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6/11/2013

iphone - ipod - ipad ေတြကုိ model number အလုိက္ အမ်ိဳးအစားခြဲနီး

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  Apple DeviceModel Number
1iPad Wi-Fi (Original)A12191iPad Wi-Fi/3G/GPS (Original)A13371iPad 2 (Wi-Fi Only)A13951iPad 2 (Wi-Fi/GSM/GPS)A13961iPad 2 (Wi-Fi/CDMA/GPS)A13971iPad 2 (Wi-Fi Only, iPad2,4)A13951iPad 3rd Gen (Wi-Fi Only)A14161iPad 3rd Gen (Wi-Fi/Cellular AT&T/GPS)A14301iPad 3rd Gen (Wi-Fi/Cellular Verizon/GPS)A14031iPad 4th Gen (Wi-Fi Only)A14581iPad 4th Gen (Wi-Fi/AT&T/GPS)A14591iPad 4th Gen (Wi-Fi/Verizon & Sprint/GPS)A14601iPad mini (Wi-Fi Only)A14321iPad mini (Wi-Fi/AT&T/GPS)A14541iPad mini (Wi-Fi/Verizon & Sprint/GPS)A14551iPhone (Original/EDGE)A12031iPhone 3GA12411iPhone 3GSA13031iPhone 3G (China/No Wi-Fi)A13241iPhone 3GS (China/No Wi-Fi)A13251iPhone 4 (GSM)A13321iPhone 4 (CDMA/Verizon/Sprint)A13491iPhone 4SA13871iPhone 4S (GSM China/WAPI)A14311iPhone 5 (GSM/LTE 4, 17/North America)A14281iPhone 5 (CDMA/LTE, Sprint/Verizon/KDDI)A14291iPhone 5 (GSM/LTE 1, 3, 5/International)A14291iPhone 5 (CDMA China/UIM/WAPI)A14421iPhone 5 (GSM/LTE/AWS/North America)A14281iPod (Original/Scroll Wheel)M85411iPod 2nd Gen (Touch Wheel)A10191iPod 3rd Gen (10/15/30)A10401iPod 3rd Gen (10/20/40)A10401iPod 3rd Gen (15/20/40)A10401iPod 4th Gen (ClickWheel)A10591iPod U2 Edition (4th Gen)A10591iPod photo (30)A10991iPod photo (40/60)A10991iPod Color DisplayA10991iPod U2 Edition (Color)A10991iPod 5th Gen (with Video)A11361iPod U2 Edition 5th GenA11361iPod 5th Gen - EnhancedA11361iPod U2 Edition 5th Gen EnhancedA11361iPod classic ("Original"/6th Gen)A12381iPod classic (Late 2008/7th Gen)A12381iPod miniA10511iPod mini (2nd Gen)A10511iPod nanoA11371iPod nano (2nd Gen)A11991iPod nano 2nd Gen (RED)A11991iPod nano (3rd Gen/Fat)A12361iPod nano (4th Gen)A12851iPod nano (5th Gen/Camera)A13201iPod nano (6th Gen/1.54" Multitouch/Clip)A13661iPod nano (7th Gen/2.5" Multitouch)A14461iPod shuffle (White)A11121iPod shuffle 2nd Gen (Silver)A12041iPod shuffle 2nd Gen (Colors/Early 2007)A12041iPod shuffle 2nd Gen (Late 2007)A12041iPod shuffle 2nd Gen (Late 2008)A12041iPod shuffle 3rd GenA12711iPod shuffle 3rd Gen (Colors)A12711iPod shuffle 4th Gen (Wheel/VoiceOver)A13731iPod shuffle 4th Gen (Late 2012)A13731iPod touch (Original)A12131iPod touch (2nd Gen)A12881iPod touch (3rd Gen/8 GB)A12881iPod touch (3rd Gen/32 & 64 GB)A13181iPod touch (4th Gen/FaceTime)A13671iPod touch (4th Gen, 2011)A13671iPod touch (4th Gen, 2012)A13671iPod touch (5th Gen)A14211iPod touch (5th Gen, No iSight, 2013)A1509

iOS 7 - Everyting You Need To Know


iOS 7 looks shockingly refreshing, now let's take a look Apple have update what.
A new look from Jony Ive
Since the first iPhone was released in 2007, Apple’s interface has looked more or less the same — and as iPhone hardware has evolved, iOS started looking stale. Under former hardware design head Jony Ive, that’s changed somewhat. Apple has kept the basic structure of iOS, but it’s redesigned its icons with a flatter, more stylized look – the whole palette has become brighter and simpler, stripping out the gradients that were ubiquitous in previous versions. When scrolling on things like the home screen or Messages app, you’ll see a subtle parallax effect.
iOS 7 includes a number of small but noticeable tweaks: fonts have been slimmed down, there’s a new version of the classic slide-to-unlock function, and a new translucent control panel slides up from the bottom with quick access to frequently used settings. Touch gestures have also been expanded, with a greater reliance on things like swiping and pinching or a tilt feature that changes the interface. Folders no longer top out at 12 or 16 apps – you can put hundreds in a folder if you want.

