Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Sony Ericsson F305 Black Unlocked

November 23, 2008

Sony Ericsson F305 Black include 2 megapixel camera, Mp3 player, motion based games. The 2.0 inches TFT display is outdo for Motion-based games. Mp3 player let you listen your favorite collection from your phone memory while FM Radio heighten your music experience by listening from different stations. It has enabled Music player and Stereo FM radio with RDS for your entertaining feel. GPRS and EDGE connectivity with WAP2.0 browser let you access internet. The 1600×1200 pixels resolution 2 megapixel camera is outdo for capturing stills and video. There are gobs of feature included with Sony Ericsson F305 itemizing Track ID music recognition, Picture editor/blogging, Organizer, Built-in hands free, Voice memo/dial, Bluetooth connectivity, USB. Messaging feature like Email, Instant Messaging….More….

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T-MOBILE GOOGLE G1

November 3, 2008


In your hand the G1 feels good. Solid and all-plastic, but not nearly as clunky as the blurrycam photos showed. Getting used to the controls takes a little bit—babies can’t pick up and instantly know their way around, like on the iPhone. Control wise, it suffers from a bit of schizophrenia—with a trackball, touchscreen, candybar mode and flip-out QWERTY, there’s a lot going on at once. What’s nice is that it seems to not lock you in to anyone type of control interface—scrolling with trackball and touching work at the same time in many apps.

Physically, the flip-out LCD feels solid and springy. Keyboard keys are small, spongy and a bit recessed, so it’s hard to touch type right off by the feel of the keys. The touchscreen is better than we had hoped—far better than the HTC Touch’s slow-to-respond screen. Scrolling is smooth at times, clunky at others, depending on the app. It’s not multitouch, so it uses a “long press” UI element quite a bit—like to drag an app from the pop-out menu to the desktop—but since the touch is fairly responsive, it works pretty well.

You use the menu button a lot, more than we’d like. For instance, in the browser, our instinct—kind of biased one, admittedly—is to touch the top of the screen to pop up the URL. Here, you’ve gotta press menu. Same with any other app, to do pretty much anything. It also pulls the Palm move of having the home button be separate from the power/lock button, so if you push the red button instinctively to kill an app, you’re just going to lock your phone.

Browsing: It may just be that we’re not comfortable with it yet, but the browsing is kind of cludgy. Again, control is an issue – lots of UI to fight through. Scrolling and zooming around a rendered page is a bit jerky as well, but on par with Opera Mini and similar mobile browsers. The touch zoom buttons don’t work as intuitively or respond as tightly as they should. Even though they’re both based on Webkit, it’s not as smooth as multitouch Safari, yet. Scrolling around web pages with the trackball is definitely smoother and more intuitive, immediately, than using the touch screen.

Google Apps: We didn’t have a Gmail account loaded, so we couldn’t see incoming messages, but the app looks minimalistic and was snappy. Text input is with the QWERTY keyboard, as it is with every app right now. It’s kinda subdued, missing the colorful bubbly design of the Gmail Mobile app for other phones. Interestingly, there is a Google Talk service active within the IM app, even though we had heard from the Android Devs that GTalk was not making it into the first version of the software.

Maps is top-notch—we found our location within a few seconds indoors on Manhattan’s far east side with combines GPS and cell-tower. It’s incredibly optimized, perhaps the smoothest app experience we’ve had yet. And Compass View, which uses accelerometers to predict where you’re pointing the phone to scroll around Street View accordingly, is rad—augmented reality, here we come….More…

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Motorola Aura Unlocked

November 1, 2008

The Return of Artistry
AURA™ by Motorola is a timeless, classically designed device that delivers a sensory experience that is second to none for those with refined taste. Combining an exquisite interface with superb craftsmanship inspired by high-end watches, AURA breaks convention and re-establishes artistry in the design and manufacturing of mobile devices. From the moment an AURA owner picks up his or her device they embark on a journey of discovery.

An Exquisitely Performing Device, Designed to the Highest Standards
Drawing on inspiration, materials and techniques from luxury jewelers, AURA begins with the world’s first 16 million color, circular display with more colors and sharper resolution than has ever been seen on a Motorola phone. The product’s richness can literally be felt, from the weight of its Stainless Steel housing and the textures and patterns chemically-etched into its surface, to its Grade 1, 62-carat sapphire crystal lens, one of the most scratch-resistant materials on earth.

Turning AURA over reveals a window into its mechanical heart-gears composed of Rockwell 50-55 hardened steel and 130 precision ball bearings-working in tandem to drive the phone’s assisted-opening blade. The effect is more like opening the door on a luxury car versus accessing a mobile phone. From its Swiss-made main bearing to the custom-engineered rotating mechanism composed of over 200 high precision individual parts, AURA was built to surpass Motorola’s reliability requirements. The gears are protected from harsh conditions with the same coatings used in high-performance racing engines.

The vibrancy and richness of the AURA interface easily matches the product’s physical design. Its unique circular display form alone is breathtaking. With a brilliant interplay of 16 million colors and 300 ppi precision, the highest resolution of any Motorola phone. And of course, Motorola’s exclusive CrystalTalk™ technology delivers supreme clarity and deep resonance to every single conversation an AURA owner has, even in noisy environments.

Pre-Order: – $1,999.99

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Blackberry Curve 8320 Gold Unlocked

September 13, 2008

Featuring a liquid silver finish, clean lines and soft edges, the BlackBerry Curve 8300 smartphone is the smallest and lightest BlackBerry® smartphone ever to come with a full QWERTY keyboard. It’s packed with incredible features*, including a camera, BlackBerry® Maps, a media player, expandable memory, Voice Activated Dialing, tethered modem and trackball navigation. Plus you get all the core functionality you’ve come to expect in a BlackBerry smartphone — email and text messaging, instant messaging, web browser and advanced phone functionality. The BlackBerry Curve is designed to simplify your life — in a friendly, personal and easy-to-use package. It’s your connection to everything that matters….More…

DEVICE SPECIFICATIONS:
Phone
Email and text messaging (SMS and MMS)
BlackBerry Maps, the best way to find your way.
Integrated address book, calendar, memo pad, task list.
Web browser.
2 MP camera.
Instant messaging.
Media Player. Audio and video playback in a variety of formats.
Full QWERTY keyboard.
Tethered modem capability (lets you use the device as a wireless modem for your laptop or PC)
Speakerphone and Voice Activated Dialing.
Bluetooth® capability for hands-free dialogue via headsets and car kits – mono/stereo headset, hands-free and serial port profile supported. Bluetooth stereo audio (A2DP/AVCRP).
3.5mm stereo headset capable.
Integrated attachment viewing.
Compatibility with popular Personal Information Management (PIM) software.
High resolution, light sensing screen that adjusts lighting levels
automatically for ideal indoor and outdoor viewing.
Dedicated Send, End and Mute keys, a trackball navigation system, plus a user definable convenience key.
64MB Flash memory plus microSD expandable memory slot.

Deal Price: – $495.99

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