Tuesday, 12 November 2013

Qmobile Noir A15 3D Smartphone Review

Qmobile Noir A15 3D Smartphone Review

Qmobile introduce new smartphone "Qmobile Noir A15 3D" recently which is having 5 inches 3D touchscreen, Dual SIM, Wifi, 5 MP Camera and running Android OS 4.1.2 Jelly Bean and the price tag of 17,200 rupees in Pakistan.







Qmobile Noir A15 3D Smartphone Specification

    Android OS, v4.1.2 (Jelly Bean)
    4 GB OF Internal
    512 MB RAM
    microSD card Slot
    Dual core 1 GHz
    MTK 6577 Chipset
    Bluetooth v4.0
    USB
    WLAN (Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Wi-Fi hotspot)
    GPRS Class 12
    EDGE Class 12
    3G
    5.0 inches 3D capacitive touchscreen, 480 x 800 pixels, 16M colors, Multitouch
    Sensors Accelerometer, gyro, proximity
    SIM 1: 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
    SIM 2: 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
    Browser HTML5
    Colors White, Black
    Dual SIM
    GPS + A-GPS support
    Camera 5MP, 2560 x 1920 pixels, autofocus, LED flash, Geo-tagging, Video (VGA@30fps)



Qmobile Noir A15 3D Smartphone Price

Rupees 17,200 (In Pakistan)

Plastic Bags Can Be Harmful to Your Health

Lots of us re-use the plastic bags that we buy at the checkout in the supermarket. And although this is a very economical and environmentally friendly option, health care professionals believe that the re-use of some packages may seriously undermine health.




Microbiologists from the University of Glasgow found that some packages can only be used once. According to the scientists, packages for meat or vegetables should be used only once – no matter how careful they are packed. Doctors believe that a violation of this rule significantly increases the risk of serious food poisoning.

The evidence of it is the result of the experiment, during which experts checked nine types of plastic and cloth bags from several supermarkets in Scotland. Four of them had such a high level of harmful microbes (primarily Escherichia coli sol) that the packages were referred to as highly dangerous.

The findings of the Scottish microbiologists were supported by their American colleagues. Experts from the United States reported that when San Francisco banned the issue of free packages in stores, the number of bacterial infections and deaths from food poisoning immediately increased (25% and 46% respectively). Think about it when you want to reuse the package brought from the store.