Multitasking like webOS
At long last, multitasking is no longer a list of four icons. Instead, Apple has taken a page from webOS and Windows Phone. When you double-tap the home button, large thumbnails of your apps appear up top with their identifying icons underneath. You can scroll horizontally through them, and see three at a time as you do. Apple also said that every app will offer multitasking in iOS 7, theoretically meaning that you won’t have to wait forever switch between recently-used apps.
The old multitasker used to have an option to swipe to the left to get common toggles — like controlling your music — but those features have been separated out into a new feature called Control Center, which is available with a swipe-up from the bottom of the screen.
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.Notification Center cleans up
Take a sigh of relief: Notification Center has seen a desperately-needed overhaul in iOS 7. The list of changes includes many eminently obvious, but previously unavailable features. For instance, iOS 7 allows you to access your notifications from the lock screen, and notifications sync between devices so you don’t need to dismiss the same update multiple times. The top of the new Notification Center features three tabs, “today,” “all,” and “missed.” The first is a bit reminiscent of Google Now: it gives you a heads-up on what’s coming up today, with calendar appointments, weather, birthday notifications, stock prices, as more. Of course, like the rest of iOS 7, there’s a huge visual overhaul here, too. The pull-down is now transparent (though it attractively blurs out the details of what’s happening on your screen, leaving bold colors), and it features the new fonts and swipe interactions we’ve seen in the rest of the updated operating system. Talk about welcome changes.
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Quick-tap toggles for settings
Digging in to change common settings has always been a multi-tap hassle on iOS, but with the new version that’s all changed. From any screen, you can drag up from the bottom to reveal a panel of quick toggles for a bunch of settings, including Airplane Mode, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Do Not Disturb, flashlight, and rotation lock. You can also adjust brightness, manage music playback, and connect to AirPlay or AirDrop.
Control Center is slightly translucent, letting you subtly see the app underneath it. All of the icons are clean black outlines on a white background. Some of these settings were hidden away with a left-swipe on the old multitasking view, and separating multitasking from Control Center makes a lot of sense.
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AirDrop comes to iOS
A new way to share files over Wi-Fi on iOS, AirDrop takes its name from the same feature on the Mac. Unfortunately, it’s only available on the iPhone 5, but Apple says it will work system-wide. It is also security encrypted, and it transfers the files directly, peer-to-peer. You can toggle AirDrop to accept files from other people on the same Wi-Fi network or force it to only accept files from your contacts. On stage, Tim Cook couldn’t help but take a subtle dig at Android — and mostly Samsung — by saying there’s “no need to wander around the room bumping your phones.”

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Instacropping and automatic organization
The once-basic Photos app on iOS is taking cues from desktop apps like iPhoto or the new photo tools in Google+. The latest version will automatically organize photographs into “moments,” based on where and when you took the images. Photos will be labeled based on the moment they’re in, which can be sorted by various levels of granularity. Photos taken in different parts of San Francisco, for example, may be labeled as different moments, but they’ll all be part of the same San Francisco vacation collection and can be viewed as a single chunk. This works temporally too, so you can get a look at everything you’ve posted in the last year.
There’s also an increased emphasis on sharing. Photos can be automatically cropped into a square shape for Instagram, and photostreams can be shared, allowing you to create a stream and then let friends add photos to it.

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App Store auto-updates
The App Store has undergone a couple of subtle but useful changes. It’s now hooked into the iPhone’s GPS, offering suggestions for popular apps based on where you are – if you’re in New York, you might get a subway map or a local restaurant guide. Users also won’t have to manually update apps – like Android, they’ll download in the background. It’s meant to both keep people out of Apple’s sometimes awkward update section and prevent new versions of apps from piling up.

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Apple joins the streaming music race
Is Apple going to kill Pandora? That’s the question people will be asking in the coming months, now that the company has finally unveiled its streaming music service. iTunes Radio is free for everyone, though you’ll see ads unless you subscribe to iTunes Match, and it offers radio stations similar to other streaming music services. It’s built into the Music app and offers selected radio stations that can be shared with friends.
Unlike other radio apps, iTunes Radio is geared less towards pure streaming and more towards old-fashioned purchases: if you like a song you hear on the radio, you can follow a link to buy it. Apple is coming relatively late to streaming music – by all accounts, it only finished signing deals with the major labels late last week – and it will be competing with both independent services like Spotify and juggernauts like Google.

