
Nokia N95 best feature is probably its video and photo capabilities, the N95 has a huge 5 mega pixel digital camera with 20X zoom capable of taking pictures up to the size of 2592 x 1944 pixels and can also record video at 640×480 pixels at an amazing 30 frames per second, almost doubling the video quality of other phones. Apart from watching films or taking pictures the N95 is a full on music player complete with FM radio and built in stereo speakers, it supports the most popular music formats including WMA, MP3, MIDI, AAC and more. Getting your music on to the N95 is easy using a computer and the software provided and you can store quite a lot on it as the phone has 160MB of memory built in, this is expandable using memory cards up to maximum of 2GB.
Nokia N95 is sure one of the most impressive handsets that have been introduced to the mobile market. Such is the popularity of the handset that it has now been termed as the king of the N series. True, the handset is not a perfect substitute for a computer, but is indeed loaded with many good features to make it stand tall amongst its competitors. The handset is suited for all – regular user, a business man and a high-end user. One of the most talked about feature of Nokia N95 is its whooping 5 MP camera.
Nokia-N95 is powered by 3G and is the first device in the genre of N series to include HSDPA technology. The Nokia N95 is a master piece of modern technology and is part of a series of Smartphone’s labeled the “Nseries”. Released on to the market back in March 2007 Nokia N95 contains a mass of multimedia functions that will keep you entertained for hours.
Nokia announced the availability of the 3G USA version of the N95, the 5-megapixel dual-slider that runs on Symbian 9.2 over S60 interface and packs anything you can imagine, from 2.6” QVGA display to GPS and WiFi. The “multimedia computer” is currently the most advanced Nokia portable phone and the one with best camera, which has resolution of 5-megapixels, auto-focus, powerful LED flash and advanced interface.
The Nokia N95 is a great smartphone that combines imagery and audio firstly the N95 has an impressive 5 megapixel camera so takes great snaps, and then it has an FM radio and MP3 player for those that adore the music side. Please Purchase online http://www.phoneandbeyond.com
Watch the video related to modern technology
In 1991, a small Medieval prayer book was sold at auction. Miraculously, some original writings of Archimedes, the brilliant Greek mathematician, were discovered hidden beneath the religious text. Through scholarly detective work with the help of modern technology, this book now reveals Archimedes’ stunningly original concepts, ideas, and theories—revelations that, if known sooner, might have reshaped our world. Many historic figures have been hailed as ahead of their time. Few—if any—are said to be centuries ahead of their time. The Einstein of his era, Archimedes had a sophisticated understanding of mathematics, and designed marvelous war machines for his native Syracuse to use against the invading Romans. Many of Archimedes’ works disappeared during the Middle Ages, but some survived to help inspire the scientific revolution in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. One document that seemed irretrievably lost was his final treatise The Method, which reputedly explained how he achieved his brilliant results—secrets he revealed nowhere else. Now, over 2200 years later, the discovery of The Method has experts and scientists dreaming of what might have been if Renaissance thinkers and other great minds had known of his ideas and been able to build on them. NOVA explores Archimedes’ rare writings, as well as the book’s mysterious beginnings, tumultuous history and amazing discovery. As the ancient text comes back from the dead, it unlocks its revolutionary contents—the <b>…</b>
Help answer the question about modern technology
How is modern technology responsible for our environmental problems?"Modern Technology owes ecology an apology"
Alan M. Eddison




Internet!!! You can communicate with many people online throughout the world! This is also how many companies communicate when they are helping clients from across the world. Also it has created so many jobs such as web design and development, internet marketing, online video etc.
[Quick answer:
It has definitely made our lives easier and more convenient but it has also made us more lazy than we should be. Innovation has obviously helped us, with cell phones, hybrid vehicles, and stuff like that, but in the case of cell phones, the question really is if we all actually need one in the first place -- it's really just a luxury good.
As for cheating, exam rooms just bar cell phones altogether now. You can't use them to communicate or use them as clocks. Being caught using one is too high a cost to pay for cheating.
