gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

April 26, 2006

Apple patent embeds thousands of cameras among LCD pixels

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Oh Barry Fox, does a week ever go by when you don't find a great patent or two? Today the intrepid Mr. Fox manages to dig up an application by consumer-darling Apple for an LCD display embedded with thousands of microscopic image sensors that would allow users to video-conference while looking straight into the "camera." Data accumulated by the individual sensors would be stitched into actual images using special software, which will probably be bundled into future versions of iLife. Since the patent specifies almost as many sensors per screen as there are pixels, some of those sensors could have different focal lengths, with a defacto zoom lens created by switching between them. Apple goes on to suggest portable uses for the technology, such as employing the displays in cellphones and PDAs, so you can add another item to the list of features we'll be expecting from the iPhone and Newton 2.0 when they finally hit stores.

[Via New Scientist]
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April 25, 2006

The SkyQube multi-phone mashup

Filed under: Skype,cellphone,email,gsm,pots,ptsn,sms — Ryan Block @ 6:08 am

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alt="" />

Qool‘s had a few arbitrary devices over the years,
but we definitely had to look twice at their SkyQube and SkyQube². It’s apparently still early on in development,
but the box gives you calling every which way possible, often using href="http://www.engadget.com/search/?q=skype">Skype as a call conduit: USB to PC audio / Skype, Skype to POTS
forwarding, Skype to (integrated) GSM forwarding, Skype to Skype, SkypeOut, Skype messaging to SMS, followme to/from
Skype — all of which you use with your POTS telephone. It’s also got conference calling and integrated contacts, just
one giant Skype love-in, supposedly to go for $80 for the SkyQube and $150 for the SkyQube². We’re just not ready
for that much Skype though, man, you know?

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Nokia N72 launched

Filed under: MultimediaComputer,MusicPhone,cellphone,multimedia computer,music,pink,symbian — Thomas Ricker @ 2:00 am

Filed under:

Along with the N93 and N73, Nokia just launched their new N72 multimedia tri-band GSM/EDGE cellphone. This Symbian S60 handset features a 2.1-inch, 176 x 208, 262k color display, Bluetooth 2.0, and 20MB internal memory expandable via SD memory cards. Media support includes a digital music player with dedicated music keys supporting MP3 and AAC playback, an FM Radio with Visual Radio support, and throws in a swivel-activated 2 megapixel shooter with integrated flash capable of CIF video capture at 15fps. Nokia is positioning this pup as a "multimedia computer" which is a bit of a stretch, but we'll play a long, for now. Expected in Pearl Pink or Gloss Black sometime in June 2006. More pics on the flip.

[Via PhoneScoop]



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Nokia N72 launched

Filed under: , , ,

Along with the N93 and N73, Nokia just launched their new N72 multimedia tri-band GSM / EDGE cellphone. This Symbian S60 handset features a 2.1-inch, 176 x 208, 262k color display, Bluetooth 2.0, and 20MB internal memory expandable via SD. Media support includes a digital music player with dedicated music keys supporting MP3 and AAC playback, an FM Radio with Visual Radio support, and throws in a swivel-activated 2 megapixel shooter with integrated flash capable of CIF video capture at 15fps. Nokia is positioning this pup as a "multimedia computer" which is a bit of a stretch, but we'll play along for now. Expected in Pearl Pink or Gloss Black sometime in June 2006. More pics on the flip.

[Via PhoneScoop]



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Nokia’s N73 and N93 launched

Filed under: NSeries,cellphone,handset,mobile,n series,n-series,nokia,symbian — Thomas Ricker @ 1:25 am

Filed under:

border="0" src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/n73-n93-stacked.jpg" alt="" />

Well hello there href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/04/17/nokia-n73-revealed/">N73 (bottom) and href="http://www.engadget.com/2005/11/17/the-next-n-series-n93/">N93, how nice to see you in the for realz at last.
Other than finally making these phones official we don’t really have too much new information to offer. Both models run
Series 60 3rd edition and feature large 2.4-inch QVGA, 262k color displays, Bluetooth 2.0, miniSD slot expansion,
MP3/ACC media players, FM radio with Visual Radio, and a chubby 3.2 megapixel shooter with Carl Zeiss optics,
autofocus, mechanical shutter, and integrated flash. Want to share those snaps? Coolio daddy-o, ’cause a new
partnership with Flickr gives you the ability to upload and add comments to your photos directly from your new N-series
cellphone without the need to download any additional software. The N73 will launch as both a quad-band GSM/EDGE model
and another which includes 3G (2100MHz UMTS). It features 42MB of on-board memory and 3D stereo speakers at the top and
bottom of the unit to kick out some tinny jams. Meanwhile the href="http://www.engadget.com/2005/11/02/nokias-n71-n80-and-n92-media-phones/">N92-lookin’ N93 turns-out
900/1800/1900 GSM/EDGE and 3G (2100MHz UMTS), 50MB built-in memory, 802.11b/g WiFi, href="http://www.engadget.com/2005/11/04/nokia-embraces-upnp-with-new-n-series-additions/">UPnP, TV-out, and adds a
3x optical zoom to the shooter which can record MPEG-4 VGA video at 30fps. If you’re looking for mobile TV, you’ll have
to stick with the N92 though, since the N93 does not feature a DVB-H tuner. Both will drop in July. Welcome to the show
boys. More product images after the break.

