vendredi 23 septembre 2016

Caméra IP extérieure


Caméra IP extérieure

Nos caméras IP de surveillance pour un usage en extérieur/intérieur seront idéales pour surveiller votre maison, votre bureau ou votre magasin que ce soit de l'intérieur ou de l'extérieur en résistant aux intempéries. Vous pouvez administrer cette caméra de surveillance depuis votre smartphone ou votre ordinateur en toute situation et quand vous le souhaitez. Dotées de caissons ultra-résistants en métal avec un indice de protection IP66 elles sont parées contre les chocs et toutes les intempéries? (pluies, poussières...). Les caméras IP vous permettront une connexion à votre réseau soit par câble ethernet soit par WiFi. Ce sont des caméras dites intelligentes qui sont capables de détecter un mouvement qui a eu lieu dans leur zone de vision, de prendre automatiquement des photos de cet évènement et de vous alerter par email. Elles sont autonomes et n'ont pas besoin d'être connectées à un serveur ou un ordinateur pour fonctionner. Vous n'aurez besoin d'aucun abonnement particuliers pour les utiliser, vous installez et configurez vos caméras et c'est tout. Vous pouvez aussi en cas de besoin enregistrer le flux vidéo directement depuis un ordinateur ou une tablette/un smartphone à partir duquel vous vous connectez au flux vidéo de la caméra (pour les smartphones et tablettes certaines applications permettent cette fonctionnalité). Que vous soyez un particulier, un professionnel ou un installateur de video surveillance, Homeprotection.fr vous propose des solutions simples pour la videosurveillance ou protection de votre bureau, votre habitation, votre commerce, ou vos proches.?
            Visiter le site: https://homeprotection.fr/

Hero RC H911 2.4GHZ iRocket 4 Channel Fixed Pitch Ready to Fly Helicopter w/ bonus Battery, Balance Bar, Main Blade, Connect Buckle, Tail Blade, USB Charger

Product Description:

Hero RC H911 is a 100 class helicopter. It is a 4 channel fixed pitch helicopter providing true radio control helicopter flight performance. It is constructed with composite plastic materials providing light weight and durability. Its elastic properties make it great for novice pilots that may crash frequently. The H911 comes equipped with a 2.4ghz transmitter with an LCD screen. The LCD screen provides the pilot with trim information and a visual aspect of trim settings. It also has a plug allowing you to charge the batteries if there is no USB port around. The Hero RC H911 is all about the fun and excitement with radio control helicopter flying. The entire package allows the pilot to be ready to fly within minutes of charging the battery. Extra spare blades are also included in the package in case of mishaps. Specifications:
Length: 223mm (~8.7in)
Height: 81mm (~3.2in)
Rotor Diameter: 189mm (~7.4in)
Flight Duration: 5-7minutes
Charging Time: 50-60 minutes
Range: 50-80m (~54-87yards)
Package contents:
V911 4-Channel Helicopter
2.4ghz Transmitter
2x 3.7V 130Mah Li-poly
Charger
USB cable
Extra rotor blades
Required to Fly:
Transmitter requires 6 AA Batteries to operate
**Can not be flown in windy conditions

  • Indoor/Outdoor capability
  • Dual Mode Operation
  • LCD Transmitter/Fine Tuning
  • Convenient Binding
  • Servo Cyclic Control

