The successor to the S710, the S730 is a dull but hard-working member of the HTC clan. It's neither quite so ubiquitous as its big brother the TyTn II nor quite as fashionable as its sisters Touch, Dual and Cruise.
In appearance, the S730 is a pretty run-of-the-mill smartphone, with its traditional keyboard layout; 2.4in, 320 x 240, 65,536-colour screen; and stout HTC-grey plastic shell. With its slide-out Qwerty keyboard, the S730 could be seen as a sort of TyTn mini-me. It does most of the same things, but at 106 x 51 x 19.4mm in size and 150g in weight it's a fair bit narrower and shorter, and a whole 40g lighter. OK, it's 5mm thicker, but you can't have everything.
In the hand, the S730 is a chunky yet comfortable device to hold. The keypad layout is a model of common sense while the central navigation pad is suitably sized, positioned and weighted for thumb use. The only slight ergonomic 'erk' is that is if you tend to hold the phone in your right hand, it's a too easy to push the keyboard open. We had the same problem with the first generation TyTn, though in that case it was an issue for lefties as the handset slid the other way.
We give the S730's slide-out keyboard top marks. The keys have a slightly rubbery feel and raised centre which combine to make it one of the best HTC keyboards we've used, and a quantum leap forward from the S710. The inclusion of two small LEDs to let you know the Cap and Fn keys have been pressed is another nice touch.
When it comes to connectivity, the S730 has the bases well covered, coming with 3.6Mb/s HSDPA 3G, quad-band GSM/GPRS/Edge, Bluetooth 2.0 and 802.11b/g Wi-Fi.
Incidentally, the S730 is also available as the O2 XDA Atmos.
The S730 is driven by Windows Mobile 6 Standard, which means prodding the screen is a waste of time and tendons. Nevertheless, navigating around the OS is straightforward. The only niggle is the main menu area: to move to the next 'page' of icons you have to hit the More soft-menu key, but to move back you have to hit the Back key. Why in the name of all that is holy can you not just scroll up and down through the entire list?
HTC's own home screen is a now familiar sight with the big LCD-ish time display and six screen icons that take you to time, alarms, the weather, contacts, email and SMS messages, and the phone log. It's a borderline call if the screen is quite big enough to comfortably take all this info. The S730 has a handy auto-update option for the weather application, which raises one question: why doesn't the Touch/Dual have it?
One issue we have with the HTC home screen is the lack of shortcuts, user-defined or otherwise. Early on in our test, we switched back to Windows Mobile's default home screen. OK, you lose the weather report but you gain ten shortcut icons, and for the sake of those we will resort to sticking our head out of the window to see if it's raining.
While using the same 400MHz processor as the Touch Dual, the S730's memory is a pretty parsimonious 64MB, which means it doesn't run quite as quickly as the Dual. Don't get us wrong, any lack of speed never gets in the way of day-to-day use, but you do notice that spinning Trivial Pursuit cake thingammijig every so often. Storage runs to 256MB, but the SDHC-compatible Micro SD card slot allows you to up that to 8GB and soon 16GB.
You might say that there's not much point buying a Wi-Fi handset if you can't make VoIP calls on it, so gloom descended when we tried, but failed to load Skype onto our test handset. We scratched our heads, came to the conclusion that the free 13MB of program memory just wasn't up to the job and downloaded Fring instead.
Fring worked a treat, and in what seemed like seconds - but was in fact about five minutes - we were chatting to our Leader, who was allegedly working in Shanghai, via Skype Out. Fring also allows you to access pretty much all your VoIP and IM accounts from the one application. Which is nice.
The two-megapixel camera is the same old, same old. And, as we've come to expect from HTC, the headphones connect through the mini-USB port. This makes HTC's own USB-3.5mm hands-free/headphones adaptor something of a must-have, and this is irritating partly because the supplied phones are pretty nasty, but mostly because the thing isn't bundled. No, it's a £14.95 accessory.
Call quality proved to be well up to snuff, as did the handset's ability to find and keep hold of a Wi-Fi signal, while the built-in speakerphone was both clear and loud, vital for those impromptu conference calls. 3G reception also proved to be more robust than on our recently tested Touch Dual.
Battery life is entirely dependent on what you leave switched on. With Bluetooth and Wi-Fi going you can expect a dead battery in about seven hours. Switch the Wi-Fi off and you are looking at about a full day of average usage between charges.
source : http://www.reghardware.co.uk/
Mobile Phones UK
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Samsung Developing Water-Powered Cell Phone Battery
Samsung Electro-Mechanics has developed a micro-fuel cell and hydrogen generator that runs on water. When the handset is turned on, metal and water in the phone react to produce hydrogen gas. The gas is then supplied to the fuel cell where it reacts with oxygen in the air to generate power. Other fuel cells need methanol to produce hydrogen, while Samsung's needs only water.
Since micro-fuel cells can generate up to three watts of electricity, they could be used in mobile devices. The new fuel cell could power a handset for ten hours, twice as long as rechargeable batteries.
"When the handset is turned on, metal and water in the phone react to produce hydrogen gas," explained Oh Yong-soo, vice president of Samsung Electro-Mechanics' research center. "The gas is then supplied to the fuel cell where it reacts with oxygen in the air to generate power." Other fuel cells need methanol to produce hydrogen, while Samsung's needs only water.
Oh said water-powered handsets are expected to hit the market by 2010. "If the user uses the phone for four hours a day on average, they would have to change the hydrogen cartridge about every five days," Oh said. "Later handsets will be developed that don't need the hydrogen cartridges to be changed, and would only need to be filled with water."
source : http://www.mobiledia.com/
Levi Strauss 3G Slider
Orange France has announced that it will be the exclusive carrier of the new Levi Strauss 3G slider handset, planned to be available in April 2008. The handset is engraved with the Levi Strauss logo and features a metal and soft touch finish.
Tri-band GSM (900/1800/1900MHz) and WCDMA (2100MHz) support will allow the handset to be used throughout Europe, and a microSD card slot will offer plenty of extra storage space. The built-in MP3 player and Bluetooth 1.2 with A2DP support for stereo headsets enables a great music experience, as well.
The Levi's 3G handset is priced at EUR279 (US$444) without contract, or as low as EUR9 (US$14) with contract.
source : http://www.mobileburn.com/
Tri-band GSM (900/1800/1900MHz) and WCDMA (2100MHz) support will allow the handset to be used throughout Europe, and a microSD card slot will offer plenty of extra storage space. The built-in MP3 player and Bluetooth 1.2 with A2DP support for stereo headsets enables a great music experience, as well.
The Levi's 3G handset is priced at EUR279 (US$444) without contract, or as low as EUR9 (US$14) with contract.
source : http://www.mobileburn.com/
New Nokia N95 8GB firmware with automatic screen rotation
Sure, you might already be rocking that cool RotateMe hack on your Nokia N95, but there's nothing like a little manufacturer-sanctioned love straight from Espoo to make you fall in love with screen-rotation on your N95. A new firmware (v20.0.016) is available for the Nokia N95 8GB (sorry folks, only the European N95-2 is supported for now) that comes with built-in support for the automatic screen rotation feature that the iPhone made so popular (sorry, I had to get that in there).
