Monday, July 14, 2014

Samsung Galaxy Grand 2 Duos receives Android 4.4.2 KitKat update

Photo by First post
Samsung Galaxy Grand 2 users in India should rejoice as the company has started rolling out the Android 4.4.2 update in India, according to various media reports.

News of the roll-out was first posted on the XDA forum by a user who wrote, “My Galaxy Grand 2 SM-G7102 got KitKat 4.4.2 update at IST 10:30 hrs on 14/07/2014. New Build No. KOT49H.G7102XXUBNG4. New Baseband No. G7102DDUBNF4.”

Other users have responded to his post as well and confirmed that the update is indeed rolling out. One user pointed out that the size for the update is 360 MB.

To download the update, users can turn to the Samsung Kies app or download it over-the-air. To see if you smartphone has got the update, just got to Settings on your Galaxy Grand 2, About Phone and then the Software Update section. Of course, you will need an active Internet connection to start the download.

So what does the update bring, other than the latest version of Android? (Android L is still in preview and developers mode) According to one user who updated to 4.4.2 there are some cosmetic changes and an improved user interface.

The user pointed out that “default Samsung keyboard emojis are smaller in size,” the S5 calculator is now in the Galaxy Grand 2, and the update seems to bring a boost in performance. However there is no S5 weather widget, no s-memo and no change in camera UI, the user adds. 

The Samsung Galaxy Grand 2 was launched at a price of Rs 22,999 in India 
and is currently retailing around Rs 19,900.

Dhoni 2.0: Evolving

Photo by Punemirror
Trent Bridge result shows the skipper has to grow as leader and Kohli has to step up

Over time, foreign cities turn into some sort of landmarks in a journey of a sporting team. With good teams, it's dotted with a famous victories and also, fascinating losses & memorable draws that helped the unit grow. Under MS Dhoni, the overseas Test series were a blur of defeats for a while. It wasn't so much the cities but entire countries were coloured with bad memories.


Drubbing in England was followed by the disaster in Australia before a series of famous retirements sprung upon us a Dhoni 2.0: Same captain but a leader of younger, newer group of men. If the then selector Mohinder Amarnath had his way, Dhoni wouldn't have lasted as a Test captain but we know how that story ended.

Suddenly, Dhoni had a clean slate to have another go as a Test captain at the start of 2014. Here, the cities are starting to make their appearances - Johannesburg, Wellington, and now this one at Nottingham, in the East midlands of England.

They have been those fascinating draws that leave a sports fan with contrasting emotions of hope and disappointment. Is the team moving forward? Or are they failing to convert these draws into potential victories? Considering that this is a team that is relatively young, new, and which doesn't intuitively know its best eleven yet, these cities can be viewed as signposts of progress.

Those nursing the hangover of Dhoni 1.0 will disagree and possibly see them as more of the same. They will also see that both South Africa then and England now have seen better days. Both reactions are understandable and it's a sort of an uncertainty that only time, and future success or failure, can put to rest. Will India grow as a team or will they fumble?

They have been provided with the best situation on this trip. In England team they are faced with an unsure captain, a bowling unit that didn't really deliver in Australia or against Sri Lanka, and a batting line-up that hasn't erased a sense of vulnerability.

To capitalize, Dhoni has to grow as a captain and Virat Kohli the potential heir has to step up. Did we see enough positives from Dhoni the captain? We saw it in his elevation of his batting position but as a captain on the field there weren't enough sparks to silence his critics.

Asked if it was a disappointment that from a winning position on day three, India were saved from a defeat by Nos 7 and 8, Dhoni said "That's a part and parcel of the game, and it doesn't really matter who has scored runs or taken wickets because at the end of the day it is a team game and you go with the strategy of winning the game. It doesn't really matter if No. 11 is scoring the runs or No. 7 is scoring the runs.

Overall, it is important that we have put runs on the board, and we need to defend that. But plenty of positives we can take out of this game." Captains usually don't say the truth always in press conferences but that last sentence rings true for this unit.

Right now, these performances do leave this team with "plenty of positives". If these performances in Jo'berg, Wellington and Nottingham had come from a better team, they would be unequivocally termed as disappointments.

