gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

May 2, 2006

Nokia N83 shot and specs

Filed under: gsm,leaked,n83,nokia,spy,symbian,umts — Ryan Block @ 4:44 am

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We still can’t guarantee the href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/05/01/nokia-keeps-em-coming-possible-n83-spotted/">N83 is the real deal,
but it certainly looks to be taking shape, and New Mobile has a very slick looking front-on of the device with those
same promising details: UMTS, 2.5-inch 352 x 416 display, 4GB drive, 5 megapixel camera, Bluetooth 2.0, FM radio,
MicroSD, and 3.5mm headphone jack. The over the top specs make it out to be one of the hottest Symbian devices we’ve
ever seen, which is exactly why we’re not going to go getting our hopes up just yet that all those pie in the sky
features are going to turn up roses.

[Thanks, MacBoy]

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Samsung releases their D520 slim slider

Filed under: Samsung,d520,gsm,phone,slider — Paul Miller @ 2:03 am

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Not a big surprise on specs or anything, but Samsung is getting that trim n' fit D520 slider of theirs out the door in Korea today. The tri-band GSM phone is pretty light on features, with a mere 176 x 220 display, 1.3 megapixel camera, Bluetooth, and 80MB of non-expandable memory, but it manages to do it all while weighing 3.3 ounces and measuring 0.6-inches thick. Not too much of a phone to miss out on, but it wouldn't hurt if they at least offered to ship it over here.

[Via Aving]
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May 1, 2006

Is this the T-Mobile-branded Sidekick III?

Filed under: Rumors,SidekickIii,danger,gsm,handset,leaks,photos,pics,sidekick III,t-mobile — Evan Blass @ 12:48 pm

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Is this the fabled Danger Sidekick III? We can't say for sure, but the site that reader John M. tipped us to contains this solitary photo, which looks almost identical to the shots that have been leaking out for the last few months. Although no explanation of the picture is given, John claims that its from T-Mobile's advertising campaign for the device, which sounds pretty reasonable to us.

[Thanks, John M.]
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SecureGSM SP crypto software for WM5 smartphones

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src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/05/secgsm.jpg" alt="" />Windows Mobile Smartphone users now have a
new way to conduct their shady business in secret, thanks to a newly-released version of Australian developer
SecureGSM’s “military-grade” crypto software. Designed to incorporate seamlessly with the WinMo UI, SecureGSM
SP delivers on-the-fly data encryption for communicating with other SecureGSM-enabled devices, and promises voice
quality that’s “comparable to standard mobile communication.” Processor requirements for the ~$190 app are
pretty light, with any device running faster than 175MHz making the cut, but system requirements are a bit stricter, as
you’ll need the MSFP-sporting WM5 href="http://engadgetmobile.com/search/?q=aku2">AKU2 installed if you want to enjoy conversations free of
eavesdropping.

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April 28, 2006

Mio A701 GPS-enabled Windows Mobile smartphone reviewed

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src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/a701.jpg" alt="" />On paper, the href="http://www.engadget.com/2005/08/25/mios-a701-gps-enabled-pocket-pc-phone/">Mio A701 smartphone sounds like
almost the perfect convergence device, sporting a Windows Mobile 5.0-powered 520MHz Xscale processor, SiRF III GPS
receiver, tri-band GSM radio, Bluetooth, and a 1.3 megapixel camera. Sadly, at least according to Reg Hardware, the
A701 has so many little faults that the device is often barely usable, and sounds like a skip except for those folks
who absolutely must have GPS and aren’t into the square-screened iPaq href="http://engadget.com/search/?q=hw6900">hw6xxx series from HP. Some of the Reg’s gripes with this model include
its crappy camera (one of the worst they’ve ever seen, apparently), GPRS-only data connection, flimsy telescoping
stylus, lack of dedicated buttons for WM5 softkey control, and buggy navigation software (luckily it’s optional).
Besides the full suite of accessories that come included in the box, there doesn’t seem to be much good to say about
the $660 to $790 A701, which is no doubt a big disappointment to those who may have been looking to import what
appeared to be such a hot phone.

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April 27, 2006

Alltel, America’s Largest Network? Nah.