You can enable and disable the screen rotation feature at will, so there's basically no reason not to download and install this latest firmware for your Nokia N95 8GB. That is, unless you're rocking the N95 8GB NAM (N95-4), in which case, you'll need to wait it out a bit longer.
source : http://www.intomobile.com/
You can enable and disable the screen rotation feature at will, so there's basically no reason not to download and install this latest firmware for your Nokia N95 8GB. That is, unless you're rocking the N95 8GB NAM (N95-4), in which case, you'll need to wait it out a bit longer.
source : http://www.intomobile.com/
Friday, April 18, 2008
Sony Ericsson sees red with new handset
Sony Ericsson’s new W910i Walkman music phone was all shook up with the Shake Control action that changes tracks, but now it is seeing red with a new scarlet version, which has won Best Handset at the Global Mobile Awards.
3 Mobile network brought out this red hot handset in the hopes it will appeal to fashion-conscious ladies around the country with clips from Heat, Xposé and RTÉ lifestyle shows available from Planet 3.
Head of PR for 3, Rachel Channing, said: “Today’s mobile generation look for both functionality and form, and the W910i in red delivers both. It’s a talented entertainer and offers mobile music, TV, news and sport on the go.”
The W910i is the latest in Sony Ericsson’s all-rounder lifestyle phone with an emphasis on music downloads and listening experience, as well as Gracenotes’s Music ID service for recognising album tracks.
Apple’s iPhone may get its edge from touchscreen technology but Sony Ericsson has opted for a Wii-type experience where the user can change tracks while holding the phone, all with the flick of a wrist.
This slider phone also promises a 3D-gaming experience and user-friendly mobile web.
It is available for free for 3 Billpay customers but costs €349 from 3 Pay’s prepaid service.
source : http://www.siliconrepublic.com/
3 Mobile network brought out this red hot handset in the hopes it will appeal to fashion-conscious ladies around the country with clips from Heat, Xposé and RTÉ lifestyle shows available from Planet 3.
Head of PR for 3, Rachel Channing, said: “Today’s mobile generation look for both functionality and form, and the W910i in red delivers both. It’s a talented entertainer and offers mobile music, TV, news and sport on the go.”
The W910i is the latest in Sony Ericsson’s all-rounder lifestyle phone with an emphasis on music downloads and listening experience, as well as Gracenotes’s Music ID service for recognising album tracks.
Apple’s iPhone may get its edge from touchscreen technology but Sony Ericsson has opted for a Wii-type experience where the user can change tracks while holding the phone, all with the flick of a wrist.
This slider phone also promises a 3D-gaming experience and user-friendly mobile web.
It is available for free for 3 Billpay customers but costs €349 from 3 Pay’s prepaid service.
source : http://www.siliconrepublic.com/
Nokia and Sony Ericsson developing 4G wireless
Hot on the heels of the iPhone price cut news this week, comes news that Nokia, Sony Ericsson, NEC and Alcatel-Lucent have formed a licensing framework for their 4G patents called Long Term Evolution (LTE) in direct competition with Intel’s Wimax.
The group of four mobile phone giants claims that LTE is solution for mobile phones, laptops and fixed broadband connections, eventually replacing Wi-Fi.
Sony Ericsson's Senior Vice President, General Manager and Chief Technology Officer Håkan Eriksson said in statement: "The adoption of this initiative will reassure operators of the early widespread adoption of LTE technology throughout the consumer electronics industry," in a statement.
WiMax growth rate
Intel is sticking with its Wimax, with Intel chief exec Paul Otellini telling the BBC this week that 10 million people will be using WiMax within the year and then "hundreds of millions two years after that".
"We see Wimax as the most cost-effective way to deliver high-bandwidth wireless broadband," he added.
source : http://www.techradar.com/
The group of four mobile phone giants claims that LTE is solution for mobile phones, laptops and fixed broadband connections, eventually replacing Wi-Fi.
Sony Ericsson's Senior Vice President, General Manager and Chief Technology Officer Håkan Eriksson said in statement: "The adoption of this initiative will reassure operators of the early widespread adoption of LTE technology throughout the consumer electronics industry," in a statement.
WiMax growth rate
Intel is sticking with its Wimax, with Intel chief exec Paul Otellini telling the BBC this week that 10 million people will be using WiMax within the year and then "hundreds of millions two years after that".
"We see Wimax as the most cost-effective way to deliver high-bandwidth wireless broadband," he added.
source : http://www.techradar.com/
Sony Ericsson W960i - Your Friend For Life
Mobile phones are a part and parcel of modern day existence. There would be very few people in the present day world who could do without their handsets. And the fact that the new and innovative phones launched by leading manufacturers such as Sony Ericsson come with the very best in features and functionalities make this decision all the more logical. The Sony Ericsson W960i is one such very innovative and high-end phone from this well-known brand.
The design of the handset is slender. A touchscreen that can be used to access all the features and functionalities of this very sophisticated Sony Ericsson handset make it all the more special.
This Sony Ericsson mobile excels in more ways than one. First and foremost, this handset comes with some of the very best music related features such as an integrated music player, album art support, built-in FM radio with RDS, TrackID music recognition, and PlayNow™ options. To add to all these, this powerful gadget can be also used to make video calls as well as for multitasking – thanks to the inherent third generation (3G) technology that is a part of the same.
On the one hand, the owners of this high-end gadget can make the most of the musical options to enjoy their leisure time. On the other hand, they can connect in a more personalized way with friends, family members, colleagues and others.
An owner of this music phone can add an individual touch by downloading their choice in MP3, polyphonic and AAC ringtones; the mobile is compatible with all these different variants of ringing tones. The 8 GB of memory is more than ample to store all the varied mobile content in terms of music, video clips, ringtones, wallpapers and the like.
The fact that the Sony Ericsson W960i is 3G enabled has already been spoken about. The other connectivity alternatives that need to be mentioned include Bluetooth® technology, WLAN and USB. The messaging options are no less impressive. An owner of this device could send emails, instant messages, MMS, and text messages to other compatible handsets without any hassle.
source : http://www.pressemeldungen.at/
The design of the handset is slender. A touchscreen that can be used to access all the features and functionalities of this very sophisticated Sony Ericsson handset make it all the more special.
This Sony Ericsson mobile excels in more ways than one. First and foremost, this handset comes with some of the very best music related features such as an integrated music player, album art support, built-in FM radio with RDS, TrackID music recognition, and PlayNow™ options. To add to all these, this powerful gadget can be also used to make video calls as well as for multitasking – thanks to the inherent third generation (3G) technology that is a part of the same.
On the one hand, the owners of this high-end gadget can make the most of the musical options to enjoy their leisure time. On the other hand, they can connect in a more personalized way with friends, family members, colleagues and others.
An owner of this music phone can add an individual touch by downloading their choice in MP3, polyphonic and AAC ringtones; the mobile is compatible with all these different variants of ringing tones. The 8 GB of memory is more than ample to store all the varied mobile content in terms of music, video clips, ringtones, wallpapers and the like.
The fact that the Sony Ericsson W960i is 3G enabled has already been spoken about. The other connectivity alternatives that need to be mentioned include Bluetooth® technology, WLAN and USB. The messaging options are no less impressive. An owner of this device could send emails, instant messages, MMS, and text messages to other compatible handsets without any hassle.
source : http://www.pressemeldungen.at/
Mobile phone Goliath to battle sounds of iTunes
THE great online music war is about to break out in Australia.
Nokia, the world's largest mobile phone maker, will launch a local frontal attack on Apple's iTunes, the biggest music service in the world, with the first shots fired next Tuesday.
