Friday, November 7, 2008
FRIENDSHIP LOVE
This is a love between yourself and someone that is totally honest, open and comfortable. You really only have this kind of bond with a few people. You might know a lot of people and be "friendly" with them in a group situation but they are not the best friends I am talking about here.
I have a theory that you can not truly be best friends with a member of the opposite sex. Down the line romance will always come up from either party and feelings will be misinterpreted and mistaken. When this happens, the friendship will change and possibly never be the same again.
SECURITY LOVE
ROMANTIC LOVE
(The much anticipated love!) Most people experience this type of love many times in their life. It is when you see that person for the first time and he/she makes your knees go weak or gives you butterflies in your stomach.i.e. "Love at first sight”. Most people don’t even love the person they think they are in love with…they fall in love with the idea if being in love. This is more of a lustful kind of love, it wears off after a while and hopefully leads to...
UNCONDITIONAL LOVE
This is the sincere love, the love that lasts forever. This kind of love comes when you have found the person you are destined to be with. Nothing can destroy unconditional love. It is like when you have an argument or disagree about something with that person and you realize that it doesn’t bother you because the love you have for him/her overcomes everything.
Thursday, November 6, 2008
NOKIA 5800 XPRESS MUSIC
Touchscreen phones are the flavour of the month at the moment, thanks to Apple's iPhone, and Nokia's first attempt at a touchscreen handset has plenty to recommend it. The generous 3.2in widescreen display is pleasingly responsive to the touch, while it features a superior camera to the iPhone, as well as the ability to record video – a basic feature missing from Apple's deviceIts web browser is fast, thanks to the phone's reliance on the high-speed 3G network and support for Wi-Fi, but it's just not as much fun to use as that on the iPhone. Where the 5800 does score a major point over the iPhone, though, is in its support of Flash, a type of program used to power many online video services and websites, such as the film clips embedded in our own Telegraph website.The iPhone is not compatible with this technology, leaving some web pages that contain video clips frustratingly blank. The 5800 is first and foremost a music phone, and this is the area in which it gives the iPhone a run for its money. It has 8GB of memory, capable of storing about 4,000 songs, and this can be expanded to 16GB using a removable memory card. The use of a standard 3.5mm headphone jack is a welcome feature, as is one-touch access to music, photos and videos using the dedicated virtual ‘media bar’ key, which is always displayed on the phone’s screen regardless of what you’re doing on the handset.
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Nokia's handset offers a variety of input methods. Users can choose between typing on a virtual Qwerty keyboard using their fingers, tapping out messages using a standard alpha-numeric keyboard with T9 predictive text, or using a stylus to scribble out messages on the touchscreen.
There's plenty else to recommend the phone in addition to its music-playback capabilities. Nokia has done a good job of making commonly used programs and functions – such as the alarm clock, internet and Bluetooth connectivity – accessible with a single click, rather than buried within nested menus.
The inclusion of Nokia Maps, GPS software and voice-guided navigation means the phone can pass as a sat-nav device, and it offers the option of walking directions if you're on foot rather than travelling by car.
Where the 5800 does fall down is the operating system.
Both Apple's iPhone and Google’s G1 give users the ability to download extra sotware and useful applications onto the device, something that's largely missing from Nokia’s offering. Overall, though, it's an impressive touchscreen debut, and a handset that will do the Comes with Music service justice.
There's plenty else to recommend the phone in addition to its music-playback capabilities. Nokia has done a good job of making commonly used programs and functions – such as the alarm clock, internet and Bluetooth connectivity – accessible with a single click, rather than buried within nested menus.
The inclusion of Nokia Maps, GPS software and voice-guided navigation means the phone can pass as a sat-nav device, and it offers the option of walking directions if you're on foot rather than travelling by car.
Where the 5800 does fall down is the operating system.
Both Apple's iPhone and Google’s G1 give users the ability to download extra sotware and useful applications onto the device, something that's largely missing from Nokia’s offering. Overall, though, it's an impressive touchscreen debut, and a handset that will do the Comes with Music service justice.
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