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Tag: Bluetooth

HTC Nexus One blessed by the FCC (updated)


var digg_url = ‘http://digg.com/tech_news/Google_Phone_HTC_Nexus_One_blessed_by_the_FCC’;

Well lookie here. A little phone by the name of “NEXUSONE” just slipped through the FCC as model number PB99100 built by HTC. The filing also confirms a few more details including microSD expansion, 802.11b/g WiFi, and Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR. But the real news comes from looking at the radios: quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE with UMTS/HSUPA on 850/1700/1900 frequencies. In other words, this 3G phone is capable of both 2Mbps up and 7.2Mbps down for both the T-Mobile and AT&T networks in the US of A. If this device is sold unlocked (as rumored), at a reasonable price (as hoped), and with a jaw dropping user experience (as tweeted), well, it could be very disruptive to the status quo. Then again, that’s a lot of ifs.

Update: We’re going to pull this back a bit. So far the FCC has posted a trio of reports this morning for the Nexus One but the outcome is inconclusive based on our own continued research and from the discussion in our comments. According to the bands listed (I, IV, and VIII) we’re definitely looking at a T-Mobile USA device as well as applicability on European networks (among others). The whole AT&T range is in doubt as the test lab incorrectly lists 815-880MHz frequencies as part of band VIII. Hold tight as we dig deeper.

Update 2: Only WCDMA Band IV was tested in the Part 22H / 24E / 27 Report, leading us to believe that the Nexus One is going to be HSPA 900 / 1700 / 2100 (a pretty common tri-band 3G setup) plus quadband EDGE. Sorry, AT&T, but that’s how the cookie crumbles.

Continue reading HTC Nexus One blessed by the FCC (updated)

HTC Nexus One blessed by the FCC (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Dec 2009 04:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Soundmatters’ foxL v2 portable Bluetooth speaker rocks the suburbs

Soundmatters made a few (sine) waves last year with the introduction of its awfully cute foxL Bluetooth speaker, but for those preoccupied with other matters, there’s nothing wrong with snagging v2 in order to catch up. The pocket-sized (5.6- x 2.2- x 1.4-inches) speaker sports new BT circuitry that allows for 3x better reception than the prior version, and it also automatically pairs and searches for Bluetooth devices. Users can now answer and terminate a call from the speaker itself, and as expected, you’ll also get a bit more volume out of this one compared to the original. The rechargeable battery will keep the jams spinning for five hours on a full charge, and if the international charging prongs weren’t enough, there’s also the option to regenerate over USB. It’s set to ship later this month to jet-setting music junkies for $199, while a wired (read: non-BT) variant will go for $30 less.

Soundmatters’ foxL v2 portable Bluetooth speaker rocks the suburbs originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 11:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cignias NAO Symphony iPod speaker enables WiFi control with iPhone and BlackBerry

You know what’s annoying? Having to get up and walk all the way to your iPod dock to pick a song. Sure, there’s the good old remote control these days, but you’d still need to squint at the tiny screen from afar if you want any modicum of song control. The couch potatoes at Cignias probably felt the same pain and thus came up with the free MusicNAO app for the iPhone, iPod Touch and BlackBerry, allowing you to control and browse content over WiFi on the iPod docked on NAO Symphony speakers. It doesn’t end there: you can also stream music from the latest iPhone OS devices over Bluetooth, and the same goes for BlackBerry phones but with the addition of WiFi streaming. There’s no word on the sound quality yet, but the adventurous among you can pre-order a NAO Symphony for $249 ahead of its December 1st launch.

Filed under:

Cignias NAO Symphony iPod speaker enables WiFi control with iPhone and BlackBerry originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Nov 2009 03:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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REVIEWS: Samsung Moment mobile phone

Can Speed win over style?
Samsung Moment mobile phone

The spec sheet suggests that the Samsung Moment, available on?Sprint?in the USA should be one of the best?Android-powered handsets out there, with its AMOLED screen, fast processor and the “now” network. But can its specs live up to the dream? Read on to find out.

