Archive for November, 2008

The World’s 10 Most Expensive Cell Phones

Friday, November 28th, 2008

Sometimes people with money buy things that aren’t actually worth the money. I don’t know if diamonds help to make your signal stronger, but I highly doubt it. I am not saying that all expensive phones are not worth the price, but you be the judge.

The cheapest phone on this list costs around $28,000 and the most expensive is priced at over $1.3 million dollars.

  1. Christian Dior Cell Phone – $28,000

    There is a basic model for a ‘mere’ $5,000 and a premium model encrusted with 640 diamonds and an alligator skin case for $28,000.
  2. Gresso Avantgarde Royal Black Diamonds – $37,800

    This phone by Gresso actually uses black diamonds for its navigation keys. It is adorned with gold in many places including a gold Gresso logo in the back. The phone is powered by Windows Mobile 6.
  3. The Motorola V220 Special Edition – $52,000

    This phone looks really weird in my opinion. It is studded with 1,200 diamonds and inlaid with 18-carat gold. This phone was designed by Peter Aloisson.
  4. Vertu Signature – $81,000

    This phone was made by Vertu, a subsidiary of Nokia, and a maker of many really expensive luxury phones. It has 48 diamonds on its keypad and an additional 943 diamonds on its bezel.
  5. The Vertu Diamond - $88,000

    The Vertu Diamond is available in four different flavors, with your choice of white gold, yellow gold or platinum finish. They are made to order.
  6. The Apple iPhone Princess Plus – $149,500

    This iPhone is made of 18-carat white gold with a rhodium trim. It is encrusted with 180 brilliant cut diamonds and 138 princess cut diamonds.
  7. Sony Ericsson Black Diamond – $300,000

    This phone will be limited to 200 phones, which is actually quite a bit of phones considering the price tag. It has a platinum body and a 4 Megapixel camera.
  8. The Vertu Cobra - $310,000

    The Cobra, another phone by Vertu, has an actual cobra designed on it. The cobra is made up of jewels, with two emeralds for the eyes and 439 rubies for the body. Of course it would be complete without additonal diamonds as well.
  9. The Goldvish Le Million - $1,200,000

    The Goldvish Le Million is basically covered in diamonds, about 1,800 of them to be exact. It also appears to have a secret compartment. There are only three in existence in the world today.
  10. Ancort Diamond Crypto Smartphone – $1,320,000

    This phone is made of solid platinum. Yes, platinum. The sides of the phone are adorned with whopping 25 1/2 carat princess cut diamonds. The navigation button is made of your choice of 18 carat rose gold, or yellow gold. The phone was designed by Peter Aloisson.

Nokia Unveiled the 6260 Slide

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Nokia unveiled its 6260 Slide, a featurephone that uses 6260 Slide’s new S40 6th Edition user interface. The 6260 Slide packs in the features, starting with a 5 megapixel autofocus camera with Carl Zeiss optics and dual-LED flash.

The Nokia 6260 Slide also features quad-band GSM (850/900/1800/1900MHz) support, in addition to UMTS (900/1900/2100MHz) with HSUPA support for ultra-high-speed data transfers. The 6260 Slide also offers WiFi for even faster data speeds. The internal GPS receiver allows the Nokia 6260 Slide phone to function as a GPS navigation device, and TV-out functionality should make it simple to share your pictures and videos with others.

The Nokia 6260 Slide is planned to be available in Q1 2009, priced at EUR299 (US$389) before taxes and subsidies.

Samsung Electronics Launched The Haptic ON In Korea

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Samsung Electronics announced the launch of its high-end full touchscreen phone Haptic ON in Korea market, which combines compact digital camera and full browsing functionality.

The phone is equipped with a 5M camera with face detection and auto focus functions, the Haptic ON adopts a 3-inch WVGQ display to enjoy video recording, internet full browsing and more.

It is expected to be available in Korea market via LG Telecom for around 800,000(KRW).

Opera Mini 4.2 Available for Android

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Opera has graduated version 4.2 of its Opera Mini cell phone web browser from its beta state to being officially offered and supported. Opera Mini is compatible with nearly any cell phone on the market that runs Java applications, and a special version for Android-powered smartphones, such as the T-Mobile G1, is also available.

