Nikon India announces ‘DSLR lens combo offer’ for its DX and FX format DSLR kits

Nikon India announces 'DSLR lens combo offer' for its DX and FX format DSLR kits

Nikon India on Friday announced a new offer for camera enthusiasts. The DSLR lens combo offers are aimed at helping photographers and enthusiasts save money when buying a DSLR kit from Nikon. It is evidently also a part of the company’s plans in creating a bigger image for the brand by reaching out to a wider customer base.
The DSLR lens combo offer is available for both the DX format DSLR kit and the FX format DSLR kit. The FX format is a full frame camera and the DX format is an image sensor format with dimensions of 24mm x 16mm for the sensor, as compared to the 36mm x 24mm of the FX format. The difference between the two types is the difference in the image area of the image sensor.

The Nikon ‘DX DSLR +Lens Combo’ offer enables a customer to get an extra lens (from the below list) by paying Rs. 8,990 additional over and above the DX format DSLR kit.

The offer is valid on the following camera models: D3100, D3200, D5100, D5200, D5300, D90, D7000, and D7100.

The following Nikkor lenses are available on DX DSLR +Lens Combo offer offer:

AF-S DX VR Zoom-Nikkor 55-200mm f/4-5.6G IF-ED

AF-S DX Nikkor 35mm f/1.8G

AF-S Nikkor 50mm f/1.8G

The Nikon ‘FX DSLR + Lens Combo’ offer entails that a customer can get an additional lens of their choice (from the list below) with the FX format DSLR kit, with a saving that can go up to Rs. 30,990. The offer is valid on the following Nikon FX DSLR camera models: D610, Df, D800, D800E and D4. Nikon India also mentions that the offer will be available only till the stocks for the same last.

The Nikon FX DSLR + Lens Combo offer is available on the following Nikkor lenses:

AF-S Nikkor 24-120mm f/4G ED VR

AF-S Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8G ED

AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm f/2.8G ED

Google announces $2.71 million reward for hacking Chrome OS

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Google has announced the Pwnium hacking contest, aimed at singling out those who can hack the firm’s own Chrome OS. The event will be held at a Canadian security conference (CanSecWest, Vancouver 2014) on March 12. The firm will also shell out a massive $2.7 million (total reward pool) for the individual and team winners.

The event, dubbed Pwnium 4, will again put the researchers to the test, but will let them choose between Intel or ARM-powered laptops this time. Last year, the hackers were provided a Chromebook with Intel processors.

It has been noted that a prize money of $150,000 will be rewarded to individuals or teams that demonstrate a ‘Chrome OS system-level compromise delivered via a web page and triggerable when browsing in Guest mode and affecting all subsequent Guest mode sessions across reboots (“persistent Guest-to-Guest exploit”) using bugs in Chrome OS.

Google also says prize money of $110,000 will be rewarded to individuals or teams that demonstrate a Chrome browser-level compromise delivered via a web page using bugs in Chrome OS.

The firm will also offer bonuses to those researchers who can demonstrate a “particularly impressive or surprising exploit,” which is working through a kASLR (kernel Address Space Layout Randomization), a new variant of ASLR anti-exploit technology used by Apple iOS, OS X, Microsoft Windows 8 and Google’s Chrome OS.

Google’s prize money of $2.71828 million comes from a mathematical unit that is the base of natural algorithm. Similarly, last year, the firm kept the prize money of $3.14159 million, which is the (truncated) value of Pi.

The contest is unfortunately not available for residents of Italy, Brazil, Quebec, Cuba, Iran, Syria, North Korea and Sudan.

There is no entry fee for the participants. The eligibility for taking part, along with the official competition rules and regulations can be seen on Google’s Chromium Security page.

Asus R9 290X and R9 290 DirectCU II graphics cards launched in India

Asus R9 290X and R9 290 DirectCU II graphics cards launched in India

Asus has announced the launch of the R9 290X DirectCU II and R9 290 DirectCU II graphics cards. These cards use Asus’ own copper heatsink and fan design, rather than AMD’s reference design which came on its earlier Radeon R9 series cards. The cards are priced at Rs. 52,000 and Rs. 42,000 respectively.

The AMD Radeon R9 290X and R9 290 GPUs were introduced in November 2013, but cards based on the reference design were criticized for heating up and requiring the use of loud fans to cool them. The new Asus cards promise to eliminate this problem thanks to the cooler, quieter DirectCU II cooler which, according to the company, make both the R9 290X and R9 290 run up to 20 percent cooler and up to three times quieter than reference designs.

Asus’ trademark cooler design has been seen before on other graphics cards. It uses 10mm copper cooling pipes which are placed in direct contact with a card’s GPU so heat is dissipated quickly and efficiently. With this version, Asus is introducing a new fan, dubbed “CoolTech”, which uses a hybrid blade and bearing design that combines the strengths of radial blowers and traditional blades to improve airflow and thus reduce noise.