Nokia announced the launch of the service in Sydney yesterday, showing off the local internet browser-based library of more than 2 million songs, including local artists such as the John Butler Trio, Pete Murray and veterans such as Jimmy Barnes.
Customers will be able to download songs, priced at $1.70 a track, or $17 an album (a cent more than Apple charges in each case), directly to their 3G mobile phones or, much more cheaply, to their PC for later loading into a mobile phone fitted with an MP3 player.
As well as direct downloads, the Nokia library will offer, for $10 a month, an "all you can eat" music streaming service that will allow subscribers to listen on their phone to any track from the entire catalogue of music without downloading it for later playing.
Nokia's chief executive in Australia, Sean Colligan, said distribution deals had been done with three of the four global record companies — Universal, Sony-BMG and EMI — and negotiations were under way with Warner Music.
"We aim to be number one in music here and in the world," Mr Colligan said.
source : http://www.theage.com.au/news/
Nokia, the world's largest mobile phone maker, will launch a local frontal attack on Apple's iTunes, the biggest music service in the world, with the first shots fired next Tuesday.
Nokia announced the launch of the service in Sydney yesterday, showing off the local internet browser-based library of more than 2 million songs, including local artists such as the John Butler Trio, Pete Murray and veterans such as Jimmy Barnes.
Customers will be able to download songs, priced at $1.70 a track, or $17 an album (a cent more than Apple charges in each case), directly to their 3G mobile phones or, much more cheaply, to their PC for later loading into a mobile phone fitted with an MP3 player.
As well as direct downloads, the Nokia library will offer, for $10 a month, an "all you can eat" music streaming service that will allow subscribers to listen on their phone to any track from the entire catalogue of music without downloading it for later playing.
Nokia's chief executive in Australia, Sean Colligan, said distribution deals had been done with three of the four global record companies — Universal, Sony-BMG and EMI — and negotiations were under way with Warner Music.
"We aim to be number one in music here and in the world," Mr Colligan said.
source : http://www.theage.com.au/news/
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Nokia 6212 Classic
The Nokia 6212 Classic is a lightweight 3G handset with a QVGA display and 2 megapixel camera, very similar to the Nokia 3120 Classic in terms of core specification. However, the Nokia 6212 has one key difference - it supports NFC technology.
It isn't the first phone to offer NFC, the Nokia 6131 NFC is a previous effort, but NFC compatible handsets are few and far between.
What is NFC?
If you haven't heard of NFC you're not alone. No, it's not Nebraska Fried Chicken, but Near Field Communication - a way for two devices to communicate with each other over a very short distance of around 10 centimetres or so, a much shorter distance than Bluetooth or WiFi. NFC can be used for information exchange, ticket payment or as a way to identify yourself.
Unlike Bluetooth, NFC works without pairing and relies on physical proximity. You basically swipe your NFC device near the other NFC device and the information exchange can occur immediately, rather like the contactless Oyster Card used in London.
The catch is that there are very few large-scale implementations of NFC anywhere in the world, with the technology mostly under trial. O2 have announced that they will try using NFC mobiles with the London Oyster system this year. In France, Bouygues Telecom has partnered with the Paris Metro for a while now, and the National Australia Bank, VISA and Telstra are trying out a contactless payments system called Visa payWave.
Nokia are also making a Bluetooth/NFC headset which pairs with the phone using the NFC connection first, rather than the usual Bluetooth passcode arrangement. This should make pairing a lot easier.
To a certain extent, the Nokia 6212 Classic is a solution to a problem that doesn't yet exist.. hardly anyone actually uses NFC at the moment, but Nokia is working on the principle that if you make the technology available, then perhaps the customers will follow.
Nokia 6212 Classic - Pricing and Specification
At €200 (around £160) before tax and subsidy, the 6212 is roughly the same current retail price of the 6500 Classic, although the 6212 has video calling, better video capture quality and an FM radio where the 6500 does not. The 6500 Classic does offer more memory and a slight better stills photographs. The similar 3120 Classic is a little cheaper at around €160.
For this, you get an 88 gram 3G phone with quad-band GSM, EDGE, and 3G support (WCDMA 850 / 2100). The 2" 240 x 320 pixel screen has 16 million colours, there's a 2 megapixel camera with flash but no autofocus, Bluetooth and microSD expandable memory (up to 4GB). Talktime is around 2.75 hours on 3G with a maximum of 12 days standby time.
Unlike other recent 6000 series devices, this is not an S60 smartphone. But it does have an email client, web browser and multimedia player. The sales package includes an AC-8 charger with a 2mm plug and a stereo wired headset.
Nokia say that the 6212 Classic will be available during Q3 2008 in "selected markets", presumably those where NFC technology is in use.
source : http://www.mobilegazette.com/
It isn't the first phone to offer NFC, the Nokia 6131 NFC is a previous effort, but NFC compatible handsets are few and far between.
What is NFC?
If you haven't heard of NFC you're not alone. No, it's not Nebraska Fried Chicken, but Near Field Communication - a way for two devices to communicate with each other over a very short distance of around 10 centimetres or so, a much shorter distance than Bluetooth or WiFi. NFC can be used for information exchange, ticket payment or as a way to identify yourself.
Unlike Bluetooth, NFC works without pairing and relies on physical proximity. You basically swipe your NFC device near the other NFC device and the information exchange can occur immediately, rather like the contactless Oyster Card used in London.
The catch is that there are very few large-scale implementations of NFC anywhere in the world, with the technology mostly under trial. O2 have announced that they will try using NFC mobiles with the London Oyster system this year. In France, Bouygues Telecom has partnered with the Paris Metro for a while now, and the National Australia Bank, VISA and Telstra are trying out a contactless payments system called Visa payWave.
Nokia are also making a Bluetooth/NFC headset which pairs with the phone using the NFC connection first, rather than the usual Bluetooth passcode arrangement. This should make pairing a lot easier.
To a certain extent, the Nokia 6212 Classic is a solution to a problem that doesn't yet exist.. hardly anyone actually uses NFC at the moment, but Nokia is working on the principle that if you make the technology available, then perhaps the customers will follow.
Nokia 6212 Classic - Pricing and Specification
At €200 (around £160) before tax and subsidy, the 6212 is roughly the same current retail price of the 6500 Classic, although the 6212 has video calling, better video capture quality and an FM radio where the 6500 does not. The 6500 Classic does offer more memory and a slight better stills photographs. The similar 3120 Classic is a little cheaper at around €160.
For this, you get an 88 gram 3G phone with quad-band GSM, EDGE, and 3G support (WCDMA 850 / 2100). The 2" 240 x 320 pixel screen has 16 million colours, there's a 2 megapixel camera with flash but no autofocus, Bluetooth and microSD expandable memory (up to 4GB). Talktime is around 2.75 hours on 3G with a maximum of 12 days standby time.
Unlike other recent 6000 series devices, this is not an S60 smartphone. But it does have an email client, web browser and multimedia player. The sales package includes an AC-8 charger with a 2mm plug and a stereo wired headset.
Nokia say that the 6212 Classic will be available during Q3 2008 in "selected markets", presumably those where NFC technology is in use.
source : http://www.mobilegazette.com/
Cubans queue for mobile phones as sales ban is lifted
LONG queues stretched outside shops in Cuba this week as the new government allowed citizens to sign up for mobile phone services for the first time.
The contracts cost about £60 to activate – half a year's wages on the average state salary. And that does not include a phone or the credit to make and receive calls.