Filed under: advertising,alltel,cdma,gsm,network — Ryan Block @ 7:04 am

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Ok,
cellphone quiz! Question one: which wireless carrier has the most subscribers in the US? Verizon would have been a lot
of peoples’ guess, but if you answered Cingular, good on you, they’re href="http://cingular.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=press_releases&item=1505=_new">up to about 56 million now.
Question two: who has the smallest amount of subscribers in the US, not counting strictly small regional carriers and
MVNOs? Nope, it’s not T-Mobile (they supposedly have somewhere around 30 million now), it’s Alltel, with their 15
some-odd million. Question three: who has the largest network in the US? Well, according to Alltel, the answer’s not
Cingular, nor Verizon, Sprint-Nextel, or T-Mo. It’s them.

So
after we noticed Alltel’s seemingly spurious claim not too far back, we decided to look into the matter. Regarding
Alltel’s emboldened stake in having "America’s largest network," the disclaimer on their page says the
following: "Largest Network Claim: Based upon analysis by an independent research company in December 2005, which
compared marketed coverage patterns at the time of their creation of each wireless carrier without allowance for
variations due to electrical interference, customer equipment, topography & each carrier’s translation &
defined preferences of their own internal engineering data."

Well, that didn’t really help very much –
in fact, that’s nearly incomprehensible. But in plain English it sounds like the firm that conducted the analysis was
comparing the coverage of each carrier’s network at the time it was originally rolled out, and did not take into
account carriers’ own "internal engineering data," i.e. carriers’ data on their own networks. Surely Alltel
would never make this claim — and fashion a marketing campaign around it — based on such dubious information. So we
contacted their VP of PR, Andrew Moreau, and asked for: a) a statement regarding these claims, b) a copy of the study,
c) to know who conducted the study, d) information on where the study could be found, and e) hard figures on the study.
Click on to see what we found out.

Alltel’s Vice Prez of PR met our queries with two rather terse replies. (Since neither of which disclaimed
them to be unofficial or off the record, and we asked for a statement on the claim, we will republish them here.) The
first simply said: "Our wireless network  — built out and lit — covers more square miles than any other
carrier. Hope this helps. Andy." And the other, sent in reply to asking for more information simply said:
"It’s more s.f. covered than any other provider." That’s it. Not even a "Hope this helps. Andy." />
Now, we had a pretty difficult time tracking down any solid figures for square mileage covered by the big four
(and we’re sure as soon as we publish this we’ll get flooded with the information we’re after). But from what we could
tell the biggies play in terms of millions of square miles — not square feet. We did have some vague figures (for
example, Verizon covers "more than two million square-miles," Sprint covers "more than 2.8 million
square miles." ). And, of course, measuring coverage isn’t an exact science; roaming partnerships, spectrum
sharing, indefinitely dead zones or areas with just generally crappy service can make a difficult proposition to
accurately gauge. But Alltel laid out the terms for us, and going by those terms Sprint made things really easy. />
In a release
dated 2003
, Sprint (now Sprint-Nextel, of course) stated their network "covers more than 96 percent of the
population and more than 2.8-million square miles in the continental U.S." Now, we can’t imagine their network
would have shrunk, so let’s go to the maps. We know they’re not incredibly accurate, but we think they’ll do the
trick.

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

Here is href="http://www.alltel.com/corporate/media/coverage.html">Alltel’s map. Some decent coverage of Eastern, Mountain,
and Central time zones — even a little on the west side (if you count Nevada, anyhow). Alltel suppoesdly has AMPS and
CDMA roaming agreements in every state, but that apparenty
is not an official part of their "built out and lit" claim. Now let’s check out Sprint’s map.

/>

src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/sprintmap2.jpg" alt="" />

So this is href="http://www1.sprintpcs.com/media/Assets/Maps/U.S.coverageMapSprint_64e2b1.gif">Sprint’s service map. We’d like
to point out that those white speckles comprise the entirety of their uncovered area. Hell, they even cover portions of
Alaska (which isn’t to scale, and would probably easily make up for those dead zones in the contiguous US), Hawaii, and
regions in the commonwealth of Puerto Rico and portions of the Virgin Islands. So, the nation’s largest network
"built out and lit… in square miles," eh? Just for reference, let’s look at the other carriers’ maps. />

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

Here we have Cingular, whose very decent nation-wide
coverage is also supplemented by service up in AK, down in the ‘Rico, and over in Hawaii.

align="center"> />

T-Mobile’s, well, you know, T-Mobile. They may not provide the widest area of coverage, but we love ‘em
anyway.