[Via href="http://www.phonescoop.com/news/item.php?n=1696">PhoneScoop]

Read href="http://press.nokia.com/PR/200604/1046576_5.html">N73
Read href="http://press.nokia.com/PR/200604/1046557_5.html">N93

src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/01_n93_lowres.jpg" />

alt="" src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/08_n93_lowres.jpg" />

border="0" alt="" src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/01_n73_lowres.jpg" />

hspace="4" border="0" alt="" src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/03_n73_lowres.jpg" />

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Nokia’s N73 and N93 launched

Filed under: NSeries,cellphone,handset,multimedia,n series,n-series,nokia,symbian — Thomas Ricker @ 1:25 am

Filed under: , , , , ,

Well hello there N73 (bottom) and N93, how nice to see you in the for realz at last. Other than finally making these phones official we don’t really have too much new information to offer. Both models run Series 60 3rd Edition and feature large 2.4-inch 262k color QVGA displays, Bluetooth 2.0, a MiniSD slot, MP3 / ACC media players, FM radio with Visual Radio, and a chubby 3.2 megapixel shooter with Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus, mechanical shutter, and integrated flash. Want to share those snaps? Coolio daddy-o, ’cause a new partnership with Flickr gives you the ability to upload and add comments to your photos directly from your new N-series cellphone without the need to download any additional software (don’t forget to ZoneTag!). The N73 will launch as both a quad-band GSM / EDGE model and another which includes 3G (2100MHz UMTS). It features 42MB of on-board memory and 3D stereo speakers at the top and bottom of the unit to kick out some tinny jams. Meanwhile the N92-lookin’ N93 turns out 900 / 1800 / 1900 GSM / EDGE and 3G (2100MHz UMTS), 50MB built-in memory, 802.11b/g, UPnP, TV-out, and adds a 3x optical zoom to the camera, which can record MPEG-4 VGA video at 30fps. If you’re looking for mobile TV, you’ll have to stick with the N92 though, since the N93 does not feature a DVB-H tuner. Both will drop in July; welcome to the show, boys. More product images after the break.

[Via PhoneScoop]

Read N73
Read N93

src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/01_n93_lowres.jpg" alt="" />

border="0" src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/08_n93_lowres.jpg" alt="" />

hspace="4" border="0" src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/01_n73_lowres.jpg" alt="" />

vspace="4" hspace="4" border="0" src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/03_n73_lowres.jpg" alt="" />

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April 19, 2006

Samsung’s SCH-V890 slim slider

Filed under: Bluetooth,NATE drive,NateDrive,Samsung,cellphone,handset,slider,slim,thin — Thomas Ricker @ 2:00 am

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Samsung just knocked a couple more phone models outta bed to show-off their new SCH-V890/SPH-V8900 cellphone. This slider measures in at 13.8-mm and 85-grams and features a 2.12-inch, 240 x 320, 262K color TFT LCD, Bluetooth, a 1.3 megapixel shooter, MP3 player and that Nate Drive service popular in South Korea. We're not sure, but we'll bet you can even hold it up real close to your pie-hole for making calls. At least it better for that roughly $525 US equiv.

[via Akihabara News]
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April 18, 2006

LG’s Chocolate phone on sale in China for $495

Filed under: cellphone,china,chocolate,handsets,knockoff,lg,mobile — Thomas Ricker @ 2:30 am

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vspace="4" hspace="4" border="1" src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/chocolate_05.jpg" alt=""
/>

Yeah ok, it’s not exactly shipping in the US yet, but it’s still good to know that the LG
“Chocolate” phone has left South Korea and is finally dancing on the international stage with the intent of
kicking it live in the West
sometime after May
. Turned-out in a tri-band GSM flavour for China (a CDMA version is also produced), this 0.6-inch
sugary sweet slider brings a 2-inch QVGA display, 512MB of memory, and 1.3 megapixel cam for a cool fistful of
Benjamins. Of course, now that these are in the wild, we fully expect a “ href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/04/11/rims-blackberry-to-battle-redberry-clone-in-china/">red
chocolate” knockoff to drop in a few months for about half the price.