To say that the Samsung Moment is big would be an understatement; to say that it was ugly: a fairer statement; to say it is fast: that much is true.?That’s pretty much the best way to describe the new Android 1.5 smartphone, because whilst it’s one of the fastest Android handsets we’ve tested, it’s also one of the most unpolished in terms of “wow” factor t.

The decline and fall of the handset starts with the design. A landscape slider, the unit measures a rather bloated 4.6 x 2.34 x .63in and weighs a hefty 160 grams (5.6oz). A brick (Mrs Pocket-lint’s words not ours) is probably the politest way to describe it.

The rather impressive 3.2-inch AMOLED 320 x 480-pixel screen holds its own on the front of the unit offering up not only an array of touch-sensitive and physical buttons beneath but a gaudy strip at the top.

Sliding out to the side of the left screen is a QWERTY keyboard while the right offers a dedicated camera button, voice control and the Mini-USB socket. There’s also a 3.5mm socket covered by a bit of plastic that will break within 3 weeks and the standard volume keys.

Slide open that keyboard and you’ll hurt your eyes, especially if it’s dark. Looking like a beehive honeycomb, the keys are laid out over four rows with the numbers getting their own dedicated row.

That means that Samsung?has crammed the rest of the keyboard over the next three. The end result is that the spacebar is in-between the “V” and “B” something that is very off putting and unconformable for the touch typists amongst you. You might not realise it but you know where the keys are on a keyboard and throwing in random space bars for us just doesn’t work.

All this pales in significance however if you use it in the dark. The keyboard handily lights up, however all the function keys (there is one for every key) glow a strong blue. Confusing isn’t the word.

Back to the top side of the device and the touch sensitive buttons under the screen offer the usual home, menu and back features found on most Android handsets. Beneath that there is a call answer and hang up button and between those a touch-sensitive optical trackpad (like that found on other Samsung handsets and the BlackBerry Bold 9700).?The touchpad is actually one of the cooler elements of the handset as it allows you scroll through menus, icons on the screen or the web pages without touching the screen.

The only other tech on the outside is the 3.2-megapixel camera with flash. With Samsung dominating the megapixel race (it’s up to 12 megapixels) we’re surprised to see only a 3.2-megapixel offering and at the current state of play it looks like Sony Ericsson will be the purveyor of high pixel cameras for the platform with the Xperia X10 sporting 8 megapixels.

Connectivity is served by Sprint’s Dual-Band EVDO Rev. A 800/1900MHz offering and you’ll get Wi-Fi b and g along side Bluetooth. There is also GPS in case you get lost.

Power up the phone and that 800MHz chip running Android 1.5 is fast. Even though we’ve played with a 1GHz Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 (pre-production) the Samsung Moment appears (currently) to be faster.

One of the reasons for this, is that like the i7500 released in the UK, the Samsung Moment has no customisation what so ever. No Sense UI, no Motoblur, no Nexus UX – Samsung might have embraced the Android platform, but it hasn’t done anything to enhance the experience above and beyond what Google has offered in the OS.?In fact, beyond the big silver Samsung logo on the front and the second one on the back there is no trace of the Korean manufacturer.

As for Sprint, that’s a different matter. As an exclusive handset it gets an even bigger silver logo above the screen and the usual array of Sprint flavoured applications like SprintTV, Sprint Navigation (Google Maps Navigation?is only available for 1.6 and 2.0 based devices at present), and Nascar Sprint Cup (all as found on the Sprint?HTC Hero).

As for the rest of the applications, well it’s the usual story. The usual suspects are installed – Amazon MP3, Gmail, and Google Maps, with a further 10,000 available in Marketplace.?All this software or data that you create can be stored on the phone’s own internal 288MB of memory or an external microSD card, you get 2GB in the box.

Phone time is around 5 hours from a single charge, while the battery lasted the usual day in our tests, but is heavily dependent on what you do. Use it like a laptop and it will last like one.

?

Verdict:

The Samsung Moment really is one of those handsets that looks so much better on paper than in real life. The specs suggest this will be a monster, and in fairness in performance it is. The trouble is that it is incredibly dull both in its software offering and its design.?This makes the T-Mobile G1 look good and that’s saying something.

