7 Important Tech Tips for the Stormy Season

Every year, devastating typhoons enter the Philippines and leave lots of damage, creating messes in the archipelago. Possibly, if we can be more prepared, we can lessen the scars left by storms every time the seasons come – so we’ll keep it straight to the point. Here are some tips that you may find useful when a storm arrives:text alert

  1. Charge up all your gadgets. You never know when the electricity will get cut, so charge up! Get a powerbank as well if your gadget batteries can no longer make it, and charge that too!
  2. Have lights & batteries around. Remember to have candles and flashlights around just in case it is needed, and on top of that, make sure you have extra batteries to last you through a strong typhoon.
  3. Buy your prepaid load already. If you’re not on postpaid, then you may need to get yourself loaded for communication. This will allow you to give and receive updates regarding the weather situation.
  4. Bring your tech where flood can’t reach them. When water starts to build up on the streets, bring your cars to higher ground – the same applies to all your gadgets, wires, appliances and the like to try and avoid huge damages.
  5. If your phone gets wet, remove the batteries and put it in uncooked rice overnight. This is a way to try and save it.
  6. Download helpful apps. LED flashlights, Project NOAH, Arko, weather apps and even social media apps will prove to be useful not only to you but also to others. Know how to use them.
  7. Remember hashtags and get the emergency numbers. We can all stay connected together despite storms between us. Here is a sample of a list of hashtags that will be useful for typhoons such as #GlendaPH, and here are the emergency hotlines. You can also follow @RescuePH, @PhilRedCross, @DSWDserves, @MMDA and other Twitter accounts for quick updates.

Some typhoon-related stories:

Keep safe everyone!

The post 7 Important Tech Tips for the Stormy Season appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

JBL Synchros S100i Quick Review

In-ears are for those who are looking for an easy-to-bring and lightweight headphones. They all offer great portability but differ on sound reproduction. Some, since their drivers aren’t as big as on- or over-ear headphones, have weak sound and poor quality. Let’s see if the JBL Synchros S100i will be able to impress us on this Quick Review.

JBL_Synchros_S100i_2

Before we begin with the review, it’s important to note that the Synchros S100i is specifically made for Apple products. Its got a 3-button inline remote which lets you control the volume and change songs easily. In contrast, there’s the Synchros S100a that is optimized for Android devices.

The JBL Synchros S100i goes with a minimalist approach on its design. It sports an all white end-to-end color right from its audio jack up to the housing of its drivers that are accentuated by silver elements. The company does away with plastic build on the S100i and instead opted to use metal alloy for the housing of their 9mm drivers. This in turn adds a solid and an overall premium feel to the in-ear buds.

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The S100i comes with a tangle-free cable, an in-line clothing clip, two sets of differently-sized buds, additional memory foam tips, and a small travel case.

The cable has a standard length which is just enough to be used while connected to a device inside the pocket of your pants. Once plugged in to the ears, it stays in place even while we were moving around. It was also comfortable enough to be used for long periods of time – a characteristic that most earbuds have.

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After hooking up the S100i to a laptop and streaming songs on Spotify to listen to different genres, we were taken by surprise with its performance. For a small driver it delivered powerful bass levels without getting muddy, but the element that impressed us most is its capability to reproduce clear and untainted vocals. We’ve had a lot of encounters with over-ear studio headphones in the past carrying 40-50mm drivers and we could say that when talking solely about voice quality, the S100i’s 9mm driver isn’t far behind.

It can also go loud without any audio clipping which is an admirable feat thanks to its maximum output power of 5 mW. Highs could be a bit more warm, but overall, we were very much satisfied with its sound reproduction.

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The JBL Synchros S100i has a simple look that would make you think it’s just another pair of ordinary earbuds. But once you put it on and play some tunes, you would hear and experience that it’s more than that. The words “Comfortable,” “Adaptable,” and “Powerful” are printed on its box and true enough they deliver those qualities once you try them on.

The catch is, it will set you back for Php5,299. But if you’re an in-ear kind of person because you want the portability and ease of bringing it anywhere, the S100i is a recommended companion.