One Plus 3 Review


Design

  • First full-metal design by OnePlus makes it far more attractive than previous phones
  • New Soft Gold version offers a brighter alternative to the standard grey
  • The OnePlus 3 has a mute switch, which many Android phones don't offer
The single biggest advancement from the OnePlus 2 to the OnePlus 3 is the design. I forgave the original OnePlus One's polycarbonate looks because the phone offered such fantastic value for money, but when the OnePlus 2 came round many people, myself included, wanted more than what was on offer.
Thankfully OnePlus has answered fan's calls for a more premium design, delivering its first metal uni-body smartphone in the OnePlus 3, cut from a single slab of aluminum.
The result is pleasing. The metal chassis signals the evolution of OnePlus brand from a slightly shaky Chinese startup to a brand that knows what it's doing, and knows what people want. It doesn't break any new ground in terms of looks, with flashes of iPhone, HTC and Samsung, but it's great to eyeball and hold in the hand.
Résultat de recherche d'images pour "one plus 3"
You've got the choice of two colors. Graphite (basically Space Grey) was available at launch, but Soft Gold has only recently come into stock - and soft is certainly the right word.
In some light the gold finish looks almost silver, but it's pleasing understated and is a lot more tasteful than the slightly garish Rose Gold attempts of late.
Round the front you get a while panel instead of black on the graphite, giving the Soft Gold OnePlus 3 a brighter, lighter appearance.
It's a shame that OnePlus hasn't taken smartphone design in a new direction, but a quick look at the top phones across all the major manufacturers shows that there's a fair amount of – how shall I put this – 'borrowing' when it comes to styling.
Front-on the OnePlus 3 isn't anything special – it's a relatively standard black (or white, if you opt for soft gold) slab coated in Gorilla Glass 4, with the main feature being the indented fingerprint scanner-come-home-button oval below the display.
The fingerprint scanner is much quicker at recognizing your digits and unlocking the OnePlus 3 than it was on the OnePlus 2, with a quoted time of just 0.3 seconds. While I can't vouch for the exact speed I can see that it's impressively quick, and I didn't have any issues when using it. OnePlus says it's faster than Apple's Touch ID, and I'm inclined to agree.
Either side of the scanner you'll find touch-sensitive navigation keys which are only visible when tapped, with a single white LED illuminating for a couple of seconds before disappearing into the bezel.




OnePlus 3 price and release date

  • Released in June 2016
  • US$399 or £329
  • Only available SIM-free from OnePlus
The OnePlus 3 launched at $399 in the US and hasn't changed in price, but it's not the same for those in the UK. Since July 11 the OnePlus 3 has cost £329, instead of the £309 launch price, due to the Pound weakening after the Brexit campaign.
Those in Australia have to continue waiting for the OnePlus 3 and there's no word of an official release yet.

Note 7 Review

  • Pros

    Top-of-the-line performance. Fantastic display. Improved S Pen design and functionality. Reasonably easy to handle for the size. Gorgeous, distinctive edge design.
  • Cons

    Expensive. Carrier bloatware.
  • Bottom Line

    The Samsung Galaxy Note 7 is the most attractive and powerful phablet you can buy, but it's also the most expensive.
The Samsung Galaxy Note 7 is the large-screen phone for 2016 that Android power users have been anxiously waiting to upgrade to, and it takes several cues from the Galaxy S7 Edge.
Sure, the S7 Edge already stretched our fingertips into near-phablet territory with a 5.5-inch display in March. But it didn't have two Note-series staples: a 5.7-inch screen and the S Pen.
The Note 7 maximizes the screen space, while minimizing its body, and it includes a small stylus that slides right into the phone – no matter which way you put it in this time.

Iphone 7 Review


Every year, Apple releases the best iPhone ever, but the iPhone 7 feels different somehow. All of its major details leaked ahead of time, not to mention a good handful of rumors about next fall’s iPhone, which could be a major redesign with an OLED screen and no Home button. For now, the iPhone 7 makes minor changes to the phone’s form and bigger improvements to its function. But it adds a couple new annoyances at the same time, which makes the iPhone 7 feel a bit like a beta version of what’s to come.

    A10 Fusion

The biggest advancement is under the hood. At the September event, Apple explained that the A10 Fusion chip powering the iPhone 7 has four cores: two high-performance cores for the most intense tasks, and two low-energy cores to handle easier jobs while saving power. All I noticed when testing the iPhone 7—we bought a 128GB rose gold model on launch day—was speed.
Apps launch quickly, updates install quickly, and the camera is ready to shoot seemingly the very instant I swipe to it from the lock screen. I didn’t notice any different in performance in a resource-hungry app like Pixelmator as in a lighter app like Mail. Everything is just faster. Geekbench scores are 3440 for the single-core CPU test, and 5273 for the multi-core. That’s nuts—my iPhone 6s scored 1437 and 2411, respectively, on the same tests, while my 2013 MacBook Air (1.7GHz Intel Core i7, 8GB of RAM) scored 2935 and 6200. 
 