It might be more powerful and faster than the HTC Hero from Sprint, however unless you are ready to be mocked by your friends when your phone rings we would avoid this from a street cred point of view at all costs.

That said, if you have no friends or don’t care, you can’t (currently) get much faster than this.

Tags:
Phones Mobile phones Samsung Android Google Sprint

Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 
Samsung Moment mobile phone 

Samsung Moment mobile phone originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Thu, 26 Nov 2009 08:45:11 +0000

REVIEWS: BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone

Can this improve on the Storm?
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 0

When RIM launched the BlackBerry Storm in 2008 it was greeted with a mixed reception. Some loved it, others (like Stephen Fry) hated it. So can the second attempt fix the problems and give BlackBerry users a viable touchscreen experience? We’ve been using one for a couple of weeks to find out.

At a quick glance you’ll think it’s the same phone as last year. The design is similar, the form factor is virtually the same and the operating system doesn’t look too different either.

Of course it isn’t the same and RIM has worked hard to address all the minor and major issues associated with the first version of the handset. The software is faster and more responsive, the bottom buttons are now a part of the screen rather than separate, and overall it’s a far better experience than before. Say what you want, but this is how the original Storm should have performed.

So does that make it another contender for phone of the year? In short, no. While the Storm users we tracked down were impressed – noting it was much improved in performance levels – the world has moved on from the innovative, if not controversial, approach of the first handset.

If you are moving over from a Bold or Curve, with its hard QWERTY keyboard, then the notion of having to jab the screen to accept your commands (SurePress as RIM calls it) won’t be that annoying, but moving from a capacitive touchscreen device you will find it a shock.

The system works by floating the entire high-resolution 480 x 360 pixel 3.25-inch screen so you have to physically press it down to accept your command. It’s not as bad as it sounds, but if you’re looking to type a long email you will really feel like you have gone 10 rounds in a thumb fight: it’s hard work.?

Upgraded from a single hidden button underneath to four actuators in the corners of the screen you get a more responsive press and therefore feedback to your actions. It also means it doesn’t shift around as much as the first screen did in its cradle as it’s held in place at the four corners rather than the centre. It will allow for two finger pressing, but not pinching to zoom for example.

Hardware-wise it’s the usual story, following the “we don’t need Wi-Fi” stance on the Storm, the Storm 2 now has Wi-Fi. Personally it’s not that big a deal as Verizon and Vodafone’s 3G coverage is very good, but if you were upset by the lack of Wi-Fi you now don’t have to be. Wi-Fi joins 3G, CDMA (for Verizon) Bluetooth and GPS on the connectivity front. Multimedia wise, you get a 16GB microSD card inside to store your stuff on, a 3.5mm headphones socket, a 3.2-megapixel camera with flash, auto focus, image stabilization, and a 2x digital zoom as well as that very crisp screen ideal for watching movies and BlackBerry OS 5.0.

There’s also a bump in Flash memory (double in fact from 128MB to 256MB) and on-board memory for storing Apps goes up to 2GB from 1GB.

The Operating system is the same, obviously adapted for the touchscreen, as you’ll find on the latest BlackBerry handsets like the Bold 9700.?Those who have used a BlackBerry before know what they are getting here and the Storm on that front doesn’t throw up any surprises.

We tested a Verizon handset in the US, although it is available on Vodafone in the UK. Verizon pre-install their VCast Sony ID, VCast Videos and VZ Navigator as standard on the unit. You can choose to remove them if you want, and there isn’t any further customisation. It’s not as violent as carriers used to be with dedicated skins for example.

There are tweaks to the software over the original making it a better experience all around, but ones to note are the Inertial Scrolling w/Snap Back that means you can swipe down with your finger and watch the page carry on scrolling (just like the wheel of fortune) and we especially like the ability to now press on the network coverage logo and get direct access to the connections. It’s the same for the clock (i.e., alarms) and the volume, although you do get a physical volume button to mute it for when you hit that important “do not disturb” meeting.

Email is fantastic, giving you real power to search. Add that to Xobni’s BlackBerry app when it comes out and this, for communicating on the go, will be hard to beat. It’s what RIM do best after all, but that’s true of the BlackBerry family, not just the Storm 2.

