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									<title>test to write</title>
									<link>http://www.fropper.com/ezBlog/hardiboy1981</link>
									<description>hi</description>
									<language>en-us</language>
									<pubDate>2008-Jul-28, 11:42:37</pubDate>
									<lastBuildDate>1970-Jan-01, 05:29:59</lastBuildDate>
				
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						<title>Jaane tu ....</title>
						<link>http://www.fropper.com/post/18953</link>
						<description><![CDATA[Movie name: Jaane tu ...na jaane tanu  Genre: Comedy  Actor/ Actresses: Imran Khan  Review: nice movie - for youth   comedy is nice ..songs are good   nice for one time watch]]></description>
						<pubDate>Jul 28, '08</pubDate>
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						<title>iPhone</title>
						<link>http://www.fropper.com/post/16865</link>
						<description><![CDATA[The iPhone is an Internet-enabled multimedia mobile phone designed and marketed by Apple Inc. It has a multi-touch screen with virtual keyboard and buttons, but a minimal amount of hardware input. The iPhone's functions include those of a camera phone and portable media player (iPod) in addition to text messaging and visual voicemail. It also offers Internet services including e-mail, web browsing, and local Wi-Fi connectivity. The first generation phone hardware was quad-band GSM with EDGE; the second generation uses UMTS and HSDPA.[21]   Apple announced the iPhone on January 9, 2007.[22] The announcement was preceded by rumors and speculations that circulated for several months.[23] The iPhone was initially introduced in the United States on June 29, 2007 and is in the process of being introduced worldwide. It was named Time magazine's Invention of the Year in 2007.[24] On June 9, 2008, the iPhone 3G was unveiled, which supports 3G phone standard and includes Assisted GPS&nbsp;   According to The Wall Street Journal, the first generation iPhone was manufactured on contract in the Longhua, Shenzhen factory of the Taiwanese company Foxconn.[25] Conditions for workers at the factory have been a matter of controversy.[26]    Screen and interface  The 3.5 in liquid crystal display (320&times;480 px at 160 ppi) HVGA touchscreen topped with optical-quality, scratch-resistant glass[27] is specifically created for use with a finger, or multiple fingers for multi-touch sensing. Because the screen is a capacitive touchscreen, bare skin is required; a stylus or a normal glove prevents the necessary electrical conductivity.[28][29][30][31]   Almost all input is given through the touch screen, which understands complex gestures using multi-touch. The iPhone user interface enables the user to move the content itself up or down by a touch-drag motion of the finger, much as one would freely slide or flick a playing card across a table with a finger. Zooming in and out of web pages and photos is accomplished by placing two fingers (e.g. thumb and forefinger) on the screen and spreading them farther apart or closer together, as if stretching or squeezing the image. Similarly, scrolling through a long list in a menu works as if the list is pasted on the outer surface of a wheel: the wheel can be &quot;spun&quot; by sliding a finger over the display from bottom to top (or vice versa). In either case, the list continues to move based on the flicking motion of the finger, slowly decelerating as if affected by friction. In this way, the interface simulates the physics of a real 3D object. There are other visual effects, such as horizontally sliding sub-selections and co-selections from right and left, vertically sliding system menus from the bottom (e.g. favorites, keyboard), and menus and widgets that turn around to allow settings to be configured on their back sides.   The display responds to three sensors. A proximity sensor shuts off the display and touchscreen when the iPhone is brought near the face to save battery power and to prevent inadvertent inputs from the user's face and ears. An ambient light sensor adjusts the display brightness which in turn saves battery power. A 3-axis accelerometer senses the orientation of the phone and changes the screen accordingly.[32] Photo browsing, web browsing, and music playing support both upright and left or right widescreen orientations, while videos play in only one widescreen orientation.   A software update allowed the first generation iPhone to use cell towers and Wi-Fi networks to locate itself despite lacking a hardware GPS. The iPhone 3G includes aGPS but also uses cell towers and Wi-Fi for location finding.   A single &quot;home&quot; hardware button below the display brings up the main menu. Subselections are made via the touchscreen. The iPhone utilizes a full-paged display, with context-specific submenus at the top and/or bottom of each page, sometimes depending on screen orientation. Detail pages display the equivalent of a &quot;Back&quot; button to return to the parent menu.   The iPhone has three physical switches on its sides: wake/sleep, volume up/down, and ringer on/off. These are made of plastic on the original iPhone but metal on the iPhone 3G. All other multimedia and phone operations are done via the touchscreen.    