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Android & WM6.1 Dual OS Mobile G3

December 21st, 2009

Android & WM6.1 Dual OS Mobile G3

it’s not real dual os , just built-in wm6.1 os with android theme .

OS: Windows Mobile 6.1  Touch Classic Android UI

Screen:  3.2″  WQVGA  240*400  Touch Screen

CPU:  huawei K3  460mhz

Camera : 2.0MP

Wireless: Wifi ,EDGE2.75G,Bluetooth

Built-in GPS,G-Sensor

Frequency: GSM/GPRS 850/900MHz/1800MHz/1900MHz

Software: word/excel/power point/pdf/outlook

Memory:256M ROM,128M RAM

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Author: admin Categories: mobile phone Tags: , , , ,

Pinphone 3GS

December 9th, 2009

Screen: 3.5″  480×320 Sharp HVGA Capacitive TOUCH screen (This is same like IPHONE, for some technical reason maybe will have 1 light point on screen)

Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11/802.11b/802.11g)

2.0MP CAMERA

Language support: English,French,Spanish,Portuguese,Italian,German, Japanese,Dutch, Russian,Chinese , Danish , Finnish ,Swedish , Polish

pinphone (7)

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Author: admin Categories: mobile phone Tags: , , , , , , ,

5″ WM6.1 Device Smartbook U1000

November 12th, 2009

smartbooku1000 (4)

◇Basic product information
◇ Platform
* OS 6.1 Professional Edition
◇ Characteristic
* Type PDA
* Dimensions 133*85*10.9mm
* Weight with battery     TBD
◇ Processor Marvell310 624MHz
◇ GSM/GPRS
* RF band
EGSM850/GSM900/DCS1800/PCS1900
* GSM services
Speech services with EFR/FR/AMR codec

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Author: admin Categories: mobile phone Tags: , , , , , , ,

Powerful xpPhone – Mobile and Computer Combination

November 2nd, 2009

http://www.jiongtang.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/auto_save_image/2009/11/041128k9X.jpg

Standard Specification(Configuration) *CPU: AMD Super Mobile CPU
* Memory:512M/1G
* SSD: 8G/16G/32G/64G
* HDD:30G/60G/80G/120G
* LCD: 4.8′ TFT Touch-screen LCD 800*480
* Operating System: Microsoft Windows XP
* Network:GSM/GPRS/EDGE/WCDMA (HSDPA/HSUPA)
CDMA/CDMA2000 1X/CDMA1X EVDO,TD-SCDMA,TD-HSDPA
* Wireless:WiFi 802.11b/g,WiMax(optional),Buletooth,Stand-alone GPS
* Camera Specifications:CMOS, 300k/1.3 Million
* Ports:1 x earphone jack,1 x microphone jack,Docking Connector
(include VGA output signal ),1 x USB 2.0, SIM Slot
* Power Management:
Battery: Removable Lithium-ion
Talk time: about 5 hours,Stand by time: about 5 days
Real life: about 7 hours(Standard), about 12 hours(Large)
Talk time,Standby time,Operation time may vary depending different usage.
* Weight: 400g (include battery)

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Author: admin Categories: mobile phone Tags: , , , , , ,

SciPhone Android Mobile Series

October 9th, 2009

SciPhone N12 Smart Phone with Google

  • Processor: Marvell Monahands (624MHz) + Qualcomm MSM6246
  • Operating system: Android/ Windows Mobile
  • Dimensions: 117*58*12.7
  • Mode: UMTS-2100MHz, GSM-900/1800/1900 MHz
  • Bearer: GSM, 3G(WCDMA)
  • Display: WQVGA 240*400 pixels, 3.2 inch TFT 262K
  • Main camera: 3.2M pixel
  • Secondary Camera: 0.1M pixel
  • Storage: ROM-256MB+64MB, RAM-256MB+64MB
  • Extended Storage: Micro SD, up to 16GB
  • USB: USB 2.0 high speed
  • Bluetooth: Ver 2.0
  • GPS: Yes
  • WiFi: IEEE 802.11b/11g
  • TV: CMMB
  • Battery capacity: 1000mAh
  • Standby time(GSM): Up to 220 hours
  • Voice talk time(2G): Up to 170 minutes

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Mobile Script Phone Needs No Stinkin’ Batteries

June 16th, 2009

Yay! It’s been awhile since we’ve posted a mobile phone concept that promises to do everything under the sun in the thinnest form factor. I was getting withdrawal symptoms. The Mobile Script phone explores what functions any contemporary mobile device should have; internet access, documents on the go, games, communication, and mobility.

It has 2 touch screens, one in a traditional candy bar style format, the other a flexible OLED that stiffens with a low voltage charge when you unfurl it. This layout enables maximum real estate when watching movies or editing documents when you need it.