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A smarter Siri
Siri’s signature robotic voice is getting an overhaul. A redesigned version of the personal assistant comes with the option of a male or female voice, both more natural-sounding than the original. Several languages are supported, and Siri’s data sources have been expanded: users can query her (or him) for information from Wikipedia or Twitter. Apple touted a partnership with Bing, which is currently used to pull in web results, but it’s possible other search engines will be available.
Activation Lock. In essence, it is what it sounds like: if someone steals your phone and chooses to disable Find My iPhone, he won't be able to reactivate the phone. Same if they wipe the phone -- they'll be forced to sign in with your Apple ID and password, which they obviously wouldn't know. Barring extenuating circumstances (that "thief" happens to be a deranged ex-lover who knows your log-in credentials), the new feature should keep your data safe, if nothing else. But will it be a theft deterrent, as Apple hopes? That's a question we'll leave for another day. In the meantime, Activation Lock is available in beta today, and for iPhones, specifically. An iPad beta will follow in the coming weeks, with the final, public release set for this fall.
Via theverge via engadget

Android 5.0 OS ရရွိႏုိင္မည့္ Samsung Galaxy Devices မ်ား

Samsung Galaxy ဖုန္းမ်ားအတြက္  Android 5.0 operating system က မၾကာခင္ထြက္လာေတာ့မွာပါ ..Android 5.0 ထဲမွာ ပါ၀င္လာမယ့္ ထူျခားဆန္းသစ္တဲ့ Features မ်ားနဲ႕ပတ္သတ္ျပီး သတင္းအခ်က္အလက္ တိတိက်က် မရရွိေသးေသာ္လည္း  ၄င္းဖုန္းမွာပါ၀င္မယ့္ new features ေတြကေတာ့ ေကာင္းမြန္မွာ မုခ်ဧကန္ပါပဲ..ေအာက္ေဖာ္ျပပါ  Samsung Devices မ်ားကေတာ့ Android 5.0 အထိ မၾကာမွီအခ်ိန္အတြင္းမွာ upgrade  ေပးသြားမွာျဖစ္ပါတယ္ ..Samsung အေနနဲ႕ ေနာက္ဆုံး ထြက္ ေမာ္ဒယ္ျမင့္ဖုန္းမ်ားကုိသာ ၄င္းစနစ္ထိ upgrade  ေပးသြားမွာျဖစ္ျပီး သတင္းအရေတာ့  Samsung ရဲ႕  ေမာ္ဒယ္ ဖုန္းအမ်ဳိးအစား(5) သာရႏုိင္မွာျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း သိရပါတယ္…Android 5.0 ရရွိႏုိင္မည့္ ဖုန္းအမ်ဳိးအစားမ်ားကေတာ့ ……..

Galaxy S4
Galaxy S3
Galaxy Note 8.0
Galaxy Note 2
Galaxy Note 10.1 Tablets  တုိ႕ျဖစ္ၾကပါတယ္။
အထက္ပါ Devices မ်ား မကုိင္ေဆာင္ထားတဲ့  Samsung crazy အခ်ိုဳ႕အတြက္လည္း  Android 5.0 မရရွိလုိ႕ ၀မ္းနည္းစရာေတာ့ မလုိပါဘူး ..Samsung companay ရဲ႕ သတင္းထုတ္ျပန္မႈအရ ေအာက္ပါဖုန္းမ်ားကုိလည္း 4.2.2 အျပင္ ေနာက္ထပ္ လည္း upgrade ေပးသြားမွာျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း သိရပါတယ္ ..

GT-I9082 – Galaxy Grand DUOS
GT-I9080 – Galaxy Grand
GT-I8730 – Galaxy Express
GT-I8530 – Galaxy Beam
GT-I8190 – Galaxy S3 Mini
GT-I8160 – Galaxy Ace 2
GT-I9260 – Galaxy Premier
GT-I9105 – Galaxy S2 Plus
GT-I9100 – Galaxy S2
GT-I9070 – Galaxy S Advance
GT-N7000 – Galaxy Note
GT-S6810 – Galaxy Fame
GT-S6312 – Galaxy Young DUOS
GT-S6310 – Galaxy Young
GT-S7710 – Galaxy X Cover 2
အထက္ပါဖုန္းမ်ားကုိလည္း Android 4.2.2 အျပင္ ေနာက္ထပ္ upgrade လည္းေပးသြားဦးမွာျဖစ္ပါတယ္ .. Android 5.0 ရရွိဖုိ႕ကတာ့ Company ရဲ႕ စိတ္အထားအေျပာင္းအလဲေပၚမွာပဲ  ေမွ်ာ္လင့္ရမွာပါ..

Myo Minn Thant(Myanmar Mobile App Store)

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