Audio  The iPhone's headphones are similar to those of current iPods, but also incorporate a microphone. A multipurpose button in the microphone can be used to play or pause music, skip tracks, and answer or end phone calls without touching the iPhone. The 3.5 mm TRS connector for the headphones is located on the top left corner (as seen from front upright). The headphone socket on the original iPhone is recessed into the casing and is narrow when compared to some headphone jacks, making it incompatible with most headphones without the use of an adapter.[33] The iPhone 3G has a flush mounted headphone socket.   Wireless earpieces that use Bluetooth technology to communicate with the iPhone are sold separately. It does not support stereo audio.   The loudspeaker is used both for handsfree operations and media playback, but does not support voice recording.   Composite or component video at up to 576i and stereo audio can be output from the dock connector using an adapter sold by Apple.[34]    Battery  The iPhone features a built-in rechargeable battery that is not intended to be user-replaceable, similar to existing iPods, but dissimilar to most existing cellular phones.[35][36] If the battery prematurely reaches the end of its life time, the phone can be returned to Apple and replaced for free while still in warranty,[37] one year at purchase and extended to two years with AppleCare. The cost of having Apple provide a new battery and replace it when the iPhone is out of warranty is US$79 and US$6.95 for shipping.[38]   Since July 2007 third party battery packs have been available[39] at a much lower price than Apple's own battery replacement program. These kits often include a small screwdriver and an instruction leaflet, but as with many newer iPod models the battery has been soldered in. Therefore a soldering iron is required to install the new battery.   The original iPhone's battery was stated to be capable of providing up to seven hours of video, six hours of web browsing, eight hours of talk time, 24 hours of music or up to 250 hours on standby.[27] Apple's site says that the battery life &quot;is designed to retain up to 80% of its original capacity after 400 full charge and discharge cycles&quot;,[40] which is comparable to the iPod batteries.   The iPhone 3G's battery is stated to be capable of providing up to seven hours of video, six hours of web browsing on Wi-Fi or five on 3G, ten hours of 2G talk time, or five on 3G, 24 hours of music, or 300 hours of standby.[20]   The Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, a consumer advocate group, has sent a complaint to Apple and AT&amp;T over the fee that consumers have to pay to have the battery replaced.[41] Though the battery replacement service and its pricing was not made known to buyers until the day the product was launched,[41][42] a similar service had been well established for the iPods by Apple and various third party service providers.    SIM card   The original iPhone's SIM card slot shown as open, with ejected SIM card.The SIM card is located in a slot at the top of the device. The iPhone is usually sold with a simlock preventing the use of SIM cards from different mobile networks.    Storage  The iPhone was initially released with two options for internal storage size, either a 4 GB or 8 GB flash drive (manufactured by Samsung) model was available. On September 5, 2007, Apple announced they were discontinuing the 4 GB models.[43] On February 5, 2008, Apple announced the addition of a 16 GB model to the iPhone lineup.[44] The iPhone does not contain any external memory card slots for expanded storage.    Included Items and Accessories  Both the iPhone and the iPhone 3G came with a series of included accessories and items when purchased.    Items common to both versions  Appropriate documentation  Stereo headset with mic  Dock connector to USB cable  Cleaning/polishing cloth   Original iPhone  Dock  Standard USB power adapter   iPhone 3G  SIM ejector tool  Updated &quot;mini&quot; USB power adapter   Software  Main article: iPhone OS  iPhone OS is the operating system that runs on the iPhone and iPod touch. It is based on a variant of the same basic Mach kernel that is found in Mac OS X. iPhone OS includes the software component &quot;Core Animation&quot; from Mac OS X v10.5 which, together with the PowerVR MBX 3D hardware, is responsible for the smooth animations used in its user interface. The operating system takes up considerably less than half a GB of the device's total 8 GB or 16 GB storage.[45] It will be capable of supporting bundled and future applications from Apple.   Like an iPod, the iPhone is managed with iTunes version 7.3 or later, which is compatible with Mac OS X version 10.4.10 or later, and 32-bit Windows XP or Vista.[46] The release of iTunes 7.6 expanded this support to include 64-bit versions of XP and Vista,[47] and a workaround has been discovered for previous 64-bit Windows operating systems.[48]   The iPhone's CPU is an ARM-based processor instead of the x86 and PowerPC processors used in Apple's other computer products. This means applications can not simply be copied from Mac OS X and have to be written and compiled specifically for the iPhone. Additionally, the Safari web browser supports web applications written with AJAX, which, by design, are platform agnostic applications.   ]]></description>
						<pubDate>Jun 13, '08</pubDate>
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