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Archive for September, 2008

Ericsson to launch mobile Innovation Center in Africa

Posted by arm On September - 26 - 2008

Ericsson to launch mobile Innovation Center in Africa

Ericsson is establishing an Innovation Center in sub-Saharan Africa to develop mobile applications that will benefit society as a whole, but with a special focus on meeting the needs of poor and rural populations. The initiative will focus on solutions in health, education, agriculture and small business development.

The Ericsson Innovation Center will include three application development hubs, in Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya. At first, the Innovation Center will concentrate on mobile applications, such as m-health, where great efficiency gains stand to be made. These applications will, for example, enable health workers to gather, monitor and share data on things like births, deaths and epidemics, and to use smart mobile decision support tools in their daily work. Other applications will relate to education, agriculture, business development, finance, government services and the overall improvement of communication capabilities.

The Innovation Center will also develop business cases that enable network operators to introduce and expand mobile broadband services in Africa and other emerging markets, with an emphasis on developing affordable, sustainable applications and services for rural communities.

The Innovation Center aims to stimulate local entrepreneurship and business development by providing tools for local developer communities in and around the three new hubs to create their own applications. The innovation center should also foster a good environment for the creation of new small businesses throughout Africa.

Jan Embro, President of Ericsson in sub-Saharan Africa, says: “Mobile communication significantly improves quality of life, providing the tools to deliver enormous socio-economic benefits to people in developing countries. Connectivity helps to offset a lack of resources, particularly in rural areas, and provides access to a range of services, including education and healthcare.

The annual growth rate in mobile subscribers in Africa in 2007 was more than 40 percent, with more than 80 million new subscribers. Increased mobile penetration boosts economic activity, and recent studies show that increase in mobile penetration can lead to a one to five percent increase in the annual growth rate in a country’s GDP.

Popularity: 32%

Motorola Q11 Spyshot Leaked

Posted by arm On September - 26 - 2008

Motorola Q11 Spyshot Leaked

Bluetooth SIG has already given us the info on the upcoming Moto Q11 early this month, although there wasn’t much other specifications info and pictures on the site. It does not take long to see the actual devices though, Mobility Today posted 2 spyshots together with some info yesterday.

Motorola Q11 Spyshot Leaked

Other than a more compact QWERTY keyboard, the new Motorola Q11 is similar to other Moto Q-family. It will be running Windows Mobile 6.1, comes with built in GPS, WiFi, bluetooth and a 3 megapixel camera.

Popularity: 38%

Samsung Bresson Pictures

Posted by arm On September - 26 - 2008

Samsung Bresson Pictures

It looks like the time of 8 megapixel camera phones is looming closer, as live pictures of Samsung’s M8800 Bresson have made it to the internet. The phone should be retailing for something around 550 Euros when it hits the stores, and will have the following specs:

  • Quad band GSM, tri-band HSDPA
  • Qualcomm MSM6281 chipset
  • Native Samsung OS
  • 3.2? 240×400px TFT Display
  • 8 megapixel camera (3264×2448) with VGA video recording at 30 fps
  • FM Radio with RDS
  • Built-in accelerometer
  • 100MB of user memory
  • microSD card slot

Popularity: 45%

Art Lebedev Concept Phone

Posted by arm On September - 26 - 2008

Art Lebedev Concept Phone

It looks like even concept phones aren’t exempt from the “iPhone-clone” look. Some Russian designers at the Art Lebedev studio have come up with this concept phone this looks a little like the iPhone, but sports WiMAX support, along with Wi-Fi and tri-band GSM. Other juicy details include an 850 x 480 pixel touchscreen, dual cameras, USB connectivity and microSD card expansion. Of course, this phone is still very much a concept, and there isn’t any indication as to when or if it will ever make it to becoming a reality.

Popularity: 39%

New LG Xenon for ATT

Posted by arm On September - 25 - 2008

New LG Xenon for ATT

BGR has just got another piece of leak on the upcoming LG phone for AT&T network in US. The LG Xenon is a full touch screen phone with a QWERTY slider keyboard. The keyboard is done in 4 rows, with space key placed at the side instead of middle. The Xenon will support UTMS/HSDPA, it is a GSM Quadband phone and comes with 2.8-inch display screen, 3 megapixel camera (no Xenon flash?), 100MB internal memory, Bluetooth, WiFi and microSD card slot. It should be available in December this year according to the source.

