Posts Tagged ‘mobil phone’

Samsung’s GT-6620 Goes In Italy

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

The Windows Mobile powered Samsung GT-C6620 has poked its head out on Italian mobile operator TIM’s website, ahead of its official announcement. The GT-C6620 packs a QWERTY keyboard and is powered by Windows Mobile 6.1 Standard Edition. Tri-band GSM (900/1800/1900MHz) support, with UMTS (2100MHz) and HSDPA for high-speed data are also on board.

The Samsung GT-C6620 sports a 2 megapixel camera as well as a microSD card slot for extra storage. Pricing is set at EUR199 (US$255), and the GT-C6620 will be available in navy blue, apple green, or wine red color schemes.

Opera Mobile on iPhone Was Bloked By Apple

Saturday, November 1st, 2008

Apple’s success with the iPhone hasn’t seemed to dampen its enthusiasm from keeping all other companies away from its precious device, as it has apparently rejected the Opera browser from its App Store.

Opera CEO Jon Stephenson von Tetzchner told the NY Times in a recent interview that Opera’s engineers have developed a browser capable of running on the iPhone, but Apple won’t let the App be released as it competes with Safari Mobile.

It seems strange that Apple would be so protective over a certain aspect of the handset. It happily lets multimedia playing applications through the App Store, even though the iPhone is so heavily built on the iPod structure.

Perhaps this is Apple’s way of keeping its powder dry until the Mobile version of Firefox releases? Many within the industry believe the new browser is going to be pretty good, and although Safari Mobile is still one of the best ways to get the internet on your handset, the Mozilla effort could be the one mobile phone users are clamouring for in the next year.

Or maybe Apple just doesn’t want to play with any of the other kids… seems equally plausible really.

Phone Review: Samsung M540 Rant

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

The Samsung M540 Rant is one of the latest QWERTY messaging devices to be put on the market by Sprint. The Rant features a 2 megapixel camera, Sprint’s new One Click standby screen user interface, and 3G data. All of this adds up to a device that seems ready for text or picture messaging as well as dealing with other more ordinary tasks.

The Rant weighs in at a somewhat hefty 130g (4.6oz), but still measures only 114mm x 53mm x 18mm (4.5″ x 2.1″ x 0.7″) in size, which seems spot on for QWERTY keyboard messaging tasks. The keyboard slides in and out from the side with a solid clunk, thanks to a decent set of internal springs. The fact that the keyboard has 4 full rows of keys makes the Rant a lot simpler to use than those devices that try to cram a full keyboard worth of functionality into 3 measly rows. The keyboard’s key are made of rubber, but are stiff enough to provide good tactile feedback. The exception is the space bar, which is a bit more finicky and generally prefers to be hit on its ends, not working as well when pressed in the middle.

The alphanumeric keypad on the rant is conventional, if a bit tight, and the d-pad and softkeys work well enough. For those times when the QWERTY keyboard is being used, users will find a second set of softkeys available along the bottom edge of the display. The camera and its self-portrait mirror sit on the otherwise plain looking rear cover of the Rant. You have to remove this cover to access the built-in microSD memory card slot, but you don’t have to remove the battery to get to it.

We’re pretty pleased to see Samsung using the standard micro-USB connector for power on the Rant, but a bit less pleased with its choice of a 2.5mm headphone socket instead of the more popular 3.5mm type. The display also failed to wow us. While Samsung tells us that the Rant uses a 262k color TFT display, our eyes try to convince us otherwise. The Rant’s screen just appears a bit washed out from certain angles, and looks something like an older tech passive matrix type display.

Phone Contracts ?

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

If you have a mobile phone that you are happy with, then why not grab a great SIM only deal? SIM only plans will give you a load of extra minutes and texts compared to other pay monthly plans, without tying you into  long mobile phone contracts and you can keep your existing mobile number. O2, Orange, T-Mobile and Vodafone all have SIM only packages. If you need to keep your mobile phone number, there’s nothing to stop you keeping it and switching to a sim-only deals. It can sometimes be easier if you are switching to a different network. But a large number of phones are “locked” to the network that originally sold the phone, so you will need to check if your phone will work on a differnt network. To see whether your phone is locked, simply put a sim from another network in your phone. If it works OK, yours is unlocked.

On the  Internet are many sites were you will find the best mobile phone information online, including unbiased and honest consumer Mobile Phone Reviews. You can research every aspect before you buy your new handset from what insurance to get to what Manufacturer or Network to use. There are  also  reviews of all the bluetooth accessories available for all you drivers out there looking for a handsfree and in-car kits to keep you in contact whilst on the roads.

Motorola L7c SLVR – Sprint: Review

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Introduction
The Motorola L7c SLVR is an odd phone in Motorola’s lineup. It is modeled after its GSM counterpart, the L7 SLVR, which is a low-end phone. Likewise, the first CDMA SLVR is being billed as a low-end phone. However, in many respects, it’s just as high-end as the other new entries into Motorola’s Sprint lineup.