JBL Synchros S100i specs:
Design: In-ear
Type: Earbuds
Driver size: 9mm
Frequency range: 10Hz – 22MHz
Maximum power output: 5 mW
Sensitivity: 106dB

What we liked about it:
* Sturdy build
* Impressive lows
* Untainted vocals
* No audio clipping

What we didn’t like:
* Looks very plain and simple
* Highs could be warmer
* More expensive than other in-ears

The post JBL Synchros S100i Quick Review appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Aquino’s DAP: lethal mix of ignorance and arrogance

President Aquino takes on the Supreme Court.

President Aquino takes on the Supreme Court.


President Aquino’s belligerent stand against the Supreme Court’s decision declaring his pet initiative, the Disbursement Acceleration Program, unconstitutional was not at all surprising considering his defense of Budget Secretary Florencio Abad, Jr. last Friday.

Reading and listening to his speech was not only appalling. It was disturbing.

It showed the lethal combination of ignorance and arrogance.

The issue is his usurpation of Congress’ power of the purse which is a violation of the Constitution and he talked about parking zones!

The President cited provisions the 1987 Administrative Code as legal basis of DAP. He said, “..we were surprised to find that the Supreme Court decision did not take into account our legal basis for DAP. How can they say that our spending methods are unconstitutional when they did not look into our basis? Even until now, Section 39 of the Administrative Code is in effect, along with its other sections.”

What he was referring to was Book VI, Chapter 5, Section 39 of the 1987 Administrative Code of the Philippines which states, “Except as otherwise provided in the General Appropriations Act, any savings in the regular appropriations authorized in the General Appropriations Act for programs and projects of any department, office or agency, may, with the approval of the President, be used to cover a deficit in any other item of the regular appropriations…”

Did he read the part, “be used to cover a deficit …”. I dare Malacanang to show a certification of deficit from the agencies it gave DAP funding to.

In what is an indication that Malacañang is hard put scrambling for justification for DAP, Aquino cited Sec. 39 of the 1987 Administrative Code while the Solicitor General Francis Jardeleza invoked Sec. 38 in his defense of DAP before the High Court.

Section 38 on suspension of Expenditure of Appropriations states:”Except as otherwise provided in the General Appropriations Act and whenever in his judgment the public interest so requires, the President, upon notice to the head of office concerned, is authorized to suspend or otherwise stop further expenditure of funds allotted for any agency, or any other expenditure authorized in the General Appropriations Act, except for personal services appropriations used for permanent officials and employees.”

The main decision penned by Justice Lucas Bersamin said, “The withdrawal and transfer of unobligated allotments and the pooling of unreleased appropriations were invalid for being bereft of legal support.
Justice Antonio T. Carpio, in his concurring decision, lengthily explained why DAP cannot be legal based on the 1987 Administrative Code issued by President Corazon Aquino, which her son now is clinging to to save his presidency.

Carpio’s explanation: “Section 38, Chapter V, Book VI of the Administrative Code of 1987 allows the President ‘ to suspend or otherwise stop further expenditure ‘ of appropriated funds but this must be for a legitimate purpose, like when there are anomalies in the implementation of a project or in the disbursement of funds.

“Section 38 cannot be read to authorize the President to permanently stop so as to cancel the implementation of a project in the GAA because the President has no power to amend the law, and the GAA is a law.

“ Section 38 cannot also be read to authorize the President to impound the disbursement of funds for projects approved in the GAA because the President has no power to impound funds approved by Congress.

“The President can suspend or stop further expenditure of appropriated funds only after the appropriated funds have become obligated , that is, a contract has been signed for the implementation of the project. The reason for the suspension or stoppage must be legitimate, as when there are anomalies. The President has the Executive power to see to it that the GAA is faithfully implemented, without anomalies. However, despite the order to suspend or stop further expenditure of funds the appropriated funds remain obligated until the contract is rescinded. As long as the appropriated funds are still obligated, the funds cannot constitute savings because ‘savings’ as defined in the GAA, must come from appropriations that are ‘free from any obligation or encumbrance.’

