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For $20, however, you can get a hold of Sprint's newest 3G smartphone, the ZTE Fury--the very device CNET's Scott Webster anticipated yesterday. But that's only after you sign a two-year contract and send in a $50 rebate, of course. Aside from sounding like it needs to take an Adderall, the ZTE Fury is powered by a 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor and is capable of holding up to 4GB of internal memory. There's room to add up to 32GB of memory as well, and the device has hot-spot capabilities that let up to five Wi-Fi devices share a network connection.
It runs on Android Gingerbread, has a 3.5-inch capacitive display, and a 1500 mAh battery inside, The handset also has a 5-megapixel camera with LED flash, The phone will be available starting March 11 and as previously noted, will set your wallet back $20, Which, it so happens, is how much my wallet cost anyway, The ZTE Fury is fox & poppies iphone case an Android Gingerbread device running on Sprint's 3G network and is loaded with a Snapdragon processor, These days, you can't get much for 20 bucks, The pair of jeans I bought yesterday cost more than that, and I'm pretty sure the ol' Jackson barely gives me enough gas to drive to my aunt's house, who lives two blocks away from me..
We're not sure what the developer Pyrolia has in store for the new iPad and its Retina display, but this is an app that does a good job showing off the graphical capabilities of the iPad. An iPhone version is in the works and Pyrolia plans on adding additional car models. The app normally costs $4.99 but it's on sale through March 11 for 99 cents. If you're a classic-car enthusiast and own an iPad, grab Road Inc. while it's on sale for 99 cents. Road Inc. has been out since last year and has generally received very good reviews from publications and users. It basically turns your iPad into a digital coffee table book or, as the company puts it, "Road Inc. is a fully interactive anthology of cars that marries the cutting edge of digital technology to traditional publishing craftsmanship."There's no game here but there is a ton of content, including a "3D museum," 3,000 archival documents, and 70 videos that cover 50 landmark automobiles from literally every angle (you can spin the cars around and get a 360-degree view).
With over 450,000 apps now available on Google Play (aka Android Market), quadrupling since July 2010, dastardly 'Droid-damaging deeds and malicious money-making mischief is on the rise, Your phone's increasingly under threat from phishing, banking trojans, spyware, bots, root exploits, SMS fraudsters, premium dialers, fake installers and backdoor defilers (ok, I made the last one fox & poppies iphone case up), Of the 41 anti-malware products tested by AV-Test recently, only 17 detected over 65 per cent of threats from the 618 types of malicious Android APK files identified, That is considered by the report's authors as being "very good" protection, Of those 17, a mere seven had a rate higher than 90 per cent..
The following apps got a gold star, a pat on the back and an interview at Oxbridge for being in the top set. (Extra bonus points to Dr Web for being the only one to correctly spell 'Light'.). Among the second group of 65-90 per centers were well-known PC anti-virus titles such as AVG, Norton and Trend. However, a number of those could easily move into the top group if they covered more of the 20 identified "families" of malware -- not all of which pose a critical threat. "Some products miss the top group only due to their low detection of one or two malware families," said the report. "You can expect better signatures for these families to be added in the near future. The detection of specific families can also depend on each vendor's definition of malware. Some families might only be annoying advertisement apps."In light of the load of duff security apps out there, the not-always-obvious threat from a malware mugging is reason enough to choose your protection carefully. "Even if Google now checks all apps on its Android Market, you should consider installing a security app, because nowadays the malware authors are able to load their malicious code after a seemingly clean app has been installed," the report added.
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