Description

★ Introduction of Game
Third volume of Seed Series (Seed 3) with record of 1 million downloads all over the world has been released. Mikhail, a new hero, appears. The story begins from Mashima Kingdom existing at the opposite side of Khalikuf continent whish was the central place for volume 1 & 2. It depends on your choice and decision whether the hero, Makhail, can fight on against his fate.
★ Characteristics of Game
1. 4 distinctive occupations system
4 kinds of distinctive occupations such as knight, warrior, archer and wizard can be selected and a unique combat system per occupation can be experienced.
2. Excellent feeling of blow and action
5 kinds of buff skills and more than 24 kinds of attack and defense skills can be used, and the splendid presentation of each skill offers a lively compulsive viewing combat even for a moment. The new conceptual runaway mode is an important technique to attempt a dramatic reversal.
3. Various game systems
By realizing various game systems such as naval combat, arena, dragon race, etc., it satisfies the user’s various requirements and doubles the fun of game with getting out of the repeated monster hunting.
4. Various types of quests
By pursuing variety in the composition of quests such as subjugation of monster, collection, transfer, protection major NPC, guard, rescue, naval combat, battle with invading into the ship, strengthening of equipment, etc., it is composed in order for the user to feel a new fun as the user repeat the game.
5. More advanced clothing system
The unique clothes are provided for each of all equipment items, so the appearance of character is changed according to the item to be worn. Try to create your own beautiful character with the more advanced clothing system.
6. Possible to continue game by three rounds
It is possible to enjoy plays by three rounds with succession of the ability values and items after ending a game.
7. Network storage and trading
Try to deposit items or trade them with other users through network in the system menu.
8. Strange Dungeon
It can be entered through NPC of arena manager in the village and high level of equipment can be obtained.


Users and developers alike are still getting used to Ice Cream Sandwich. And while the adaptation period has taken a little longer than with prior versions of Android, progress is being made in getting used to the new OS and its new tools. Developers and themers alike often have to compile and decompileapk files in order to apply their themes and modifications. However, many have had issues decompiling Samsung ICS system apk files.
Luckily, those working on the Samsung Galaxy S II I9100 now have a modified version of APKTool. XDA Forum Member xtremesv found and tested a modified version that is capable of editing the Galaxy S II system.apk file and similar files, which have been the bane of many themers and modders. The functionality and usability of APKTool hasn’t been changed much, but has been expanded to allow users to work with these difficult files a little bit more easily. Says xtremesv:
Some people are still having problems de/compiling system apks on Samsung ICS builds, most of the errors arising are related to “bad magic values”. I googled a little and managed to find a modded Apktool. I’ve tested it and it has worked fine so far with many apks (e.g. framework-res, TouchWiz30Launcher, etc).
That’s not all though. Some apk files require a little special attention. So if the modified APKTool doesn’t decompile an app, you may have to decompile it with the original APKTool provided by xtremesv, and then recompile using the modified APK Tool. A little complicated? Yes. Does it work? You betcha. Additionally, since the modified APKTool wasn’t designed specifically for the Galaxy S II, any users having difficulties with ICS apks may want to give it a shot as well.
If you’re having problems with ICS apk files and are looking for solutions, check out the original thread for more details.



When MotoBlur first came out, many reviewers agreed that having that much Social Media in one spot was confusing and unfavorable. However, there were many users who enjoyed having all their Facebook and Twitter feeds in one place, as well as an inbox that contained all their texts, missed calls, and so on. With that in mind, Motorola removed most of this functionality from Motoblur, and fans of the original lost their all-in-one widget containing everything they wanted.The all-in-one widget has now made a roaring comeback, and no amount of negative reviews can squelch it this time. As an added bonus, the widget is now compatible with more than just Motorola phones.
XDA Senior Member eladizak has posted a thread about an application called BlingBoard, a social widget that takes your missed calls, Facebook and Twitter feeds, text messages and more and crams them into one widget at the convenience of the user. Unlike the first version of Motoblur where it was “too much, too fast”, this widget has actually received many positive reviews from the community.
The app itself is very simple. Simply install it from the Play Market, set up the widget and you’re hooked in to all of your social media, all in just one spot. The app has been designed with aesthetic appeal in mind, and users can expect a spacious, well laid out interface that displays all the info you need it to without feeling cramped. Not only can you see all the alerts, but you can even reply to them as well. Says the developer:
- Dial to your Missed Calls
- Reply to SMS messages
- Launch Gmail
- Facebook: Check links directly from the widget (YouTube videos will launch the YouTube App, etc..)
- Twitter: Check links directly from tweets
- Simply launch the related app when no notifications.
So it’s really a nifty application for those who miss the days where everything went into one spot, and especially those users who could use some of their screen real estate back from having several individual widgets.

For more information and discussion, check out here.