However get into web browsing and the browser is incredibly slow on Wi-Fi and 3G, a shame as Verizon’s and Vodafone’s 3G coverage is very good. Pages seem to take forever to load and while you can opt for the nippier Opera browser you can’t set it as the default, which means you’ll soon forget about it when you go to open a link in an email or tweet.

Verdict:

The BlackBerry Storm 2 is a vast improvement on the Storm. It’s a better hardware design and better software build that gives you a better experience all around.

In the year since the Storm launched however, we’ve seen plenty of high-end smartphones hit the market in the UK and the US. The iPhone 3GS, the Palm Pre, the HTC Hero, even the Motorola DEXT show us what can be done with touchscreen and slider devices. In a segment of the market offering great possibilities from a large touchscreen, the Storm 2 just can’t keep pace.

So the final result? It’s a condescending “well done” to RIM for making it better, but unfortunately it’s just not good enough when you compare it to the competition that’s now available.

Tags:
Phones Mobile phones RIM BlackBerry BlackBerry Storm 2

BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 0 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 1 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 2 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 3 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 4 
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BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 7 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 8 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 9 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 10 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 11 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 12 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 13 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 14 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 15 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 16 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 17 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 18 

BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Wed, 25 Nov 2009 09:00:10 +0000

REVIEWS: BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone

Can this improve on the Storm?
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 0

When RIM launched the BlackBerry Storm in 2008 it was greeted with a mixed reception. Some loved it, others (like Stephen Fry) hated it. So can the second attempt fix the problems and give BlackBerry users a viable touchscreen experience? We’ve been using one for a couple of weeks to find out.

At a quick glance you’ll think it’s the same phone as last year. The design is similar, the form factor is virtually the same and the operating system doesn’t look too different either.

Of course it isn’t the same and RIM has worked hard to address all the minor and major issues associated with the first version of the handset. The software is faster and more responsive, the bottom buttons are now a part of the screen rather than separate, and overall it’s a far better experience than before. Say what you want, but this is how the original Storm should have performed.

So does that make it another contender for phone of the year? In short, no. While the Storm users we tracked down were impressed – noting it was much improved in performance levels – the world has moved on from the innovative, if not controversial, approach of the first handset.

If you are moving over from a Bold or Curve, with its hard QWERTY keyboard, then the notion of having to jab the screen to accept your commands (SurePress as RIM calls it) won’t be that annoying, but moving from a capacitive touchscreen device you will find it a shock.

The system works by floating the entire high-resolution 480 x 360 pixel 3.25-inch screen so you have to physically press it down to accept your command. It’s not as bad as it sounds, but if you’re looking to type a long email you will really feel like you have gone 10 rounds in a thumb fight: it’s hard work.?

Upgraded from a single hidden button underneath to four actuators in the corners of the screen you get a more responsive press and therefore feedback to your actions. It also means it doesn’t shift around as much as the first screen did in its cradle as it’s held in place at the four corners rather than the centre. It will allow for two finger pressing, but not pinching to zoom for example.

Hardware-wise it’s the usual story, following the “we don’t need Wi-Fi” stance on the Storm, the Storm 2 now has Wi-Fi. Personally it’s not that big a deal as Verizon and Vodafone’s 3G coverage is very good, but if you were upset by the lack of Wi-Fi you now don’t have to be. Wi-Fi joins 3G, CDMA (for Verizon) Bluetooth and GPS on the connectivity front. Multimedia wise, you get a 16GB microSD card inside to store your stuff on, a 3.5mm headphones socket, a 3.2-megapixel camera with flash, auto focus, image stabilization, and a 2x digital zoom as well as that very crisp screen ideal for watching movies and BlackBerry OS 5.0.

There’s also a bump in Flash memory (double in fact from 128MB to 256MB) and on-board memory for storing Apps goes up to 2GB from 1GB.

The Operating system is the same, obviously adapted for the touchscreen, as you’ll find on the latest BlackBerry handsets like the Bold 9700.?Those who have used a BlackBerry before know what they are getting here and the Storm on that front doesn’t throw up any surprises.