But most Cubans have at least some access to US dollars or euros thanks to jobs in tourism, with foreign firms or money sent by relatives abroad. Queues formed before the stores opened, and waits grew to more than an hour.
"Everyone wants to be first to sign up," said Usan Astorga, a 19-year-old medical student who stood for about 20 minutes before her queue moved at all.
Getting through the day without a mobile phone is unthinkable now in most developed countries, but Cuba's government limited access to them and other so-called luxuries in an attempt to preserve the relative economic equality that is a hallmark of life on the communist-run island.
The president, Raul Castro, has done away with several other small but infuriating restrictions, and his popularity has surged as a result – defusing questions about his relative lack of charisma after his ailing older brother Fidel formally stepped down in February.
An article on Friday in the Communist Party newspaper Granma said it was Fidel Castro's idea all along to lift the ban on mobile phones, and that he was also behind recent government orders easing restrictions that had prevented most Cubans from staying in hotels, hiring cars, enjoying beaches reserved for tourists and buying DVD players and other consumer goods.
"They are part of a process initiated and called for by Fidel," Granma said of the recent changes.
Fidel Castro has not been seen in public
since undergoing emergency intestinal surgery in July 2006, but he has continued to write essays every few days and recently criticised DVDs, mobile phones, the internet, e-mail and Facebook, asking: "Does the kind of existence promised by imperialism make any sense?"
Mobile phones on the island can make and receive calls from overseas, a key feature because the overwhelming majority of Cubans have relatives and friends in the United States.
Cuba's state-controlled telecommunications monopoly, a joint venture with Telecom Italia, charges £1.35 per minute to call the US. Making or receiving local calls costs 15p a minute.
Ms Astorga said she planned to buy about £30 in credit – enough, she hopes, for three months of very brief conversations. "You can't talk all day because it's too expensive," she said. "It's only, 'hello, I'm here. Goodbye.' Or 'where are you?' and hang up."
source : http://news.scotsman.com/
The contracts cost about £60 to activate – half a year's wages on the average state salary. And that does not include a phone or the credit to make and receive calls.
But most Cubans have at least some access to US dollars or euros thanks to jobs in tourism, with foreign firms or money sent by relatives abroad. Queues formed before the stores opened, and waits grew to more than an hour.
"Everyone wants to be first to sign up," said Usan Astorga, a 19-year-old medical student who stood for about 20 minutes before her queue moved at all.
Getting through the day without a mobile phone is unthinkable now in most developed countries, but Cuba's government limited access to them and other so-called luxuries in an attempt to preserve the relative economic equality that is a hallmark of life on the communist-run island.
The president, Raul Castro, has done away with several other small but infuriating restrictions, and his popularity has surged as a result – defusing questions about his relative lack of charisma after his ailing older brother Fidel formally stepped down in February.
An article on Friday in the Communist Party newspaper Granma said it was Fidel Castro's idea all along to lift the ban on mobile phones, and that he was also behind recent government orders easing restrictions that had prevented most Cubans from staying in hotels, hiring cars, enjoying beaches reserved for tourists and buying DVD players and other consumer goods.
"They are part of a process initiated and called for by Fidel," Granma said of the recent changes.
Fidel Castro has not been seen in public
since undergoing emergency intestinal surgery in July 2006, but he has continued to write essays every few days and recently criticised DVDs, mobile phones, the internet, e-mail and Facebook, asking: "Does the kind of existence promised by imperialism make any sense?"
Mobile phones on the island can make and receive calls from overseas, a key feature because the overwhelming majority of Cubans have relatives and friends in the United States.
Cuba's state-controlled telecommunications monopoly, a joint venture with Telecom Italia, charges £1.35 per minute to call the US. Making or receiving local calls costs 15p a minute.
Ms Astorga said she planned to buy about £30 in credit – enough, she hopes, for three months of very brief conversations. "You can't talk all day because it's too expensive," she said. "It's only, 'hello, I'm here. Goodbye.' Or 'where are you?' and hang up."
source : http://news.scotsman.com/
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Sony Ericsson Cyber-shot W61S unveiled
Sony Ericsson has added one more phone in its basket of cyber-shot goodies. Sony Ericsson Cyber-shot W61S is all ready to hit the market very soon with a 5Megapixel camera and 3x optical zoom along with the smile shutter technology.
After the success of its cyber shot range of phones, here’s one more phone that will rule the pockets of mobile phone enthusiasts who like a good camera quality combination. The phone has a considerable huge screen of 2.8 inches with TFT VGA display. The Sony Ericsson Cyber-shot W61S can be used on CDMA 1 X WIN networks supporting EV-DO Re. Navigate through the routes with the GPS functionality and enjoy quick file transfers with the Bluetooth technology on the Sony Ericsson Cyber-shot W61S.
The phone is given a fresh and trendy look with eye-catchy colors such as pink, black and white. The slider phone is expected to be first released in Japan and the exact launch date or price of the phone has not yet been revealed.
source : http://www.mobiletor.com/
After the success of its cyber shot range of phones, here’s one more phone that will rule the pockets of mobile phone enthusiasts who like a good camera quality combination. The phone has a considerable huge screen of 2.8 inches with TFT VGA display. The Sony Ericsson Cyber-shot W61S can be used on CDMA 1 X WIN networks supporting EV-DO Re. Navigate through the routes with the GPS functionality and enjoy quick file transfers with the Bluetooth technology on the Sony Ericsson Cyber-shot W61S.
The phone is given a fresh and trendy look with eye-catchy colors such as pink, black and white. The slider phone is expected to be first released in Japan and the exact launch date or price of the phone has not yet been revealed.
source : http://www.mobiletor.com/
T-Mobile betting on 3G to close on high-speed competitors
T-Mobile USA is late to the high-speed wireless party, but it's going low-cost to catch up.
While rivals such as AT&T, Verizon Wireless, and Sprint Nextel have been talking recently about building new 4G wireless networks, T-Mobile--which will begin offering 3G wireless service this summer--is leveraging cheap, unlicensed Wi-Fi technology to bring true broadband speed over wireless networks to some of its subscribers today.
There's no question Wi-Fi is far from perfect. Its use of unlicensed bandwidth can mean signal interference. And it's a short-range radio technology that will never be able to provide ubiquitous coverage. But when Wi-Fi is combined with a new 3G wireless network using phones that T-Mobile claims switch seamlessly between the two networks, it becomes an interesting story.
As the smallest nationwide carrier in the U.S. market, T-Mobile is using $4.2 billion worth of spectrum it bought in the Federal Communications Commission's 2006 Advanced Wireless Auction to build a 3G wireless network that operates in the nation's top markets. The service, expected to launch this summer, will be up and running in 80 percent of the top 20 markets by the end of the year, according to Joe Sims, vice president and general manager of broadband products and services for T-Mobile USA.
Even without 3G services, T-Mobile has managed to become a formidable competitor. And even though it doesn't offer specific e-mail or Internet surfing service over its cellular network, T-Mobile has still managed to become a leader in messaging with its popular Sidekick device that's used for SMS text messaging.
Now, as T-Mobile prepares to open its 3G network for business, the carrier has also begun offering a companion service using Wi-Fi that will provide even faster upload and download speeds for mobile-phone users. And while Sprint Nextel struggles to roll out WiMax and Verizon Wireless and AT&T talk about LTE (long-term evolution) deployments, T-Mobile will be able to offer its subscribers true mobile broadband service through Wi-Fi hot spots. The combination of its 3G network and Wi-Fi strategy could help the company compete more aggressively as mobile Internet and data become more important sources of revenue for wireless operators.
