Monday, May 30, 2016

The 10 Best Windows Tablets of the Year




Windows-based tablets have become increasingly ubiquitous, with multiple models released by major PC manufacturers all the time. Spurred on by the touch capability of Windows 8 and Windows 10 operating systems, as well as hardware that fits true PC power into slimmer and lighter devices, these versatile systems won't be disappearing anytime soon.
We've seen standalone tablets, dock-friendly slates, and a collection of accessories that range from keyboards to gamepads to variations on the simple stylus. The unifying thread that runs through all of these isn't hardware, or even accessories, but software. Setting these tablets apart from all of the iDevices and Android tablets is full-blown Windows with x86 support for all of your software.
Size Matters
Just as laptops come in different sizes and are built for different users, tablets fall into several categories. There are inexpensive 8-inch models, designed to let you browse the Web and enjoy streaming a movie from Netflix or Amazon Prime, but these small, budget-friendly devices usually rely on low-power processors and minimal storage, making them ideal as a second or third device alongside your laptop or smartphone. Then there are larger 10- to 12-inch models that come with a stylus or a docking keyboard, giving you a better way to take notes in class, type up an email or a term paper, and generally provide a well-rounded (if somewhat basic) Windows experience. Finally, there are premium and business systems, designed as productivity tools rather than media consumption devices.
Processor
Tablets run the gamut from low-power entertainment devices to potent tools for productivity. A lot of this comes down to the processor. At one end of the spectrum are Intel's Atom processors, which are built for low-power usage and passive cooling. 
At the other end of the spectrum are the Core i3, i5, and i7 processors that you might expect to find in a full-fledged laptop. While these CPUs draw more power and require more cooling hardware, they offer a much higher level of capability, letting you get real work done. Tablets equipped with these processors are priced more like laptops, but they also offer similar levels of productivity. 
Features and Connectivity
The switch from laptop to tablet also brings some new features to these handheld PCs. Sensors previously seen in smartphones bring new ways to interact with your PC, with accelerometers, gyroscopes, and e-compasses providing positional awareness for both automatic screen rotation and new immersive applications. And let's not forget touch. 
Finally, there's the question of connectivity. With such mobile designs, it's only natural that some shoppers will want tablets that feature the same sort of mobile data that they enjoy on their smartphones. While there are plenty of Windows tablets on the market with 4G and LTE connectivity, this capability isn't the norm. Most Windows tablets stick exclusively to Wi-Fi, but if you're willing to take on the added expense of a data plan, there are several mobile-friendly tablets on the market.

Article was taken on part from PC Magazine













Thursday, May 19, 2016

Things to know before you buy a smartphone or tablet


Mobile devices including smartphone and tablet market are increasingly becoming popular all around the globe. Advances in technology such as processing power, aesthetic form factor, smart applications, net connectivity, more memory space and increased batter power is propelling smartphone and tablet market to new heights than ever. With so many options available, it is becoming more of a challenging job to buy the right mobile device that suits you. This article highlights 8 important features that you need to consider when buying a smartphone or tablet.

Size of the Screen
Visual experience play a very important role in determining the quality of a product. This makes screen size a major feature to look for when buying either smartphone or a tablet. A perfect screen to some extend can overshadow the defects in a model. Screen is also the single most expensive and important hardware component in a smartphone and tablets.

Thickness and Weight
 Thickness and weight is another important factor to be considered when buying a smartphone or tablet. Thickness is more of an aesthetic concern than anything else. Thinner devices don’t always lead to a quality product. So it’s up to you to decide if you want to sacrifice quality over aesthetic value.

Operating System used by Smartphone or Tablet
 OS that is used on a Smartphone or tablet is yet another major feature to be considered before you make a purchase. When it comes to OS that we use in our PC, we have the popular options to either go for Apple’s Macintosh, Microsoft Windows OS or the open source Linux. Windows OS is the winner here since it is very user friendly and got a huge choice of supporting applications and softwares to go with the OS. iOS is used only in Apple phones and tablets. Android OS is very popular and used in a wide range of models. Even though Windows phone is not as popular as Android, it is user friendliness and popularity is slowly capturing the smartphone and tablet os market.

Storage space available in a Smartphone or Tablet
Most smartphone and tablet manufacturers these days are offering 16 GB storage capacity which is enough space for storing pics, songs and videos. However some users like to add additional memory to increase the storage capacity.