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April 17, 2006

The Engadget Interview: Sky Dayton, Helio CEO

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/>Ok, so CTIA, the big wireless industry trade show that Ryan and I went to earlier this month, didn’t exactly
knock our socks off, but we were lucky enough to sit down with Sky Dayton, the serial entrepreneur behind EarthLink and
Boingo. Dayton’s latest venture is Helio, a youth-oriented (yeah, we know…) MVNO that’s all set to launch this
spring.

Thanks so much for taking some time to speak with us; I’m sure it’s been a busy week
for you here at CTIA. Could you tell us about Helio? I know you’re getting ready to launch soon.

Helio is a new mobile brand designed for young, passionate consumers that have really been missing out on cool stuff;
not just in terms of technology, but in terms of services — some of which are available elsewhere in other countries
like Korea, and some of which we’re just inventing and that are totally new. We don’t have the word
“wireless” or “mobile” in our name — it’s just Helio. That’s because for young,
passionate consumers today, it’s just as much about fashion and lifestyle as it is technology, and saying the
word "wireless" is a little bit redundant. Of course it’s wireless. We never had a concept that there
was a wire.

What we’re doing is starting with a technological lead with a platform from Korea, from
SK Telecom, probably the most advanced wireless market in the world and bringing a basis of innovation here. Then
we’re taking that and creating some interesting stuff with that.

How is the launch looking?

It’s good; we’re launching in the
spring and everything’s on track. It’s been a very fast ramp. We weren’t even a company until about
a year ago. I’ve been hiring I think one and half people every business day. We’re up to about 230
employees now, plus about 70 engineers from Korea, and we’re based in Westwood, right across from UCLA. We’ve
got a great building with a big Helio logo on the top of it; I could go on, but we got this flame, a 16 foot flame made
up of thousands of LEDs; really kind of cool.

How is Helio going to attract customers? To be
successful, at least in the long run, you’ll have to get at least a few million subscribers, so what is Helio going to
do to convince people to sign up? At this point you can’t count on first-time wireless subscribers – you’re
really going to have convince people to leave Verizon, or Sprint, or whatever carrier they have now.
/>
We’ve created this experience for a very specific group of people. Broadly we talk about young consumers
in this country; people who are 18 to 34. We vary specifically within that. Who are the people that really care about
wireless? I mean, again, not just for the technological aspect, but people for whom their lives revolve around this
device in their hand; their phone is the one thing that they can’t live without. That group is a very specific
sub-segment, and when we market and distribute we’re doing it in a way that’s really authentic for that
group, which means that you’re going to see us in places that you’d expect to see us, but you’re also
going to see us in places in terms of retail that you wouldn’t expect to see mobile; you know, fashion locations,
music-type locations. You’re also going to see us do things on the web that are pretty unique, because frankly,
that’s where people are today. You start with an innovative product and then figure out how to distribute it in
an innovative way.

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/helio_kickflip.jpg" />But going beyond that, how do you
convince someone to switch? Is it going to be aggressive pricing, is it going to be more advanced features on the
handsets? Every carrier would say that they have savvy marketing, so what specifically is it going to be that attracts
consumers besides marketing? Will Helio be competitively priced compared to the major carriers?

You’re going to sign up for Helio not because you want to save a bunch of money, but because we offer something
that’s really different.

What specifically is that something different that you’re going to offer?

A couple things; let’s start with
the handsets. We have exclusive, unique handsets that have never been in this country before, and the services that run
on those handsets are also unique to Helio. One of the best examples of that is MySpace. There’s a social
phenomenon in Korea called Cyworld. 30% of Koreans use Cyworld, and 90% of Koreans in their teens and early twenties
use Cyworld. And they’ve done it for years and they’ve taken it mobile; Mobile Cyworld is just a huge
thing in Korea. We looked at it in this country. Well, okay, social networking is happening, MySpace, etc., but
nobody’s taken that mobile. That’s really where people really want to interact with that stuff, is when
they’re out in the world, right? They don’t want to be blogging about what they did last night; they want
to be blogging about what they’re doing right now. They want to be taking pictures and uploading. Helio is the
only place where you can get the full MySpace mobile experience on a device.

Is that an exclusive
contract?

There’s exclusivity as part of it.

For a period of
time?

Yes. There’s also another set of things that I can’t really talk about yet, but that
are services that are just really cool. I mean it will be like, “Wow, that’s great, that’s what I
want!” Those things are the main event for Helio; they’re not some kind of side-attraction, or something
we’re doing on the side while we’re also targeting soccer moms and business people and grandparents and
everyone else.

