NOKIA N97 ORIGINAL RINGTONESORIGINAL
NOKIA N97 ORIGINAL RINGTONES

DOWNLOAD:
http://www.ziddu.com/download/5323403/N97.rar.html
ALTERNATE DOWNLOAD:
http://ul.to/1remdw
NOKIA N97 ORIGINAL RINGTONES

DOWNLOAD:
http://www.ziddu.com/download/5323403/N97.rar.html
ALTERNATE DOWNLOAD:
http://ul.to/1remdw
NOKIA 5800 ORIGINAL RINGTONES

DOWNLOAD:
http://w19.easy-share.com/1903090523.html
ALTERNATE DOWNLOAD:
http://www.ziddu.com/downloadlink/3077833/Nokia5800.rar
NOKIA N85 ORIGINAL RINGTONES

DOWNLOAD:
http://w19.easy-share.com/1903090545.html
ALTERNATE DOWNLOAD:
http://www.ziddu.com/downloadlink/3077835/NokiaN85.zip
BenQ Rolls Out a New 10-Inch, Atom-Based Netbook
Meet the Joybook Lite U102
BenQ Joybook Lite U102

BenQ has recently announced the introduction of yet another Joybook portable PC, dubbed Joybook Lite U102. The new model has been featured with a 10-inch display and is part of the company’s growing line of Atom-powered netbook systems. While the technical specifications resemble that of many 10-inch netbooks available in the market, BenQ’s latest release packs a new external design, featuring a larger touchpad and a 90 percent-sized keyboard.
The full list of technical specifications of BenQ’s new netbook is yet to become available, but it looks like the system will be powered by an Intel Atom processor, coupled with 1GB of RAM and a 250GB hard disk drive. The 10.1-inch display boasts a 1024 by 600 pixel resolution and is powered by Intel’s integrated graphics solution. Additional features include a built-in webcam, WiFi, Ethernet, optional 3.75G HSUPA connectivity, a 4-in-1 card reader, three USB 2.0 ports and a Windows XP operating system. Overall, the Joybook Lite U102 looks like yet another Intel Atom-based 10-inch netbook looking for a place in the already crowded market.
BenQ Joybook Lite U102

The new Joybook Lite solution from BenQ will be available with a choice for a 3-cell or a 6-cell battery pack, providing the end-user with up to six hours of operation. In addition, to separate it from the pack, BenQ has tried to make some changes to the system’s overall design. As a result, users will be able to take advantage of a 90 percent-sized keyboard, a larger touchpad and an overall netbook design that is only 1 inch thick and weighs in at about 1kg.
Although the netbook has already been made available in Taiwan, China and Thailand, there aren’t any details regarding the pricing of the new ultraportable netbook. BenQ is yet to announce if the new model will be available worldwide.
Gateway Updates Prices on Gaming Laptops
Makes them more affordable
Gateway offers more affordable gaming laptops

When it comes to portable gaming systems there are a number of available choices for consumers looking to take advantage of the latest in hardware technology and benefit from the performance of a high-performance portable PC. These gaming laptops are known for their higher price tags, which are somewhat justified by the level of
performance they can deliver. However, there are some PC vendors that have decided to roll out gaming systems that are built to deliver performance in a more affordable package. Such is the case with Gateway and its line of P-series FX edition laptops, specifically designed for gamers on a budget.
According to a recent report on Cnet, the wholly owned Acer subsidiary has just updated two of its P-series FX laptops, providing users with a more affordable, yet performance-ready configuration. While the systems aren’t exactly new, their recently changed price tags and hardware configurations make them a noteworthy alternative for users looking for an affordable gaming laptop.
Kicking off with a price tag of just US$1099,99, the Gateway P-7807u FX has been featured with an Intel Core 2 Duo P8600 (2.4GHz, 1066MHz FSB, 3MB L2 cache) processor, 4GB of DDR3 dual-channel memory, a 320GB 7200RPM SATA hard drive, the Intel PM45 chipset and the integrated Intel WiFi 5100AGN 802.11 wireless LAN chip. The system’s graphics will continue to be based on the NVIDIA GeForce 9800M GTS with 1GB of GDDR3 discrete graphics memory.
The P-7809u FX has been priced at a higher US$1249,99, but has been featured with a better Intel Core 2 Duo P8700 (2.54GHz, 1066MHz FSB, 3MB L2 cache), 4GB of DDR3 memory, a 500GB 5400RPM hard drive and an NVIDIA GeForce 9800M GTS with 1GB of GDDR3 memory. This is also based on the PM45 chipset and features the same wireless module.
Windows 7 Free Upgrade Option Program FAQ