“Section 38 cannot be used by the President to stop permanently the expenditure of unobligated appropriated funds because that would amount to a Presidential power to impound funds appropriated in the GAA.

“The President has no power to impound unobligated funds in the GAA for two reasons: first, the GAA once it becomes law cannot be amended by the President and an impoundment of unobligated funds is an amendment of the GAA since it reverses the will of Congress;second , the Constitution gives the President the power to prevent unsound appropriations by Congress only through his line item veto power, which he can exercise only when the GAA is submitted to him by Congress for approval.

“Once the President approves the GAA or allows it to lapse into law, he himself is bound by it.
“There is no presidential power of impoundment in the Constitution and this Court cannot create one . Any ordinary legislation giving the President the power to impound unobligated appropriations is unconstitutional.
“The power to impound unobligated appropriations in the GAA, coupled with the power to realign such funds to any project, whether existing or not in the GAA, is not only a usurpation of the power of the purse of Congress and a violation of the constitutional separation of powers, but also a substantial re-writing of the 1987 Constitution….

“Section 38 cannot be invoked by the President to create ‘savings’ by ordering the permanent stoppage of disbursement of appropriated funds, whether obligated or not. If the appropriated funds are already obligated,then the stoppage of disbursements of funds does not create any savings because the funds remain obligated until the contract is rescinded. If the appropriated funds are unobligated , such permanent stoppage amounts to an impoundment of appropriated funds which is unconstitutional.

“The authority of the President to suspend or stop the disbursement of appropriated funds under Section 38 can refer only to obligated funds;otherwise, Section 38 will be patently unconstitutional because it will constitute a power by the President to impound appropriated funds…

“Therefore, it is grave error to construe that the DAP is an exercise of the President’s power to impound under Section 38, Chapter VI, Book VI of the Administrative Code of 1987.

“The OSG and DBM do not interpret Section 38 as granting the President the power to impound. The essence of impoundment is not to spend. The essence of DAP is to ‘spend, spend,spend,’ in the words of the Solicitor General.”

Harry Roque, one of the petitioners representing the Concerned Citizens Movement, said, it is elementary: “Administrative Code cannot prevail over the Constitution.”

Is that too much for President Aquino to understand?

Lenovo A526 Review

Right around the mid-way point of May, Lenovo added three new smartphones to their portfolio. One of which is the Lenovo A526; a wallet-friendly dual-SIM smartphone with a 4.5-inch display and is powered by a 1.3GHz quad-core processor. Check out our full review after the break.

Design and Construction

The Lenovo A526 doesn’t differ much from your typical entry-level smartphones in terms of design. It’s rather bulky and hefty for a phone of its size and the majority of its body is made of plastic.

The front panel houses the handset’s 4.5-inch FWGA display along with three capacitive buttons at the bottom and an earpiece above, neighbored by a front-facing VGA camera.

The left and bottom portions of the A526 are devoid of any components, which leaves the top and the right flank to house the two ports for audio and charging and three buttons for power and volume controls respectively.

Flip the phone on its back and you’ll be greeted with a texturized back cover that hides the pair of SIM card slots, Micro-SD card slots and the A526’s 2000mAh battery from plain sight. It is also here that you’ll find the phone’s 5-megapixel rear camera, and the speaker grille which is situated at the bottom left corner.

Display and Multimedia

As one would expect from an entry-level device, the Lenovo A526 only comes with a no-frill 4.5-inch FWVGA display. No additional layer of fancy glass laid on top of the actual screen, no IPS panel, just a modest screen that allows you to operate the phone using touch inputs.

Needless to say, the screen is not a strong suit of this smartphone. Viewing angles are bad, the colors are a bit washed out and outdoor legibility is sub-par at best. The only redeeming thing about the A526’s screen is its responsiveness to touch inputs, even at the corners.

The good thing is that the audio was not as lackluster as the A526’s display. Whether the sound was coming out of its loudspeaker or through the headphone jack, the output and the quality was very acceptable.