With this Indian team, it's bracketed in that frame of near-misses and plenty of positives. This isn't condescension but just an observation of reality. They will get four more chances on this trip to grow or disintegrate but first, can we please get a decent English pitch to properly judge this team?

By Pune Mirror

Germany vs Argentina: Germany planned World Cup success to perfection

Photo by Times of India
RIO DE JANEIRO: Rio's morning after was quiet and tame. The sun had broken out early, and the city woke up to a strange Monday - of work, of a forgotten everyday grind and nursing a hangover of a just-finished World Cup. 
In the twittering of birds, the sound of the sidewalk sweeper's broom and the sporadic honks of the early bus service and airport taxis, a latecomer, on just being told that Germany had won the World Cup the evening before, screamed his lungs out and ran down the palm-fringed Rua Paiisandu in Flamengo here. All in all, it was like any other day here in Rio. 


At the same time, in Germany somewhere - Ruhr typically or Munich if you like - someone was switching off the main switches at a football factory, the well-oiled assembly lines squealing to a reluctant halt. But it was only to be a brief break: after stopping work to welcome their victorious Mannschaft home from Brazil, it would be back to work again - of producing home-bred footballers who would patiently work their way to another World Cup title in a few years time. 

In Rio's Maracana, the only stadium after the Azteca in Mexico City to host two finals, Germany showed how its tried and tested history always reaps rewards, of how having 66 per cent of homegrown players in your home league pays. The shrill Premiership could have done well to listen to the Germans and stopped splashing out the cash for foreign talent in regular positions of their clubs' teams. 

"There's too much money in English football, especially for the young kids," lamented 1990s star Chris Waddle to TOI after Germany's win on Sunday. 

Waddle belonged to a generation when England players meant something; also coincidentally, it was a time when German players meant everything. In 1990, Waddle and mates reached the semifinals, then got beaten by Germany who went on to beat Diego Maradona's Argentina to win the World Cup. Twenty four years later, the two finalists were at it again, with Germany again taking home the Cup. 

The story of Germany's harmonious multiculturalism is well known by now - Andre Schuerrle and Mario Goetze, who scored the winning goal off his pass, were the first players born in a unified Germany to appear in a final. 

Apart from them, five of this squad - Christoph Kramer, Shkodran Mustafi, Erik Durm, Julian Draxler and Matthias Ginter - were born after 1990 when West Germany won the Cup. 

This brings to the fore the point that Germany's triumph was the result of a 10-year planned investment in grassroots football - of identifying talent early and imparting the best possible training to them. 

In the past decade, Germany and Spain are the two countries which have invested heavily in youth and they are consecutive world champions. At 22 years and 39 days, Mario Goetze became the youngest scorer in a final after another German Wolfgang Weber (in 1966), who was a week younger. 

The youngest side in the semifinals at the last World Cup, Germany continued with their belief in youth. At 36, Miroslav Klose may have been the side's fast-moving dinosaur and the only survivor since Germany's last final in 2002, but there were 14 players in Joachim Loew's squad who were below 25 years of age. 

The next young squad, interestingly, was England with 10 under-25 players, and their cluelessness at this top level notwithstanding, it could augur well for the future. 

Loew, the fast-talking, soft-spoken manager, had surprisingly copped a lot of flak back home for his 'elusive tactical arrangements' and the team's uncertain performance against Algeria, after they had stormed through what was being considered as the Group of Death, comprising USA, Ghana and Cristiano Ronaldo's Portugal. 

It didn't faze the man, nor did Sami Khedira's warm-up time calf muscle injury did. 

Looking back at his bench and the depth of it, he drafted in Christoph Kramer to help rein in Lionel Messi. When Kramer was injured, as Germany seemed rattled by the Argentine's refusal to back down, he sent in Schuerrle, an attacking player and a goal scoring supersub. It was a philosophy which continued from their opening game, a rout of a preening Portugal side. 

With 11 open play goals, Germany scored at least three more goals than any other team at the World Cup. And their total of 18 goals in this tournament was the most for a team in a single World Cup since Brazil in 2002. 