We tested a Verizon handset in the US, although it is available on Vodafone in the UK. Verizon pre-install their VCast Sony ID, VCast Videos and VZ Navigator as standard on the unit. You can choose to remove them if you want, and there isn’t any further customisation. It’s not as violent as carriers used to be with dedicated skins for example.

There are tweaks to the software over the original making it a better experience all around, but ones to note are the Inertial Scrolling w/Snap Back that means you can swipe down with your finger and watch the page carry on scrolling (just like the wheel of fortune) and we especially like the ability to now press on the network coverage logo and get direct access to the connections. It’s the same for the clock (i.e., alarms) and the volume, although you do get a physical volume button to mute it for when you hit that important “do not disturb” meeting.

Email is fantastic, giving you real power to search. Add that to Xobni’s BlackBerry app when it comes out and this, for communicating on the go, will be hard to beat. It’s what RIM do best after all, but that’s true of the BlackBerry family, not just the Storm 2.

However get into web browsing and the browser is incredibly slow on Wi-Fi and 3G, a shame as Verizon’s and Vodafone’s 3G coverage is very good. Pages seem to take forever to load and while you can opt for the nippier Opera browser you can’t set it as the default, which means you’ll soon forget about it when you go to open a link in an email or tweet.

Verdict:

The BlackBerry Storm 2 is a vast improvement on the Storm. It’s a better hardware design and better software build that gives you a better experience all around.

In the year since the Storm launched however, we’ve seen plenty of high-end smartphones hit the market in the UK and the US. The iPhone 3GS, the Palm Pre, the HTC Hero, even the Motorola DEXT show us what can be done with touchscreen and slider devices. In a segment of the market offering great possibilities from a large touchscreen, the Storm 2 just can’t keep pace.

So the final result? It’s a condescending “well done” to RIM for making it better, but unfortunately it’s just not good enough when you compare it to the competition that’s now available.

Tags:
Phones Mobile phones RIM BlackBerry BlackBerry Storm 2

BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 0 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 1 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 2 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 3 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 4 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 5 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 6 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 7 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 8 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 9 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 10 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 11 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 12 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 13 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 14 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 15 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 16 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 17 
BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone. Phones, Mobile phones, RIM, BlackBerry, BlackBerry Storm 2 18 

BlackBerry Storm 2 9550 mobile phone originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Wed, 25 Nov 2009 09:00:10 +0000

Motorola i410

Motorola i410 is a basic iDEN clamshell phone featuring 65k color TFT display, Bluetooth, MMS messaging, WAP browser and speakerphone.

Basic specifications:

iDEN 900/800

Average Dimensions –
3.86 x 1.89 x 0.77 inches
(98 x 48 x 19.6 mm)

Average Weight –
4.52 oz
(128 g)

Small display –
128 x 160 pixels; 65 536 colors

Standby / Talk times (168 h / 3.5 h)

GPS – Yes

Photos:

Blobo squeezable game controller bounces through the FCC

Befuddled by the Blobo squeezable game controller developed by an upstart company out of Finland? The FCC probably was to, but that didn’t stop ‘em from putting it through their usual battery of tests, tearing it apart, and giving us a glimpse at the user manual and our first real up-close look at the device itself. Of course, it is just a rubber ball packed with Bluetooth and sensors — but if you’re curious, you can find more pics where this one came from at the link below. And if, by chance, you missed out on all the Blobo details earlier this week, you’ll no doubt want to check out the helpful and informative video after the break.

Continue reading Blobo squeezable game controller bounces through the FCC

Blobo squeezable game controller bounces through the FCC originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 22:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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REVIEWS: First ELSE mobile phone – First Look

Looking for something ELSE?

First ELSE mobile phone - First Look

ELSE Ltd was born today along with their first handset, cunningly named the First ELSE. To clear things up ELSE Ltd was formerly known as Emblaze Mobile and today changed the name of the company as well as announcing their first device to the world. Pocket-lint were on hand to witness the unveiling, and have a close look at the new handset.

