My nephew is very keen on trains, vehicles, dinosaurs and stuff like that. Live dinosaurs are hard to find and despite the cold Finnish winter even mammoths aren't that common.. But I happen to live next to a train station so I figured I might shoot some exciting videos for him to view =) Thus, I took my Lumia 920 into freezing conditions (it was around -10 to -15 °C ) and took a few short clips of trains passing by/stopping. The last one that with train going full speed just about a meter away was actually quite an experience to myself too!
Overall I think the video quality is exceptional, very crisp and steady thanks to the optical image stabilization found on the device. The noisy hum of the full speed trains are quite well recorded as well. Check out the 1080p full HD videos on YouTube!
Random thoughts and notes on technology, science, nature, traveling etc.
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Monday, November 26, 2012
Wireless charging with Fatboy pillow and Lumia 920
Here's a really short video of how easy charging can be with the Nokia Lumia 920. Just lay down your phone on the pillow and it'll start charging =) Check it out on YouTube:
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Nokia Lumia 920 - my new phone!
I've got a new phone again - Nokia Lumia 920! I wanted it in yellow and boy it looks hot! Had my doubts about the glossy finish, but it's really neat. It's a nice, fresh contrast to the classy, matte black Lumia 800.
This time it's not about an actual need to take up years gap of advances as it was when I switched from iPhone 3G to Windows Phone a year ago, but more of an huge interest on the new, feature-rich WP8 flagship device from Nokia. Especially the low-light camera capabilities interest me since I like taking photos and on mixed/low-light, Lumia 800 can't do squat (see sample below).
In addition to the image stabilization feature, the phone has been packed with so much cool stuff - the super sensitive, high resolution screen (yes it looks amazingly sharp compared to Lumia 800), it has WP8 with more speed, power and customization + apps (I can now play Angry Birds Space and Star Wars!) ;D plus NFC and wireless charging that I haven't had time to test yet!
Based on two days testing, I can say that yes, Nokia really delivers this time and the floating lens stuff is not a gimmick! Sure, the photos taken in really dark night condition tend out to have some blur when zoomed 100% but most of the time the photos are truly remarkable.
PS. the phone is a bit bulky if you compare it to other smartphones out there, but I think this has been made into a much bigger "issue" than it really is. The size and weight really doesn't bother me at all, if anything it feels really solid and fits perfectly to hand!
PPS. Don't get me wrong, Lumia 800 is still a very solid smartphone and takes great daylight photos. Will get WP 7.8 on it when it comes out.
This time it's not about an actual need to take up years gap of advances as it was when I switched from iPhone 3G to Windows Phone a year ago, but more of an huge interest on the new, feature-rich WP8 flagship device from Nokia. Especially the low-light camera capabilities interest me since I like taking photos and on mixed/low-light, Lumia 800 can't do squat (see sample below).
Sample comparison. From the left: Lumia 800, Lumia 920 auto settings, Lumia 920 Night Shot mode (all lights are out inside unlike in the first two shots)
In addition to the image stabilization feature, the phone has been packed with so much cool stuff - the super sensitive, high resolution screen (yes it looks amazingly sharp compared to Lumia 800), it has WP8 with more speed, power and customization + apps (I can now play Angry Birds Space and Star Wars!) ;D plus NFC and wireless charging that I haven't had time to test yet!
Based on two days testing, I can say that yes, Nokia really delivers this time and the floating lens stuff is not a gimmick! Sure, the photos taken in really dark night condition tend out to have some blur when zoomed 100% but most of the time the photos are truly remarkable.
PS. the phone is a bit bulky if you compare it to other smartphones out there, but I think this has been made into a much bigger "issue" than it really is. The size and weight really doesn't bother me at all, if anything it feels really solid and fits perfectly to hand!
PPS. Don't get me wrong, Lumia 800 is still a very solid smartphone and takes great daylight photos. Will get WP 7.8 on it when it comes out.
Labels:
low-light,
Lumia,
Lumia 920,
Nokia,
photography,
sample,
Windows Phone,
WP8
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Lock screen wallpapers for Nokia Lumia 920
Earlier this year I posted some lock screen photos for WP7 (480x800 pixels), but now that WP8 is out I figured I should post some of the wallpapers in higher resolution. I decided to set the images in 768x1280 pixel resolution because that's what the awesome Lumia 920 is sporting.
