Showing posts with label smartphones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label smartphones. Show all posts

Friday, April 15, 2011

Nokia E6 Walkthrough |


Walkthrough video of the latest E series smartphone from Nokia. The Nokia E6-00 is a Symbian Anna device, optimized for business use with QWERTY keypad and a VGA resolution capacitive touch display. The device features integrated mobile office and messaging applications, 8 Mpix Full Focus camera with dual-LED flash, A-GPS with Ovi Maps and Social networking integration. Additionally, for the software developers, the device includes Qt 4.7.3, Java MIDP 2.1, Bluetooth 3.0 and Flash Lite 4.0.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Samsung Galaxy S II will launch in the next two weeks| followed by global domination


Apparently, many people have been asking Samsung about the Galaxy S II. Today, the electronics giant got back to its fans through its Facebook page with a somewhat accurate launch date.

Nokia Nuron Review

Nokia 5230 Nuron is a version of Nokia 5230. A candybar phone boasting a 3.2-inch widescreen touch display with full-screen QWERTY keyboard and handwriting recognition. Other features include a 3.5mm headphone jack, microSDHC card support up to 16GB, A-GPS, a 2 megapixel camera and Bluetooth.


Nokia 5230 Nuron, and now T-Mobile USA 

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Mobile phone users 'overpaying by £200' per year

Three-quarters of mobile phone subscribers are wasting an average of nearly £200 a year because they are on the wrong contract, research suggests.
Some customers are paying for four times as many minutes as they use, according to Billmonitor

Monday, April 11, 2011

Android's problem isn't fragmentation, it's contamination


This thought was first given voice by Myriam Joire on last night's Mobile Podcast, and the simple, lethal accuracy of it has haunted me ever since. All the hubbub and unrest about whether Google is trying tolock Android down or not has failed to address whether Google should be trying to control the OS, and if so, what the (valid) reasons for that may be. Herein, I present only one, but it's arguably big enough to make all the dissidence about open source idealism and promises unkept fade into insignificance.