New features in version 4.2 include a new set of visual skins, as well as enhanced support for Opera Link, which synchronizes bookmarks and notes from the desktop Opera web browser to Opera Mini. Opera Mini v4.2 is also able to take advantage of a new server farm in the U.S., which should work to improve speeds for all users.

To download Opera Mini v4.2, simply point your phone’s web browser to  mini.opera.com. The browser is free, but obviously uses your phone’s data connection.

The Medical Phone At Mobile Asia Congress 2008

Monday, November 24th, 2008

On 20th At Mobile Asia Congress 2008, Macao, Britain’s The Medical Phone presented what appeared like an iPhone  equipped with QWERTY keyboard and game keypad, the icephone.

The specialty of icephone lies in its various input devices. It is decked with touch display, QWERTY keyboard like that of a laptop, specialized game keypad, and mouse, providing more input devices than any other mobile equipment to date.

With 3.1MP camera, multi-media functions and HSDPA, it is possible to enjoy high-resolution online network games on this product. Plus, its user can utilize automotive navigation and location identifier via GPS.

In times of emergency, The Medical Phone’s Ice Aid software permits one-touch call to the patient’s doctor, the nearest hospital, or 119. The product release is to be in May, 2009.

Nokia Joins China’s 3G Telecomunication

Monday, November 24th, 2008

Mr. Wang Jianzhou, CEO of China Mobile stated in his keynote speech at 2008 Asia Mobile Congress on the 18th, that NOKIA will join China’s 3G telecommunication standard, TD-SCDMA.

He reported that “China’s 3G service will gain yet more resilience with Samsung Electronics, LG Electronics, and now NOKIA, the world’s largest mobile terminal manufacturers, supporting TD-SCDMA.”

He also added, “China’s 3G telecommunication standard, TD-SCDMA service completed its first stage successfully during the Beijing Olympics and added Hong Kong for its 2nd stage to make a total of 28 cities, and by mid- 2009, the service will be available in 28 cities.”

Multi-Mode Mobile Phone GI602 From Inventec

Monday, November 24th, 2008

On the 18th at the Mobile Asia Congress 2008, held in Macao, Taiwan’s leading IT industry Inventec introduced its multi-mode mobile phone GI602 that supports GSM, CDMA, PHS and GPS at the same time.

The special features of this product is its conference call through which 3 people can communicate together, and A2DP (Advance Audio Distribution Profile) Bluetooth that permits its users to listen to high-quality stereo music. Furthermore, it supports MP3P, MP4 Play, JAVA, Web 2.0 and touch screen functions.

Phone Review: Nokia 6650

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Joining a rare breed of mobile phoneNokia clamshell smartphones – the Nokia 6650 is a tidy-looking flip phone with some neat functionality onboard.

As well as the Symbian S60 smartphone operating system underpinning it, this device features high-speed HSDPA 3G connectivity and A-GPS Sat Nav functionality. But this T-Mobile exclusive also has an impressive supporting cast – though there’s also a few less than standout performances.

Reliable build quality. There’s more than a touch of the Motorola RAZR about the 6650’s design but Nokia hasn’t managed to achieve quite the same slimness. Actually, the 6650’s a bit of a bulky beast, measuring 99(h) x 47 (w) x 16(d) mm, but for all that it does have a strong, dependable build quality. The keypad, even with its nifty multicoloured lights, has a reassuring ‘Nokia‘ feel about it and is intuitive and responsive.

The fold design enables Nokia to include two screens: the main one being a 2.2in TFT QVGA (240×320) display that’s crisp and precise. The second – on the front of the handset – is a 1.36in TFT version, and can be used to browse the menu and activate features, including the music player, thanks to controls on the front of the shell.

Multimedia features. Handset spotters might also notice that Nokia has had a bit of a recycling moment, the 6650 model number having already been used once before – on the company’s first 3G phone, released in early 2003.

Mobiles have certainly come on somewhat since those early Third Generation days. The combination of Nokia’s S60 OS and HSDPA (with download rates of up to 3.6Mbps) provides the 6650 with strong multimedia functionality, allowing fast downloads of video and audio content, speedy web browsing, plus customisation of the phone’s software with numerous third-party applications available to download.

