Showing posts with label holiday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holiday. Show all posts

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Top 5 high end smartphones worth buying for the 2012 holiday season

Smartphone war starts ahead of holiday season. Starts with iPhone 5, then Windows phone 8 follow up, such as Nokia Lumia 920, Windows Phone 8X by HTC, Samsung ATIV S. The Nexus 4, announced yesterday and rumored for about 50 years before, goes on sale directly from Google starting November 13. The Smartphone war is heating up as smartphones play a bigger role this holiday season.

Thinking about buying a new smartphone for yourself or as a gift this holiday season? People are spending a whole lot of time with their smartphones these days, so heres a list of the top smartphone choices to make sure its time well spent.1. Nokia Lumia 920
The Nokia Lumia 920 is the new flagship smartphone of the Windows Phone 8, which features a 4.5 inch PureMotion HD+ display, LTE, 8.7MP PureView camera, 1.2MP front camera, 1.5GHz dual-core processor, wireless charging, 2000 mAh battery,1GB of RAM, and 32GB of internal memory , Nokia Maps, Nokia Drive, Nokia City Lens. Nokia claims its new handsets are “the world’s most innovative smartphones”. I know many of you have already added it to your list this holiday season, so do I. Now Nokia Lumia 920 is available in Canada (at Rogers). More units will be shipped in the near future.2. Windows Phone 8X by HTC
The Windows Phone 8X by HTC is a premium Windows Phone 8 device that packs a punch with a beautiful 4.3-inch HD-resolution super LCD 2 Lcd, a powerful 1.5GHz dual-core processor, impressive 8MP camera with HTCs custom Image Chip technology and a very-wide-angle 2.1MP front-facing shooter on the other side. Customers will enjoy the feel of the pure unibody design in California Blue, access to Windows Phone’s Live Tiles, immersive studio-quality sound with Beats Audio™ and incredible camera capabilities of the Windows Phone 8X by HTC.3. LG Nexus 4 runs on Android 4.2
The Nexus 4 has a 4.7-inch, 1,280 x 768 pixel resolution display, a quad-core Snapdragon S4 Pro processor from Qualcomm, 2 gigabytes of RAM, an 8-megapixel rear camera, a 1.3-megapixel front camera and either 8 or 16 gigabytes of storage. It also has NFC, a micro USB port and micro HDMI output. For bells and whistles, Google is touting built-in wireless charging (though you’ll need to supply your own compatible charging mat) and a Photo Sphere feature that can shoot 360-degree panorama photos but it doesn’t support 4G LTE. LG Nexus 4 runs on Android 4.2, which comes with a lot of new features, like updated Google Now, and multiple user accounts. It also adds a Swype-like trace keyboard, built right into stock Android.

    See also: Android 4.2s four best new features4. Samsung Galaxy Note 2
If you are interested in larger Lcd, then galaxy note 2 may be your best choice. The Galaxy Note II will be featuring HSPA+ and 4G LTE connectivity, a 1.6GHz quad-core processor, a 5.5-inch HD Super AMOLED display with a resolution of 1280 x 720, Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, an 8 megapixel auto focus rear-facing camera with a 1.9 megapixel front-facing camera, S Pen stylus, Bluetooth 4.0, a 3100mAh battery, 2GB of RAM and microSD card support up to 64GBs. The Galaxy Note II will also be coming in 16GB, 32GB and 64GB models along with a white or black color to choose from.5. iPhone 5
“The iPhone has always been an innovator since its 2007 release and its true potential really came out with the 4 and 4S models, but the iPhone 5 is the king of them all,” said junior Caleb Hughes.

The iPhone has a 4-inch LED-backlit IPS TFT display featuring 326ppi pixel density with 640 x 1136 pixels and also has Gorilla Glass, features a A6 chipset with 1.2GHz dual-core CPU and of course the PowerVR SGX543MP2 GPU, 1GB RAM, has an 8-megapixel on the rear and a 1.2MP on the front, as well as 1080P HD video, geo-tagging, HDR, panorama, LED flash, autofocus and face detection. The iPhone 5 comes in 16, 32 and 64GB versions, which is running iOS 6. Price of the iPhone 5 is relative high than other smartphones.

With shoppers getting ready to kick off the holiday season the day after Thanksgiving — or sooner — retailers are ready for consumers to pull out their smartphones or tablets, NRFs Shay said. So Which one is your next mobile device as the holiday gift ?

Saturday, November 8, 2014

10 best iPad and iPhone apps for planning your holiday

Booking a holiday used to be easy, kind of expensive and occasionally disappointing: youd spend hours poring over brochures before popping to the travel agent and booking a fortnight in what inevitably turned out to be a building site halfway up a volcano.


