MICROS and payleven launch new smartphone point-of-sale model for start-ups

Point-of-sale software provider MICROS and hardware manufacturer payleven have announced the launch of a new cloud-based point of sale solution, which they claim will allow start-ups to begin taking credit and debit card payments via mobile almost instantly.

The offering will allow start-ups to begin taking payments through their point-of-sale device immediately after registering on MICROS’s Kachng website – which payleven claims eliminates the need for specialist setup staff. 

The system will work over 3G, 4G and Wi-Fi mobile connections and will be offered on a mixed subscription and pay-as-you go basis, with users charged from £49 per month for the MICROS service as well as a 2.75% levy on each payment taken.  The card reader device itself costs £89 + VAT.

Payleven claims its offering is fully scalable from the smallest to the largest businesses, with options to manage multiple card readers, tills and branches.

Micromax Stylus Toting Canvas Doodle A88 Music Headset

Micromax Take a Step Ahead With a New Headset"Canvas A88"With Existing New Features Headset Only in 8,499.
In terms of specifications, the Canvas Music cannot compete with the likes of the Doodle or Canvas HD, but for its price, we expected as much. There’s a 4.5-inch display of unspecified resolution. In terms of processing power, the Canvas Music should chug along fine thanks to the 1GHz dual-core processor.

Nokia Metal Lumia 925 With Latest Camera Technology

The Nokia Lumia 925 is an Great device – on the one hand, a bold design, on the other, debatable specs for a flagship phone.

 The phone, which runs the latest version of Microsoft's Windows Phone 8 software, will be available from T-Mobile in the United States and from other carriers around the world. Along with the new phone, Nokia introduced a set of new camera-focused software features, which will make their way to the Lumia line of Windows Phone 8 phones.

This Smartphone Is Really a Masterpiece.

This Lumia 925 is a lot like the Verizon Lumia 928 that was announced last week: It has a big 4.5-inch HD AMOLED Screen, 1280x768-resolution touchscreen, a dual-core Snapdragon processor, 1GB of RAM and an 8.7-megapixel camera. But the outsides of the phones are very different. While the 928 is made of a shiny white polycarbonate or plastic, the 925 is made entirely of metal.

Volkswagen’s XL1 Review

There are four brand-new supercars at this year’s Geneva motor show. All are advanced hybrids and made of carbon-fibre. Although, with just 47bhp from its 803cc turbodiesel, a 100mph top speed and 0-62mph in 12.7 seconds, Volkswagen’s XL1 appears puny compared with LaFerrari, the McLaren’s P1 and Porsche’s 918. This diminutive silver machine is, however, every inch a supercar, from its hi-tech construction, to its 300mpg-plus fuel economy.
More than 120 years after the invention of the first motor car, isn’t it time we changed our view of the supercar? Welcome to the new super, super efficient. And when this remarkable two-seat coupé trundled silently into this year’s Geneva show having traversed the Swiss Alps from Lucerne across the precipitous 5,000ft Brünig and Jaun passes, it was averaging more than 140mpg. Having covered this entire project from its very beginnings, it was your correspondent, along with development engineers, swapping turns at the wheel.
In 1998, Ferdinand Piëch, the then head of VW, ordered his engineers to develop a “ine-litre” car. This refers to the German measure of fuel consumption of litres per 100km, which equates to 282.5mpg. Wolfsburg went into overdrive, producing a carbon-fibre bodied, tandem-seat, single-piston engined special. Looking as though he was about to tackle the Bonneville salt flats, Piëch climbed behind the wheel for his last public appearance as VW chairman in 2002 and drove from his office in Wolfsburg to the VW shareholders meeting in Hamburg. In the rain and in chilly temperatures, the canny old engineer beat his own target for the car, setting an average fuel consumption of 317·4mpg at 43·5mph.

Micromax Bolt A35 Review

Micromax launched a new smartphone, called Bolt A35. This is also the first handset of Micromax’s Bolt Android smartphone series.
“The Bolt category will include a new range of feature rich phones from Micromax,” said the company n a press release while announcing the launch of the phone.
The Micromax Bolt A35 comes with a 10.1 cm full capacitive touch screen and runs on Android 2.3.5 (Gingerbread). It is powered by a 1 GHz processor. The new Micromax handset is equipped with a 2.0 megapixel rear camera and a 0.3 megapixel front camera. The A35 comes with an expandable memory up to 16 GB too.





Powered by a 1500 mAh battery, the phone claims to provide talk time of 4.5 hours and supports Bluetooth 2.1 and WiFi. It has something called ‘Flash’ application that, according to Micromax, enables users to share apps, games, photos, videos, songs and much more with just a swipe.
“Users can drag content across the screen or simply shake and share seamlessly between Android devices to spread the excitement at blazing fast speeds. The app works on WiFi, making one of the devices a Hotspot and sharing files over the private network via “Flash Transfer” App to keep the action going even without any data connectivity. It is the ideal application for the young generation who is always on the lookout for better, faster and savvier smart phones on the go,” Micromax explained further.

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