OS, UI and Apps

Turning on the handset on for the first time, we were greeted with a skinned version of Android Jelly Bean which looks somewhat similar to the one we saw on the K900 and other recently launched Lenovo handsets.

To our surprise though, the A526 is loaded with a number of third party apps that we don’t usually see on handsets. This can be viewed as a good thing and bad thing since these pre-installed apps eat up most of what is left of its measly 4GB internal storage. On the other hand, some users may appreciate these add-ons because they won’t have to download it themselves.

In addition to the pre-loaded third party apps, Lenovo also slipped in a few of their homebrewed apps like SHAREit, SECUREit and SYNC it in to the handset. We imagine that most users won’t mind having these apps on their phone since they are useful compared to other bloatware that other companies add to their devices. However, the fact remains that it takes a bite out of internal storage, forcing users to invest on a Micro-SD card when purchasing the handset.

As far as the UI is concerned, the overall feel remains similar to stock Android despite of the a few aesthetic changes that Lenovo made. Although the toy-ish icons didn’t appeal to us that much, we’re content with the fact that things are where they’re supposed to be and it didn’t take long before we get accustomed to the subtle alterations in the UI.

Performance and Benchmark

Backed by a 1.3GHz quad-core processor from MediaTek with 1GB of RAM, the Lenovo A526 was able to breeze through basic tasks without laboring too much. During our time with it, we also tried playing Dead Trigger 2 on it, and although the game was not as smooth as we would hope for, the game was very playable for the most part.

We’ve already had a few encounters with the MT6582M chipset that powers the A526, therefore we already have an idea on what to expect from it in terms of benchmark scores.

As expected, the scores that we got from the A526’s chipset is at par with the other handsets that has the same processor. Here’s the breakdown of its benchmark tests results:

AnTuTu: 17238
Quadrant Standard: 6067
Vellamo: 1771 (HTML5) / 740 (Metal)
NenaMark2: 59.3fps

Camera

Like the A526’s display, imaging and video recording also leave a lot to be desired. It’s bad enough that the resolution is fairly low in today’s standards, but the lack of autofocus on both the front and rear snappers and the absence of an accompanying flash on the back side made it hard for us to get a decent picture out of the handset.

Battery Life

Equipped with a 2000mAh battery pack and a rather modest display, the Lenovo A526 gave us a pretty decent mileage-per-charge. On a light-to-moderate usage, the phone lasted for more than 14 hours on average.

Here’s the result of our battery test:

Test Parameters:

Smartphone state: Airplane Mode
Brightness: 50%
Volume: 0%
File Type: MP4
Media Player: MX Player

Conclusion

Despite of its relatively cheap price tag (Php5,999), we still feel that some consumers, especially those who are very paricular with the specs, will have a hard time grabbing the Lenovo A526 off the shelves because there are other handsets in the market with roughly the same price tag but has a better specs than this.

However, the not-so-nitpicky crowd should give this handset a second look because it offers decent battery life and good overall performance without breaking the bank.

The Lenovo A526 is now available in the country and is being retailed for Php5,999.

What we liked about it:

* Durable build
* Good sound output
* Acceptable performance
* Long battery life

What we didn’t like about it:

* Subpar display
* Poor camera performance

The post Lenovo A526 Review appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Isuzu D-MAX 4×4 surmounts biggest challenge in Davao finale of drive series

Gracing the Davao leg of the Isuzu D-MAX 4×4 Drive Series were Isuzu Philippines Corporation (IPC) EVP Takashi Tomita (4th from left) and Isuzu Davao President and General Manager Frank Liu, Jr. (3rd from right). Other Isuzu executives present during the opening ceremony, from left, IPC Consultant for Manufacturing Tadao Takenouchi, IPC VP for Administration Akira Okumura, IPC VP for Sales Daisuke Inaba, Isuzu Davao VP for Sales and Marketing Kim Liu, and Isuzu Davao VP for Parts and Service Jockson Liu

 

THE Isuzu D-MAX 4×4 has successfully demonstrated its unmatched capabilities in tackling tough terrain to thousands of truck lovers and off-road driving enthusiasts coming from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. But the popular pickup model faced—and, more importantly, surpassed—its biggest challenge at the final leg of the driving series that was designed to showcase its performance.