Unfortunately, I still have to wait for my phone since Nokia is having problems delivering the devices to retailers.. even it's own flagship store in Helsinki where I pre-ordered! =/
Anyway, click on the image below to get the wallpapers from my SkyDrive!
Unfortunately, I still have to wait for my phone since Nokia is having problems delivering the devices to retailers.. even it's own flagship store in Helsinki where I pre-ordered! =/
Anyway, click on the image below to get the wallpapers from my SkyDrive!
Labels:
lock screen,
Lumia,
Lumia 920,
Nokia,
wallpaper,
Windows Phone,
WP8
Sunday, November 11, 2012
Xbox 360 Halo 4 Limited Edition
For quite some time I've considered buying a new Xbox console because the old one was quite noisy and lacking with some ports and built-in wireless. So when Halo 4 was announced Microsoft also announced a special edition Xbox 360 console to be released simultaneously with the game on November 6th 2012. As a Halo franchise fan, that was the perfect time and excuse to finally buy the new console.
Even though the Xbox Halo 4 Limited Edition console is quite expensive and everyone is expecting a totally new Xbox hardware next year (rumored to be Xbox 720 or something), I thought what the heck! It looks great and unique, ships with two cool controllers, Halo 4 bundle copy and has huge hard drive. And yes, it's very quiet. No sound at all if you've installed the game, at least. On my old Xbox 360 Elite the humming was still quite loud even when game had been installed.
So here's just a few pics of the console and controllers. It has a mechanical looking, Forerunner-ish stripes in cyan and silver and the plastic cover is transparent both on the console and the controllers. Also all the lights are blue instead of the classic Xbox green. I'll write more about my impressions of Halo 4 on another post =)
Labels:
console,
Halo,
Halo 4,
Limited Edition,
video games,
Xbox,
Xbox 360
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Mobile broadband vs. fiber optic connection
The past month has been very busy for me! I've got a new job as Web Designer situated in the capital city and thus I've also moved to greater Helsinki region. This is the reason for such a quiet season on my blog, sorry about that!
There's still much stuff for me to sort out around here, but finally today I got my new internet connection working. For a short period I trialed a mobile broadband, "mokkula" as we call it here. For basic web surfing it was ok, but the speeds were varying a lot and the capability to sustain multiple connections failed to impress, even despite the 4G DC (?) signal was strong all the time. I need a solid connection for average web/download use that works even if I'm playing online on Xbox.
That is why I decided to return the mokkula and found out that there is an optical fiber connection available in my apartment building. They said it's the top-notch technology, especially designed for data transfers and fast speeds. This is also the impression I had of fiber optics and a quick Speedtest.net testing gave very, very consistent speeds. Almost all tests capped steady at 10.8 Mb/s for download and 2.0 Mb/s for upload. The ping number was constantly below 10ms, which is really impressive compared to the 60-80ms I got with the mokkula!
So this was my first post from my new home =) I've got some other new gadgets I haven't tried yet - hopefully I'll manage to test and write about them soon!
There's still much stuff for me to sort out around here, but finally today I got my new internet connection working. For a short period I trialed a mobile broadband, "mokkula" as we call it here. For basic web surfing it was ok, but the speeds were varying a lot and the capability to sustain multiple connections failed to impress, even despite the 4G DC (?) signal was strong all the time. I need a solid connection for average web/download use that works even if I'm playing online on Xbox.
That is why I decided to return the mokkula and found out that there is an optical fiber connection available in my apartment building. They said it's the top-notch technology, especially designed for data transfers and fast speeds. This is also the impression I had of fiber optics and a quick Speedtest.net testing gave very, very consistent speeds. Almost all tests capped steady at 10.8 Mb/s for download and 2.0 Mb/s for upload. The ping number was constantly below 10ms, which is really impressive compared to the 60-80ms I got with the mokkula!
Speedtest.net results for my new broadband (Sonera's fiber optic) internet connection.
So this was my first post from my new home =) I've got some other new gadgets I haven't tried yet - hopefully I'll manage to test and write about them soon!