The company don’t want you to call it a phone. They are pushing the First ELSE as a portable device capable of fulfilling a number of connected roles, but not centred around the phone. Company CEO, Amir Kupervas, called out Apple’s iPhone, pointing out that it was named around the “phone” and that at all times the phone took prominence.

The differentiation perhaps doesn’t go much further than marketing: it will be sold as a mobile phone, in mobile phone outlets and supported by the mobile phone network. We’ll call it a mobile phone and so will everyone else.

In recent times we’ve seen a shift in mobile phone marketing to focus on applications and services, not just hardware. Windows Mobile is doing it with its giant application icons and Apple has been saying “there’s an app for that” for yonks: it’s fun, it’s light hearted. The teaser video for the First ELSE plays out like something from a Tom Clancy movie. You expect to see Matt Damon stroking a PSG-1. It’s the stuff of thrillers.

But is the handset itself thrilling?

The hardware specs are fairly typical. It measures 115.6 x 56.6 x 13mm, fairly average dimensions, if not a little on the long side. That gives you a 3.5-inch, 854 x 480 pixel resolution, display. It’s a capacitive touchscreen and from what we’ve seen it seems responsive enough.

The widescreen aspect means that you don’t get all the landscape space you might have wanted to reduce scrolling on websites, but it is sharp and the colours from sample images were certainly vivid, allowing of course for the fact that these were put in the device to do just that – show the screen at its best.

On the connectivity front you get UMTS/HSDPA (tri-band), GSM, EDGE (quad-band) as well as Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. It connects to the charger and your PC via a microUSB jack. A 3.5mm headphone jack sits on the top.

Around the back is a 5-megapixel camera, but no sign of a flash or a LED illuminator. Kupervas used the opportunity in presenting the phone to take a shot at Sony Ericsson’s Satio, asking the audience when they’d choose a 12-megapixel phone over the 5-megapixel Canon camera? We didn’t get to see the First ELSE’s camera in action, so we don’t know how it stands up. Of course you get GPS too.

You also get 32GB of memory, so the First ELSE really punches hard into the storage area. Unfortunately there is no microSD card slot, so you can’t just stick your music collection in on a 16GB card, something of an oversight in our opinion.

The First ELSE isn’t about the hardware though. It is about the user interface, so everything that is written above you’d be encouraged to ignore, or so the company would have us believe. With the First ELSE comes a new operating system and platform for you to discover. It is based on an Access Linux platform at its core, with a user interface called ELSE Intuition.

ELSE claims that Intuition is the end of the “main menu”. In practise it doesn’t look like this really is the case, as you have a number of different styles of menu operation in ELSE. There is a diamond style menu that accesses major application groups and then there is sPlay. It is all designed to be operated by a single thumb for one-handed operation, with sPlay fanning out options for phone, diary and media, as the name suggests. You simply highlight the one you want and lift your thumb off to select that option.

Of course, that one-thumbed operation, as our pictures show, is the right thumb. If you are left-handed, you’ll have to snort in derision and get on with it as us lefties so often do. ELSE told us that First ELSE is designed for right-handed folk but perfectly usable by left-handers, with a planned “flip capacity” for future versions. As it is, if you’re left-handed, your thumb will cover the menu options as they splay out.

All the usual suspects are here and the interface does look a world apart from the staid menus that plague many other phones. But do you have a problem with Apple or Android’s icons? The overall effect on the First ELSE is something like you’d expect to see in The Terminator’s HUD. It has a raw futuristic look to it that looks sharp and technical.

There are also a number of shortcut touch buttons running down the right-hand side of the phone, giving you access to the menu, up/down navigation, back, and cross-platform search. This is a feature that we’ve all been calling for and ELSE claims to offer both device searching and online searching in a single integrated area.

We didn’t have the opportunity in our demo to evaluate how this will be in day-to-day use, but it is interesting, futuristic and looks great. We asked Kupervas what the inspiration was behind the First ELSE and the reply was simple: The Fifth Element and Minority Report. The idea that a sci-fi look and feel could be put into a device now drove Emblaze (as it was then) and Access to design the interface that the First ELSE gives us.