 Now we have access to the kind of information holidaymakers of yesteryear could only dream of. We can find out what many of brochures dont to tell us, as well as the best time to hit the buffet; how to shave hundreds, or even thousands, of pounds off the price of hotels, car hire and flights; and how to find the best attractions, exhibitions and eateries in places weve never been to before.

A few well-chosen vacation-planning apps can make sure your holiday memories are happy rather than horrible. Some apps will help you find the cheapest deals or advise you on the best days to fly. Others can help you find the perfect place with the help of hundreds of other holidaymakers honest opinions and top tips - some apps will even make sure you dont forget to pack your pants.

Whether youre a creature of habit or a fearless explorer - and whether your holidays a budget break or an expensive extravaganza - the right apps can make sure you dont pay more than you need to while helping you find the best places to stay, the most interesting places to visit and the best times to go. They can even help you learn the lingo and find your way around when you get there.

So grab your bucket and spade, and discover how you too can plan an app-y holiday with these top holiday planning apps for iOS.

1. Kayak

Price: Free
Works with: iPhone, iPod touch, iPad
Kayak is a kind of Swiss Army Knife for travelling: it enables you to search for the best and/or cheapest flights, hotel rooms and car hire deals, and it has a handy Price Alerts feature to let you know if prices go up or down. It knows about add-on fees such as airport charges and hotel taxes, and you can even book everything from within the app.

That last bit is how Kayak makes its money: it gets paid for referring people. Its a very good app - especially if youre planning to visit the US - but it isnt perfect: for example, if you search for flights from Glasgow to Faro, it suggests British Airways via Heathrow without letting you know that, if you go a few days later, EasyJet has direct flights for one-fifth of the cost.

Kayak does know about those flights, but it doesnt tell you about them because they arent on the dates you specified. Its definitely worth trying a few different date ranges to see what difference it makes.

Kayak comes in two versions: the standard app (free) and Kayak Pro (69p). Theres hardly any difference between the two versions bar airport terminal maps - which Pro users get and free users dont. Everything else is the same, so whichever version you go for, youre getting a really handy travel app.

2. TripAdvisor

Price: Free
Works with: iPhone, iPod touch, iPad
The main draw with TripAdvisor isnt the booking engine or the hotel prices (although TripAdvisor is a good deal finder); its the user reviews. Weve used the TripAdvisor website and app for years, and despite the odd bit of obvious fakery - this run-down hotel is the best hotel in the world and I am not the owner in disguise, honestly, Im not! - its saved us from booking the kind of holiday you remember for all the wrong reasons.

It tells you what the brochures dont: that this hotel is on top of a cliff; this ones next to a building site; this ones full of stag nights, and so on. TripAdvisor doesnt just warn you - if 400 people reckon your first choice is a god-forsaken hell-hole, the sidebar shows you a whole host of alternative options with equally honest reviews.

The trick is to ignore the very worst and very best reviews and concentrate on the it was great, but… ones - they tend to be the most reliable and trustworthy opinions. TripAdvisor is as good at finding local restaurants as it is at finding things for you to do when you travel abroad. It also provides access to TripAdvisors great forums, where you can get advice on everything from gayfriendly hotels to the best places to take easily bored children and adults alike.

3. Skyscanner

Price: Free
Works with: iPhone, iPod touch, iPad
When it comes to booking flights, Skyscanner is the app to beat. When you launch the free app it shows a collection of last-minute deals from your nearest airport, and if youre looking for something specific, it brings the results back as a handy graph showing just how expensive flights for each day is.

If your dates are flexible, that feature alone will save you a fortune, because prices vary from day to day. For example, if wed wanted to fly to Paris from Glasgow on the fifth of the month, the cheapest flights were £94 per person, but if we were willing to wait a week, the same flights were just £34.

You can filter the results by the number of stops, direct flights and so on, and when you select certain times, Skyscanner looks for the best prices from multiple booking agents including Expedia and Lastminute.com.

4. TripIt

Price: Free
Works with: iPhone, iPod touch, iPad
So what if youre organising a trip with more than one provider or service? With Tripit, you email all your confirmations to them using the app and the service works out whats going on and adds it to your TripIt itinerary. It can easily recognise confirmation emails from some 3,000 different booking services for flights, concerts, restaurants, hotels and other key travel services - it also converts those emails into diary entries with related information such as contact information and prices paid.