Samsung Galaxy S II. Its successor is expected imminently. Photograph: Bloomberg
Samsung's Galaxy S3 is due to be launched in the UK on Thursday evening, the followup to its enormously successful S2 smartphone which helped it reach the top spot in the world smartphone market.
The introduction of the phone – expected to be very much like the S2, but with a larger 4.8in screen (compared to the 4.3in of the S2), running Ice Cream Sandwich, the 4.0 version of Google's Android software, and with a faster quad-core processor – will see an event in London's Earls Court, with streaming live video to some phone shops in the capital.
The S3 isn't expected to depart radically from the successful offerings of the S2 or Galaxy Nexus, the Google-branded phone made by Samsung which was intended to showcase Ice Cream Sandwich but has not sold strongly.
The top 10 smartphones/mobile phones list on Amazon UK, which shows the most popular SIM-free devices (sold without a contract) point to the 5in Galaxy Note and S2 as the two most popular on the site; the Nexus is presently ranked 19th.
But according to ComScore, Samsung still has some way to go in the UK market. New data released by the company say that despite Samsung leading in the world market, with a 29% share of smartphone sales in the first quarter of 2012, in the UK the "installed base" of Apple's iPhone is larger, with 26% of all current smartphone users in the UK at the end of March 2012.
At the end of that month a total of 27.2 million people in the UK have a smartphone, representing 55% of the total mobile audience – up from 39%, or 19.3 million, in March 2011.
According to ComScore's figures, Google's Android has the highest penetration, powering more than 40% (10.9 million) of those.
Samsung is the fourth largest smartphone provider, it says, with 4.4m handsets in use (16.2%) – though that has risen dramatically from 1.3m (6.8%) at the end of March 2011.
That represents more than a tripling in user numbers, almost certainly driven by the S2, which was launched in May 2011 in the UK. Samsung lies behind HTC and RIM for user base in the UK.
However, ComScore's numbers suggest that it is the Galaxy Ace S5830 – launched in January 2011, and with 1.05 million users – that is the leader, rather than the S2, which has 919,000 users. The Nexus doesn't figure among the top five Samsung models, according to ComScore.
Samsung popular phonesSamsung's most-used smartphones in the UK in March 2012, according to ComScore
Among Android handset makers, HTC still leads in the UK, with 40% of the Android installed base, but Samsung is close behind with 37%. The two are now duelling for dominance with HTC's recent release of the HTC One X.
Samsung could make it on volume alone, suggests ComScore: it has released the most handsets since 2011 (24) with Sony Ericsson (14) and HTC (13) rounding the top three. In comparison, Apple has released four since 2011 (the iPhone 4 and 4S, each in two colours).
For the Galaxy Note, the "phablet" which some research companies class as a tablet (because its 5in screen marks their lower bound for that category), ComScore doesn't have figures for the numbers in the UK, saying the sample size is too low – though in the five largest EU countries it surveys (UK, France, Germany, Italy and Spain) it found 509,000 users of the Galaxy Note in March 2012, reaching 0.2% of the total mobile market for those countries.








Seems like Verizon is pushing potential customers into getting Android phones instead of iPhones. On the surface, this sounds great for Android. Verizon must love Android if they keep pushing it in favor of Apple’s handset. But the folks at CNNMoney have uncovered something interesting. It’s not that Verizon necessarily prefers Android. It’s that they need to push people into using their 4G LTE network and off of their heavily trafficked and clogged up 3G network.
Last year, Big Red started offering Double Data Deals for 4G users in an attempt to shift more users in that direction. Since the iPhone does not support 4G LTE and only runs on Verizon’s 3G network, and many iPhone users tend to not want to switch to Android, Verizon is seeing their 3G network usage remain relatively high.
CNNMoney reporter David Goldman decided to do a little experiment. He contacted 10 Verizon sales reps from around the New York area to ask about options for a new smartphone. In all 10 conversations, each Verizon rep steered him toward a 4G-capable Droid Razr MaxxDroid Razr, or LG Lucid smartphone. When asked if those phones were better than the iPhone, the reps would state that they were because the iPhone would only run on their much slower 3G network. One rep said that “The iPhone is a great phone, but it’s on 3G. I’m not going to recommend a phone that’s outdated.”
Another rep had this to say:
“The only drawback to the iPhone is it doesn’t have 4G, and Verizon is really pushing 4G. Don’t get me wrong, the iPhone is a great phone. It just costs the company a lot of money for returns when customers find out that a faster 4G network is available and the iPhone’s only on 3G.”
As a control to his test, David asked half of the reps he contacted that he wanted an iPhone. None of them tried to talk him out of it until he asked if there was a better phone available.
If that’s what you want, absolutely we’ll order it,” one rep told him. “But my recommendation is 4G. I’d want the fastest, best technology that’s not going to be outdated when I buy it.”
When asked directly, Verizon spokesman Tom Pica said the following in a written statement:
Our sales force’s mission is to ensure customers are familiar with our product line and to match the customer with the right device to best meet their needs. At the end of the day, our goal is that every customer is delighted with the device that they have chosen.
The bottom line is that it seems like Verizon is trying to ease the congestion of their 3G network by pushing customers to their much speedier and roomier 4G LTE network. And the only way they can do that right now is by pushing their only 4G-enabled devices… which all happen to run Android. Let’s see what their tune is if the iPhone 5 is released with LTE support.
[TOOL]Reset custom bin counter - Without JIG [GA]