Then he had his old warhorses - Bastian Schweinsteiger, Philipp Lahm and Mesut Ozil. Schweinsteiger ran himself into the ground against Argentina, at one point even getting a few stitches below his eye, lying on the touchline. Ozil completed more passes in the final third (144) than any other player in the tournament, while Toni Kroos was second with 136. It was largely possible because Schweinsteiger had Lahm providing the cover for forays from midfield. 

In the end, as someone said, Brazil had Neymar, Argentina had Messi, Germany had a team. They also had a sweeper, who sometimes played as a goalkeeper. How could you ever beat such a combination? 

By Times Of India

Pragathi to make her acting debut

Photo by Times of India
Pragathi Guruprasad, who shot to fame with her singing prowess on a reality show on television, is all set to make her acting debut as well. The young singer will make her acting debut with Bala's upcoming production Thaarai Thappattai. She is likely to play the sister of the film's lead actor Sasikumar. 


Interestingly, Pragathi had made her singing debut with another Bala's film, Paradesi. It looks like this girl has found her mentor in the National-Award-winning director. 

By Times of India

Before Apple launches iPhone 6 this year, Samsung will launch Galaxy Alpha

The big news about the smartphone war going to take place around the annual product launch of Apple is here. News report from Korea indicates that Samsung will launch its high-end smartphone before the official launch of the Apple iPhone, challenging the Cupertino company.
Photo by Danik Bhaskar

 
According to a new published in ET News (via Cnet), Samsung is working on a new phone that will be launched as the iPhone 6 competitor. This new device will be called the Galaxy 'Alpha' and is expected to be launched on 13th August this year, according to another report inGSMArena. That is, about a month before Apple launches its annual flagship, giving Samsung ample time to get the product in stores before its rival.
 
“Samsung wants to get the handset out to store shelves before Apple has a chance to announce the rumored iPhone 6,” the ET Report said based on sources who claim to have knowledge of the situation.

Germany vs Argentina: FIFA World Cup 2014 Final, Rio de Janeiro

Photo by India Today
With two quick and sublimely deft touches, Mario Goetze ended Germany's 24-year wait for another World Cup title.


Goetze scored the winning goal in extra time to give Germany a 1-0 victory over Argentina on Sunday in a tight and tense World Cup final that came down to a few moments of individual skill.

Goetze, who wasn't born when West Germany beat Argentina in the 1990 final, controlled a cross with his chest in the 113th minute and in one fluid motion volleyed the ball past goalkeeper Sergio Romero and inside the far post from five yards out.

It was a goal that gave Germany its fourth World Cup title in its eighth final, and left Argentina star Lionel Messi still walking in the shadow of his compatriot Diego Maradona, who led his country to the 1986 title.

Goetze went on as a substitute for Miroslav Klose toward the end of regulation time and the 22-year-old midfielder's fresh legs made the difference.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Argentina Withstands the Netherlands in a Shootout

Photo By NDTV

Argentina beat Netherlands 4-2 in a penalty shootout to reach the final of the 2014 FIFA World Cup. For Argentina, Lionel Messi, Ezequiel Garay and Sergio Aguero confidently punched their shots into the net. The decisive attempt, by Maxi Rodriguez, was deflected, but it hit the underside of the crossbar and bounced into the net.