Labels:
broadband,
fiber optic,
internet,
mobile,
mokkula,
other,
Sonera,
technology,
Xbox
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
The new Outlook and Skydrive
Recently Microsoft has been modernizing it's core products in quite a fast pace. I've already talked about Windows 8, but now also Outlook.com and Skydrive.com have new, fresh and modern appearance and they're totally worth a try.
SkyDrive
I've used SkyDrive a lot in the past year because of the great integration with my Nokia Lumia 800 Windows Phone. Instead of always connecting my phone to the computer to download the images, I quite often upload them to the cloud storage straight from my phone. The SkyDrive app on WP7 is pretty neat, but now that Skydrive.com has been totally modernized, I'm very pleased to use it on my computer.
The interface is very clear, simple and fits greatly to the browser window. You can easily have side panel to show extra info, or access the settings or social media share options, etc. The new SkyDrive site uses some modern HTML techniques that enables e.g. re-arranging photos with drag-and-drop gestures and uploading photos by dragging them from your desktop to the browser window, skipping the annoying "Select files to upload" type of dialogs!
One of the few things that annoy me is the fact that you can't rotate images that are already uploaded to SkyDrive. That should be fixed since sometimes the camera doesn't get the rotation of the image right, causing many portrait images rotated into landscape pics.
Outlook.com
I haven't used Hotmail much since it's always been my secondary email, but with the re-branding (to Outlook.com) I'm considering using it more than before. First of all the web email interface is better than anything else I've tried, even Gmail seems less easy to use compared to it. You can change the interface main color, reading pane position and more very easily.
One cool thing is also an extra panel that shows social media (FB, Twitter) content from the person who's email you are reading, nice! You can also chat on Facebook (also on SkyDrive) directly from Outlook.com without need to swap back to other browser tab or window. It's the same high social media integration that I've seen on Windows Phone.
Outlook.com could have many inboxes, from 3rd party services like Gmail, but I haven't tried that yet. What I did like was the option to create aliases for my old Hotmail account. The old email, macjuhruo@hotmail.com, obviously isn't the best possible, so just with few clicks I created a juho.ruohola@outlook.com alias that automatically forwards the mails to my Hotmail-account and inbox. There's still plenty of settings and stuff I haven't tried, but overall the impression of outlook.com is very positive.
SkyDrive
I've used SkyDrive a lot in the past year because of the great integration with my Nokia Lumia 800 Windows Phone. Instead of always connecting my phone to the computer to download the images, I quite often upload them to the cloud storage straight from my phone. The SkyDrive app on WP7 is pretty neat, but now that Skydrive.com has been totally modernized, I'm very pleased to use it on my computer.
The interface is very clear, simple and fits greatly to the browser window. You can easily have side panel to show extra info, or access the settings or social media share options, etc. The new SkyDrive site uses some modern HTML techniques that enables e.g. re-arranging photos with drag-and-drop gestures and uploading photos by dragging them from your desktop to the browser window, skipping the annoying "Select files to upload" type of dialogs!
One of the few things that annoy me is the fact that you can't rotate images that are already uploaded to SkyDrive. That should be fixed since sometimes the camera doesn't get the rotation of the image right, causing many portrait images rotated into landscape pics.
Outlook.com
I haven't used Hotmail much since it's always been my secondary email, but with the re-branding (to Outlook.com) I'm considering using it more than before. First of all the web email interface is better than anything else I've tried, even Gmail seems less easy to use compared to it. You can change the interface main color, reading pane position and more very easily.
One cool thing is also an extra panel that shows social media (FB, Twitter) content from the person who's email you are reading, nice! You can also chat on Facebook (also on SkyDrive) directly from Outlook.com without need to swap back to other browser tab or window. It's the same high social media integration that I've seen on Windows Phone.
Outlook.com could have many inboxes, from 3rd party services like Gmail, but I haven't tried that yet. What I did like was the option to create aliases for my old Hotmail account. The old email, macjuhruo@hotmail.com, obviously isn't the best possible, so just with few clicks I created a juho.ruohola@outlook.com alias that automatically forwards the mails to my Hotmail-account and inbox. There's still plenty of settings and stuff I haven't tried, but overall the impression of outlook.com is very positive.
Labels:
cloud,
Facebook,
Microsoft,
other,
Outlook,
SkyDrive,
technology,
Twitter,
webmail,
Windows Phone
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