Are you a working
professional looking for some extra income? Or a Housewife who wants to
financially help her family or let's say a student looking for some
income to pay off college fees? We all need extra income, a little more
to realize our dreams, to make our lives better and also of our near and
dear ones. You might have thought of various career options / work at
home opportunities / part time job options but have you ever given a
thought to internet based online jobs something which can fit in your
existing schedule, does not require any setup or investment... and is
always just a click away.
At EJobsJunction, you can explore one such online work at home option
and the potential it holds. If you have a little free time, this can be
something that can change your life for better.
With the great
pleasure, we want to inform all people and organizations that our
company is going to launch a very typical online directory list and
advertisement system in the IT history of Nepal. For the first time
which is a new additional brick to promote any sorts of the profession
company through web media.
Our main motto: behind inaugurating this online concept is to give
extra concentration to our youngsters who often spend their maximum time
on internet. Moreover our website gathers information’s from different
fields and makes accessible to everyone via single site named
www.onlinejobpoint.com, at any time. By doing this our site basically
helps to busy time of the people visitors and providers actual
information about there subject of interests including opportunities,
business, bank, college school, tour & travel, hotels, business
complex, automobiles, garments, models and many more…
We would like to offer you to promote our
originations through www.onlinejobpoint.com, a latest media for this, we
do have the special package of Rs. 500/- for each organization to
include their information in our online directory lists.
The Internet is expanding and so is the Internet Society. A
career with us offers you an amazing chance to use your skills and
talents to further the Internet SocietyĆ¢€™s mission, which is based upon
the fundamental belief that the Internet is for everyone. Please come
by often to see what new employment opportunities we have at the
Internet Society.
The Sense interface on the HTC One M9 is still one of the most
cultured and sophisticated around – far better than Samsung's TouchWiz
and far more powerful than iOS - and with the addition of Android
Lollipop it's been given another boost forward in terms of
functionality.
There are still a lot of swipes needed to get
around, which may put some people off, but it's simple to pick up and
rewards you for playing with lots of subtle tricks.
The interface
hasn't really been overhauled that much in the last year, and given most
of the updates below will be coming to the HTC One M8 (and possibly
even the M7) it seems like the reason to get them on the current model
is slightly limited.
That said, they're still great ways to drive
through the phone, and the nimbleness of the Snapdragon 810 chip means
most of the touches are buttery smooth and quick. There are still
pauses, judders and stumbles though, which I don't expect in a phone of
this level.
BlinkFood
I'll be honest here: I'm a fan of
Blinkfeed, but I've barely used it on this review device. I only
remembered it was there after a couple of days of using the phone, and
even then I found the motivation to go through and set up all my
favorite sites wasn't something I wanted to do.
There's something
about Blinkfeed that's not evolved in the way I wanted it to, even
though I was promised two years ago it would become really intuitive.
I
really like the theory and when I'm sitting there waiting for something
and I want to idly read some stuff for a few minutes, it's always great
to have it there. But
then I realized that I don't want to keep snacking. I want something
more substantial. After a couple of years of flicking past interesting
tidbits of info, I'm not feeling full.
Blinkfeed needs to evolve,
become something more substantial - and there was an attempt to do that
here, with the service keeping an eye on where you are and the time, and
showing you nearby restaurants and eateries that would be perfect for
you based on Yelp recommendations.
However, this option doesn't
seem to know anywhere in the UK, as it's never once recommended a place
to eat, although it is working well enough in the US.
Either way,
I don't want it - the times when I fancy a place to eat that I've not
tried are few, so the One M9 telling me what's nearby each lunchtime
isn't going to be helpful.
Ideally, this service should know the
EXACT moments that I'll be looking for a new place to eat (when calendar
invites show lunch, for instance) rather than just generically. If it
worked now, I'd have turned it off.
The lockscreen does tell me
when the sunset and sunrise is coming, which is nice. Always good to
know when the vampires are going to be out.
New notifications
This
isn't something that's particularly new, but for those of you thinking
about upgrading from the HTC One M7 or other phone from 2013, the
improvements on Sense are really cool.
The lockscreen now shows
information in strips which can be flipped away when not wanted, or
double tapped to open in the relevant app. It's a neat system, and shows
Google and HTC have worked well together to integrate the option with
Sense.
In the pull down bar, there's often a lot going on though.
With Google Now just chucking information at you (you'll get the option
if you search for anything in the dedicated bar on the home screen) as
well as apps telling you information, music widgets popping up and more,
it's quite busy. Another
pull down will show the quick settings and the integration of all this
together makes a lot of sense to me. It's one of those things to be
experienced rather than read about, but with a few minutes of use it all
makes sense.