"WiMax and LTE are a ways off from becoming reality," Sims said. "There isn't anything faster than Wi-Fi right now. And with the seamless handoff to a 3G network, we can get much wider coverage."
Last summer, T-Mobile launched the Hotspot @Home service, which allows people using any of T-Mobile's dual-mode Wi-Fi/cellular phones to use their home Wi-Fi networks instead of the T-Mobile cellular network to make phone calls or access the Internet from their phones.
The company has expanded the service to also include its more than 9,000 public Wi-Fi hot spots in the U.S., giving its customers even more places where they can use Wi-Fi. I must admit, I have never used the service myself, but T-Mobile's Sims says the handoff between the Wi-Fi and the cellular is seamless, and subscribers can walk in and out of either network as many times as they like without ever noticing they have hopped onto another network.
Since the Hotspot @Home service launched nationwide last summer, T-Mobile has assembled an impressive list of devices that can be used with the service. Earlier this month at the CTIA trade show in Las Vegas, the company introduced the BlackBerry Pearl 8120 with Wi-Fi. T-Mobile also offers two other Hotspot@Home-enabled BlackBerrys, the popular Curve 8320, and the business-centric BlackBerry 8820.
Using the Wi-Fi network instead of the cellular network benefits T-Mobile, as well as its customers. For T-Mobile, Wi-Fi helps reduce the amount of traffic that is running on T-Mobile's own wireless network. And consumers get better in-home or in-building coverage. It also greatly improves the upload and download speeds for surfing the mobile Web. And at only $9.99 extra per month for subscribers who spend at least $40 a month on T-Mobile phone service, it's not an expensive add-on for high-speed data access and better coverage.
The service, which began selling nationwide last year, has been a big success, Sims says. It's even helped the company entice some customers to switch providers for T-Mobile.
"Over half of the @Home customers are new subscribers to T-Mobile," he said. "And most of them seem to be coming on for the faster speeds and the increased coverage proposition."
T-Mobile also recently announced a home phone replacement service called Hotspot @Home Talk Forever that also uses Wi-Fi. The service is currently available in Seattle and Dallas. Essentially, it is a voice over IP service, much like services offered by cable providers and companies such as Vonage. It allows people to use their regular phones to make and receive calls over a broadband connection. The service only costs $9.99 more a month on top of the regular calling plan and Hotspot @Home charge.
"Hotspot @Home is great for one device and great for improving in-home coverage," Sims said. "But there's another demographic that wants one permanent line in the home."
He admitted that the new service is an attempt to take on companies such as AT&T and Verizon, which offer wireless as well as home phone service.
"We are absolutely going after the traditional phone companies with these offerings," he said. "And we're doing it in a way that is relevant to our brand."
But Sims also says that T-Mobile's ambitions for Wi-Fi go beyond simply using it in the home. The service can also be used in conjunction with thousands of T-Mobile public Wi-Fi hot spots. The company currently has more than 21,000 public hot spots around the globe, with more than 9,000 of them in the U.S. While these hot spots by no means provide ubiquitous coverage, Sims said the company is evaluating how to expand its hot spot footprint to bring more Wi-Fi access to its subscribers.
Currently, most of T-Mobile's hot spots are in places like airports or cafes where people typically use laptops. But as more dual-mode phones come online, he said the company will evaluate where it might be useful to deploy hot spots for "nomadic" use.
Considering citywide Wi-Fi
He even admitted that the company has considered deploying Wi-Fi citywide. The movement to blanket cities with Wi-Fi was badly damaged last year when EarthLink, the largest Internet provider to offer such a service, decided to stop building these networks. Since then cities have been struggling to figure out ways to bring inexpensive Wi-Fi services to their communities.
T-Mobile could be the perfect candidate to build such a network. Not only does the company already have its own Wi-Fi networks, but the use of dual-mode devices that can switch between cellular and Wi-Fi networks would make the service more useful and appealing to nomadic city workers or even consumer subscribers looking for faster mobile Internet surfing.
"We've looked at citywide Wi-Fi," Sims said. "There's no real reason why it couldn't work from a technology standpoint. But there are different business models around using the technology in that way."
T-Mobile's service is already being used on some Wi-Fi-blanketed college campuses. The University of Texas at Austin launched a pilot program last month that will run through August and is allowing T-Mobile subscribers to use the university Wi-Fi network as part of their Hotspot @Home service. This means that in addition to using the @Home service in a dorm room, residents and faculty who subscribe to the T-Mobile service will be able to use it anywhere they can find the university Wi-Fi network, such as in the library, in classroom buildings, and in outdoor public hot spots.
The main reason the university is interested in allowing the T-Mobile service to be used with its Wi-Fi network is to provide better in-building coverage. The university currently is working with all the major cell phone carriers to improve cellular coverage on campus, but even with these efforts faculty and students complain of poor service inside many buildings.
Instead of investing in expensive femtocell technology, which uses a router-like device to boost cellular radio signals indoors, William Green, director of networking for the University of Texas at Austin, sees Wi-Fi as an inexpensive way to provide better coverage. At the same time, people in the university community with dual-mode phones can also benefit from the higher-speed network access using Wi-Fi.
That said, Green is skeptical that T-Mobile's Wi-Fi service could be as effective in a citywide deployment.
"Wi-Fi networks are very hard to manage in dense environments," he said. "And it's very hard for a city to deploy a network such as ours. We already own the fiber and all the rights of way."
Skepticism over Wi-Fi strategy
Indeed, other experts are also skeptical that T-Mobile's Wi-Fi strategy will find much traction beyond some niche applications. Roger Entner, vice president of communications for IAG Research, said T-Mobile has had little choice but to use Wi-Fi since it is so late to the 3G cellular game.
"They are trying to turn a virtue out of necessity," he said. "They're forcing a technology to be used in a way that it was not designed to be used. Can they get to it to work? Yes, but it doesn't work very elegantly."
At this point in the game, only time will tell. Sprint Nextel was supposed to have launched its Xohm WiMax service this month. But it now says it will launch the service later this year. And even though Nokia has announced one device to be used on a WiMax network, it will take awhile before more WiMax-enabled devices become available.
Then there's the other 4G technology, LTE. Verizon Wireless and AT&T have each said they plan to use wireless spectrum newly won in the 700MHz auction to build these networks, but it will be years before either provider offers a service on these proposed networks.
In the meantime, T-Mobile will be expanding its Wi-Fi hot spots and cell phone manufacturers will be embedding inexpensive Wi-Fi chips into more devices. So at least for the near future, T-Mobile, the laggard in the wireless speed war, could be the only provider to offer true wireless broadband speeds to its subscribers.
Coverage may not be everywhere, but it might just be enough to entice some subscribers to give it a second look.
source : http://www.news.com/
While rivals such as AT&T, Verizon Wireless, and Sprint Nextel have been talking recently about building new 4G wireless networks, T-Mobile--which will begin offering 3G wireless service this summer--is leveraging cheap, unlicensed Wi-Fi technology to bring true broadband speed over wireless networks to some of its subscribers today.