If, for whatever reason, the emails dont work - and we found a few instances where emails simply vanished into the ether without turning up in our TripIt app - you can enter the details manually. The app also includes a find whats nearby feature to help locate cash machines and other essentials during your trip.
The core TripIt app is free, or 69p if you dont like ads - theres also a $49 annual subscription.

5. Airbnb

Price: Free
Works with: iPhone, iPod touch
You dont need to spend a fortune on accommodation when you travel. With the excellent - and free - Airbnb app, you can find details of incredibly cheap places to stay all over the world, and theres a handy I need somewhere tonight! option that finds places near you when you havent booked ahead.

Airbnb knows about accommodation in some 33,000 cities across 192 countries, and its great for finding deals. The available options cover everything from shared spare rooms to full apartment rentals.

Its important to note that Airbnb is a marketplace, not a travel agent. Think of it as eBay for accommodation, a service that brings buyers and sellers together, but one that doesnt do background checks and might attract the odd conmerchant. Make sure you read airbnb.co.uk/safety - Airbnbs Trust & Safety Centre - before you commit to anything.

6. British Airways

Price: Free
Works with: iPhone, iPod touch
BA was quick to embrace the power of iOS, and its BA app does everything youd expect with the minimum of fuss. There are downloadable maps for the worlds bigger airport terminals, a very fast search engine that doesnt try to lead you to the most expensive options, online check-ins, Wi-Fi passwords for the airport lounge if youre a Silver or Gold Executive Club member and up-to-date information about arrivals and departures.

The app even doubles as a boarding card - it enables you to download and display a machine-readable boarding pass thatll satisfy security and get you on board the aircraft. If youre in the Executive Club, you can also use the app to store and display all your future bookings - membership is free and, of course, you can join from inside the app. Its typically BA: smart, stylish and efficient without fuss or faffing around.

7. Travel List

Price: £1.49 / $1.99
Works with: iPhone, iPod touch
If youve ever got to a destination only to discover that you forgot to pack your pants, youll see the value of Travel List immediately. This useful app lets you put together a list of everything you need and ensures you pack it.

As you pack, you tick items off the list, and if you attempt to leave with items still unticked, the app will sound an alarm to alert you. Travel List comes pre-populated with most items - shirts, t-shirts, dresses, makeup, personal care, gadgets, chargers and so on - and you can, of course, add your own items if the developer hasnt included them already.

In a nice touch, you can copy any existing packing lists to new destinations or trips, because there are some things (underwear, passports, sun cream) that might appear on every list you make. It also syncs over iCloud, letting you update your lists from any iOS device or Mac - perfect if youre making a list between devices.

8. Jets - Flight & Seat Advisor

Price: £1.99 / $2.99
Works with: iPhone, iPod touch
These days, many airlines allow you to choose your own seat - charging handsomely for the privilege, of course - but how do you know what youre paying for? Enter Jets, an app that can make the difference between travelling in comfort and being unable to stand up when your plane lands. Simply enter the name of your airline, pick the plane youll be flying in, and Jets shows you exactly what each seat does.

Youll see which ones recline and which ones dont; which ones have the most legroom; which ones are next to the food preparation area or the toilets and which ones have funny little tray tables and nowhere to put your stuff.

The app knows most but not all airlines - so Ryanair, BMI Baby and EasyJet are there, but not Jet2 - but if you can find out what kind of plane youll be on, you can see the seating plan and make your booking based on the standard seating plans.

9. Google Maps

Price: Free
Works with: iPhone, iPod touch
Google Maps isnt just a great app to have on holiday (although you need to watch out for data roaming charges if youre using it to navigate while abroad) - its a great app to help you plan your holiday, too.

Googles driving directions are superb, and weve found its estimates of driving times to be very accurate - and that means the apps a great way to plan days out or road trips, exploring different options and zooming in to see what the terrain is like.

You can also use it to prevent disappointment by switching to satellite view and/or Street View to get a really good look at potential places to stay. That way, you can see if the location is really as unspoilt and idyllic as the brochure blurb suggests - or if its between an army firing range and a sewage treatment plant.

The combination of Google Maps and TripAdvisor can really help you avoid a nightmare holiday.

10. EasyJet Mobile

Price: Free
Works with: iPhone, iPod touch
One day, every airline will embrace Apples Passbook and make travelling that little bit less annoying, but for now, the British ones prefer to have their own proprietary apps, if they offer apps at all.

EasyJet is one of the airlines that has embraced apps, and its EasyJet Mobile app enables you to find and book flights; add options such as specific seats; sports equipment or extra baggage; see the status of your flight on the day and book additional items such as hotels. The app works well enough, but its not ideal for people who like to think long term - when we tried to book flights four months ahead, the app listed outbound flights, but no return ones.