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

Finally, we have the mighty behemoth that is Verizon,
whose coverage extends into Canada and clear up to Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador. Nice. Not that this has
anything to do with Alltel, of course.

So what have we learned? Well, Alltel has some explaining to do, and
they could start be releasing the study they’re basing these claims on. (Our request for a copy was rejected.) No more
convoluted technicalities, ok?

We’re not out to get anyone or anything, but if you’re going to blatantly
mislead consumers, don’t craft an entire marketing campaign around it. To Alltel we say: be happy with the network you
have. Provide good service, excellent customer care, and try not to act like those other big networks that move slowly
and make getting a decent handset nigh impossible (you know who we’re talking about), and maybe someday soon you really
will have America’s Largest Network.

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April 26, 2006

VK Mobile’s waif-like VK2020 musicphone reviewed

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VK Mobile seems like a very flashy company to us, what with their fashion-over-function ethos, their, shall we
say, liberal
"borrowing" of design elements
from some of the sexier phones on the market, and who could forget the
airbrushed nude models that they employed to hawk their products at CeBIT this year? We think PC Mag would agree that
the company’s quad-band GSM VK2020 musicphone — that, like the models, we also href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/03/12/live-from-cebit-hands-on-with-vk-2200-4-megapixel-cameraphone-a/">spotted
at CeBIT — falls in line with this assessment, as their review highlights the handset’s RAZR- and SLVR-killing
thinness and "wow factor," but knocks it on nearly every aspect important to people who actually like their
stuff to function properly. Among the laundry list of flaws reported are this model’s small, dim screen, barely
acceptable MP3 and call audio quality, lack of even EDGE-speed data, sub-four-hour battery life, limited filetype
support, and flaky Bluetooth connection. Still, PC Mag’s Sascha makes a good point when he compares the VK2020 to a hot
date, in that you’re a lot more likely to accept its faults just because it looks so damn good. If you’re the type that
rushed out to buy LG’s silly href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/03/16/lgs-style-i-hands-full-headset/">Style-i non-hands-free, non-headset
Bluetooth headset when it href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/04/26/lgs-style-i-hands-free-headset-available-from-verizon/">became available
from Verizon this week, then you’ll probably be just fine with forking over $400 to Dynamism in order to sport one
of today’s hotter-looking imports.

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April 25, 2006

Motorola “Capri”: the real RAZR slider?

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The Motorola rumor mill is in full grind mode lately, with word of an impending slider version of the RAZR, called the "Capri," coming hot on the heels of the "Canary" photos that have been fluttering around lately. According to Cnet's Alpha blog, the quad-band GSM Capri will be no thicker than the SLVR, sport a "high-resolution" CCD (what that means for cameraphones is unclear -- 1.3 megapixels? 2.0? 3.2?), and also a TransFlash slot, probably for storing tunes. Although no pics of this rumored model are available yet, Cnet speculates that it will be quite similar to the Korea-only MS600 (pictured, also referred to as the "RAZR slider), which is a bit thicker than the SLVR but takes many of its design cues from the trusty RAZR.

[Thanks, Hitechy and Corey]
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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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April 24, 2006