Are you going to offer anything to users who aren’t picking a carrier because of
the services, but just want unfettered access to the internet and want a powerful handset that gives them full access
to the features they’re looking for, like WiFi and Bluetooth that’s not crippled? Are you going to go after those power
users?

I kind of draw a line and say, “All right, there’s cool technology and we can
get a device and just tackle the technology.” Okay, so that’s on one side of the line. On the other side
of the line is really cool technology that enables you to actually do something. We’re not going to integrate
technology just for the sake of technology, like putting a ten megapixel camera on a phone. We could do that — we know
where to get ‘em, you know — but it’s a little bit of a freak show as a handset, right? I mean it’s
not a very good phone, it’s huge and it’s not really a very good camera. If you want ten megapixels, go
get a D50, you know; that’s a great camera. So we really – and this is important to understand Helio — we
look at how people use mobile and then we use technology to enable them to do something. It just so happens that we have
a technological foundation that is a strategic advantage for us, in terms of both handsets and in terms of back-end
systems. The Cyworld platform, for example, is what we’re using to power MySpace on Helio.

Are all Helio handsets going to have the same user interface?

Yes.

Are are you going to encourage people to develop applications for the phones?

Totally, I
mean you can develop in WIPI Java or WIPI C. WIPI Java’s just a very easy incarnation of Java and is very
similar to BREW. We have a lot of Brew developers that have developed stuff in WIPI C for us. They say it’s very
easy.

How many handsets do you expect to have in your portfolio by the end of the year?

We haven’t announced it publicly, but we will have a good selection. We are rolling out our initial
two handsets, and we’ve got a number of others in the works right now. You’ll see us come out and
consistently hit, not only with new handsets, but with new services — bang, bang, bang — as we go through the year
and into 2007.

Should we expect to see a QWERTY phone from Helio? What sort of spectrum of
handsets are we looking at?

Without hearing the specifics, we’re going to stay focused on
the high-end; even our entry-level phone is like a BMW 3 Series. We are going to introduce interesting form factors
and stuff that’s different.

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/helio_hero.jpg" />Will you carry any smartphones? Does having a
common platform for all your phones preclude Helio from offering a device with a smartphone OS like Symbian or Windows
Mobile?

Nothing that we’ve really announced, I mean we’re kind of quiet about that
stuff. What’s important again is, what are people actually doing with it and how do we enable that? So I think
what we wanted to start with was a UI is consistent from device to device; no MVNO’s ever achieved that. Frankly,
few carriers have achieved that, and we have. That’s not easy, believe me, but it’s a good start for us.

How do you view Amp’d, the other new MVNO that seems to be going after the same youth demographic.
How does Helio position itself with respect to Amp’d?

You know, I think there are a lot of
interesting things happening in the MVNO space. It’s a sign of the segmentation that’s inevitably going to
happen. One brand being all things to all people — that’s okay as a generalist thing, but there are people with
very specific needs and interests. In order to really be different you need a technical capability and you need a lot
of capital.

This is not an inexpensive business; it’s not a couple guys in a garage doing a web
startup. I mean I’ve started lots of companies and this is a half a billion dollar startup to do it properly. Even
though you’re not building a network, the handsets are expensive, the systems are expensive, and marketing and
distribution are expensive. That’s going to naturally limit the field, and without talking about any one
competitor specifically, we’re doing almost everything except building a network. So for the carriers that we
work with they see us as, “Great, they’re actually going to add a lot of value,” and not just come in
and compete on price.

At what point does the MVNO market become oversaturated? Sprint just
announced that they’re going to limit the number of MVNOs they support because there’s just too many.

I’m really happy that that’s happening because I’ve been through this before,
and when there’s too much capital flowing into a space with bad ideas, it just pees in the sandbox for everybody.
We need healthy competitors and competitors that are legitimate. When you actually look at the number of MVNOs that are
going to get off the ground, it’s actually relatively limited at this point, but there are a huge set of business
plans out there that are not going to get funded, and I think that’s a positive for the industry. There
should be a high hurdle.

On some level as an MVNO you’re at the mercy of the
carrier whose network you’re using. How does that complicate the future of the business, not just for Helio, but for
MVNOs in general?

A typical MVNO, unlike Helio, is really dependent on the network provider for a
lot of the core stuff. Maybe they use an MVNE to do some billing and stuff like that, but when they want to roll out a
new service or get a new handset they have to go to the carrier and get in line. With Helio we brought over one of the
most advanced billing systems in the world from Korea. We brought over one of the advanced, if not the most advanced
content-management systems. That allows us to make decisions. Of course, we still have to work with our carrier
partners for the things that touch the network, but give us a lot of freedom to be creative.