Debuted last week for customers worldwide, the Windows Upgrade Option Program is designed to deliver customers and small businesses that buy designated PCs with premium versions of Windows Vista pre-installed free upgrades to equivalent flavors of Windows 7 once the operating system becomes available. The initiative is meant to feed consumers’ appetite for Windows 7 that could hurt Windows Vista sales and to make waiting for the next iteration of the Windows client drop pointless.
1. What is the Program Eligibility Period?
June 26, 2009 to January 31, 2010 – Only PCs preinstalled with qualifying Vista editions have to be acquired starting with June 26, but no later than January 31, 2010, in order to be eligible for a free Windows 7 upgrade through the Upgrade Option Program.
2. What are the qualifying Vista SKUs? To which Windows 7 edition will free upgrades be possible?
- Windows Vista Home Premium Upgrade free upgrade to Windows 7 Home Premium Upgrade
- Windows Vista Home Premium Full free upgrade to Windows 7 Home Premium Upgrade
- Windows Vista Business Upgrade free upgrade to Windows 7 Professional Upgrade
- Windows Vista Business Full free upgrade to Windows 7 Professional Upgrade
- Windows Vista Ultimate Upgrade free upgrade to Windows 7 Ultimate Upgrade
- Windows Vista Ultimate Full free upgrade to Windows 7 Ultimate Upgrade
- Windows Vista WAU Home Basic to Home Premium free upgrade to Windows 7 Home Premium Upgrade
- Windows Vista WAU Home Basic to Business free upgrade to Windows 7 Professional Upgrade
- Windows Vista WAU Home Basic to Ultimate free upgrade to Windows 7 Ultimate Upgrade
- Windows Vista WAU Home Premium to Business free upgrade to Windows 7 Professional Upgrade
- Windows Vista WAU Home Premium to Ultimate free upgrade to Windows 7 Ultimate Upgrade
3. Are there Windows releases that do not qualify for the Windows 7 Upgrade Option Program?
Yes, Windows Vista Home Basic, Windows Vista Starter Edition and all the editions of¦Windows XP.
4. Will a PC with a qualifying edition of Vista bought on June 25 and earlier be eligible for a free upgrade to Windows 7?
No! The Program as well as the Fulfillment Website go-live date is June 26. Only starting with this date will Microsoft offer free Windows 7 upgrades.
5. When will the free Windows 7 upgrades be available?
According to Microsoft, October 22, 2009 is the Initial Upgrade Media Fulfillment Date. October 22 is also the General Availability deadline for Windows 7, and it will mark the first shipments of upgrade media for qualifying customers in accordance with their upgrade options.
6. How long will customers be able to submit Windows 7 Upgrade Option Program requests?
The Upgrade Offer Form Expiration Date is February 28, 2010. After this date no more submissions for Upgrade media redemption orders will be possible or accepted.
7. Is there an end date for the program?
Yes, the Final Software Fulfillment Date / Program End Date – April 30, 2010. This deadline will mark the last of free Windows 7 upgrade shipments for customers.
8. Are there restrictions to the initiative?
Yes, Vista to Windows 7 upgrades can only be performed for the same architectures, namely 32-bit to 32-bit and 64-bit to 64-bit, but not x86 to x64. At the same time, both operating systems have to share the same language and have to belong to the same market/territory.
9. Who are the OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) participating in the Windows 7 Upgrade Option Program?
Here is a short list (OEM participants are not limited to the companies listed below):
10. Is there a certain period of time that I have to wait for my Windows 7 upgrade media to be delivered?
After October 22, 2009 Microsoft will work to serve all Windows 7 upgrade orders in less than four weeks. In the eventuality that the four-week period passes and the Windows 7 upgrade order hasn’t been fulfilled, customers can use this email, aporders at microsoft.com, to check the status of their order.
11. Is there no way to get free Windows 7 upgrades for Windows XP?
Actually, there is. Here is what Microsoft has to say: “a system that was sold with a Windows Vista Business Certificate of Authenticity (COA) and has Windows XP Professional installed, and meets all other program offer requirements, can be eligible for the Windows 7 Upgrade Option offer.” Of course, upgrades to Windows 7 are only possible from Vista. XP users have only the option of performing a clean install.
12. How will Microsoft offer Windows 7 upgrades?
The Redmond company will deliver Windows 7 DVD upgrade media to qualifying Vista-PC users.
13. How free is free?
In some cases the PC manufacturers involved in the Windows 7 Upgrade Option Program can choose to charge customers extra fees. Microsoft itself will charge customers of Windows Vista-packaged software a sum around $20. The money is “required at the time of your online registration at Microsoft’s Windows 7 Upgrade Option fulfillment site. Your credit card will be charged approximately two weeks before the Windows 7 Upgrade media ships to the address you have provided,” Microsoft informed.
14. Where should I submit my Windows 7 upgrade order?
Microsoft revealed that “for PC purchases, you should find information about deadlines on a coupon or form included with your PC. If you don’t find the coupon or order form, please contact the PC manufacturer. Completed Windows 7 Upgrade Offer Forms must be received by 1 March 2010. A good place to begin looking for contact information is at our Windows 7 Upgrade Option page. For software purchases you can register your order online at Microsoft’s Windows 7 Upgrade Option fulfillment site, anytime between 26 June and 31 January, 2010.”
Windows 7 Professional $99.99 and Home Premium $49.99 Discounts Now Live
Pre-orders get the green light
Windows 7