Fujitsu-Siemens’ 3G-enabled Lifebook E8210 reviewed

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With most manufacturers concentrating on making smartphones ever-smaller, it's refreshing to see Fujitsu-Siemens flip the script and release what may be the world's biggest Windows-powered handset, eschewing CE for XP in the process. Actually, F-S is marketing the six-pound Lifebook E8210 as a laptop, what with its 15.4-inch, 1,680 x 1,050 display, 2GB of RAM, and full-size keyboard, but any data-centric device that can make cellphone calls (thanks to the built in HSDPA-compatible 3G card) is a smartphone in our book. Whatever you wanna call it, the E8210 impresses on many fronts, says Trusted Reviews, who give the 2.16GHz, Core Duo T2600-powered model nine out of ten stars, highlighting its connectivity (802.11/a/b/g, Bluetooth, HSDPA/UMTS/EDGE/GPRS, PCMCIA/ExpressCard slot, four USB, and even serial, parallel, and D-SUB ports), security (fingerprint reader and Smartcard), and benchmark performance. The only downsides here seem to be the lack of a 3G CDMA option and the ATI Mobility Radeon X1400 graphics, which definitely makes this Lifebook anathema to gamers -- but at over $3,500, the E8210 is clearly being targeted at corporate, and not LAN party, deployment.
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April 19, 2006

Treo Hollywood nothing but a rumor?

Filed under: 700w,Rumors,Smartphones,brighthand,gsm,handsets,hollywood,lowrider,palm,treo — Evan Blass @ 2:48 pm

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src="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/media/2006/04/whatisthis.jpg" alt="" />Brighthand, a site we happen put a good
deal of credence in, is reporting that "very reliable sources" have informed them that there is no such
creature as the Treo Hollywood. The
Hollywood, which first appeared in a Saigo Investments report last year along with another model known as the href="http://engadgetmobile.com/search/?q=lowrider">Lowrider, was said to be a more stylish 3G-enabled Treo for the
antenna-hating European market. Even more intriguing were href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/03/20/first-shots-of-the-treo-hollywood/">pictures href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/03/22/more-pics-show-antenna-free-treo-to-be-more-of-a-lowrider/">that have
been steadily href="http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2006/04/19/treo-hollywood-sighted-for-reals/">leaking out of an antenna-free
Treo with blue highlights that were said to be Hollywood, but which Brighthand is now discounting as possibly just a
restyled GSM version of the 700w. Stay tuned to this station
folks, because Palm’s plans for this year just got a lot more open-ended.

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T-Mobile’s SDA reviewed

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We've been spending some quality time with T-Mobile's SDA Windows Mobile 5.0 Smartphone. The $300 phone boasts some pretty good features for the price, including EDGE data, Bluetooth, a QVGA screen, and a 1.3 megapixel camera. The real kicker is the WiFi connectivity lacking in its 2125 cousin from Cingular, but how does it hold up under rigorous solitaire play and indiscriminate texting of ex-lovers? You'll have to read on to find out.


The first thing you'll notice about this phone is the screen. Well, we suppose that's not exactly true, since the start up time borders on the millenia (60 seconds from pressing the power button to making the first call), but after the phone is finally fired up you'll notice just how great this QVGA screen really is, bordering on the brightness of one of our beloved 2405FPWs.

Speaking of startup reminds us of our main gripe of this phone: the buttons. The power button takes great will and dexterity to activate, the side rocker button that controls volume is painful use, and the side camera and comm manager buttons aren't much better. Then there's the keypad; it's much more tactile than the aforementioned buttons -- a very shallow, clicky feel -- but it's squeezed tightly into the bottom fourth of the phone, causing finger cramps, especially during extended texting sessions. This of course makes data entry more of a chore than it already is on a keypad-only smartphone.

The media buttons are a bit of a waste of space since they merely provide redundant functionality for Windows Media Player and are compatible with little else. The center joystick also teases with great feel, but causes difficulty due to the cliche problem with joysticks: it's hard to make a straight and center button press.


Otherwise there's plenty to love about this phone, including great signal (even the occasional single bar when waiting for the subway), and great data capabilities with the included -- and speedy -- WiFi. With a dedicated button for the communications manager, allowing us to enable and disable the phone, WiFi, and Bluetooth radios within a few button presses, the phone couldn't be much easier to use with wireless connections, and we had little trouble finding and using random networks.

As for actual phone functionality, the SDA works fine. We found there to be clear -- if a bit quiet -- voices on both ends and plenty of battery life -- for talking at least. While we found the battery fairly indifferent to talking and PDA usage, the phone usually didn't make it past a couple of days of standby, no matter how little time we spent with it. The speakerphone was our main caveat for phone use, offering clear audio but too little volume.