Okay if that wasn’t enough, there’s more futurist fantasms. You don’t need to charge it, yes you heard right. The case is covered in a photo sensitive nano material that converts sun light into energy. Oh my!

You know what? I like it.

[via   yankodesign ]

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Palm Pre review

June 11th, 2009

The Palm Pre. It’s not just a phone, it’s a myth, an idea, possibly a legacy… and a really, really long time coming. It’s almost impossible to believe, but the crew at Engadget has been talking about a Linux-based Palm phone since way back in 2004. Through the now-distant years that followed, we were speculating, pontificating, and wishfully-thinking about a new device from a company that we’d come to expect innovation from. But we waited. And waited. And waited. We waited so long, in fact, that we actually penned a lengthy open letter to Palm, pleading for the company to get back on its game. Only when the picture looked really, truly bleak for the folks in Sunnyvale (you know, like $2 a share bleak) did we actually see a spark of hope — two sparks, in fact — called the Pre and webOS.

Yes, this is epic stuff. The Pre (and its accompanying operating system) could likely decide the fate of the company largely credited with ushering in the age of the do-everything phone. Since Palm’s announcement at CES this year, news surrounding the Pre has been a veritable whirlwind of activity: rumors, half-truths, hate, love, fear-mongering, fanboyism, rampant gadget-lust… and even a little late night celebrity for the pint-sized phone. Finally the time has come to put rubber to road and get into the guts of this thing once and for all. Can the Pre and webOS live up to the hype — the kind of hype we haven’t seen since the launch of the original iPhone — or do they snap under the pressure? Read on for the full review.

Part 1: Hardware, webOS / user interface
Part 2: Synergy, phone, media, applications
Part 3: Data speeds, backup, battery, Bluetooth, pricing, wrap-up

[via  engadget]

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Sony Ericsson Satio (Idou) preview: First look

June 8th, 2009

1. introduction

Sony Ericsson Satio (a.k.a. Idou) is perched at the top of the touchscreen food chain with an ominous grin. Currently rivaled only by the Samsung Omnia HD and in a way by the non-smart Samsung Pixon12, the 12 megapixel predator readily bares its teeth of incredible multimedia, powerful processing and of course perfect connectivity. There isn’t much more to look for in a smartphone except how its potential translates to real-life performance.

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Sony Ericsson Satio official photos

The Satio sure is an exciting package but at this point it still needs to live up to its very own spec sheet. This quick preview tries to give you an idea about how the Satio behaves under pressure and warn of glitches (if any) that remain hidden on paper.

Now we are pretty certain you all know them by heart but before we continue let’s have a look at the main features of the Sony Ericsson Satio.

Sony Ericsson Satio at a glance:

  • General: GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz, UMTS 900/2100 MHz, GPRS/EDGE class 10, HSDPA 7.2 Mbps, HSUPA 3.6 Mbps
  • Form factor: Touchscreen bar
  • Dimensions: 112 x 55 x 13.3 mm
  • Display: 3.5″ 16M-color TFT resistive touchscreen, 640 x 360 pixels
  • Memory: 100MB integrated memory, hot-swappable microSD card slot (up to 16GB), 256 MB RAM
  • OS: Symbian OS
  • Camera: 12 megapixel autofocus camera with xenon flash and video LED flash, geotagging, face and smile detection, Smile Shot, Smart contrast and VGA video recording at 30 fps
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.0 with A2DP, USB v2.0, GPS receiver with A-GPS
  • Misc: Accelerometer for screen auto rotate, FM radio with RDS
  • Battery: 1000 mAh battery

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Sony Ericsson Satio at ours

Now, as we mentioned, the Sony Ericsson Satio currently has a single strong rival. The Samsung i8910 Omnia HD is a few megapixels short in the still camera department but makes up with stunning HD video recoding.

The Omnia HD is supposed to hit the market as early as this month and the Sony Ericsson Satio release date is still to be confirmed. The autumn sounds like a good guess for the Satio availability, but we’ll just have to wait and see.

Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio
Sony Ericsson Satio views

Whatever that date may be, one thing’s for sure – there’s still plenty of time left until the Satio actually makes it to the shelves so new contenders are likely to emerge.

In the meantime Sony Ericsson gave the Sony Ericsson Satio its name (we preferred Idou, really) and announced that they have dropped the Symbian foundation future OS plans and will be offering the Satio with the regular touch-enabled Symbian S60 5th edition that’s already used on Nokia 5800 XpressMusic and Nokia N97.

Sony Ericsson have done a lot customizing of the OS giving it a distinct SE feel – and we definitely like every ounce of character they put in it. But we are getting ahead of ourselves, join us on the next page where we embark on exploring Sony Ericsson design and ergonomics.