There's no question Wi-Fi is far from perfect. Its use of unlicensed bandwidth can mean signal interference. And it's a short-range radio technology that will never be able to provide ubiquitous coverage. But when Wi-Fi is combined with a new 3G wireless network using phones that T-Mobile claims switch seamlessly between the two networks, it becomes an interesting story.
As the smallest nationwide carrier in the U.S. market, T-Mobile is using $4.2 billion worth of spectrum it bought in the Federal Communications Commission's 2006 Advanced Wireless Auction to build a 3G wireless network that operates in the nation's top markets. The service, expected to launch this summer, will be up and running in 80 percent of the top 20 markets by the end of the year, according to Joe Sims, vice president and general manager of broadband products and services for T-Mobile USA.
Even without 3G services, T-Mobile has managed to become a formidable competitor. And even though it doesn't offer specific e-mail or Internet surfing service over its cellular network, T-Mobile has still managed to become a leader in messaging with its popular Sidekick device that's used for SMS text messaging.
Now, as T-Mobile prepares to open its 3G network for business, the carrier has also begun offering a companion service using Wi-Fi that will provide even faster upload and download speeds for mobile-phone users. And while Sprint Nextel struggles to roll out WiMax and Verizon Wireless and AT&T talk about LTE (long-term evolution) deployments, T-Mobile will be able to offer its subscribers true mobile broadband service through Wi-Fi hot spots. The combination of its 3G network and Wi-Fi strategy could help the company compete more aggressively as mobile Internet and data become more important sources of revenue for wireless operators.
"WiMax and LTE are a ways off from becoming reality," Sims said. "There isn't anything faster than Wi-Fi right now. And with the seamless handoff to a 3G network, we can get much wider coverage."
Last summer, T-Mobile launched the Hotspot @Home service, which allows people using any of T-Mobile's dual-mode Wi-Fi/cellular phones to use their home Wi-Fi networks instead of the T-Mobile cellular network to make phone calls or access the Internet from their phones.
The company has expanded the service to also include its more than 9,000 public Wi-Fi hot spots in the U.S., giving its customers even more places where they can use Wi-Fi. I must admit, I have never used the service myself, but T-Mobile's Sims says the handoff between the Wi-Fi and the cellular is seamless, and subscribers can walk in and out of either network as many times as they like without ever noticing they have hopped onto another network.
Since the Hotspot @Home service launched nationwide last summer, T-Mobile has assembled an impressive list of devices that can be used with the service. Earlier this month at the CTIA trade show in Las Vegas, the company introduced the BlackBerry Pearl 8120 with Wi-Fi. T-Mobile also offers two other Hotspot@Home-enabled BlackBerrys, the popular Curve 8320, and the business-centric BlackBerry 8820.
Using the Wi-Fi network instead of the cellular network benefits T-Mobile, as well as its customers. For T-Mobile, Wi-Fi helps reduce the amount of traffic that is running on T-Mobile's own wireless network. And consumers get better in-home or in-building coverage. It also greatly improves the upload and download speeds for surfing the mobile Web. And at only $9.99 extra per month for subscribers who spend at least $40 a month on T-Mobile phone service, it's not an expensive add-on for high-speed data access and better coverage.
The service, which began selling nationwide last year, has been a big success, Sims says. It's even helped the company entice some customers to switch providers for T-Mobile.
"Over half of the @Home customers are new subscribers to T-Mobile," he said. "And most of them seem to be coming on for the faster speeds and the increased coverage proposition."
T-Mobile also recently announced a home phone replacement service called Hotspot @Home Talk Forever that also uses Wi-Fi. The service is currently available in Seattle and Dallas. Essentially, it is a voice over IP service, much like services offered by cable providers and companies such as Vonage. It allows people to use their regular phones to make and receive calls over a broadband connection. The service only costs $9.99 more a month on top of the regular calling plan and Hotspot @Home charge.
"Hotspot @Home is great for one device and great for improving in-home coverage," Sims said. "But there's another demographic that wants one permanent line in the home."
He admitted that the new service is an attempt to take on companies such as AT&T and Verizon, which offer wireless as well as home phone service.
"We are absolutely going after the traditional phone companies with these offerings," he said. "And we're doing it in a way that is relevant to our brand."
But Sims also says that T-Mobile's ambitions for Wi-Fi go beyond simply using it in the home. The service can also be used in conjunction with thousands of T-Mobile public Wi-Fi hot spots. The company currently has more than 21,000 public hot spots around the globe, with more than 9,000 of them in the U.S. While these hot spots by no means provide ubiquitous coverage, Sims said the company is evaluating how to expand its hot spot footprint to bring more Wi-Fi access to its subscribers.
Currently, most of T-Mobile's hot spots are in places like airports or cafes where people typically use laptops. But as more dual-mode phones come online, he said the company will evaluate where it might be useful to deploy hot spots for "nomadic" use.
Considering citywide Wi-Fi
He even admitted that the company has considered deploying Wi-Fi citywide. The movement to blanket cities with Wi-Fi was badly damaged last year when EarthLink, the largest Internet provider to offer such a service, decided to stop building these networks. Since then cities have been struggling to figure out ways to bring inexpensive Wi-Fi services to their communities.
T-Mobile could be the perfect candidate to build such a network. Not only does the company already have its own Wi-Fi networks, but the use of dual-mode devices that can switch between cellular and Wi-Fi networks would make the service more useful and appealing to nomadic city workers or even consumer subscribers looking for faster mobile Internet surfing.
"We've looked at citywide Wi-Fi," Sims said. "There's no real reason why it couldn't work from a technology standpoint. But there are different business models around using the technology in that way."
T-Mobile's service is already being used on some Wi-Fi-blanketed college campuses. The University of Texas at Austin launched a pilot program last month that will run through August and is allowing T-Mobile subscribers to use the university Wi-Fi network as part of their Hotspot @Home service. This means that in addition to using the @Home service in a dorm room, residents and faculty who subscribe to the T-Mobile service will be able to use it anywhere they can find the university Wi-Fi network, such as in the library, in classroom buildings, and in outdoor public hot spots.
The main reason the university is interested in allowing the T-Mobile service to be used with its Wi-Fi network is to provide better in-building coverage. The university currently is working with all the major cell phone carriers to improve cellular coverage on campus, but even with these efforts faculty and students complain of poor service inside many buildings.
Instead of investing in expensive femtocell technology, which uses a router-like device to boost cellular radio signals indoors, William Green, director of networking for the University of Texas at Austin, sees Wi-Fi as an inexpensive way to provide better coverage. At the same time, people in the university community with dual-mode phones can also benefit from the higher-speed network access using Wi-Fi.
That said, Green is skeptical that T-Mobile's Wi-Fi service could be as effective in a citywide deployment.
"Wi-Fi networks are very hard to manage in dense environments," he said. "And it's very hard for a city to deploy a network such as ours. We already own the fiber and all the rights of way."
Skepticism over Wi-Fi strategy
Indeed, other experts are also skeptical that T-Mobile's Wi-Fi strategy will find much traction beyond some niche applications. Roger Entner, vice president of communications for IAG Research, said T-Mobile has had little choice but to use Wi-Fi since it is so late to the 3G cellular game.
"They are trying to turn a virtue out of necessity," he said. "They're forcing a technology to be used in a way that it was not designed to be used. Can they get to it to work? Yes, but it doesn't work very elegantly."
At this point in the game, only time will tell. Sprint Nextel was supposed to have launched its Xohm WiMax service this month. But it now says it will launch the service later this year. And even though Nokia has announced one device to be used on a WiMax network, it will take awhile before more WiMax-enabled devices become available.