It's hard to believe the SDA is a Smartphone based on the size, barely out bulking Sony's candybar classic, the T616. Once picked up, though, it makes more sense. The phone has a solid build, and felt a tad heavy after long conversation, but we really can't blame HTC for this one (the SDA is based on HTC's Tornado design), since they really do pack it in. There's a decent 1.3 megapixel camera for a few shots on the go, and also a miniSD slot -- annoyingly placed under the battery -- to expand the phone's paltry 64MB of storage, half of which is already used out of box (hey, that OS has to go somewhere). We would recommend planning to spring for a decently-sized miniSD along with the phone's $300 price tag, especially since the phone excels with media, offering Windows Media Player syncing and great video playback on the QVGA screen. Syncing media files over USB 2.0 went fast, and while the 200MHz processor's performance isn't stellar, we were able to play some DivX "24" in TCPMP without a hitch.

Of course the Smartphone crown is a moving target, but the SDA does plenty for the price for now, and should serve many touchscreen or size-averse Windows Mobile types very well.
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April 17, 2006

Blackberry’s 8700g with EDGE available on T-Mobile

Filed under: 8700,8700c,8700g,Bluetooth,blackberry,crackberry,edge,gsm,quad-band,rim — Evan Blass @ 11:31 am

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hspace="4" border="0" align="right" alt="" src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/8700g.jpg" />It was bound to
happen sooner or later, and now the Blackberry 8700 smartphone is
finally available to push email-loving members of the T-Mob, as the 8700g. As far as the features go, well, you should
all know them quite well by now, as Cingular has had this model
since late last year: quad-band GSM with EDGE data, a 312MHz Intel processor, QVGA color display, Java, and
Bluetooth 2.0, plus the standard suite of RIM-supplied applications. Getting your Crackberry fix from the big
"T" will cost you $300 with a contract (after $100 in rebates).

[Thanks, Phil G]

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

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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 15, 2006

Philips Xenium 9@9t candybar

Filed under: Xenium9@9t,candybar,gsm,handset,philips,phone,touchscreen,xenium 9@9t — Paul Miller @ 12:24 pm

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The Philips Xenium 9@9 series is traditionally a rather low-end group of candybar phones, but this new 9@9t isn't looking too bad. Sure, the miniSD slot, MP3 playback and 1.3 megapixel camera are fairly standard by now, but the phone features some sort of touchscreen, along with touting 30 days of standby -- if the text on the screen can be believed. The slim phone is also supposed to be tri-band GSM, but that's about all we have for info right now.

[Via Slashphone]
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April 9, 2006

Lenovo’s i921 WinMo smartphone

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Akihabara News has some, um, news about a new Windows Mobile-powered handset from Lenovo that is, while not the first smartphone from the PC manufacturer that we've seen, certainly the most attractive. The i921 is said to rock WM5 (no confirmation on that, apparently, but we seriously doubt that they'd go the WinMo 2003 route), a two megapixel camera, Bluetooth, QVGA touchscreen, and MiniSD slot, and work on some unknown number of GSM frequencies. Not many other deets are known, such as pricing or availability, but if we don't see WiFi or UMTS in the specs, we keep on shopping, no matter how hot the phone looks.

[Via MobileMag]
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April 7, 2006

Qualcomm chips to power 3G world phones

Filed under: 2.5g,2g,3g,WorldPhone'cdma,ctia,ev-do,gsm,qualcomm,travelling,umts,world phone'cdma — Evan Blass @ 8:10 am

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In a move sure to excite both business travelers and wandering geeks, Qualcomm announced earlier this week that it expects to ship chips for high-speed world phones by the end of this year. Handsets with the new Qualcomm chipsets will be able to access both EV-DO services on CDMA networks as well as W-CDMA-powered GSM UMTS networks, effectively allowing for 3G connections almost anywhere in the world. Even customers not willing to shell out the big bucks that these first models will cost will still benefit from the new chips, as prices on current-gen 2G and 2.5G world phones will drop accordingly as a result of their new mid-tier market status.
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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

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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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April 3, 2006