Sao Paulo: Regulation and overtime brought 120 minutes of scoreless exasperation in a World Cup semifinal on Wednesday that was by turns tense, cautious, clumsy, gripping and stubbornly unyielding.
There was little space to move, few chances to score. Sometimes the match was as dreary as the misty evening chill. If it possessed any beauty, it was not in gracefulness but in stark, struggling exertion.
And finally, when grind and strain and labor could not bring a resolution, whimsy and caprice did. Argentina defeated the Netherlands by 4-2 on penalty kicks and advanced to Sunday's final against Germany.
Sergio Romero, Argentina's goalkeeper, was poised in the shootout, unsettling the Dutch on the very first kick. He dived to his left, parried a shot by the defender Ron Vlaar and kissed his gloves. Later, Romero repelled a shot by Wesley Sneijder and pounded his chest.
For Argentina, Lionel Messi, Ezequiel Garay and Sergio Aguero confidently punched their shots into the net. The decisive attempt, by Maxi Rodriguez, was deflected, but it hit the underside of the crossbar and bounced into the net.
Messi took off in a jubilant, screaming run up the field as Argentina reached the championship game for the first time since 1990.
That long ago night its opponent was West Germany, which even Diego Maradona could not find a way to beat. But that was forgotten on Wednesday as Argentine fans roared in delight and players removed their jerseys and twirled them in triumphant ecstasy.
"It's luck, that's the truth," Romero said of the penalty kicks. "You can dive and not make it, like their goalkeeper did. I had confidence, and thank God things turned out well."
The Netherlands led this World Cup with 12 goals, but its patient counterattacking style produced nothing in the quarterfinals and semifinals after a late, desperate victory against Mexico.
Twice, the Dutch were taken to penalty kicks. In Saturday's quarterfinal against Costa Rica, coach Louis van Gaal made a shrewd move, bringing on the reserve goalkeeper Tim Krul for the shootout. On Wednesday, though, van Gaal had already used his three substitutions, so he was forced to stay with Jasper Cillessen, who did not possess Krul's reach or effective reaction.
After a demoralizing 7-1 defeat to Germany in Tuesday's other semifinal, the people of Brazil received another blow on Wednesday when archrival Argentina advanced to the final instead.
Argentina won the World Cup in 1978 and 1986. Now it will seek a third title in, of all places, the Maracana stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil's most famous and prized arena.
Throughout this tournament, fans of Brazil and Argentina have heckled each other through song, comparing the relative merits of their idols, Pele; and Maradona. Now, Argentina gets to sing on the world's biggest stage while Brazil must remain silent and seething.
"If Brazil cannot be champion, I don't want Argentina to be champion," said Edgard Custodio, 37, a Brazilian fan.
At 27, Messi will have a chance in his third World Cup to take home his sport's ultimate prize. And perhaps he will finally draw a full embrace by Argentine fans and an equal's comparison to the great Maradona, who won a World Cup in 1986.
Many in his home country have found Messi to be a remote figure, given that he left as a boy to begin his magnificent career at Barcelona. But he has been reliable and rescuing at this World Cup, scoring a late winner against Iran and making a critical pass to decide a second-round match against Switzerland.
He has been superb, scoring four goals and carrying his team through arid moments. Coach Alejandro Sabella has called him "our water in the desert."
Argentina reached the final in the most suffocating of matches. Perhaps Germany's victory on Tuesday took all the scoring oxygen out of the semifinals. Or maybe Brazil's humiliation was so shocking that Argentina and the Netherlands were left fumbling for artistry and inspiration. Not even Messi could find the net until the game went to a shootout.
The Netherlands gave him little room, hip-checking, grabbing and impeding him with a five-man back line, marking him with the enforcer Nigel de Jong in midfield. De Jong returned quicker than expected from a groin injury and, though he is most famous - or infamous - for a reckless kick to the chest of Spain's Xabi Alonso in the 2010 final, he was insistent in shadowing Messi on Wednesday.
In the 14th minute, a free kick by Messi found a gap in the wall, but Cillessen easily smothered the low, hard shot with his chest and hands.
Bruno Martins Indi, a Dutch defender, drew a yellow card in the 45th minute for repeatedly fouling Messi. He was replaced after halftime; van Gaal felt he could not risk another yellow and a suspension.
De Jong began to tire and limp and van Gaal made a second substitution in the 62nd minute, bringing on Jordy Clasie, who also tried to stick to Messi like an iron filing to a magnet.
In the 96th minute, the ineffective and depleted Robin van Persie, who had missed practice Tuesday with a stomach virus, was substituted for Klaas Jan Huntelaar. Against Mexico, Huntelaar had delivered the decisive goal. But his presence Wednesday meant that Krul would now be unavailable in goal if the game reached a shootout.
"I thought it was necessary to get van Persie out because he was on his last legs," van Gaal said.
A few minutes earlier, near the end of regulation, Arjen Robben, who had been so threatening against Costa Rica, slipped free into the penalty area. He might have scored the winning goal, but Javier Mascherano gave frantic chase and slid to block the shot and extend the match. Afterward, Mascherano cried in celebration and relief.

By NDTV