Sense Home
Sense Home is one of the big
things HTC is talking about with the One M9, a widget that lives on the
home screen to show you the apps you use the most.
The clever
trick is that the phone will work out where Home, Work and the more
generic 'Out' zones are, and populate the apps accordingly - and you can
set these locations yourself.
It generally works well too,
although you can't tell it to NOT put certain apps there - Tinder fans
probably won't want others to see that on the front screen. By
default HTC has also lobbed 'smart folders' into the mix, showing
suggested apps and those you've downloaded.... but these are really poor
and should be switched off. The suggestions are random and the titles
truncated - not what you'd expect from a flagship phone.
I like
the idea of having different apps for different times, and generally
they were pretty good. However, I still found that after a week the
eight slots weren't filled with my most-used apps, so I hope this gets
more accurate over time.
Gestures
Gestures are back from
the HTC One M8, allowing you to wake the phone into certain modes when
locked. The main gesture is double tapping the blank screen to unlock
it, something Nokia invented and LG made popular. Given how hard it is
to find the power button at times, this ability is useful - plus you can
now double tap to turn the screen off too.
Flicking up from the
bottom of the display bypasses the lock screen altogether if you've not
got security on, and when I remembered to use it I found it quite a
useful ability.
Plus you can drag down from the top or other side
to open straight into voice dialing or Blinkfeed, although these are
turned off by default. The
main thing that's annoyed me from last year is still there though: if
the phone is asleep on the desk, you can't wake it without picking it up
or knocking the One M9 first. I'm sure the screen doesn't stay
constantly waiting for a tap or swipe input when asleep to save battery,
but the LG range seems to be able to do it with better power
management.
But this gesture unlock is one of the best thing HTC has done in a while, and it should be applauded for keeping it present.
Keyboard
While
I don't want it to sound like I'm bashing the One M9 too much in the
interface section, the keyboard is another place where HTC has let a
lead go.
The brand used to be synonymous with an excellent and
accurate keyboard, but it's so far behind the likes of SwiftKey that
it's hard not to recommend you don't download a better option from the
Play Store as soon as possible. The
accuracy is OK, but the word predictions are rarely correct. On top of
that, the phone will only let you put in a word that's not in the
dictionary if you explicitly to so - and it won't default to that the
next time.
It's not terrible, but HTC used to be the best default keyboard on any phone, where now it's just OK.
Excellent contact integration
One
thing HTC does do really well is make the phone section really easy to
use, with the clever join between your contacts on handset and social
networks almost seamless.
For instance the smart linking between
your friends on the phone and the profiles on Facebook and Twitter is
excellent. And on top of that, the One M9 can pull in HD pictures from
Facebook profiles so when you get called it's not from a blurry,
pixelated mess. It
can take a while for the app to overwrite the fuzzy pictures with the
HD options, but it will shake itself out eventually. Given phones like
the iPhone 6 still can't get close to this kind of happy integration
(nor do they have smart dialing, where you can easily tap out numbers to
get to friends' profiles) so HTC should be applauded for this effort.
Performance
The
performance of the HTC One M9 is excellent, as noted. There are too
many judders in this early version of the software that I anticipate
will be ironed out in a very short time, but when it's opening apps or
searching the web everything is crisper than last year.
I wish I
could it say it would stay that way for the next two years that you'll
own this phone, but when you start filling it with apps you'll get an
inevitable slowdown as they start doing things in the background.
Always keep things clean and safe, kids. A factory reset once in a while doesn't hurt.
The
GeekBench 3 results show a very impressive score, and remember this
isn't really the full performance of the phone as HTC has throttled it
slightly so it doesn't go burning hot. That
points out something huge about today's phones: they're pointlessly
powerful. The octacore processor can be pushed to insane speeds if you
don't care too much about battery, but in day to day life it won't hit
anywhere close to that limit, meaning HTC can dial back the power
without a worry.
With that in mind, why does it matter how
powerful the phone is? It's like buying a high performance sports car
that will never see the track. It's good to know you've got that
headroom to put your foot down when you want it, and the acceleration is
great, but push it too hard and you'll be in trouble. Even
with the lower power, the HTC One M9 is the most powerful smartphone
we've tested, only second to the insane skills of the iPad Air 2.
For
gaming, flying through multiple apps and more it's got the power – but
then when you're trying to browse high resolution pictures in the
gallery and it takes a second to load the fully sharp image, that
experience is ruined.
Shout out for call quality though – the
ability to grab signal is very good indeed, which is even more
impressive when you think how much metal is in this phone.
Metal
usually equals no phone signal at all, so it's good to see that HTC has
somehow managed to improve this area. I was a really big fan of using
the One M9 to make something as old-fashioned as a phone call.