On the same day that it announced officially the pricing of Windows 7, Microsoft also revealed that customers would have the opportunity to buy the two main editions of the next iteration of Windows at discounted prices. The discounts went live on June 26, 2009, and Windows 7 Professional is available for $99.99, while Windows 7 Home Premium can be bought for just $49.99.
One good place to start is the Microsoft Store. The Redmond-based company not only sells the two Windows SKUs at the discounted prices but also offers a list of its partners that do so across North America and Japan. As a reminder, the special offer is only available in the US, Canada and Japan.
“Promotional pricing is available on Windows 7 Home Premium and Windows 7 Professional upgrade versions only. This promotional pricing is a limited time offer, while supplies last, and is limited to three (3) copies per edition per customer,” Microsoft informs. In the US and Canada, the special prices will last until July 11, or as long supplies are still available. In Japan, Microsoft will discontinue the offer on July 5.
What are customers getting? Well, they’re getting the upgrade editions of Windows 7 Professional and Home Premium. I have seen questions related to whether a clean install of Windows 7 was possible using the upgrade media. The answer is apparently yes. But the fact of the matter is that with the upgrade, Windows 7 media consumers also get an upgrade license. Meaning that they might install Windows 7 as they see feet, either upgrade or clean install, but only as long as they already have a genuine, licensed copy of Windows Vista or Windows XP. Otherwise, they would be breaking the EULA, essentially pirating.
“Pre-Orders can be reviewed, updated, or cancelled at any time before pre-order items are released,” Microsoft explained. “Prices for pre-order items are covered by the Pre-order Price Guarantee, which describes what happens if prices change after you purchase a pre-order item. A credit card is required for pre-order, but your card will not be charged until your order is shipped or the product is made available for download. If you wish to return an item that was pre-ordered, the 30-day return period begins: when downloadable products are delivered electronically to your account; when physical products are shipped.”
Windows 7: Home Premium vs. Professional vs. Ultimate
Microsoft publishes its own comparisons
Windows 7

It was bound that with Microsoft having made public the pricing details on the next iteration of the Windows client, the company would also introduce initiatives designed to help consumers decide on the Windows 7 edition best suited for them. And what better way than an operating system editions measuring contest? The software giant and partners have already started accepting pre-orders for Windows 7, which is scheduled to launch officially on October 22, 2009.
Microsoft is, of course, offering a Compare editions page set up as an overall guide highlighting the differences between Windows 7 Home Premium, Professional, and Ultimate. But don’t expect an in-depth, feature by feature, painfully exhaustive comparison. Instead, the software giant is offering a general perspective over what it considers the main two editions of Windows 7 and the high-end SKU of the operating system.
Windows 7 “Makes the things you do every day easier with improved desktop navigation. Faster and easier to launch applications and find the documents you use most often. Make your web experience faster, easier, and safer than ever with Internet Explorer 8. Easy to create a home network and connect your PCs to a printer with HomeGroup. Watch many of your favorite TV shows for free when and where you want with Internet TV,” are the tasks enumerated by Microsoft that can be performed by all three editions.
Windows 7 editions comparison