While Apple did remove the analog headphone port (and trust me, I’ll get way into that a little later), it did add a second speaker for stereo sound when you hold the phone in landscape mode. The extra speaker is up near the FaceTime camera, and I could hear a bit of stereo separation when streaming The Force Awakens in the Videos app. Watching the same passage on an iPhone 6s, it was more obvious the sound was only coming from one speaker, and the iPhone 7 was louder too.
Another nice addition is the doubling of storage sizes. The entry-level iPhone 7 is now 32GB instead of 16GB. The middle tier is 128GB, and the high-end 256GB. That’s a pretty big deal if you’re always having to manage your available storage by deleting photos and videos. The iPhone SE tops out at 64GB, and the iPhone 6s at 128GB, so if you need a huge amount of storage, the iPhone 7 is the way to go.

  Camera

This review only covers the iPhone 7—we’ll follow up with a separate review of the iPhone 7 Plus, which has two cameras. The iPhone 7 has one 12-megapixel iSight camera, but its performance is much improved over the iPhone 6s. It’s got a wider aperture lens, f1.8, which lets in more light for better photos in low-light conditions than the iPhone 6s’s f2.2 lens. The iPhone 7 also has optical image stabilization, which used to be confined to the larger Plus models. The TrueTone flash is also 50 percent brighter thanks to four LEDs, and Apple says it can even compensate for the subtle flickering of indoor lighting. 


IPhone 7 Plus review




The iPhone 7 Plus went on sale on September 16… sort of. That was the official release date given by Apple during its iPhone launch event, but as release day dawned it transpired that the 7 Plus had been so popular during the pre-order period there wasn't any stock left at Apple Stores.
At the time of writing, the Apple website says the typical wait for iPhone 7 Plus delivery is 2-3 weeks, so while you will be able to get hold of Apple's new phablet before Christmas, you still can't pop down to your local Apple boutique and walk out with one in your hand.
If you're not in a rush then availability will improve over the next few months – and you may need that time to save up, given the hefty price tag.
The iPhone 7 Plus price starts at $749 (£719, AU$1,229) for the entry-level 32GB model. Apple has finally (and thankfully) done away with the 16GB storage option, so you're getting double the storage over the entry-level iPhone 6 Plus and 6S Plus – but you'll be paying $20 (£100, AU$40) more for the privilege.
That's not all that much extra – although for those in the UK that price hike has been amplified by the vote to leave the EU and the subsequent fall in the value of the pound, hitting iPhone-loving Brits squarely in the pocket.
Apple has also ditched the 64GB model in favor of a new 256GB option at the top of the range, with 128GB dropping down to become the middle storage option.
The 128GB iPhone 7 Plus price is $869 (£819, AU$1,419), while power users will need to shell out a whopping $969 (£919, AU$1,569) if they want to get their hands on the 256GB version.






Duplicate design

  • Water resistance is genuinely useful
  • Lack of a headphone jack is initially frustrating
  • More of the same design, with the same look as predecessors                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              It's easy to tell the iPhone 7 Plus apart from its predecessors, as it's the only iPhone to sport two cameras on its rear.Aside from the bulkier camera block, lack of a headphone port (more on that in a minute) and a couple of new colors though, Apple's stuck with exactly the same design that's served it well for its previous two iPhone iterations.
    If you've owned, or are familiar with, the iPhone 6 Plus or 6S Plus then you'll know exactly what the iPhone 7 Plus looks like.
    The rounded corners, aluminum frame and minimalist styling means the iPhone 7 Plus retains its premium status, and with the introduction of new black and 'jet black' colors, fans have two new ways to show their dark side.












mercredi 8 avril 2015

Annonce Derby 117,5

     
     Après une absence (forcée) de presque un mois, c’est le temps des retrouvailles avec l’Hamra. Ce Samedi 11 Avril à partir de 16h30 aura lieu le derby 117,5 au complexe Mohamed V.

Ce match est d’une importance cruciale car il parvient dans le dernier virage du championnat, la présence en masse du peuple Wydadi est plus qu’indispensable.

Les Winners portent à la connaissance de tous les habituels de la Curva Nord qu’une réunion générale aura lieu le jour du match à 12h derrière la porte 14. Des explications détaillées seront données par le Groupe, il faut que tout le monde soit attentif à ces consignes afin de les suivre à la lettre.

Soyez le soutien inconditionnel de la nation, soyez la source de courage de l’Hamra, soyez la rage de la Curva Nord.

Together Forever