There
hasn’t been a high-end premium MVNO with the ability to scale. Actually let me say that differently: there
haven’t really been post-paid MVNOs until recently. This is a new thing. It’s really important again that
the MVNO that’s utilizing a carrier’s infrastructure really do something that’s fundamentally
different, and coming and competing on price, you’re totally right-on. That’s flying in the face of the
carrier whose infrastructure you’re using, and that just doesn’t make sense. So you’ve got to come and
you’ve got to bring something that’s really different.

What do you think that the
traditional carriers aren’t doing to address the needs of the customer base? Is it just that they’re not offering
services like the kind Helio is promising?

You just walk into a typical company-owned cellular
store and look at the posters on the wall. You know: soccer moms, grandparents, kids, business people, everybody, with
one brand appealing to everyone. With something that is this personal, that is this close to you, that is the one thing
you can’t leave home without, you don’t want a generalist brand, and when I say ‘you’ I’m
talking about this young consumer segment. They want something for them, and that’s what we designed Helio for.
That manifests in lots of different ways, from the handsets, to the services, to the way it’s marketed and the
language we use.

How is music going to fit into what you’re doing; that seems to be the one thing
that the carriers have seriously bungled over the past year, with the disastrous launch of the ROKR and its 100-song
cap and Sprint and Verizon offering two or three dollar downloads. What is Helio going to do differently?
/>
There are some endemic problems with music that you’re all too familiar with, and when we do something we
will only do it if it’s better than the alternatives. We will not do something that’s a marginal experience.
The iPod is a great experience and what I focus on is “What’s really different here?” We’re
organized around a central theme, which is communication and connection. And the thing that our customer wants to
connect to is their friends and to their world.

Everything we do is organized around that concept, and
even when it comes to media. So for example, with video it’s not just about consumption, it’s about
discovery and sharing. Sitting and watching reruns of Desperate Housewives in a doctor’s office — that’s
all interesting, but that’s not the main point of this device. This device is about communication — two-way
communication — so we see content, whether it’s ultimately video or music or a game or a ringtone or anything,
as particles of communication to be discovered and shared between people. And that will play out, as you will see, in
a number of things that we’re doing.

Thanks very much for your time!

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LG’s CU500 3G clam with quad-band GSM/EDGE and HSDPA

Filed under: , , , , ,

HowardForums has some pics of that new slim LG CU500 clamshell coming to Cingular. This dual-mode phone is said to go quad-band GSM/EDGE, support WCDMA 850/1900 (and possibly 2100 making this a global 3G phone), and will operate on Cingular's HSDPA (1.8Mbps) network. What's more, that swiveling 1.3 megapixel cam eliminates the need for that second, bulky cam found on many 3G phones. It supports MicroSD expansion, looks crazy-thin for all the features it packs, and according to HoFo peeps, throws down an internal 2-inch, QCIF TFT LCD to view content on Cingular's Video service. Apparently, the CU500 is already FCC approved meaning it could drop anytime. More pics after the break.

[Via PhoneArena]



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April 14, 2006

FCC Fridays

Filed under:

We here at Engadget Mobile tend to spend a lot of way too much time poring over the latest FCC filings, be it on the net or directly on the ol' Federal Communications Commission's site. Since we couldn't possibly (want to) cover all the stuff that goes down there, we've gathered up all the raw info you may want (but probably don't need). Enjoy!

Phones
Samsung A640 - Read
LG AX490 - Read
Samsung T709 - Read
Samsung T719 - Read
Motorola ROKR E2 - Read
Samsung X461 - Read
Samsung X481 - Read
Samsung S109 - Read

Computers
Sony PCG-6J1L - Read
Motorola Mobile Laptop 900 - Read
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April 12, 2006

BenQ launches a slew of Joybees

Filed under:

We're glad BenQ's not trimming the fat on their portable audio division the way their optical drives business got the boot this week (it was bought by LITE-ON), but a couple of their new Bluetooth-enabled Joybees are definitely hat-tipping BenQ-Siemens as possible accessories. So let's get to the players, already (clockwise from top left): the E520 (no, not that BenQ E520) with Bluetooth / call features not dissimilar from Samsung's SBH-300; their ET50 with the same Bluetooth call features, but also a data transmission profile, presumably for file swapping (so it'd probably be OBEX / FTP); the Game Boy Micro-esque EG10, which comes bundled with ten Sega Game Gear and Master System titles (like Sonic Blast and Columns) and an SD slot; and finally the E105 (no, not that E105) clip-on MP3 player. No word on when or if these'll be States-bound, so keep those fingers locked and loaded on your favorite importer.