Along with a first-rate music player you also have S60 standards including RealPlayer for watching video clips, various web-based applications, plus a main 2-megapixel camera.

The Nokia 6650 only has a 30MB internal memory, but fortunately a hot-swappable microSD expansion slot means you won’t be stuck for extra storage space. A 1GB microSD card is included in-box, so you should have ample room to be getting on with anyway.

Headphones socket. A 2.5mm AV connector allows you to connect the supplied in-ear ‘phones to enjoy your music, videos or the FM radio. The quality is acceptable, though it would have been more elegant to have included a standard 3.5mm jack socket to allow you to plug in your own headphones without having to source an adapter. Nokia does this on some but not all of its higher end devices.

On a positive note, stereo Bluetooth does mean that you can ‘go wireless’ with a suitable headset.

Limited camera. However, the inclusion of a mere two-megapixel camera (with LED flash) casts a downer on things – a mood not helped by the pictures it produces, which suffer from over-exposure. Detail is limited too. A video clip resolution of 320×240 isn’t impressive, though a nifty video clip editing app does provide some much needed flexibility. It’s worth noting that the 6650 doesn’t include Wi-Fi either.

One further connectivity addition comes in the guise of the 6650 as a USB modem. Just plug it into a compatible PC and you’ll be able to benefit from mobile broadband over T-Mobile’s network. Nokia’s PC Suite software comes bundled with the handset.

GPS guidance. The 6650 features integrated A-GPS (Assisted GPS), which uses network based assistance to speed up the calculation off the coordinates of your location when your device is receiving signals from satellites. First time around GPS proved slow in establishing our position but in terms of maintaining it was very reliable.

In keeping with other entry-level Nokia handsets you’ll find that Nokia Maps aren’t stored locally, instead they are downloaded when required. The map software is a touch fiddly but persistence pays dividends as this is a solid, dependable app.

Naturally with the web browser, you get fast access to T-Mobile’s web portal, so you can download tunes and videos and check out other t-zones content and services; of course you can also browse the full web using the rather nifty S60 browser, which is pretty efficient thanks to the HSDPA connectivity.

Exceptional call quality. Over our test period the 6650 maintained an impressive call quality, with superb clarity and definition. Interference is minimal and it was often a genuine pleasure to use the handset to make and receive calls.

Battery life was perhaps a little disappointing. The quoted standby is up to 350 hours, but after a handful of calls, the download of two full-length music tracks and 20 minutes of web browsing our test model packed up after around 60 hours.

While from a design point of view the Nokia 6650 might not set the world alight, it’s reasonable enough. But there’s more than enough multimedia functionality to keep most people happy. The camera remains a disappointment but elsewhere there’s plenty to be played with and enjoyed.

Network availability: T-Mobile

Looks: 3.5/5
Ease of use: 3.5/5
Features: 3.5/5
Call quality: 4/5
Value: 4/5

Samsung Gravity Available In T-Mobile Network

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

T-Mobile is now making its new Samsung Gravity messaging phone available for purchase. It features a slide-out QWERTY keyboard and a large a 2″ color display. A 1.3 megapixel camera and camcorder are also on board, coupled with a microSD card slot for extra storage.

The Samsung Gravity also features Bluetooth with A2DP support for stereo headsets and T-Mobile’s MyFaves service. Basic messaging functionality can be found on the Gravity, including support for AOL, ICQ, Windows Live, and Yahoo instant messaging clients. Available now, the Gravity is priced at $49.99 with a 2-year commitment after a $50 mail-in rebate.

New High-Speed USB

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Verizon Wireless has recently added another high-speed USB modem to its lineup, the USB760. The USB760 uses a simple USB port on your computer to connect to Verizon’s high-speed EV-DO network and features an internal antenna for a sleek look.

The Verizon USB760 also sports a microSD memory card slot for extra memory expansion while connected to the high-speed network. This small modem is currently available to Verizon Business accounts, but should be in regular Verizon retail stores on December 1st, priced at $99.99 after a 2-year commitment and mail-in rebate.