Copy watches are the imitators of the original watches which have hitherto dominated the world. Initially, only the super rich could afford the original watches because, the original watches are very dear due to the fact that most of them are made of highly costly materials. However, the fake watches available today come in various qualities and grades. Here are pieces of the latest information you need to know about them:
1. Copy watches come in the same brands names like the original such as Rolex, Cartier, Breitiling, Patek Philippe, Tag Heuer and others.
2. The Copy watches mimic the originals in every ramification. They offer you what the original can offer.
3. Copy watches are made of high quality materials used in their lower quantities in order to make the prices of the watches very affordable. This marks their major difference from the original ones. Thus Copy watches are very cheap but yet very efficient. They are durable like the originals. The fact they are called copy watches does not make them fake products.
4. Copy watches are becoming very popular today. This is because many people can now have access to them. Many people have reportedly used them for many purposes and they did well. Today, people use the copy watches as gift items to their loved.
In all, Copy watches are the ultimate expression of status. You can now join the class of the rich by wearing them as the rich do. These copy watches are very much available especially online. There are various online stores where you can easily purchase them.
Finally, it is good to know that there is a single thin line between the reliable Copy watches and the fake ones. Hence you need to be very observant.
Archive for July, 2009
COPY WATCHES: VARIOUS GRADES AND QUALITIES
July 31st, 2009Motorola Sholes Android phone for Verizon appears in the flesh
July 31st, 2009Hm, maybe Motorola should have stuck with the render a while longer, cause this first shot of the Verizon-bound Sholes Android smartphone is looking mighty rough. Of course, it is just a blurrycam leak, and there’s a chance we’re not seeing this set’s true beauty, but honestly, we’re not sure even the most loving press photographer can make that red D-pad attractive. We’ll find out soon enough, if things go as planned.
M&Soft launches 7-inch Mappy AP1 PND in South Korea
July 31st, 2009M&Soft’s Mappy navigation software seems well established in Korea, and now the company has decided to offer its own hardware for it in the shape of a 7-inch SiRF-based touchscreen device. Of course, it wouldn’t be a South Korean PND if it didn’t include a DMB digital TV tuner, video and audio playback, and a photo / text viewer, but the company’s gone one better by offering the elaborate, gimmicky GUI you see above. Pricing is pretty decent too, set at 349,000 KRW ($283) with a 4GB SDHC card, or 399,000 KRW ($323) for an 8GB unit. The AP in the model name stands for “Absolute Pride” — sure, make your jokes, but maybe it’s that wise-guy sense of humor keeping this sort of tech away from Western shores.
In San Francisco, hackers park for free
July 31st, 2009In High School civics class we learned that besides voting, feeding the meter is one of the most important things we Americans can do. But just like e-voting, it looks like you can add parking to the list of things that hackers have spoiled for law and order-types everywhere. According to the kids at CNET, a group of nogoodniks were able to decode the smartcards used by Guardian XLE-series meters manufactured by J.J. MacKay Canada — from which point it was a simple matter of boosting the card’s value to $999.99. Its unclear how the city of San Francisco (one of several around the country that have dealt with the company) is going to address the problem, but one possibility is flagging accounts with suspicious activity and reprogramming parking meters to ignore the offending cards. Is nothing sacred, people?
Samsung YP-R0 outed, not exactly groundbreaking
July 31st, 2009In the vein of the previous yawnfest, the YP-R1, Samsung’s apparently got this baby — the YP-R0 — on the decks as well. Maybe it’s just the naming scheme that bores us — after all, it’s not a bad-looking slim little device, with a 2.6-inch touchscreen display, and this model will supposedly house 8GB of storage, an RDS FM tuner, a microphone, plus a microSD card slot. It’ll support a host of formats, including MP3, OGG, WMA, ASF, FLAC, WAV, AAC, MPEG4, WMV, JPEG, PNG, BMP, and GIF — just to name a few. The whole thing weighs in at about 60 grams, and is expected to run about €130 (about $183) when it is made available, though we don’t know yet when that will be. There’s one more shot after the break.