[Via The MP3 Players]
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Samsung’s Tristar X828 6.9-mm thin champ

Filed under: Bluetooth,Samsung,cellphone,skinny,slim — Thomas Ricker @ 1:00 am

Filed under:

Hey check-it fella, there’s a new slimster phone on the block kickin’ about by the name of X828, dig? At 6.9-milimeters (mostly, note that top-end bulge), this new unannounced Samsung shaves a full millimeter off KTF’s previous skinny champ, the EV-K100, which held the record for oh, about two weeks over that 8.8-mm VK 2000 fatty. Now, with those dimensions you’d expect it to skimp on the specs, right? Au contraire mon fraire, the X828 still eeks-out a 1.9-inch 262k color screen, Bluetooth, MP3 player and 3D virtual surround capable speakers, 80MB of on-board memory, and a 2 megapixel shooter. At this rate of slimaturization, we expect to see a cellphone film we can slather across our palms by next year’s CES. Click-on for more pics after the break.

[Via TechTickerBlog, thanks Anish]





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April 10, 2006

O2 announces XDA IQ

Filed under: , , , , , ,

While it looks pretty similar to HTC's Feeler (aka the I-Mate SP3i / HP rw4500, etc.), so far as we can tell O2's new XDA IQ is a whole 'nother phone entirely. Though it shares many of the same facial features as the Feeler, the XDA IQ will supposedly come with the Tornado-like inclusion of both 802.11b and EDGE; the rest of the specs aren't much to phone home about (64MB flash and RAM, 200MHz OMAP, QVGA display, Smartphone 5, etc.), so what we're looking to set this thing apart is price (unannounced) and release time frame (same).
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April 7, 2006

Live at CTIA: Haier’s knockoff heaven

Filed under: Cell Phone,Cell Phones,Cellphones,cellphone,haier,knockoffs — Ryan Block @ 7:35 am

Filed under: ,

/>

We’re sure the majority of these devices are tri-band Asian phones, but in the last year Chinese manufacturer
Haier has returned triumphantly to CTIA with a veritable cadre of sweet knocks on namebrand cellphones. Take the above
W800 rip, the M260, which features 2 megapixel camera, 262k color touch screen, and MiniSD slot. See, sometimes fake
can be better than real. Click on for the rest.

/>

Look familiar? Samsung’s Z130 as the A600 features a 2.2-inch 262k color touch scren, MicroSD, 2 megapixel
camera, and push email.

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/haier05.jpg" />

Samsung’s A940 as the N60 with a 2.2-inch touchscreen,
Linux, and 1.3 megapixel camera.

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/haier07.jpg" />

The M230 rocks a 2 megapixel camera and MiniSD
slot.

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/haier10.jpg" />

The Z3 is a little reminiscent of the Nokia
7200-series, no?

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/haier12.jpg" />

The A63 has a 2 megapixel camera, MiniSD slot, and
2-inch 262k color touchscreen.

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/haier13.jpg" />

Wow, the A7 is basically a PEBL / Nokia 7380
mashup.

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/haier18.jpg" />

The C800, yet another touchscreen with a 2 megapixel
camera.

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/haier21.jpg" />

Hm, that C101 kind of reminds us of the HTC Tornado.
Just a little.

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/haier23.jpg" />

And, finally, the D1200 is about as low-end as you can
get with a 128 x 160 CSTN display. See you this fall, Haier!

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LG @ CTIA, the rest: LG225, LG350, LG3400, LG5300, LG8300

Filed under: GPS,cdma,cellphone,ev-do,gsm,handset,lg — Thomas Ricker @ 3:50 am

Filed under: , , , ,

LG brought a crush of new GSM and CDMA phones into CTIA in addition to the LG550 musicphone, LG DM-L200 for Disney we checked earlier. The LG8300 musicphone (pictured) is the most interesting of the lot bringing dual-stereo speakers and A2DP stereo Bluetooth to the game while packing a 1.3 megapixel cam, EV-DO data, a GPS positioning system, and stubby little antenna for jabbing into the sides of annoying commuters. The mid-level LG5300 packs in CDMA, dual-band GSM, Bluetooth and a VGA cam with flash. The LG3400 meanwhile, is touted as "sleek, sexy and super lightweight" clamshell -- you be the judge. The LG350 then sports Bluetooth, dual internal/external LCD displays, and 3D graphics support. Bringing up the rear is the LG225 which sports a range of uninspiring features such as VGA cam, full-duplex speakerphone, and MSN Messenger for those mad texting tweeners in your life. Pics of the others after the break.

