Thursday, June 15, 2017

SPINNER

                                 SPINNER 
A fidget spinner is a self-regulation tool designed to help you focus and pay attention. According to several articles, fidget spinners help improve performance in classroom and office. They are handy units for those who suffer from life’s stress and anxiety. They also help eliminate nail biting, leg shaking, and more. Today’s fidget spinners are somewhat more advanced than their conventional counterparts.

For example, they are easy to use and most of them have a longer spinning time. Nevertheless, not every fidget spinner on the market is top quality. So, before you rush out to get one, we advise that you go through this compilation that talks of how to find the best fidget spinner as well as the top 10 best fidget spinners reviews in 2017

How to Find the Best Fidget Spinner
There are a number of factors you should consider to help you settle on nothing but the best product. These are:
The material: Different spinners are made of different materials. You’ll realize that some fidget spinners are made of wood while others are made of plastic or metal. We advise that you look for a fidget spinner made of metal, as they are durable and will serve you for an extended period of time.
The brand: No one gets out of their house or visits an Amazon website to buy a counterfeit fidget spinner. Reputable brands only make original fidget spinners. With this in mind, the brand of a fidget spinner should be a consideration as well. After all, what you need is an original product.
The shape/design: Spinners come in different shapes and designs. While it is advisable to choose a spinner based on your subjective preferences, it is important to make ease of use and comfort your priority. Also, you may choose a spinner based on the visual appearance. Unless otherwise, do not go for a bulky spinner, as they tend to be uncomfortable.
The material of the bearing for the center axis: It is recommended to go for a spinner whose bearing is constructed of a ceramic material. This is because they do not expand when subjected to heat. They also offer a smoother spin for optimum comfort and convenience.

GRAND THEFT AUTO V

                      GRAND THEFT AUTO V

GTA 5 PC REVIEW


  • Also available on Xbox One, PS4, Xbox 360 and PS3
The long wait has been worth it. If you’re a PC gamer who’s spent the last eighteen months envying the console crowd while they all got stuck into the latest, greatest GTA, then rest assured that you can now play the definitive version. Sure, the Xbox One and PS4 versions were amazing, delivering GTA 5 at higher resolutions with more detailed textures, smoother surfaces, better lighting and cool depth of field effects (see our full review below), but the PC version offers even more enhancements plus a couple of additional features that play to the PC’s strengths. In doing so, it adds a few more metres to one of gaming’s towering achievements.
Having covered the game twice already, we won’t go too far into the detail of what makes GTA 5 so good. Partly, it’s a question of experience. With four previous 3D GTAs under its belt plus Red Dead Redemption, Bully and assorted DLC packs, Rockstar has had time to refine its vision for open world gameplay and its systems, and GTA 5 has the best driving, the best shooting and some of the best mission design of the series.

Read more at http://www.trustedreviews.com/gta-5-review#5s9UQQQWwpMqzhyK.99

It’s also a question of structure. Dividing the action amongst three protagonists with three interlocking storylines and three distinctive flavours means you nearly always have the option to flick from Michael’s ageing career criminal saga to Franklin’s ambitious hoodlum story to Trevor’s crazed, amoral brand of mayhem, where the dumb, cathartic slapstick violence we all – deep down – love GTA for finds its natural home. With repeated play, it only becomes clearer how well all three tales mesh thematically with Rockstar’s savage satirical take on the Californian dream.
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And the budget definitely helps. The more time you put into GTA 5, the more you come to appreciate what a large and intensely detailed creation Los Santos is, and just how much is packed into the surrounding Blaine County. That’s because Rockstar had the ambition and the money to put in all the golf and tennis mini-games, all the stunt challenges, all the bizarre side missions and all the weird, hidden stuff that probably 90% of players will never see. The amazing thing about GTA 5 is that you can spend hour after hour playing it yet still be struck by all the stuff you haven’t done yet. No other open world feels this coherent. No other open world has so much to do.
Read more at http://www.trustedreviews.com/gta-5-review#5s9UQQQWwpMqzhyK.99//www.trustedreviews.com/gta-5-review#5s9UQQQWwpMqzhyK.99