Called the 2014 Isuzu D-MAX 4×4 Drive Series, the event kicked off in April in Pampanga, moved to Bacolod and Cebu in May, then to Cagayan de Oro in early June, before finishing amazingly in Davao City. The fifth and final leg, held from June 20 to 22 at the Dakudao Estate on JP Laurel Avenue, Lanang, Davao City (beside SM Lanang), completed the driving activity’s theme of “One Challenge, Five Destinations.”

And rise to the challenge the Dabawenos did as they took to the specially designed off-road course. Unlike in the previous four legs where the tracks were laid out across vacant spaces, in Davao it was closer to terrain traversed in rainforest challenges. Participants had to navigate their way through heavy, jungle-like foliage as they followed the land’s natural terrain. Making the experience more demanding were the occasional rains, which made the track slippery and treacherous.

The Isuzu D-MAX 4×4 traversing rainforest challenges with slippery and treacherous track due to its natural course and occasional rain. 

The course also featured obstacles that put the D-MAX 4×4’s power, maneuverability and traction to the test. The obstacles included 40-degree hill climb done in first gear and in second gear; 40-degree hill climb with a stall midway up; 40-degree descent without braking; lateral climb mount; driving over “elephant holes”; tackling trail ruts; camber right and camber left sides up in 45-degree angles; traversing a roundabout cone; lateral descent ditch crossing; and, driving over cross axle articulation rails.

The guests who trooped to the venue and who were able to try and experience for themselves the off-road capabilities of the D-MAX 4×4 claimed that the pickup truly addresses their requirement for a durable, reliable and fuel-efficient workhorse. In Davao, this takes on significant relevance as almost half of the place’s total land area is classified as a forest, with agriculture the largest economic sector. Davao City, meanwhile, is the third most populous in the Philippines after Metro Manila and Cebu City, which means the city—a hub for trade, commerce and industry in Mindanao—is progressive and urbanized.

“It is notable that Davao has always been included in our D-MAX 4×4 Drive Series since it began in 2008. This only means that Dabawenos are one of the strongest supporters of Isuzu products in the country. For this, allow me to extend my sincere gratitude on behalf of Isuzu Philippines Corporation and our dealer, Isuzu Davao,” IPC Executive Vice President Takashi Tomita said at the opening of the event.

In the driving exercises lined up on the D-MAX 4×4 track, the hundreds of participants were able to learn some of the special skills required in going off-road—especially in wet and wild conditions. They received instructions from certified experts at off-road driving.

Like in all four previous editions of the D-MAX 4×4 Drive Series, the experience stressed to the participants the advantages offered by four-wheel-drive vehicles. The D-MAX boasts of one of the highest ground clearances among pickups with a 235mm height for the LS 4×4 and 225mm for the LT 4×4 variants. Isuzu’s new 4WD Terrain Command Select Dial also allows the driver to switch from two-wheel drive to four-wheel drive high even while traveling at speeds of up to 100kph. Boosting the pickup’s off-road capabilities are its 30-degree approach angle, 22.7-degree departure angle, the ability to be tilted sideways on a 49-degree slope, and a Limited Slip Differential that lets it tackle any obstacle. The D-MAX has a suspension system composed of independent double wishbone with coil springs in front and semi-elliptical over-slung leaf springs in the rear.

“In the market today, truly the Isuzu D-MAX offers the best value for your hard-earned money,” Tomita said.

The 2014 D-MAX 4×4 Drive Series is the third and the biggest mounted by IPC. The first two editions of the event were held in 2008, which took on three locations, and in 2010, which traveled across four venues. Next up for the D-MAX are many more activities as IPC presses on with its effort to reach out directly to its target market. In the meantime, present and potential customers of the D-MAX and of Isuzu’s popular model lineup can visit any of the 21 authorized Isuzu dealerships nationwide for test drives or to avail of new promos. They may also log on to www.isuzuphil.com for updates and other information.