Other tweaks Asus has made to the reference design include the use of eight-phase voltage regulation circuitry to reduces power noise by 30 percent and improve energy efficiency by 15 percent, and GPU Tweak, a software tool that allows quick changes to settings including RAM speeds, fan speeds and power consumption thresholds. Users can thus push the performance of their cards in a safe environment without fear of damaging any components.

The R9 290X has a core speed of 1050MHz, while the R9 290 is clocked at 1000MHz. Both cards come with 4GB of GDDR5 video memory.

The complete specifications are as follows:

R9290X-DC2OC-4GD5
AMD Radeon R9 290X
PCI Express 3.0
4096MB GDDR5 memory
1050MHz core speed
5400MHz (1350MHz GDDR5) memory clock
2 x Dual-link DVI-D output
1 x HDMI output
1 x DisplayPort output

R9290-DC2OC-4GD5
AMD Radeon R9 290
PCI Express 3.0
4096MB GDDR5 memory
1000MHz core speed
5040MHz (1260MHz GDDR5) memory clock
2 x Dual-link DVI-D output
1 x HDMI output
1 x DisplayPort output

Microsoft’s Outlook.com review

Microsoft's Outlook.com review

Longtime users of Hotmail, MSN and other Microsoft email services will start noticing a big change: When they sign in to check messages, they’ll be sent to a new service called Outlook.com.

You might be thinking, isn’t Outlook the software Microsoft Corp. makes for people to use email at work? Indeed it is, but Microsoft is now adopting that brand for personal, Web-based email services as well. It’s part of a broad makeover that includes the company’s overhaul of the Windows operating system and the Office software suite.

There’s little relationship between the two Outlooks apart from the name. That’s good. The Outlook Web App I use for checking work email at home feels like an adaptation of software meant to be installed on work computers, rather than something designed from the start to play to the Web’s strengths. The consumer Outlook.com, on the other hand, feels the way Web email should. It bears more similarities with consumer-based email services, such as Google’s Gmail and Yahoo Mail, than with the corporate Outlook.

People have been able to sign up for Outlook.com email addresses and use the new interface as a “preview” for several months now. Microsoft made Outlook.com official on Tuesday and plans to spend millions of dollars to advertise it. Microsoft is even starting to force people using older Microsoft email services to switch to Outlook.com. If you’ve already tried Outlook.com on a browser, you might find your other accounts automatically upgraded the next time you sign in. Others will be moved over starting this summer.

One important note: People will be able to keep their existing addresses while using Outlook.com. There’s no need to print new business cards replacing Hotmail with a new Outlook.com address. But if you want to change your address, you can get a new one for free. In fact, at least for now, it’s still possible to get new Hotmail and Live addresses by signing up through Hotmail.com or Live.com, rather than Outlook.com.

You’ll see a lot of improvements when you switch, though nothing feels revolutionary if you’ve already been using Gmail.

By revolutionary, I mean something along the lines of what Gmail did to email when Google introduced it in 2004.

First, Gmail scrapped the use of folders to organize older messages. Instead, it gives you labels, and you can apply as many as you want to a particular message. So an email among friends to make plans for “The Hobbit” movie might be filed away as “friends,” “movies” and even “The Hobbit.” With folders, you had to choose one folder to put your message into or create multiple copies of the messages. It’s a relic of the offline world, in which a paper document can only go in one folder without a copying machine.

Meanwhile, those 50 emails it might take to coordinate your movie date with friends could have easily cluttered your inbox. Gmail automatically groups those into “conversations,” so you see all 50 messages as a single item in your inbox.

These changes took time to get used to, but that’s what happens with revolutions.

Outlook.com adopts conversations, which makes it feel like it’s catching up to Gmail, but it still uses folders instead of labels.

The improvements over Gmail are mostly around the edges:

Outlook integrates with leading social networks such as Facebook and Twitter.
Gmail mostly integrates with Google’s own services. With Outlook, you can have the service automatically fill your address book with contact information not just from Google but also from Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and even China’s Sina service. You can chat with a Facebook friend directly from the Outlook website.

And if you get an email from a Facebook friend, you might see that person’s latest Facebook post to the right, as long as Facebook has that email address registered to the social-networking account. Keep in mind that your posts won’t start showing up next to correspondences with people you’re not friends with, unless you’ve set them on Facebook to be publicly visible.

Outlook offers many ways to customize and manage the mailbox.
One of the complaints I have about Web-based email is the lack of versatility. You’re not given as many options as you are with stand-alone email software.

I was pleased to see a number of options with Outlook. For instance, I can have contents of emails automatically appear in a reading pane, rather than just as a list with subject lines. This is the part that feels most like Outlook software for work. You’d need to turn this feature on, though. It’s something you might not want if you check messages a lot from public places and don’t want messages to automatically appear. But Gmail doesn’t even give you that option unless you install a tool that Google says “may change, break or disappear at any time.”

Outlook also lets you create alternate email addresses without signing up for additional accounts – up to five a year, or up to 15 at any one time. So you can create “UseThisForSpam(at)Outlook.com” for dealings with merchants, whereas Google requires you to set up a new Gmail account to get that second address, which you can then link with your main account.