Wednesday, June 14, 2017

SAMSUNG GALAXY S8

                                       SAMSUNG GALAXY S8

The Samsung Galaxy S8 is without a doubt the most beautiful, polished phone I've ever held. These words were true when I first reviewed it in April, and are still true a month on. I do have some additional insights since then -- scroll down a bit for those.
OK, so the S8 is pretty. But it's also the most important Samsung phone right now, at least until the Galaxy Note 8 comes along. It's been helping restore buyers' confidence after the doubleNote 7 battery disaster (the S8's apparently selling like hotcakes), and it's a chance to cement the Samsung name as the top Android brand against upcoming rivals: the pure Android Google "Pixel 2," squeezable HTC U11 and cut-price OnePlus 5. It helps that soon, you'll be able to use the Galaxy S8 in Google's Daydream headset.
 What makes the Galaxy S8 so special is this: A tall, narrow shape that fits snugly in my palm and curved sides that scream "classy." And the screen? 5.8 inches of colorful gorgeousness with a display that stretches from edge to edge with just a whisper of a bezel. For its looks alone, Samsung's flashiest phone lands at the top of the class. Trust me, when you see the S8 andlarger, pricier S8 Plus, you're gonna want to put your hands all over them.
I did everything with these two phones at home, in the office, around town and at the beach. I took scores of photos and videos, watched tons of YouTube and Netflix movies, chatted my fingers off. I sat on them in my back pocket (no Bendgate yet). I've unlocked these things 100 times in four different ways (fingerprint, eyes, face, PIN). So I'm confident pointing out the S8's problems -- because, let's be real, there's always something.
In this case, I can boil it down to the awkwardly placed fingerprint reader -- you will curse this -- and the still-up-in-the-air Bixby AI software, which combines SiriGoogle Now and a camera add-on. (Samsung's Siri-like Bixby Voice tool is live in South Koreabut nowhere else and I use the rest of the Bixby features... never.) Also, while photo quality is great, it's weird to me that Samsung, usually so on top of trends, opted for one camera lens on the back instead of two.
So far, the battery has made the S8 warm, like most phones get, but not dangerously hot. Hopefully Samsung's new eight-point battery test has done its job keeping all future handsets combustion-free, unlike the poor Note 7. The battery reserves have lasted a good, long time (but I'm keeping an eye on idle drain as the months march on). Overall, it's zippier than the Galaxy S7, but not so much better at its core that S7 owners should dash to upgrade.

What you really need to know is that the S8 is an extremely fast, highly competent, visually stunning device that you'll probably want to use with a case. Yes, this will hide most of its beautiful lines. Tough luck: It's just too costly and pretty to risk dropping.
And the Galaxy S8 is expensive. At $750, £689 or AU$1,199, you want to know that your phone is going to go the distance, and that you won't regret getting something cheaper -- like the midrange but awesome-for-what-it-isOnePlus 3T (which is being phased out in preparation of the OnePlus 5, so hurry if you want one) -- or holding out for the next iPhone, Google Pixel or Note 8, each of which should debut in the next four to six months.

Ps4 slim

Sony's 4K-equipped monster, the PS4 Pro , has established itself as the first Ultra HD console on the market, but if you're not ready to upgrade to a new television just yet then the original PS4 is still an excellent machine, especially now that it's been shrunk down into a new slimline form factor. 
It's meant as the budget option, so there are a couple of compromises. You naturally won't get any form of 4K output, and you'll have to do without an optical audio output. 
But if you're willing to put up with these limitations you'll find the PS4 slim to be an exceptionally capable machine. 

After all it's smaller, it runs quieter, it's more power efficient and – if you live in Europe or Asia – it's available in Glacier White, but is it worth upgrading to? Moreover, if you're looking to buy the console for the first time, is this the one to go for? 
It'd be an easier decision if Microsoft's Xbox One S hadn't significantly raised the bar by packing a 4K Blu-ray player into the Xbox One, as well as adding 4K upscaling and HDR functionality to its games. 
Meanwhile, further complicating the decision, the 4K PS4 Pro has just launched, bringing improved performance to the PS4 ecosystem. The slim PS4, meanwhile,  works more or less identically to the existing console.
The slim retails at £259 / $299 / AU$599.99 for the 500GB model, with a 1TB model expected further along down the line.
The PS4 Slim might have entered the fray as Sony's budget PlayStation offering, but that doesn't mean it's scrimping on its specs. In all key areas it matches the original PlayStation 4 console, and at many points outperforms it too.
It may be hard to remember now, seeing how much joy gamers have gotten out of the original PS4, but its off-kilter shape was met with some raised eyebrows when it was first revealed three and a half years ago.
2016's slim PS4 more-or-less retains the core visual identity of the first PlayStation 4, but shrinks everything down into a more dinky parallelogram package, with newly-rounded edges.
Whereas the original PlayStation 4 measured 27.5 x 30 x 5.3 cm, the PS4 Slim is just 26.5 x 26.5 x 3.8 cm. That's roughly a third smaller than what the original measured up as, and its weight is comparably lighter, too

xbox one

 It's smaller, it runs quieter, but its most interesting development is its resolution which has been boosted from HD to Ultra HD, aka 4K
It's not quite a complete 4K console. Games are upscaled to the resolution (a process which doesn't look as good as true or 'native' 4K), but movies will happily make the most out of the extra pixels whether you're streaming 4K Netflix or else playing an Ultra HD Blu-ray. 
Beyond 4K, the addition of HDR is also a great inclusion for the console. It's more powerful than it was when the system came out three years ago, and more spacious thanks to a larger 2 TB hard drive.