When it comes down to running “many existing Windows XP productivity applications in Windows XP Mode. Connect to company networks easily and more securely with Domain Join. Recover your data easily with automatic backup to your home and business network,” only the Professional and Ultimate editions of Windows 7 will do the trick.
Windows 7 Ultimate offers a few extra features on top of all other editions. In this regard, Microsoft has chosen to highlight BitLocker, an encryption technology for the computers running the platform but also for removable and portable storage devices. In addition, Windows 7 Ultimate is the only version of the OS, with the exception of Enterprise, that can easily jump from one Multilingual User Interface (MUI) to another, seamlessly jumping among 35 supported languages.
Windows 7 Official Pricing Details Available
Windows 7 Home Premium is cheaper than Windows Vista Home Premium

Pricing was the last detail that Microsoft still had to reveal when it comes down to Windows 7. The Redmond-based company certainly took its due time, but the prices for the retail and upgrade packages of Windows 7 have now been finally made public. According to the software giant, the prices for Windows 7 will enable consumers to pay less and get more value for their money. The truth is that, with a small exception, Windows 7 editions will cost the same as the Windows Vista SKUs.
“So here’s the low-down on pricing for Windows 7. The estimated retail prices for upgrade packaged retail product of Windows 7 in the U.S. are: Windows 7 Home Premium (Upgrade): $119.99; Windows 7 Professional (Upgrade): $199.99; and Windows 7 Ultimate (Upgrade): $219.99,” revealed Brandon LeBlanc, Windows Communications Manager on the Windows Client Communications Team (emphasis added). Just in case you are curios, the Windows Vista Home Premium (Upgrade) costs $129.99; the Windows Vista Business (Upgrade) is $199.99; while the Windows Vista Ultimate Ultimate (Upgrade) is priced at $219.99.
“The estimated retail prices for full packaged retail product of Windows 7 in the U.S. are: Windows 7 Home Premium (Full): $199.99; Windows 7 Professional (Full): $299.99; and Windows 7 Ultimate (Full): $319.99,” LeBlanc added. In contrast, Windows Vista Home Premium (Full) ERP is $239.99; the Windows Vista Business (Full) costs $299.99; while the Windows Vista Ultimate Ultimate (Full) is $319.99.
In this regard, Microsoft is in fact offering a reduced price only for the Home Premium edition of Windows 7 in comparison with the same SKU of Windows Vista. “For Windows 7, we are reducing the price on our most popular retail product for customers, the Home Premium Upgrade, by approximately 10% (depending on the market). In the U.S., this means a customer buying Windows 7 Home Premium upgrade will pay only $119.99 instead of the $129.99 being charged today for its predecessor,” LeBlanc stated. “Windows 7 Home Premium full retail product is $40.00 less than Windows Vista Home Premium today.”
Microsoft to Prep a Bing Mobile Application
The service will launch in Europe too
Bing application for mobile phones

At the beginning of this month, Microsoft launched into the wild its latest search-decision engine, Bing, and it seems that the company is getting ready to come to the market with a Bing application for mobile phones as well. The software solution should come as the successor of the already known Live Search Mobile app for Windows Mobile, which was a rather attractive solution in the end.
The new mobile application should be on its way to Windows Mobile-powered handsets in the near future, at least this is what a Twitter post shows. Given the fact that Bing has replaced Live Search, the new app might be only an upgrade/rebranding of the existing software solution, though there are also great chances that the Redmond-based company will deliver a more advanced solution.
As many of you might already know, the Live Search mobile application included intelligent voice search and location-based search capabilities, which, for some time, were not available with other solutions on the market. According to istartedsomething, the new Bing mobile app should include some of the features Live Search sports, though it seems that a wide range of novelties should be included in the package as well.
Among the features the upcoming Bing mobile application is expected to include, we can count support for Sidekick and BREW-supported phones, besides the Windows Mobile and Blackberry devices, and it seems that Microsoft will have the app present in all Verizon BREW phones that will be launched starting with November this year. In addition, the service is expected to become available in the European market as well, while the UK, France and Italy will also have local content on it.
According to the news, the service and the application are very likely to be launched either in August or September. The screenshots below are meant to provide us with an idea of what the app for Windows Mobile should look like, thought there are great chances that some design modifications will be applied and that some of the new Bing features will be included in the app too.