[Via PhoneArena]


LG3400


LG5300


LG225


LG350
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Live from CTIA: World’s best Samsung booth

Filed under: ,

alt="" />

It’s quite refreshing to see so many "World’s ____s" at Samsung’s booth. This time we’ve got
the World’s First 10 Megapixel Cameraphone, the World’s Best HSDPA Handset, and the World’s First Mobile WiMAX rig. We
got hands ons with their new T509 slimphone, href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/search/?q=b600">B600 10 megapixel cameraphone, their href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/search/?q=i310">8GB i310, href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/search/?q=s4300">S4300 musicphone, href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/search/?q=z540">Z540 Vodafone phone (which happens to remind one a little much
of the V3x), the Z510,  D520 slim slider, Cingular’s forthcoming D407, and, of course, some Samsung execs shooting
the breeze about their devices.

src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung002.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung003.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung004.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung005.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung006.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung007.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung008.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung009.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung010.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung011.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung012.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung013.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung014.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung015.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung016.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung017.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung018.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung019.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung020.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung021.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung022.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung024.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung025.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung026.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung028.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung029.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung030.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung044.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung045.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung048.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung049.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung050.jpg" alt="" /> src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/samsung051.jpg" alt="" />

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April 6, 2006

Live from CTIA: Moto goes modern

Filed under: ,

Motorola usually has a pretty nice booth, but this CTIA they've injected a couple extra ounces of fancy, being they didn't have a whole lot of new gear to show off this time around. The PEBL amongst pebbles gag got a little old, but they needed to (and did) step up their booth's aesthetic. And you know when we start going on and on about booth aesthetics, we're pretty tapped for some news, so check out the CTIA eye candy after the break.


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HTC Hermes and StarTrek launch plans revealed

Filed under: , ,

src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/CIMG7285.JPG" />Well, well, well, it looks like HTC took the
opportunity to detail their 2006 US launch plans at CTIA while dropping that href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/04/06/modeos-dvb-h-smartphone/">DVB-H capable Foreseer we peeped earlier.
According to Phone Scoop who had the opportunity to sit down with an "HTC exec," we’ll see the
quad-band GSM/EDGE HTC Star
Trek
WinMo 5.0 Smartphone arrive on these golden shores in mid-2006 while the href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/search/?q=hermes">HTC Hermes (pictured) should arrive sometime in Q4, most
likely with Cingular. The US flavor of the 3G Hermes will go WCDMA 850/1900/2100 with all that high-speed HSDPA
we’ve got the rangin’ fiend for. Good to know.

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April 5, 2006

Samsung’s SGH-T509 gets official for US T-Mobile launch

Filed under: Bluetooth,Samsung,candybar,cellphone,edge,phone,sgh-t509,slim,t-mobile,t509 — Paul Miller @ 4:45 am

Filed under:

That 0.39-inch thick SGH-T509 phone from Samsung -- the slimmest candybar phone so far announced for the US -- just got confirmed today, and should be available in the states this May. The phone features EDGE data, Bluetooth 1.2 connectivity, and a camera of undetermined resolution. Samsung actually isn't spilling much info on this phone for as hyped up about it as they are in their PR. We still know barely more than we skimmed off the FCC site in March, but it does look like this phone will be making its way to T-Mobile users. Catherine Zeta-Jones will be so proud.
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April 4, 2006

Sony Ericsson’s W700i: just the W800i Walkman phone done-up in gold

Filed under: SonyEricsson,cellphone,handset,music,phone,sony ericsson,walkman,sonyericsson — Thomas Ricker @ 2:51 am

Filed under: ,

That Sony Ericsson Walkman line-up just keeps growing and growing. Today, SE announces their 8th Walkman phone, the W700. Said to appeal to "lovers of classic and discreet design," the W700i throws-down tri-band GSM/GPRS 900/1800/1900, Bluetooth 2.0, FM radio, a 2 megapixel cam, and ships with 256MB of Memory Stick Pro Duo'in storage. Expect these to ship in Q2 nought-six in both "titanium gold" and "smooth white." Hey, wait a second, other than being gold and shipping with a 256MB (not 512) MS Pro Duo card, there's nothing to distinguish this Walkman from the W800i released last year. Hell, it even sports the exact dimensions. A bit trivial for a full model number change especially when the addition of EDGE, an extra GSM band, and new controls only warranted a 10-point bump.