Then there's the other 4G technology, LTE. Verizon Wireless and AT&T have each said they plan to use wireless spectrum newly won in the 700MHz auction to build these networks, but it will be years before either provider offers a service on these proposed networks.
In the meantime, T-Mobile will be expanding its Wi-Fi hot spots and cell phone manufacturers will be embedding inexpensive Wi-Fi chips into more devices. So at least for the near future, T-Mobile, the laggard in the wireless speed war, could be the only provider to offer true wireless broadband speeds to its subscribers.
Coverage may not be everywhere, but it might just be enough to entice some subscribers to give it a second look.
source : http://www.news.com/
Mobile phone giants make LTE technology licensing agreement
A number of the world's largest players in mobile technology have come together to agree on a licensing framework for their patents dealing with an emerging mobile technology. Long Term Evolution (LTE) promises to make everything from downloading videos to content sharing faster, although the first networks are not expected for at least two years and some operators may opt to wait longer until the technology matures.
"Today's announcement is a step towards establishing more predictable and transparent licensing costs in a manner that enables faster adoption of new technologies," Ilkka Rahnasto, head of Nokia's intellectual property rights said in a statement.
The companies have committed to keeping royalty levels for essential LTE patents in handsets below 10 percent of the sale price, and have agreed a maximum royalty in LTE-enabled notebooks must stay below $10. Nokia, Ericsson, Alcatel-Lucent, NEC Corp, NextWave Wireless, Nokia Siemens Networks and Sony Ericsson were among those involved.
source : http://www.afterdawn.com/
"Today's announcement is a step towards establishing more predictable and transparent licensing costs in a manner that enables faster adoption of new technologies," Ilkka Rahnasto, head of Nokia's intellectual property rights said in a statement.
The companies have committed to keeping royalty levels for essential LTE patents in handsets below 10 percent of the sale price, and have agreed a maximum royalty in LTE-enabled notebooks must stay below $10. Nokia, Ericsson, Alcatel-Lucent, NEC Corp, NextWave Wireless, Nokia Siemens Networks and Sony Ericsson were among those involved.
source : http://www.afterdawn.com/
Two New Windows Mobile Phones from Velocity Mobile
Who is Velocity Mobile? We're not sure, though it seems that they've got two Windows Mobile phones on the horizon that look to be pretty good.
First up we have the Velocity 111, shown on the left, which is a Windows Mobile 6.1 Standard device with 400MHz processor, 256MB ROM, 128MB RAM, Quadband GSM with HSDPA, WiFi, and GPS. The screen measures 2.5" and is QVGA resolution. It's 15mm thick, which is about 3mm thicker than the BlackJack II.
Next we have a more compelling device, the Velocity 103, which runs on Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional and sports a minimalist design surrounding the 2.8" VGA (nice!) screen. It's also a GSM phone with HSDPA, WiFi and GPS.
The word on the street is that we'll see 103 availability in Q2, while the 111 will make it out the door by Q3.
source : http://www.pocketnow.com/
First up we have the Velocity 111, shown on the left, which is a Windows Mobile 6.1 Standard device with 400MHz processor, 256MB ROM, 128MB RAM, Quadband GSM with HSDPA, WiFi, and GPS. The screen measures 2.5" and is QVGA resolution. It's 15mm thick, which is about 3mm thicker than the BlackJack II.
Next we have a more compelling device, the Velocity 103, which runs on Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional and sports a minimalist design surrounding the 2.8" VGA (nice!) screen. It's also a GSM phone with HSDPA, WiFi and GPS.
The word on the street is that we'll see 103 availability in Q2, while the 111 will make it out the door by Q3.
source : http://www.pocketnow.com/
The Mobile Phone Journey: From Past to Present
If you have gotten used to your sleek and compact phone, imagine our grandfathers carrying a huge box which they called as a ‘Cell phone’, which weighed approximately 4 times more as compared to the newer sleek phones. Mobile phones have seen a vast amount of changes in the last few decades, here’s a quick recap of the mobile phones from the birth stages.
The first mobile phone well known as 1G (First Generation) phone was launched in 1983 by the Motorola Company. The phones used analog technology and they faced a huge problem in regards to clarity and constant noise interference. The 1G phones were quite heavy and needed to be permanently installed on automobiles due to their size and weight. The main utility that the 1G phones provided were communicating traffic information. This is the era of mobiles where only one to one calling was possible.
Then the mobile phones drove into the period of 1990’s and came the era of second generation or 2G handsets which brought in a package of changes in technology. The 2G phone proudly featured the digital technology and welcomed the smaller units and batteries and it meant as per its name Mobile. The phones introduced the calling plus messaging features.
While we were busy preparing for the funeral of 2G phones, the 2.5G Phones came in to scene with full fledged talk, messaging and picture messaging features, the phones lost a good amount of weight during their long journey. The 2.5 G features were making a foundation to the path of 3G with calling, text messaging, picture messaging and GPRS packet data facilities.
And the current age of 3G phones surprised the world with a huge list of features like video calling, Wi-Fi connectivity, mobile TV, video streaming and endless amount of excellent features. The phones became an ‘All in One’ compact system and molded into a computer phone and eliminated the need of a computer for some of the users.
The Mobile phones have traveled right from the old green or blue background screens to the latest color widescreens which can be controlled by a mere touch on the screen. While we are getting ready to welcome the 4G generation of mobiles, the mobile phones have already started displaying mobile TV’S proudly and they even guide one through a road with the GPS maps and real time traffic information.
Mobile phones have transformed themselves neatly from a luxury item to a necessity. The phones have even been encrusted with diamonds, precious gems, gold, etc and thus making it a fashion accessory rather than a simple gadget. Mobile phones have not yet stopped with their journey. In today’s date when they have become a necessity, there’s still a long way to travel and there are a vast amount of technological improvements expected in the future.
source : http://www.mobiletor.com/
The first mobile phone well known as 1G (First Generation) phone was launched in 1983 by the Motorola Company. The phones used analog technology and they faced a huge problem in regards to clarity and constant noise interference. The 1G phones were quite heavy and needed to be permanently installed on automobiles due to their size and weight. The main utility that the 1G phones provided were communicating traffic information. This is the era of mobiles where only one to one calling was possible.
Then the mobile phones drove into the period of 1990’s and came the era of second generation or 2G handsets which brought in a package of changes in technology. The 2G phone proudly featured the digital technology and welcomed the smaller units and batteries and it meant as per its name Mobile. The phones introduced the calling plus messaging features.
While we were busy preparing for the funeral of 2G phones, the 2.5G Phones came in to scene with full fledged talk, messaging and picture messaging features, the phones lost a good amount of weight during their long journey. The 2.5 G features were making a foundation to the path of 3G with calling, text messaging, picture messaging and GPRS packet data facilities.
And the current age of 3G phones surprised the world with a huge list of features like video calling, Wi-Fi connectivity, mobile TV, video streaming and endless amount of excellent features. The phones became an ‘All in One’ compact system and molded into a computer phone and eliminated the need of a computer for some of the users.
The Mobile phones have traveled right from the old green or blue background screens to the latest color widescreens which can be controlled by a mere touch on the screen. While we are getting ready to welcome the 4G generation of mobiles, the mobile phones have already started displaying mobile TV’S proudly and they even guide one through a road with the GPS maps and real time traffic information.