Outlook matches Gmail in letting you use Outlook.com to manage email from other services, such as Gmail and AOL, though neither works with Yahoo Mail unless you pay $20 a year for a Plus account.

Outlook also has tools for keeping your mailbox clean. You can automatically move or delete messages older than a certain number of days. You can also choose to keep only the latest message from that sender. Be careful, though, as I had inadvertently deleted more than 300 messages in a few seconds that way. A more useful option would have been to move only messages that had been read, or to move rather than delete all but the latest message.

One nice touch: Most services send deleted messages to a trash folder, and once you empty that, the messages are gone forever. As a Web-based service, Outlook will try to retrieve messages from its servers if they are still there after you’ve emptied the trash.

Outlook creates special filters for viewing certain types of messages.
Click “Shipping updates,” for instance, for quick access to emails with UPS, FedEx and other tracking numbers for products you are expecting from merchants. That’s something Microsoft also had with its older email services, but major rivals have yet to adopt. (Yahoo comes close but sends you to an outside service, Slice, for that.)

Another filter offers quick access to messages with photo attachments or photo links, and yet another gives you messages with documents.

All of these filters missed some of the relevant messages though, while one gave me a bunch of messages from scammers with attachments to open.

Outlook links with Microsoft’s online storage service, SkyDrive, to handle large files.
No longer do you have to worry about whether your friend or colleague can receive large attachments. Just let Outlook add the file to SkyDrive and create a link to send by email. You get 7 gigabytes of storage for free. Google doesn’t integrate its own storage service, Google Drive, with Gmail the same way.

And speaking of storage, Outlook.com offers unlimited space, matching offerings from Yahoo Inc. and AOL Inc. Gmail has a 10 GB limit on free accounts.

Again, the advances in Outlook.com are mostly neat rather than essential. If you’re already using a Microsoft email account, you might as well upgrade as you’ll be forced to in a few months anyway. Outlook.com does feel cleaner and smoother than what I had been using for Hotmail.

Microsoft is trying to lure Gmail users by pointing out that Google targets ads based on the contents of email messages. If such targeting is a concern for you, you can switch to Outlook.com while keeping your Gmail address. Your Gmail messages would go to Outlook, and you can send messages from there with your Gmail address in the “from” line. Setting that up is relatively easy but slow. After more than four days, my new Outlook.com account has managed to grab Gmail messages through only 2009.

That said, Google Inc. has been upfront about targeting from the start, and I’ve gotten used to it. At times, I’ve actually found the ads on Gmail entertaining and more interesting than the ones I’m now seeing on Outlook.com – ads for pricey products I don’t need or want.

Microsoft did a good job refreshing its email service, but that might not be enough for you to switch if you are already happy with your service.

Samsung Galaxy S5 tipped to sport 32-bit SoC, fingerprint scanner, plastic body

Samsung Galaxy S5 tipped to sport 32-bit SoC, fingerprint scanner, plastic body

Samsung’s much-anticipated Galaxy S5 might still be made of plastic, feature a 32-bit SoC, and come with fingerprint scanner, KGI analyst Ming-Chi Kuo predicts.
AppleInsider cites a research note from Ming-Chi Kuo, which claims that Samsung in an attempt to counter competition from Apple might bet on the fingerprint scanner feature for its alleged Galaxy S5 smartphone. Further Kuo expects that the South Korean manufacturer will use a fingerprint scanner built by Validity Sensors, a company now owned by touchpad maker Synaptics. However, the report has not shed much light on the alleged features of the fingerprint scanner on the rumoured Galaxy S5.

In addition, the analyst has also revealed that the alleged Samsung Galaxy S5 might still sport plastic casing instead of the new anticipated metallic chassis that’s been previously rumoured.

Kuo has also claimed that Samsung, following its tradition for high-end smartphones, will again launch the alleged Galaxy S5 equipped with two different processors. The ‘Prime’ variant of the Galaxy S5 will be powered by company’s own Exynos 5430 octa-core 32-bit processor, while the ‘Standard’ version will equip the Qualcomm’s MSM8974 AC quad-core 32-bit processor, as per Kuo. If true, this would mean Samsung would not be following up on its previous promise to put a 64-bit processor in its next Galaxy flagship.

Other specifications include a 3GB of RAM for ‘Prime’ variant, and the 2GB of RAM for ‘Standard’ variant; a 16-megapixel rear camera; a 2-megapixel front-facing camera and a 2850mAh battery.

According to Kuo, the alleged ‘Prime’ version of the Galaxy S5 will sport a 5.2-inch WQHD (1440×2560 pixel) AMOLED display boasting of a 565ppi pixel density, while the alleged ‘Standard’ version is said to include a 5.2-inch full-HD AMOLED display with a resolution of 1080×1920 pixels and a pixel density of 423ppi.

Kuo also said that the South Korean giant is not prepared to introduce the iris scanner feature in its next alleged Galaxy flagship smartphone.

Coming to the Galaxy S5’s expected launch date, we point you to a recent report emphasising the conundrum Samsung’s facing regarding the Galaxy S5’s announcement place and date.