Just some stuff to get you started. It seems more like an opinion question so you should have stuff to add as well.]
@ravendearest “as a native American and a practicing witch” your a f*cking idiot
i was in the Louvre museum and i touch the Sumerian sculpture..it was definitely a watch.
…
The idea is to have a forward observer, maybe on a hill nearby. You take your best bet, fire a test salvo. The observer tells you where it lands, by flag signals, telegraph or telephone wires, heliograph etc, and you correct for it, up a bit. left a bit, sort of. Earlier artillery was mostly with ships, and the cannon balls were skimmed along the sea surface, at fairly close range, so they could hit the side of the ship, something like ten pin bowling.
Yes, instead of answering these questions, I should be praying and/or reading the Bible.
One of the benefits of modern technology is that you can ask this question to thousands of people you will never meet.
One of the undesirable effects is that many people no longer can think for themselves.
Effects. 1. Your question 2. My answer.
Pros:
The world is smaller (it's easier to contact/find people anywhere)
Information is sent/received with more speed/accuracy
Fights the horrors of boredom
Life is "made easier" (theoretically) with gadgets that cook for you, wash for you, iron for you, dry for you, calculate for you, record your life, etc.
In case of emergency, most everyone has a cell phone
Palm pilots, laptops/computers, and similar devices help organize full schedules
Automobiles make travel more comfortable and gets you there faster
…etc.
Cons:
We're all spoiled (that's an opinion, not necessarily a fact)
In case of a power-outage, most of our lives must wait until the lights come back on.
Conversation and relationships are often replaced with telephone calls, emails, and Instant Messaging
Everything is controlled by computers (well, not everything…), which lack common sense and personality.
The media can "steer" the culture it influences wherever it wants… example: body image, power=rich…
…all that to say, we've become lazy because technology does everything for us… the gadgets that were created to make our lives easier just make our lives busier (we have more time, so we do more things)… it's very easy to manipulate large groups of people, but then again, it's also easier to help large groups of people at one time.
You decide
I love my laptop, camera, MP3 player, Microwave etc… but I'm also somewhat addicted, and am often too lazy to go to the Cinema for a movie (I can download it), buy a CD (I can download it), go out for a nice meal (microwave something)… etc.
Hope that helped!
Music, like the words in a novel, are the property of the one who wrote them. Downloading without paying is pretty much the same as stealing a CD from Barnes & Noble.
We just make it different in our head, but, you're taking what the band created, without paying the band. Listening to the radio is different. The radio (even on the NET) is providing that service, WITH the band's approval.
Napster, and other sites are providing the music, withOUT the band's approval.
Dan in Miami
iv got to say hes right on this one. the weird thing is all of this is even talked about in the Bible. it talks about the Flood, the giant Niphilim, Enoch and the Garden of Eden, the Stories of the Sumerian tie in Directly with things found in Genesis.
it would be utterly Impossible for men 6,000 years ago to Coincidently imagine these types of technological phenomenons without some sort of VISUAL EXAMPLES of them. when the Annunaki left, their technology left with them.
iLL .
Dude, of all that stuff you just mentioned my channel is huge effing storehouse of information regarding that, drop by.
you fuckin idiots, the egyptians invented ipod too
im sorry this is just bullshit to me… if they were so advanced why havent we found a single shred of EVIDENCE….im not denying that some ancient civilisations were extremely advanced like the egyptians and aztecs however i thinks its just stupid to think they had such advanced tech. xD
Cell phone was not invented by a caucasian it was invented by Henry Sampson a black man.
