Sunday, January 20, 2013

How wireless charging works??

How does wireless charging work?

Among the engineers and scientists, wireless charging is known as 'inductive charging'.

 It utilizes two smart coils - one in the charger and another in the device that is getting charged. The primary coil creates a very small electromagnetic field around the charger through which electricity can be transferred. The secondary coil, which is in the phone, receives the power from electromagnetic field and converts in back into electric current to feed it into the battery.

With the announcement of integrated wireless charging in the Lumia 920, Nokia hopes it will be a significant part of the proposition to turn heads from Android and iPhone. But unlike previous examples like the Palm Pre's Touchstone charger, Nokia has joined HTC, Sony, Samsung and others by adopting "Qi", a proprietary interface standard created by the Wireless Power Consortium.

Qi, pronounced "chee", comes from the Chinese symbol meaning energy flow and is designed to provide energy to devices through magnetic induction. This is a similar solution to the system that charges electric toothbrushes. (It's also a valuable and legal two-letter word in Scrabble.)

In simple terms, the base station includes an induction coil that creates an alternating electromagnetic field. Meanwhile, a similar coil within the device is able to pick up this field, convert the energy into current and use it to charge the battery.

After defining the low power (five watts) specification in 2009, the spec was expanded to medium power in 2011, enabling the projection of up to 150 watts -- a significant leap and one Nokia publicly welcomed last month. In reality, the former wattage should be more than enough for a smartphone but it's worth bearing in mind in relation to speculation that a Nokia Lumia tablet could be on the cards some day.

It's also positive news for phone users in that they will be able to charge the device on base stations previously released for other projects -- with the Consortium conveniently announcing that there are now 110 certified examples from 124 members. As Virgin Atlantic and US coffee franchise Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf will be supplying charging stations for public use, these are all positive signs of momentum behind the standard.

Considering the technology has been around for so long, maybe the power of a unified spec among leading manufacturers could provide the tipping point for its mainstream adoption. It wouldn't be the first time in the world of tech after all.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Sony Xperia Z






The Sony Xperia Z, out in the next few weeks, is a mobile phone with a 5in screen.
Apart from the Samsung Galaxy Note devices which are part-phone, part tablet, this is the biggest-screen phone yet.

Even so, because it’s slim and has the narrowest of bezels round the display, it didn’t feel big. Though it sure didn’t feel small.

The phone’s display has the highest resolution yet seen on a mobile – knocking the iPhone’s Retina display for six.

The 5in screen had as many pixels as a 55in Full HD flatscreen TV, and it showed.
The display was eye-poppingly sharp, with rich colours.

Since the phone has a quad-core processor, it’s fast and responsive with no lags or stutters.

This looks like it could be a real challenger to the current market leaders, the Samsung Galaxy S III and the Apple iPhone 5.

Other features included a high-resolution 13-megapixel camera and – handy if you tend to drop your phone in the bath – water resistance. It can be immersed in two feet of water for 30 minutes without harm.

It will cost around £440 with no value-added tax and £528 with VAT included.

Gadgets Y U so damn expensive :/