Connection Specifications
 All tablets and smartphones are portable devices which need wireless for communication. Wireless devices and they offer Wi-Fi connectivity to let you wirelessly connect to home and public networks. However some models offer 3G, 4G connectivity which helps in having an internet connection enabled SIM.

Apps Compatibility
One of the important feature of a smartphone or tablet is the presence of Apps. It is similar to using application software in your PC. Compatibility of apps is very important to be considered when you buy a smartphone or table.

Camera Options
 Almost all smartphones and all tablets come with an in built camera. Camera by default is a major feature that most customers check by default when buying mobile devices. It is a very useful feature especially when you are looking forward for recording memories and spur of the moment events.
TV and Video options

It is an increasing trend now a day to record high quality videos using smartphones or tablets and share it across different platforms. To see the real quality of the recorded video, one will definitely want to try it on a bigger screen connecting to display monitors or television. So the next time, you decide to buy a smartphone or tablets, you may want to see if it carries options for connecting to these devices.

Next time you buy a smartphone or tablet, remember these tips and act accordingly.










Wednesday, May 18, 2016

How Differentiate Disaster Recovery from Storage and Backup Solutions






We tend to see a lot of questions on this so let’s take a moment to see how see how they differ—and how they can work together to benefit a customer’s business.

Cloud storage refers simply to the ability to store data and files in the cloud. One of the greatest benefits of cloud storage is scalability: it provides bottomless storage and complete elasticity—meaning that it can scale up or down as needed to meet changing customer requirements. Data stored in the cloud also offers the advantage of access from anywhere, so customers can get to their files wherever they are, or from whatever application they use. With Microsoft Azure, customers also have the benefit of compatibility with a range of operating systems, so they know it will work regardless of the OS. Finally, on Azure, stored data gets enterprise-grade protection, including redundant storage with multiple copies kept automatically to prevent data loss due to unexpected systems failure.

Backup and disaster recovery also involve storing data, but they are primarily focused on doing so for the purposes of data protection and business continuity. One easy way to think about the difference between backup and disaster recovery is that backup is about making sure customers’ employees don’t lose files that may be accidentally deleted or lost due corruption, while disaster recovery is about making sure the customers doesn’t lose files AND that that they can continue to operate their business seamlessly after an unexpected event impacting their primary site, while they work to restore their systems .

Backups are the best tool for making sure you can restore recent copies of files that are accidentally deleted or lost due to hard drive failure . It is also an important tool for legal discovery—with long-term data retention, you can ensure that customers have access to historical data and files when needed for legal reasons.

Disaster recovery is generally more focused on getting services back up and running fast. For example, a customers might have taken an off-site backup of their files an hour before a fire takes out their company’s application servers. So their files are safe (with the exception of any changes made during the hour since the last backup). But how are they going to get your applications and services back up and running? That is where disaster recovery comes in, by enabling them to restore their files AND their services quickly so they can be back up and running in minutes, instead of hours, days or weeks.

All of these are great tools for that leverage the benefits of the cloud to support productivity and business continuity and a lower cost. When combined, they complement each other, working together as a great way to provide multiple layers of convenience and protection. 

Want to learn more? Get in touch with us today at info@liteglobal.com



Monday, May 16, 2016

LITE Global: The Cable TV Industry Is Dying. What Comes Next?

LITE Global: The Cable TV Industry Is Dying. What Comes Next?: Beginning in 2013, cable TV started experiencing a loss of subscribers, and that loss grew wider in 2014. A combination of lower TV view...

The Cable TV Industry Is Dying. What Comes Next?



Beginning in 2013, cable TV started experiencing a loss of subscribers, and that loss grew wider in 2014. A combination of lower TV viewership because of fewer cable subscribers and other media supplanting cable has the industry at a crossroads. In fact, according to Nielsen ratings, TV viewing has been dropping about 10% per quarter. 

And now, for the first time ever, you can watch real-time, live TV over any Internet connection… on any connected TV, phone, tablet, or another device.

You’ll see it exactly as it plays on cable, live and on schedule… except you’ll be paying a fraction of the cost and you won’t have a contract.

If you hate dealing with your cable company as much as I do, this is big news, right?
But the bigger news for you and me is the opportunity this gives us to snap up three stocks that are poised to explode now that cable TV has finally been put on life support.


Just like when newspaper publishers, telephone utilities, stockbrokers, record companies, bookstores, travel agencies, and big box retailers watched helplessly as the Internet swept away their business models.

Here some reason why cable is dying

New competitors have emerged, challenging the legacy systems. Netflix, Inc. (NFLX), Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN), Sling TV, Crackle, and Sony Corporation (SNE) provide streaming content, replacing the set-top box/TV combination as the only way to view entertainment. 