[Via GadgetCandy]
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Sony Ericsson’s W700i: just the W800i Walkman phone done-up in gold

Filed under: SonyEricsson,cellphone,handset,music,sony ericsson,walkman,sonyericsson — Thomas Ricker @ 2:51 am

Filed under: , , , ,

That Sony Ericsson Walkman line-up just keeps growing and growing. Today, SE announces their 8th Walkman phone, the W700. Said to appeal to "lovers of classic and discreet design," the W700i throws-down tri-band GSM/GPRS 900/1800/1900, Bluetooth 2.0, FM radio, a 2 megapixel cam, and ships with 256MB of Memory Stick Pro Duo'in storage. Expect these to ship in Q2 nought-six in both "titanium gold" and "smooth white." Hey, wait a second, other than being gold and shipping with a 256MB (not 512) MS Pro Duo card, there's nothing to distinguish this Walkman from the W800i released last year. Hell, it even sports the exact dimensions. A bit trivial for a full model number change especially when the addition of EDGE, an extra GSM band, and new controls only warranted a 10-point bump.

[Via GadgetCandy]
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May 20, 2012

Nokia’s XpressMusic 5300 and 5200 announced, 3250 gets makeover

Filed under: , , , , ,

If the hoard of N-series Nokias raining down from Espoo yesterday was a bit too much on say, the fuddy-duddy side of the generational slope, then check these new XpressMusic cellphones kiddies. Well “new” only if you missed the 5300 and 5200 peeped before. Still official is official so let’s run ‘er down again. The 5300 slider is the biggest news here, going tri-band GSM 900/1800/1900MHz with GPRS/EDGE support and 262k color TFT LCD, QVGA (240×320) resolution. It features up to 2GB of microSD storage, dedicated music keys, an adapter for 3.5-mm headphones, built-in IM software, FM radio (with Visual Radio), 1.3 megapixel camera, Bluetooth, and an expected retail of €250 pre-tax, or $317. The 5200 shares the looks of the 5300 but features an even lower rez camera and display for a pre-tax price of €200 or $254. Meanwhile, the original XpressMusic 3250 twister sports a new look with added support for 2GB microSD cards. Expect the 3250 to pull a pre-tax €400 or $507. All phones, according to Nokia today in New York, will “begin shipments in select markets within weeks.” MobileBurn however claims that a US variant of the mix will hit Q1, so who knows. Click-on for a snap of the updated 3250.

[Via MobileBurn]

 

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Sprint launches IP-830W, SCP-8400 and BlackBerry 8703e with GPS

Filed under: , , , , , , , ,

BlackBerry, PocketPC, and Power Vision lovers unite ’cause Sprint just unleashed three phones meant to distribute the love to all. First from the gate is the IP-830W from Samsung (pictured center) we peeped on Sprint last month. For $600 with a 2-year plan ($750 without!), it’s yours to take global with quad-band GSM / GPRS and CDMA / EV-DO pumpin’ Windows Mobile 5 plus AKU2 on a 420MHz Intel PXA272 proc. Out next is another Sprint Sanyo clam in the form of the dual-band Power Vision SCP-8400 (pictured right) with Bluetooth, 1.3 megapixel cam, and of course Live TV, Music downloads, and multiplayer game action. Yours for $100 after rebates, instant savings and your signature on a 2-year plan. Out last is the GPS-enabled BlackBerry 8703e which brings EV-DO speeds, Bluetooth and speakerphone for $350 after discounts and 2-year signup. Thing is, it’s already available on Verizon only without GPS navigation for $100 less. What to do, what to do.

[Thanks, Jim]

Read — BlackBerry 8703e
Read — SCP-8400
Read — IP-830W

 

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Cellphone offerings influencing carrier selection?

Filed under: , , , ,

Sure, it’s always nice when the hottest, most feature-packed mobile drops exclusively on the carrier you’re already using, but what happens to T-Mobile customers lusting after Verizon’s LG Chocolate? According to a research study conducted by The Yankee Group, the types of phones offered by wireless providers is having a larger impact than ever before on buying decisions, and while only three percent of those surveyed stated that phone offerings was a primary factor in their carrier selection, over one-fourth of respondents said “more frequent handset upgrades would prevent them from jumping ship.” In one particular case, a self-proclaimed “addict” switched providers three times in the span of 1.5 years, as he couldn’t resist the urges felt from Audiovox’s SMT 5600, JasJar’s Qtek 9000, and the HTC Prophet. While this particular individual may have paid merciless fees (nearly $2,000, actually) to break contracts and acquire the latest in cellphone technology, the researchers concluded that “network coverage, reliability and price” still ranked highest in determining carrier appeal — but cellphone selection is apparently climbing the ranks, and fast.

[Thanks, Donald]

 

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