We were hoping for three precogs hiding under the back cover, giving a psychic connection to the Internet, or Milla Jovovich wearing a few white straps, but it seems not. Instead the hardware sits on top of a Texas Instruments OMAP 3430 processor, the likes of which we’ve seen in the Palm Pre.

The First ELSE will also feature “silent communication”, meaning you can turn your phone into your very own automated call centre. If you can’t take the call, you can trigger a range of questions and responses for the caller, like “press * for urgent” or “press # to call back later”.

The on-screen keyboard looked pretty futuristic too, boasting algorithms to workout what you are doing from your presses and predictive text entry to produce the words you meant. The switch from portrait to landscape seemed snappy too and works in most, but not all, applications.

The ethos behind the First ELSE is total integration. Rather than be a phone with a GPS, it is designed to behave like a standalone device. Kupervas named a number of companies whilst detailing the ELSE: iPod-like music system, BlackBerry-like email, TomTom-like GPS. Bold claims indeed, but as a marketing speech it sounds like the perfect device.

But then we come to the crunch, the single point which will likely define the success or failure of ELSE. All the above are supported by established systems whereas the First ELSE is starting from scratch. Almost. Looking at the supporting organisations brings out a few names that reveal what is behind ELSE. Navteq mapping, Emoze email, Alango to improve the voice communication, Nuance voice recognition, Red Bend OTA updating and so on.

ELSE told us that it has set up its own infrastructure for an easy out-of-the-box device that works straight away, but of course, we’ll have to see it in action before we can pass a judgement on it. Whether that means you’ll get cross-protocol IM or OTA Google Contact syncing, we don’t yet know.

We were told that the SDK would be released when the phone comes out to allow third-party developers to generate apps. Given the success of the iPhone and growing success of Android, this has to be a primary concern. We were promised great things from the Palm Pre App Catalog, but that is still to put out the big guns in terms of apps.

Kupervas told us that third-party apps would be integrated to the core, so rather than a standalone app, you’d still get access to the live PIM and all the information there. Using Twitter as an example, Kupervas told us that rather than an extra Twitter layer, it would integrate fully with your existing contacts.

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Verdict:

ELSE made some bold claims with the announcement of the First ELSE. But you need to get people to take you seriously. The company is certainly pushing a different approach from a marketing angle, but ultimately it is joining a competitive marketplace full of smart devices demonstrating convergence and integration at an advanced level. There is nothing new here, per se, but the First ELSE aims to deliver the best of what everyone else is doing.

Companies like INQ Mobile have demonstrated that there is space for innovation and ELSE are certainly sending out the right messages here. But the proof of the pudding is in the eating and unfortunately it looks like we’ll be waiting to spring 2010 before we get our hands on it in the real world.

Check out all our hands-on pictures over in our gallery.

Tags:
Phones Mobile phones ELSE Mobile First ELSE First look

First ELSE mobile phone - First Look  
First ELSE mobile phone - First Look  
First ELSE mobile phone - First Look  
First ELSE mobile phone - First Look  
First ELSE mobile phone - First Look  
First ELSE mobile phone - First Look  
First ELSE mobile phone - First Look  
First ELSE mobile phone - First Look  
First ELSE mobile phone - First Look  

First ELSE mobile phone – First Look originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 19:35:32 +0000

HP’s Obsidian becomes iPAQ Glisten, officially comes to AT&T

Wow, talk about digging deep in the memory bank. The same phone that we spotted way back in July (known then as the iPAQ K3 Obsidian) has finally emerged in official fashion on AT&T. Dubbed the iPAQ Glisten, this all-business smartphone boasts a vanilla coat of Windows Mobile 6.5, a 2.5-inch AMOLED display, 3.1 megapixel camera, 256MB of SDRAM, a microSD expansion slot, A-GPS, 3.5 millimeter headphone jack, a QWERTY keyboard, 802.11b/g WiFi and Bluetooth 2.0+EDR. ‘Course, you’ll still be dealing with a resistive screen and a dated OS, but if you’re turned on in some weird way, it’ll be “available in the coming weeks” for $179.99 after a $50 mail-in rebate and 2-year agreement.

HP’s Obsidian becomes iPAQ Glisten, officially comes to AT&T originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 13:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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