Popularity: 45%

BlackBerry Javelin At The Airport

Posted by arm On September - 25 - 2008

BlackBerry Javelin At The Airport

It looks like if you’re dying to give the BlackBerry Javelin a try, you’ll be able to do so at the airport. The folks over at CrackBerry have managed to play with the upcoming BlackBerry Javelin at the airport (thanks to a delayed flight), three of them no less. According to them, the BlackBerry Javelin will be marketed as the BlackBerry Curve 8900.

Popularity: 36%

Black and White Phone is a Bulkier iPhone

Posted by arm On September - 25 - 2008

Black and White Phone is a Bulkier iPhone

My first thought after seeing this handset was that I was checking out yet another iPhone clone, but one with thicker edges and a smaller screen. Nice to see the virtual keyboard separated from the actual screen, but we’re in the era of full QWERTY devices, so this might not appeal to the public too much.

Black and White Phone is a Bulkier iPhone

Popularity: 39%

Nokia 6210 Navigator Reviews

Posted by arm On September - 24 - 2008

Last year Nokia released its 6110 Navigator phone, the first in the company’s line-up to have dedicated sat-nav features and sport the Navigator branding. It came into my office along with a flurry of other mobiles and never quite made it to the front of my review pile but its successor, the 6210 Navigator, has. It isn’t widely available as I write this but I did find it from Vodafone for free on a £30 contract.

This handset looks rather like the 6220 Classic, which I reviewed at the tail end of July. That phone is a candybar, this one is a slider, but the general button design and shiny plastic front fascia make the handsets look like near-identical twins.

Nokia 6210 Navigator Reviews

The key selling point of the 6210 Navigator, it won’t surprise you to hear, is its navigation features. You may remember that Nokia recently bought navigation specialist Navteq. Even before that acquisition was announced almost a year ago now, Nokia had already been addressing GPS and navigation with its work on Nokia Maps and the integration of receivers into its handsets.

So the 6210 Navigator is in many ways just a step along the road for Nokia. But it does represent quite a significant step in that it is a smaller, neater phone than the 6110 was, and shows that Nokia is getting a grip on how to do the GPS thing properly.

It is a shame, though, that while several other higher end features accompany the GPS, there is no Wi-Fi here. Nokia just doesn’t want to give away all its goodies at once too often, does it?

General handling of this phone is very positive. At 103mm tall, 49mm wide and 14.9mm thick it feels comfortable in the hand. Slide the number pad into view and the handset becomes about 130mm tall. It weighs an acceptable 117g.

The casing is undeniably plastic, and it may not absorb many drops from heights before it cracks, but that is not exactly a novel point to make about a mobile phone.

The key positioning and construction is generally positive. A huge D-pad is flanked by Clear and Nokia Menu keys. Call and End keys and two softmenu keys are large and easy to hit accurately. Beneath them and centrally located is the four-pointed star shaped Navigator key. Press this and Nokia Maps immediately fires up, the key becomes backlit with blue, and you enter navigation mode.

Open the slide and the number pad is accessible. Its keys are as large as the available area allows, and responsive to use. Texting at speed should not present many problems.
The screen is relatively large at 2.4 inches across the diagonal and its 320 x 240 pixels are no surprise. It needs to be sharp and bright to compete with dedicated sat-nav systems but, here, the screen is only a partial success.

Nokia 6210 Navigator Reviews

It did perform quite well outdoors but in direct sunlight, readability does suffer. If you want to use this handset for in-vehicle or pedestrian navigation and want to see the on-screen maps clearly, hope that it is not an especially sunny day.

The integrated GPS with A-GPS support works alongside a pre-loaded copy of Nokia Maps software. The handset comes with a 1GB microSD card that has local maps pre-installed. Less than 200MB of storage was occupied on my review sample card leaving you plenty of space for your own data. This alone won’t give you point-to-point navigation but the phone does come complete with 6-months subscription to Nokia’s point-to-point navigation service.

The HSDPA connection to 3.6Mbps is good for Web browsing and Nokia’s own browser copes well with websites. A menu option flips the Web browser into wide format – I couldn’t make the phone’s built in accelerometer do this for me, though it was a little flakey all round in my review sample. There is also, incidentally, what Nokia calls ‘turning control’. You can silence an incoming call or snooze an alarm simply by turning the phone face down. Not original, but potentially handy.