But using Microsoft's souped-up console has given us an opportunity to reevaluate how we see the platform as a whole, the good and the bad. 
The good news is that, overall, the Xbox is the healthiest it's ever been. It's added plenty of first-party exclusives in 2015, and the new interface has made the platform even more accessible for first-time users.                                                  
  We've also spent a good deal of time pouring over every inch of the console itself. From its porous white exterior to its reconfigured front panel, it feels more well-constructed and solidly built than its predecessor ever was. Around the back, an HDMI 2.0a port supports HDCP 2.2 allowing for 4K video streaming and HDR in games and movies.
However, all of these features that we've been craving for have come with a trade-off: the new Xbox One S forgoes a standard Kinect port on the console. In order to use the Kinect, the Xbox One S requires you to pick up a USB adapter – which, to its credit, Microsoft has said it will provide free of charge to any original Xbox One owner who asks for one.While the lack of Kinect capabilities will affect very few gamers, the removal of a Kinect port will be a shame for those who've grown used to being able to control their console using just their voice
The other thing to consider is that now the Xbox userbase is slightly fragmented. The gamers who own an Xbox One S will get to play Xbox-exclusives like Gears of War 4 and Forza Horizon 3 in HDR, while owners of the original hardware will only get to see them in the standard color range. That will mean the difference in conversations about which games are beautiful or, more frightening, how games handled loading times and lag.
Microsoft originally said that there wasn't any real difference between the hardware inside the Xbox One S and the original console but performance analyses conducted after the console's launch have found that certain games will run slightly more smoothly on the new console. 
Whether a discrepancy between systems will be a boon for Microsoft or a curse, however, the Xbox One S is quite easily the best system, hardware-wise, since the Xbox 360 Elite that Microsoft released back in 2007, especially when you consider its price – $399 (£349 / AU$549) for the 2TB version that's available in early August, $349 (£299 / AU$499) for the 1TB version and $299 (£249 / AU$399) for the 500GB model that's coming sometime later this year.
To put that price in perspective, you can get a brand-new Xbox One for $279 (£199 / AU$399). So, is the Xbox One S worth the extra $120 (£150 / AU$150)?

s7 edge

WHAT IS THE GALAXY S7?

To use a tired cliche, Samsung has had a year of two halves. After the release of both the Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 Edge, things were looking strong. It had a phone that was better than the HTC 10, better than the Huawei P9 and it’s still better than the iPhone 7.
But then the exploding Galaxy Note 7 landed and Samsung took a bit of a hit. Is it enough to make you think twice about buying a Samsung device?
In a word, no. The Galaxy S7 is still the best phone we’ve reviewed this year. Maybe the Google Pixel phone will have something to say about that though?Read more at http://www.trustedreviews.com/samsung-galaxy-s7-review#Sh1FRbI7ELLATDef.99

SAMSUNG GALAXY S7 – DESIGN

After the massive, and much needed, change in design direction Samsung took with the Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge in 2015, all rumours pointed to things staying pretty much the same for the Galaxy S7.
Well, it’s not like Apple, HTC or Sony make drastic changes to their industrial design every year.
And that’s exactly the case here. Place the Galaxy S7 next to the S6 and you’d be hard pushed to instantly pick which one is which. Frankly, this doesn’t bother me in the slightest. The S6 was already one of the best-looking phones around, and the Galaxy S7 follows suit.
Both the front and back are covered in Gorilla Glass 4, while a metal rim snakes in between. Two volume buttons sit on one side, with a lock/standby switch on the other. It’s a clean look, with the back free from any markings aside from a Samsung logo.
The camera lens now sits just about flush with the glass body too. This might seem a small change, but it makes a big difference. I can now tap out an email with the phone flat on my desk without it jumping and rocking from side to side.

Read more at http://www.trustedreviews.com/samsung-galaxy-s7-review#Sh1FRbI7ELLATDef.99
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