The phone does have a basic VGA camera, but it also touts Sprint TV, EV-DO, Bluetooth, and is the first bar-style phone on Sprint’s lineup to have Bluetooth since the Sony Ericsson T608. Combined with a microSD card slot, the Sprint Music Store, and On Demand, it is difficult to bill this phone as low-end.

Because of this, the phone has a very low after-rebate price for new customers, but a high at-retail price for existing customers. Supplies are beginning to trickle out beyond Best Buy retailers, but this phone is certainly an exciting combination of features and performance for a lower-end target audience.

First Impressions, Basic Phone Functionality

The first thing you notice with the SLVR is the great design. It carries everything over from the original GSM SLVR, and is lightweight while easy to hold in your hand. It even stands upright when placed on a desk… which is great for tuning into Sprint TV.

Also another positive for the Sprint variant is that it is in all-black. Verizon’s all-silver L7c SLVR stands out as an eyesore. Sprint’s sleek black version is much more relaxing on the eyes, and the keypad stands out great with the electrochromatic lighting. As to the directional pad, it is not as great as the RAZR, you can occasionally make an accidental click. But, for us, this was very rare. The directional pad resists accidental key presses while in your pocket very well. We never even felt the need to turn on the keyguard. However, the keyguard was also very easy to use.

Voice calling is great, crystal clear… the same experience as on any other modern Motorola CDMA or GSM phone. However, RF performance is probably the one thing that stands out as sub-par. Reception was weaker in fringe areas, and the phone would drop calls where the RAZR and KRZR on Sprint wouldn’t. Clearly the RF performance is not as good as more-expensive phones, but the reception is still good enough to watch Sprint TV with only one bar of service. In short, we wouldn’t not buy the phone because the RF is a little sub-par, but it is important to know if you live/use phones often in very-fringe areas.

Advanced Phone Functionality

Being the first Motorola Sprint PCS phone, it’s important to go over how a Motorola Sprint phone differs from the typical Motorola CDMA phone. Motorola has customized the operating system for Sprint… in some places heavily.

First, the phone uses Sprint’s MI-UI which is powered by uiOne on Sprint. However, you cannot download themes. The code to add downloadable themes just didn’t make the cut, but future Motorola phones will be able to download themes. This leaves you with the default theme, which is a Sprint-enhanced variant of the traditional Motorola user interface. In most ways, this is identical to Motorola, just with better images. Motorola handled uiOne/MI-UI very well, the phone acts just like a typical Motorola. Most users won’t even know that the user interface is different from a typical Motorola phone.

However, some things have been shuffled. Downloads for example. Preloaded ringtones are only accessible from Settings > Sounds, and are not available in the downloads folder. Same for images and videos. Certain settings are rather obscurely placed on the device, causing confusion at times when attempting more advanced functionality (for example, turning off confirm/deny requests for Bluetooth phone-as-modem are stuffed away in Headset settings).

One thing that surprised us was the Media Player in the device. Motorola’s Sprint Media Player performs just as well as seasoned, heavily revised media players on Sanyo and Samsung. The phone flawlessly streamed live Sprint TV, as well as our own 3GPP streams without any problem. Further, it offers excellent landscape view, making it easy to rotate the phone sideways for a larger viewing area.

As to camera performance however, it was rather dismal. While better than older VGA cameras, it only really rivaled high-quality ones such as on the Sanyo 5300… which was sold about five years ago. As such, we don’t have any photos to share… you don’t want to see them. It would have been nice to offer a non-camera variant of the SLVR, so that those in government and other institutions that don’t allow a camera could finally have an EV-DO phone. The extremely poor quality of the camera on the L7c just adds insult to injury in that regard.

Drop Test

Back by popular demand. We drop phones at the waist/pocket level, held vertically, onto typical sidewalk. The SLVR did fairly well, no denting or damage. However, there was paint loss on the front, running around the sides. For a phone made entirely out of plastic, it did well.

Conclusions

The Motorola L7c SLVR on Sprint is a great phone, inside and out. From excellent hardware to excellent software, this is a great combination of EV-DO and a “budget” offering. We only say budget because aside from the VGA camera, this phone is as strong a contender as the V3m RAZR and K1m KRZR.

Pros: Excellent form-factor, design, and performance in all general areas.

Cons: Some minor first-revision bugs, VGA camera.

Final Score: 5/5

Nokia 8800 Carbon Arte a Luxury Phone

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Nokia has virtuous announced its latest luxurious handset, the 8800 Carbon Arte. Nokia has shapely this last phone from high-end materials much as carbon fiber and titanium. Despite its opulence framing, this mobil phone supports exclusive tri-band GSM (900/1800/1900MHz), with UMTS (2100MHz) sustenance for Europa’s 3G networks. Bluetooth is present, with A2DP link for binaural headsets.

The Nokia 8800 Copy Arte packs a clout with its 3.2 megapixel autofocus camera, and with photo editing suite makes it easy to change your pictures. The Nokia 8800 Carbon Arte is set to be free in Q3, priced at EUR1100 (US$1616) before taxes and subsidies.