A front-facing camera caters for two-way video calling and the main camera sits on the back of the casing. There is no lens cover, but the lens is slightly inset from its surroundings offering some protection against scratching. There is a flash and autofocus. The side mounted camera shortcut button is a long way down the right edge of the phone – I’d have preferred it about a third of the way down where it sits more readily under the forefinger. You can use the central D-pad button to shoot instead though.

The camera shoots stills at 3.2-megapixels. Quality was not really up to what I’d expect, with all the photos losing refinement around the edges of the subjects. The coloured dish photographed under normal household lighting ought to have a white background, too, so the balance is a little off here. The dish itself is reasonably well reproduced, though.

Nokia 6210 Navigator Reviews

Outdoors, things are better. The whites of the chair are pretty accurate, with minimal signs of any colour shifts, although some highlights are blown out. Colour-wise, the tomatoes aren’t too bad either, but it’s easy for the autofocus to get a little confused, especially at close range. Overall, though, we have seen better results from other cameraphones.

The phone plays music of course. Its 120MB memory is augmented by the provided 1GB microSD card. The headset connector is a 2.5mm type and is one-piece. There is also an FM radio if you get bored of listening to your own tunes.

A microUSB connector sits on the left side of the phone. Nokia doesn’t provide a cable but if you get one you’ll be able to access the handset’s memory from your PC.

There is a huge array of additional features, as you would expect in a Symbian S60 3rd edition handset. In the Office folder, Nokia provides such goodies as QuickOffice (licensed only for viewing and not for creating documents), the Adobe PDF reader, a note taker, calculator, calendar, unit converter and Nokia’s ActiveNotes software, which lets you create notes that contain images and other objects.

Among the array of extras on the handset, you’ll find Nokia’s podcast downloader, support for Widsets, mobile email, calculator, voice recorder and a couple of games including one that uses the accelerometer.

Popularity: 41%

LG KS360 Reviews

Posted by arm On September - 24 - 2008

LG has been quite busy with its mobile phone launches of late. We’ve had the KC550 bringing 5-megapixels to pay as you go, the touch-control toting KF510, and who can forget the sometimes fully touchscreened Secret KF750?

Each of these handsets offers something different, and the KS360 I have in my hands right now is different again. It will be available initially on Orange and later on O2, on both contract and prepay. Final pricing wasn’t confirmed as I wrote this review, though.

The black and blue front fascia and disjointed D-Pad made up of five round buttons is different enough to be eye catching. Two more round buttons map to the softmeus. All of these buttons are quite small but their raised shaping meant I had no trouble using them.

Two raised pressure pads give you Call and End features, while two more provide a Cancel function and link to a dial pad. These are smaller again than the buttons, but their icons make them easy to find and hit accurately.

LG KS360 Reviews

LG KS360 Reviews

LG KS360 Reviews

The dial pad is interesting. Once called up, the screen suddenly becomes touch sensitive complete with haptic feedback. It works really well, but the screen is only touch sensitive for this one application.

Nestled away inside the phone and ready to pop out of the right long edge when required is a keyboard with a full qwerty pad of keys.

Now, I am more than used to seeing keyboards which slide out like this, but they tend to come on higher end handsets sporting Windows Mobile and aimed at the professional or semi-professional user. The KS360 certainly isn’t in that camp being more of a handset for consumers looking for something mid-range.

The keyboard carries on the blue theme from the front fascia but where it was subtly used there, it is the main colour here for both keys and backplate. The embedded number pad keys sit against a grey background as does a diamond-shaped arrangement of embedded cursor keys. The OK and softmenu keys are grey, the Fn key golden, but the remainder of the keys are blue.

When you slide the keyboard out the screen flips into wide format and you are ready to type.

What will you be typing? Well, this phone does support mobile email so you could tap out messages, but with tri-band GSM, GPRS and EDGE on hand but no 3G you could find this is not the ideal handset for that task. No, you are most likely to tap out SMS messages, use IM and do a spot of social networking.

My review sample was hardwired to Orange and the left softkey had links to, among other things, Orange Messenger for IM and to ‘social networks’. Choose the latter and you go online where there are links to bebo, Facebook and Myspace – you also get links to Flickr, YouTube and, er, Dating Direct.

There is a warning at the YouTube link about it being data intensive, which might help you avoid racking up a huge phone bill. Also likely to turn you off is the fact that over a non 3G connection videos come down slowly.