2. 360-degree spin ,design and construction

Sony Ericsson Satio 360-degree spin

At 112 x 55 x 13 mm the Sony Ericsson Satio fits comfortably in most pockets without causing too much of a bulge. It’s about what you would expect of a 3.5″ touchscreen handset and the extra girth around the camera lens is not much of a burden, given the 12 megapixel sensor.

Sony Ericsson are still hesitant to publish the official weight of the Satio so our digital scales had to come into play. The handset weighs 126 grams and we are pretty certain the retail version won’t differ too much. From where we stand 126 grams is just about acceptable.

Design and construction

The Sony Ericsson Satio body is all made of plastic which – as you probably know if you’ve been keeping track – we are not too thrilled with. However the plastic used on the Satio is obviously of very high quality and we’ve no reason to question the handset’s looks and reliability. By the way, we can hardly imagine what a load the Satio would have been if it was made of steel or some other metal.

Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio
The handset looks pretty neat

The front of the Satio is anything but groundbreaking design-wise in its segment, the 3.5″ touchscreen taking most of it. Underneath there are three controls, a video-call camera, ambient light sensor and the earpiece on top.

The hardware keys are perhaps too narrow but still pretty usable, and blend well with the overall design. The keys in question are the menu button squeezed in-between the call and end keys, just as on the S60 5th edition devices.

Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio
Hardware keys under the display • video-call camera and ambient light sensor next to the earpiece

The 3.5″ 16M-color resistive touchscreen is undoubtedly one of the highlights of the device. It has stunning picture quality with incredible brightness and excellent contrast for a TFT unit. Images look impressively vibrant on it.

Resistive displays need some pressure to be applied to get a click registered. As we find out, the amount of pressure required is just fine – you don’t need to squeeze like on some touchscreens. It is by no means as sensitive as capacitive displays but then again, the Satio can be controlled with a stylus or with gloves on.

The left side of the Sony Ericsson Satio features the screen lock slider, the proprietary all-in-one connectivity port and the microSD card slot. We were certainly hoping for a 3.5mm standard jack and a microUSB for data and charging but to no avail.

At least the memory card slot is covered by a plastic lid so it won’t fill up with dust and dirt. Plus, the Satio is yet another recent Sony Ericsson handset to move away from the Memory Stick Micro M2 storage. We really like the way Sony Ericsson are going recently.

Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio
The screen lock slider and connectivity port are on the left

The right side hosts an array of camera controls. Starting from the bottom those include the shutter key, the camera mode toggle key, the gallery key and the odd one out – the volume rocker. In all fairness the volume rocker doubles as a zoom lever so it isn’t totally irrelevant to imaging.

Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio
The right side is mostly about the camera

The power key of the Sony Ericsson Satio is located at the top, right next to the loudspeaker.

Sony Ericsson Satio
The power key and the loudspeaker are on top

All there is at the bottom is the lanyard eyelet.

Sony Ericsson Satio
The lanyard eyelet

The backside of the Sony Ericsson Satio is where it gets really interesting. Not that the stylish lens cover we know from the C905 impressed us that much – it’s what’s hiding underneath.

The 12 megapixel camera lens is accompanied by both a xenon and a LED flash, so the Satio is perfectly covered in low-light for both still camera and camcorder mode. There are also a couple of tiny apertures around the camera lens, which we guess are some kind of light sensors.

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The 12 MP camera lens and its entourage

As we managed to confirm, the camera performance of the Satio is nothing short of impressive and the handset can fully replace a mid-range point-and-shoot digicam. Definitely worth this spoiler, even if it is to be discussed in detail a little later in the review.

Removing the battery cover reveals the 1000 mAh Li-Po BST-33 battery. The battery is able to power up the handset for almost two days with Bluetooth constantly turned on and email syncing at regular intervals.

Sony Ericsson Satio
A 1000 mAh battery lies under the hood

The general build quality of the Satio is quite good and the materials used are both nice looking and durable. The handset feels perfectly in hand and, contrary to what you may’ve guessed, the thicker upper half of the handset doesn’t upset balance and comfortable grip.

Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio
The Sony Ericsson Satio in hand

So that’s about it on the hardware now let’s take a peek inside.

3.user interface

Symbian OS touch-style

As we mentioned, Sony Ericsson dropped their plans of using the Symbian Foundation upcoming mobile OS on their Satio in favor of the already available Symbian S60 5th edition touch UI. That’s a move probably motivated by the timeframe constraints – getting Satio on the market is a top priority for Sony Ericsson.

Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio

Symbian S60 5th edition

If you are into big and expensive smartphones, chances are you already know quite much about the Symbian S60 5th edition. Chances are you may have even seen it in action on the highly popular Nokia 5800 XpressMusic.