Goodnews guys . Sir DOKY73 found the way to reset SGY's custom bin counter.
The process is simple and it's maybe applicable on some similar Galaxy models, and it's advantage, that no USB JIG required.
If you have other model than GT-S536x then contact me first before run this script on your phone!

the method in short: the enclosed script works on bml15, writes zero into offset 786436 which is the bin counter, 02 into base+4 (which means Samsung Official bin) and flushes 0xFFs into the next 32 bytes, what is some kind of signature of the kernel flashed.

USE IT ON YOUR OWN RISK ONLY, I WON'T TAKE ANY RESPONSIBILITY ON ANY DAMAGE DONE TO YOUR DEVICE!!!

-Download the resetbin.zip from:Here-Reboot your phone into recovery
-If your kernel not supports built in CWM, then start temporary CWM Recovery (just in case you -can find one in my g-drive)
-Browse the resetbin.zip, and apply
-Reboot!



Check your custom binary counter by starting the phone in Download mode.

One real benefit of this process: the phone will display Samsung stock binary, even if you're on custom kernel... ;-)

Thanks for the testers:
devion14 
pawanyadav
chamatht
cuvix
blackjack1942
N£utrino
evanlocked
devion14
CALIBAN666
schalkerjung1984
ronnieryan
High00
noobwithgalaxyy
NanoSurfer
bumslayer
raolemo
evanlocked 

                               By:Gregory Pascol

An important player in the mobile phone market a couple of years back, Motorola has entered a slippery slope of financial losses and, unfortunately, the company doesn’t seem to be able to pick things up anytime soon.
After reporting losses for four consecutive quarters in 2011, Moto seems to have started 2012 in similar fashion, and is today announcing a net $86 million deficit for January through March. What’s interesting is that the company’s mobile unit has been – by far – the black sheep, accounting for a $121 million loss, while the home segment has managed to cover a small part of that loss with a $35 million profit.
Motorola’s home segment actually made significant progress, and managed to pull in $15 million more in profit than the first quarter of 2011. The company’s overall loss, however, is a worrying trend, as it has escalated from $56 million in Q2 2011, to $80 million in Q4 2011, and is at a whopping $86 million now.
As for total revenue, things are themselves not very bright for Motorola. The US-based company has reported net revenues of $3.1 billion in Q1 2012, down $0.2 billion from Q3 2011 and $0.3 billion from last year’s final quarter. On the other hand, the Q1 revenue was up 2 percent compared to the first quarter of 2011, so things are not quite disastrous for Moto.
8.9 million Motorola mobile devices were shipped from January to March worldwide, with 5.1 million of these being smartphones. That’s a significant decrease in comparison with last year’s final quarter, when Moto shipped 10.5 million devices, and a slight, but important drop year-on-year as well (there were approximately 9.3 million devices shipped by Motorola in Q1 2011).
Another important aspect of Motorola’s most recent report and the one that I think should be noted the most is that the company actually lost a huge pile of money on account of the pending merger with Google. All the banking and legal fees Moto had to spend for the merger to be approved resulted in about 21.5% of all the electronic giant’s losses for the quarter.





Google’s acquisition is yet to be fully official and approved, as most of you might know, with the Chinese go-ahead of the transaction being delayed for unknown reasons. The US and EU approvals have been granted, but Motorola and Google need to receive approval from China in order for the new company to be officially “born”.
Moto officials state in the financial report that they expect the acquisition to be completed by the middle point of this year. That’s in less than two months, if my calendar is not mistaken, which is, in my opinion, a very optimistic forecast from Motorola.
It’s going to be interesting to see what Google’s plans are for turning Motorola around, as it’s pretty obvious that the Droid RAZR MAXX makers have serious problems in their mobile (and marketing) departments. We’ve been reporting here on the site on several rumors aboutGoogle’s plans for Moto’s hardware unit, but nothing is for the moment confirmed.
Regardless of all of this negativity, I think you will agree that Motorola makes very high quality devices, and benefits the Android ecosystem at large. What do you guys think? Can Google make Motorola rise from its own ashes before the end of 2012? Will the merger actually get approved as soon as Moto is hoping?











[TUT] Easiest Unlock and Relock Network SGY




From devion14's tutorial, I created a simple batch code to make easiest as we can to unlock and relock our beloved SGY. No need to type a codes to prevent mistake especially for beginner. Just only run my batch file then follow the instruction.

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