YOU need to educate yourself and your mother: http://www.blackinventions101.com/inventionslist.html
air conditioning unit Frederick M. Jones July 12, 1949
almanac Benjamin Banneker Approx 1791
auto cut-off switch Granville T. Woods January 1, 1839
auto fishing devise G. Cook May 30, 1899
automatic gear shift Richard Spikes February 28, 1932
baby buggy W.H. Richardson June 18, 1899
bicycle frame L.R. Johnson October 10, 1899
biscuit cutter A.P. Ashbourne November 30, 1875
blood plasma bag Charles Drew Approx. 1945
cellular phone Henry T. Sampson July 6, 1971
chamber commode T. Elkins January 3, 1897
clothes dryer G. T. Sampson June 6, 1862
curtain rod S. R. Scratton November 30, 1889
curtain rod support William S. Grant August 4, 1896
door knob O. Dorsey December 10, 1878
door stop O. Dorsey December 10, 1878
dust pan Lawrence P. Ray August 3, 1897
egg beater Willie Johnson February 5, 1884
electric lampbulb Lewis Latimer March 21, 1882
elevator Alexander Miles October 11, 1867
eye protector P. Johnson November 2, 1880
fire escape ladder J. W. Winters May 7, 1878
fire extinguisher T. Marshall October 26, 1872
folding bed L. C. Bailey July 18, 1899
folding chair Brody & Surgwar June 11, 1889
fountain pen W. B. Purvis January 7, 1890
furniture caster O. A. Fisher 1878
gas mask Garrett Morgan October 13, 1914
golf tee T. Grant December 12, 1899
guitar Robert F. Flemming, Jr. March 3, 1886
hair brush Lydia O. Newman November 15, 18–
hand stamp Walter B. Purvis February 27 1883
horse shoe J. Ricks March 30, 1885
ice cream scooper A. L. Cralle February 2, 1897
improv. sugar making Norbet Rillieux December 10, 1846
insect-destroyer gun A. C. Richard February 28, 1899
ironing board Sarah Boone December 30, 1887
key chain F. J. Loudin January 9, 1894
lantern Michael C. Harvey August 19, 1884
lawn mower L. A. Burr May 19, 1889
lawn sprinkler J. W. Smith May 4, 1897
lemon squeezer J. Thomas White December 8, 1893
lock W. A. Martin July 23, 18–
lubricating cup Ellijah McCoy November 15, 1895
lunch pail James Robinson 1887
mail box Paul L. Downing October 27, 1891
mop Thomas W. Stewart June 11, 1893
motor Frederick M. Jones June 27, 1939
peanut butter George Washington Carver 1896
pencil sharpener J. L. Love November 23, 1897
phone transmitter Granville T. Woods December 2, 1884
record player arm Joseph Hunger Dickenson January 8, 1819
refrigerator J. Standard June 14, 1891
riding saddles W. D. Davis October 6, 1895
rolling pin John W. Reed 1864
shampoo headrest C. O. Bailiff October 11, 1898
spark plug Edmond Berger February 2, 1839
stethoscope Imhotep Ancient Egypt
stove T. A. Carrington July 25, 1876
straightening comb Madam C. J. Walker Approx 1905
street sweeper Charles B. Brooks March 17, 1890
thermostat control Frederick M. Jones February 23, 1960
traffic light Garrett Morgan November 20, 1923
tricycle M. A. Cherry May 6, 1886
typewriter Burridge & Marshman April 7, 1885
@ravendearest “as a native American and a practicing witch” your a fucking idiot
Technology is the downfall of our children. Look at all the ailments children now have due to inactivity because of technology.
Do you see kids outside playing tag, or other childhood games that would be seen up to & including the early 80's?
Granted they can find almost anything in a few moments on the internet & they can keep in touch with friends/family around the world in moments, but obesity is running rampant & childhood diseases are at an all time high due to all these video games, iPods, computers, cable & sateliite channels.
When I was growing up in NYC, I remember having Channel 2,4,5,7,9,11 & 13. THAT'S ALL. I was outside EVERY DAY playing softball, stick ball, wiffle ball, punch ball, roller skating, tag, fox & hounds & so many other things.
Now you rarely see children outside. It's a shame that technology is such a sharp double-edged sword.
wow i wanna smoke the same shit,