I found the keyboard a little fiddly to get used to. The keys are well spaced but they aren’t very well raised from the backplate. I never did get totally accurate when working with the pads of my thumbs. I was much more accurate using the nails on my thumbs as I could sight the keys I wanted rather than find them by touch. I never got up to very fast speeds though. In comparison with other phone keyboards this one doesn’t rate too highly on ergonomics.

Popularity: 34%

Motorola Briq Concept Phone is a Touchscreen Dual Slider

Posted by arm On September - 24 - 2008

Motorola Briq Concept Phone is a Touchscreen Dual Slider

I received an email just the other day, that had a beautiful concept design attached: the Motorola Briq. No details at all about it, but there was a name at the end of the email, Piotr Paczkowski, who is, I suspect, the designer of the handset. We’re dealing with a dual sliding beauty, with a very, very strange keypad, a diagonal numeric one on the right and a half QWERTY on the left.

Motorola Briq Concept Phone is a Touchscreen Dual Slider

- dual slider with two independent keyboards
- EDGE/HSDPA/UMTS/GSM
- touchscreen (1:2 or 2:1)
- 256 MB RAM and 256 MB ROM
- CPU 450 MHz
- internal memory 8GB and microSDHC
- WiFi
- Bluetooth
- GPS
- 3,2 mpx camera with autofocus
- Windows Mobile 6, with free update to Windows Mobile 7

Popularity: 36%

Sony Ericsson XPERIA X5 Photoshop Concept

Posted by arm On September - 24 - 2008

Sony Ericsson XPERIA X5 Photoshop Concept

We’ve seen the XPERIA X5 before, but never so beautiful and so uber-filled with hot features… This time we’re dealing with a smartphone designed by Exilim from Esato and what a smartphone this is! Let me begin with the shocking specs: a Qualcomm MSM7200 850 MHz processor, 512 MB RAM and 40 GB internal memory…

Plus, there are 2 displays to toy with: a front TFT touchscreen (65k colors, 800 x 480) and a slideout one, TFT touchscreen as well (65 k colors, 800 x 240).

We mustn’t forget the full touch QWERTY keyboard/game controls and the classic 3G HSDPA connectivity, accompanied by Bluetooth 2.0 with A2DP, GPS, A-GPS and an 8 megapixel camera with autofocus, image stabiliser and Xenon flash. The battery is incredible too, lasting 833 hours in standby mode and up to 10 hours if you’re a chatter.

Popularity: 38%

BlackBerry Storm WOW Factors

Posted by arm On September - 24 - 2008

BlackBerry Storm WOW Factors

Engadget has managed to get hold of some slides of Verizon’s upcoming BlackBerry Storm. The slides look to highlight the “WOW factors” of the Storm, which sounds a little cheesy, to be honest. Features that the slides confirm include:

* CDMA / EV-DO Rev. A
* Quad-band EDGE and 2100MHz HSPA
* 3.25-inch 480×360 touchscreen display
* Auto-rotation
* 3.2 megapixel autofocus camera with flash
* 1GB onboard memory with microSD card expansion
* 8GB memory card included in the box

Popularity: 38%

Brown Colored G1 Found

Posted by arm On September - 24 - 2008

Brown Colored G1 Found

While there have been plenty of pictures with regards to the G1, especially today, none of those actually show the G1 in its third color – brown. We’ve managed to dig out a picture of the G1 in brown, and from the picture, it obviously isn’t using the same type of brown like Microsoft’s Zune.

Popularity: 36%

XPERIA X2 Would Take the SE Smartphone to the Mid End World

Posted by arm On September - 24 - 2008

Someone from Esato claimed that the next the XPERIA would be an excellent way of making the original handset into a lower end device, accessible for people with less cash and tech know-how. A mid-end XPERIA would surely blow the competition away, but would it canibalize the sales of the original handset?

XPERIA X2 Would Take the SE Smartphone to the Mid End World

XPERIA X2 was designed by J. Havrlant, a name you must have surely heard if you’ve seen our best Sony Ericsson concepts.

Notice that the neat touchscreen and interface are still there, WM flavour, but the next version of this XPERIA smartphone might lack the QWERTY keyboard. It’s the designer’s call there…

Popularity: 36%

T-Mobile G1 Will Have Push Gmail

Posted by arm On September - 24 - 2008

T-Mobile G1 Will Have Push Gmail

It looks like T-Mobile’s G1 has a rather interesting trick up its sleeve: push Gmail. With the popularity of Gmail, this will be a major boost and selling point of the G1. Such a feature would give it an edge over other phones currently in the market.

Popularity: 34%