Consumers are no longer willing to pay for a plethora of channels that they don’t watch. This antiquated cable model has become usurped by streaming options of getting only what you want to watch, and even those consumers that are still with cable are requesting more targeted, smaller bundles.

Media companies that own the most sought after content, like ESPN or HBO, have recognized the change in consumer behavior and begun experimenting with offering their own streaming content. 

The costs of the legacy bundled cable subscriptions had grown so high that consumers are no longer willing to pay and are forgoing cable services all together. Between 1995 and 2005 cable bills increased three times faster than inflation, a highly unsustainable trend.

People are more wired today and prefer the ease and convenience of transitioning between devices like laptops, mobile phones, and wearable (watches) that broadband and wireless connections afford. 

Minutes spent per month on Internet videos on computers and time-shifted TV increased between 2013 and 2014 while traditional TV was the only medium that lost minutes. Whether it’s the convenience, the lower cost or the more desirable content, a shift in our viewing habits has been changing the way the industry operates. Now the question is will the legacy players be able to adapt before they are pushed out?


Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Next generation hotspots: The future of Wi-Fi?








In the home, in the enterprise, in public spaces and increasingly, in “Internet of Things” applications, WiFi has come to dominate how end users connect to the broader network as they seek good speed, throughput and low cost for their connections. For the first time in 2015, Wi-Fi carried more mobile network traffic than cellular networks. Cisco’s Visual Networking Index for mobile pegged the percentage as 51% of overall network traffic being offloaded from cellular to the wired network via Wi-Fi and femtocells. 

That trend is only expected to continue, as by 2020, Cisco predicts mobile offload will increase to 55% of overall mobile data traffic, which at that point will mean about 38.1 exabytes per month, up from 3.9 exabytes per month in 2015. Wi-Fi is also stepping up its game through expanded features and capabilities. It’s expected that 802.11ac’s second wave of features will see Wi-Fi Alliance certification this year, with the first certified devices designed to support gigabit WiFi speeds – also known as WiGig or 802.11ad – set to appear this year as well. Wi-Fi also has a new standard specifically for IoT applications known as W-Fi HaLow. Meanwhile, vendors continue to push for expanded adoption of Wi-Fi Alliance’s Hotspot 2.0, commercially known as Passpoint, which enables seamless authentication to make Wi-Fi act more like cellular.

As Wi-Fi expands its features and reach though, the technology is also encountering new challenges. Its very popularity has resulted in major congestion in the unlicensed 2.4 GHz band, and the Wireless Broadband Alliance’s 2015 annual report said some operators fear the unlicensed 5 GHz band could become intolerably congested in as little as two to three years. One of the biggest question marks is co-existence and how well Wi-Fi will fare on a continued convergence toward cellular, with the advent of LTE in unlicensed bands using License Assisted Access and LTE over Unlicensed – a question which industry players are trying hard to answer. 


Future trends in Wi-Fi, including standards work; the controversy around LTE-U and potential impacts to Wi-Fi; spectrum issues; and the role the technology is likely to play for service providers in the home and other offload points, including monetization tactics based on analytics, services and IoT.

Extracted from: The future of the Wi-Fi by  Kelly Hill

Contact us: info@liteglobal.com

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Why Do I Need Managed Services?




This is an important question to ask when you have a business full of computers, servers and employees. “What will I get with managed services that I couldn’t get with a break-fix solution?” Information technology (IT) systems are expected to meet high standards of operation, while offering 24/7 availability, security, and performance

In today’s environment, you have to keep pace with the constant changes in IT, performance demands, and pressure to deliver competitive IT functionality. To meet these challenges, many organizations consider outsourcing their IT activities to be an attractive option.

We find managed services everywhere. Most technology companies use the term “Managed Services” as a service. If you are like most non-techies, managed services may cause you to draw a blank. But, if you are a small business owner, it is definitely something you need.

Organizations are increasingly turning to managed service providers (MSPs) to handle elements of their IT needs as part of a collaborative arrangement with the internal IT department, according to new research from IT industry trade association CompTIA.

Companies have become more familiar with managed services and are turning to them for management of certain IT functions, particularly email hosting, customer relationship management (CRM) applications, storage, backup and recovery and network monitoring.

"While one-time projects account for some of these engagements, a significant portion is ongoing management of one or more IT functions by a managed services provider. "There is a much higher degree of familiarity with the term 'managed services' and greater adoption."