Vertu intros first 2 of 6 Racetrack Legends handsets

Filed under: Bluetooth,ascent,expensive,gsm,luxury,motorsport,racing,tri-band,vertu — Evan Blass @ 5:00 pm

Filed under:


Ever since their Ascent Motorsport Edition withstood five rollovers by a Porsche Boxster, we've taken Nokia's Vertu luxury handset division much more seriously, and you'll never again hear us questioning the logic of spending $X on one of their products (where X = some obscenely large number). The company's newest designs, called the Racetrack Legends series, each pay tribute to one of six of the greatest circuits on Earth and are limited to 1000 units apiece, with outlines of Italy's Monza and Britain's Silverstone etched onto the back of the first two releases. When you're in the market for a Vertu phone, features are surely not your top priority, and the Legends series meets those expectations with nary a notable spec other than the inclusion of Bluetooth and tri-band GSM connectivity. Likewise, if you have to ask about pricing on these, you're probably not part of the target demographic.

[Via Luxist]
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Vertu intros first 2 of 6 Racetrack Legends handsets

Filed under: Bluetooth,ascent,expensive,gsm,luxury,motorsport,racing,tri-band,vertu — Evan Blass @ 5:00 pm

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Ever since their Ascent Motorsport Edition withstood five rollovers by a Porsche Boxster, we've taken Nokia's Vertu luxury handset division much more seriously, and you'll never again hear us questioning the logic of spending $X on one of their products (where X = some obscenely large number). The company's newest designs, called the Racetrack Legends series, each pay tribute to one of six of the greatest circuits on Earth and are limited to 1000 units apiece, with outlines of Italy's Monza and Britain's Silverstone etched onto the back of the first two releases. When you're in the market for a Vertu phone, features are surely not your top priority, and the Legends series meets those expectations with nary a notable spec other than the inclusion of Bluetooth and tri-band GSM connectivity. Likewise, if you have to ask about pricing on these, you're probably not part of the target demographic.

[Via Luxist]
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A slew of Tech Faith Wireless Windows Mobile phones

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We have no idea who these guys are, where they came from, or if they're even real, but the buzz is a new Chinese ODM by the name of Tech Faith Wireless (TWF) is about to storm HTC's castle with a sweet lineup of Windows Mobile devices. The specs seem a little pie in the sky (at best), with most rocking quad band GSM, HSDPA, 2.4 and 2.8-inch QVGA touchscreens, MicroSD, 512MB flash, 512MB RAM, GPS, USB On-The-Go, 2 megapixel cameras, optional WiFi, and optional MicroDrives (in their larger PDA devices). We're not saying it can't be done, but they're going to have some convincing to do that they, and their products, are the real deal, not to mention the uphill battle they're going to have getting these things on the market and taking on the 800 pound ODM gorilla. Tons more -- and we mean way too many -- shots after the break.

[Via MobilitySite]


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May 20, 2012

HTC typo leaves MTeoR customers fuming

Filed under: 1800,1900,2100,850,band,breeze,gsm,htc,mteor,umts — Chris Ziegler @ 9:46 am

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Unsuspecting American buyers of the MTeoR, HTC’s self-branded cut of the 3G-capable Breeze candybar, might be a bit surprised to find that they’re not having much luck with reception. Some versions of HTC’s own marketing materials for the device list it as sporting quad-band GSM and tri-band UMTS, but alas, it’s actually a tri-band GSM 900 / 1800 / 1900 unit with support for UMTS only on the European 2100 band. Of course, had this really been a tri-band UMTS phone, we’d have been throwing parties, launching fireworks, and generally making merry here at Engadget HQ, but for the few folks who’ve imported one of these pieces stateside, our hearts go out to you.

[Thanks, Rick V.]

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The $500 GSM rotary phone

Filed under: SparkFun,Wireless,desk,gsm,mobile,phone,rotary,spark,spark fun — Chris Ziegler @ 9:46 am

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Sure, we’re guessing the belt holster is a bit unwieldy, but the decades-old chassis on Spark Fun’s “portable” rotary phone is probably every bit as sturdy as the Symbol MC70‘s for one-quarter the cash. We’ll take ours in beige, please.

[Via The Raw Feed]

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