We are glad to see that Sony Ericsson have customized the interface to match their current product lineup experience more closely.

We are quite fond of the new tabbed homescreen that Satio is pioneering – we haven’t seen that on the 5800 XpressMusic or the Omnia HD.

The tabs of the homescreen match different parts of the UI, including favorite apps, gallery, favorite contacts, network services etc.

Sony Ericsson Satio

The tabbed homescreen

Number 1

Starting from left to right the first tab contains your favorite contacts, which are added by pressing the plus key at the bottom.

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Favorite contacts tab • settings • viewing a contact • contacts list

Number 2

Next comes the Bookmarks tab. There are several bookmarks conveniently preinstalled but you can change those as you like. Unfortunately, that tab is non-scrollable, meaning you can fit only 8 bookmarks here.

Sony Ericsson Satio

Bookmarks tab

Number 3

The third tab is on by default and it resembles a regular S60 homescreen. It has a Walkman button, four other shortcuts at the bottom and the current date and time displayed. If you have a track running in background the icon for the music player is replaced by the name of the song along with album art and three music player controls (pause, next and previous).

The shortcuts in the bar at the bottom are to the dial pad, the media center, the messaging and the My phone search application.

Sony Ericsson Satio

The default homescreen

Number 4

The Gallery tab is certainly one of the best looking parts of the interface, allowing you to browse pictures by simply sweeping your finger across the screen (up or down) and the pics are sorted by date. It also enables viewing a photo of your choice in the media center, setting it as wallpaper or sending it away by a single click. Unfortunately at this stage there are no other options except the mentioned ones and you can’t zoom or get a small thumbed list as in the main gallery.

Sony Ericsson Satio Sony Ericsson Satio

The gallery on the fourth tab

Number 5

The final tab contains shortcuts to a number of programs of your choice. Much like with the Bookmarks tab – there are only 8 slots for application shortcuts here – scrolling is not an option.

Of course if you happen to prefer some of the other homescreen layouts, available to the S60 devices they are here too. However none of them can rival the looks or the functionality of the Sony Ericsson’s custom plug-in.

Sony Ericsson Satio

The shortcut tab

We have prepared a short video for you demonstrating the Sony Ericsson Satio user interface. Just remember to click the HD button once you start watching.

more information ,visit http://www.gsmarena.com/sony_ericsson_satio_idou-review-358.php

[from   gsmarena]

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Author: admin Categories: mobile phone Tags: , , , ,

Live pictures of the new Sony Ericsson Yari

May 29th, 2009

Here are few fresh live pictures of the new Sony Ericsson Yari in nice Achromatic Black colour.

Sony Ericsson Yari

Sony Ericsson Yari

Sony Ericsson Yari

Sony Ericsson Yari

Sony Ericsson Yari

More images you can find here.

[from   semcblog ]

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Sony Ericsson Satio – an Entertainment Unlimited device

May 29th, 2009

Sony Ericsson Satio

Today Sony Ericsson Satio was announced – the new high-end smartphone from Entertainment Unlimited series. It was shown at MWC 2009 on 15th of February with codename Idou. That event wasn’t the real announcement, just a small preview with a small list of specifications and some official photos. But today Sony Ericsson finally announced it with the full list of features, with some surprises like new colours and with final model name Satio.
Sony Ericsson Satio
Sony Ericsson Satio has three wondeful colours. Here they are: Black, Silver and Bordeaux. Black colour was showed at the MWC, Silver was leaked a few weeks after MWC 2009 and Bordeaux colour came as a real surprise to us. Satio is looking so unusual in Bordeaux . But I should admit, that it is a nice colour and it will be fit for women. Black and Silver are more classical colours and they should fit normally for everyone.
Sony Ericsson Satio
Satio supports GSM/GPRS/EDGE 850/900/1800/1900 and UMTS/HSPA 900/2100 networks. Device has large 3.5″ 360×640 pixels TFT touchscreen, which has ratio 16:9 and supports up to 16,777,216 colors. Device supports SanDisk microSD™ memory cards and 8GB memory card will be included to the box. One of the main feature of the new Satio is, of course, a good camera. Satio has 12.1 megapixel camera with Xenon flash and intuitive touch focus, which helps you to take great images just in few seconds.
Sony Ericsson Satio
Satio has sizes 112 x 55 x 13 mm and weight 126 gram. Device is based on Symbian Foundation operating system (S60 5th edition Symbian™ OS). A lot of applications for this operating system already available online. More specifications of the new Sony Ericsson Satio can be found on the official Sony Ericsson site. And what about launch date of the new Satio? Less then 5 months left to the launch date of this multimedia smartphone. Yeah! The new Sony Ericsson Satio will be launched in October.

Sony Ericsson Satio

[from   semcblog ]

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