Mobile phones have transformed themselves neatly from a luxury item to a necessity. The phones have even been encrusted with diamonds, precious gems, gold, etc and thus making it a fashion accessory rather than a simple gadget. Mobile phones have not yet stopped with their journey. In today’s date when they have become a necessity, there’s still a long way to travel and there are a vast amount of technological improvements expected in the future.
source : http://www.mobiletor.com/
Labels:
cell phones,
mobile phones,
mobile phones history
Monday, April 14, 2008
Palm Centro debuts in Malaysia
THE Centro is billed as the smallest and lightest Palm smartphone to date and it is targeted at first-time users who want something more powerful than a normal phone.
Measuring at 107.2 x 53.5 x 18.6mm and weighing 124g, the Centro provides users with voice, chat-style messaging, e-mail, Bluetooth and Internet connectivity in a single device.
A 2.2in colour touchscreen and a mini Qwerty keyboard are also available to help users navigate the phone's functions with ease.
The smartphone supports quadband GSM and EDGE (Enhanced Data rate for GSM Evolution) networks.
Inside, users will find an Intel XScale 312 MHz processor and a preinstalled Palm OS 5.4.9. It has 64MB of RAM and 128MB of built-in Flash memory, of which 65MB are available for users to store their data.
source : http://www.mobile88.com/news/
Measuring at 107.2 x 53.5 x 18.6mm and weighing 124g, the Centro provides users with voice, chat-style messaging, e-mail, Bluetooth and Internet connectivity in a single device.
A 2.2in colour touchscreen and a mini Qwerty keyboard are also available to help users navigate the phone's functions with ease.
The smartphone supports quadband GSM and EDGE (Enhanced Data rate for GSM Evolution) networks.
Inside, users will find an Intel XScale 312 MHz processor and a preinstalled Palm OS 5.4.9. It has 64MB of RAM and 128MB of built-in Flash memory, of which 65MB are available for users to store their data.
source : http://www.mobile88.com/news/
Labels:
Centro,
palm centro,
palm mobile phones,
palm smartphone
Sony Ericsson G700 – FCC Approved, Soon To Hit The US
Sony Ericsson G700 has recently passed the FCC tests and, most probably, it will be soon launched on the US market. Part of Sony Ericsson's brand new G-series of handsets,
first announced during MWC 2008, G700 is a touchscreen candybar that combines business and multimedia features into one sleek and slim case.
Although G700 is not as evolved in features as the other Sony Ericsson G-series phone (G900), it's still a very nice handset capable of answering the needs of many mobile users out there. The handset measures 4.17 x 1.92 x 0.51 inches (106 x 49 x 13 mm), weighs 3.49 ounces (99 grams) and, like the G900, it's created to organize the lives of those who have busy schedules, both at home and at the office.
Sony Ericsson G700 runs on Symbian UIQ and comes with a simple to use interface. The phone packs a 2.4 inch TFT touchscreen (240 x 320 pixels and 256K colors), 3G connectivity, handwriting recognition, document reader & editor, organizer, voice memo & dial, StickyNotes, Opera browser, push email, Instant Messaging, RSS reader,Media player (MP3, AAC and MPEG-4 support), TrackID for easy music recognition, FM radio with RDS, Bluetooth 2.0 with A2DP, USB 2.0 and Java MIDP 2.0. Moreover, G700 also comes with a pretty good 3.15 Megapixel camera with flash, image stabilizer and video recording, plus a secondary front camera for video calls.
The battery included in Sony Ericsson G700 is a 950 mAh Li-Ion one that should provide up to 12 hours of talk-time and up to 380 hours of stand-by time.
There's no word yet about when exactly the G700 will be commercially available in the US. Its retail price is also unknown, but users should expect to pay at least $400 for the slim touchscreen candybar.
source : http://news.softpedia.com/
first announced during MWC 2008, G700 is a touchscreen candybar that combines business and multimedia features into one sleek and slim case.
Although G700 is not as evolved in features as the other Sony Ericsson G-series phone (G900), it's still a very nice handset capable of answering the needs of many mobile users out there. The handset measures 4.17 x 1.92 x 0.51 inches (106 x 49 x 13 mm), weighs 3.49 ounces (99 grams) and, like the G900, it's created to organize the lives of those who have busy schedules, both at home and at the office.
Sony Ericsson G700 runs on Symbian UIQ and comes with a simple to use interface. The phone packs a 2.4 inch TFT touchscreen (240 x 320 pixels and 256K colors), 3G connectivity, handwriting recognition, document reader & editor, organizer, voice memo & dial, StickyNotes, Opera browser, push email, Instant Messaging, RSS reader,Media player (MP3, AAC and MPEG-4 support), TrackID for easy music recognition, FM radio with RDS, Bluetooth 2.0 with A2DP, USB 2.0 and Java MIDP 2.0. Moreover, G700 also comes with a pretty good 3.15 Megapixel camera with flash, image stabilizer and video recording, plus a secondary front camera for video calls.
The battery included in Sony Ericsson G700 is a 950 mAh Li-Ion one that should provide up to 12 hours of talk-time and up to 380 hours of stand-by time.
There's no word yet about when exactly the G700 will be commercially available in the US. Its retail price is also unknown, but users should expect to pay at least $400 for the slim touchscreen candybar.
source : http://news.softpedia.com/
Nokia debuts N82 in Middle East
Nokia has launched its new Nokia N82 multimedia computer in the UAE. The handset features integrated navigation and imaging functions, which combine to enable new location-based applications that can be shared with other users.
The N82 comes preloaded with GCC and European country maps, and will also include three-months free voice-guided navigation services. The device includes A-GPS location tracking, and a 5 megapixel camera which will capture images with embedded location data, which can then be used in other applications such as guided tours or shopping applications.
Nokia mobile phones is already offering its Sports Tracker application as a free download. The application allows runners, cyclists, joggers and so on to create and track route maps, with embedded images and data such at speed, distance and time taken to complete the route. The Sports Tracker website allows sharing of routes and data with other users.
Henri Mattila, Explore Category Head for Nokia Middle East and North Afric said: "The Nokia N82 is made for storytelling. As one of Nokia's leading-edge connected camera, the Nokia N82 in black captures people's journeys and discoveries. With built-in A-GPS it even helps people to find new places by pairing ‘contextual' information with a wide array of connectivity features such as Wi-Fi and HSDPA. We make it easy for consumers to quickly share those moments as they happen."
source : http://www.itp.net/
The N82 comes preloaded with GCC and European country maps, and will also include three-months free voice-guided navigation services. The device includes A-GPS location tracking, and a 5 megapixel camera which will capture images with embedded location data, which can then be used in other applications such as guided tours or shopping applications.
Nokia mobile phones is already offering its Sports Tracker application as a free download. The application allows runners, cyclists, joggers and so on to create and track route maps, with embedded images and data such at speed, distance and time taken to complete the route. The Sports Tracker website allows sharing of routes and data with other users.
Henri Mattila, Explore Category Head for Nokia Middle East and North Afric said: "The Nokia N82 is made for storytelling. As one of Nokia's leading-edge connected camera, the Nokia N82 in black captures people's journeys and discoveries. With built-in A-GPS it even helps people to find new places by pairing ‘contextual' information with a wide array of connectivity features such as Wi-Fi and HSDPA. We make it easy for consumers to quickly share those moments as they happen."
source : http://www.itp.net/
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