Intel presentation promises Medfield-based smartphones by 2011 originally appeared on Engadget Mobile on Sun, 17 May 2009 19:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Intel presentation promises Medfield-based smartphones by 2011 originally appeared on Engadget Mobile on Sun, 17 May 2009 19:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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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.
Joining a rare breed of mobile phone – Nokia 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
okia has released another QWERTY-based phone, the E63, aimed at the business market and hopes to steal some of RIM’s BlackBerry Storm customers in the process.
It’s pretty cheap as well, a lot less than the similarly specified handsets from RIM. The E63 runs on the S60 system, which means a lot of the ‘fun’ applications and tricks we’re used to from Nokia will be present on this handset too.
To that end, Nokia is offering both a professional and personal mode, allowing users to switch off from the daily grind when they get home with just the press of a single button.
It also offers Wi-Fi, a 3.5mm headphone port (a first for the E-Series) and 1GB of free storage on Nokia’s Files on Ovi site, as well as being 3G-enabled for super zippy web browsing.
A 2MP camera is adequate for day to day snaps, and it comes with a microSD slot to add to the pitiful 110MB internal memory.
Shipping in blue and red, this handset will likely be available in time for Christmas, so you’ve got something to buy for the business person in your life.
During its quarterly earnings call, Motorola’s Sanjay Jha, CEO of the Mobile Devices group, confirmed the rumors that his company will no longer develop phones running the Symbian OS and UIQ user interface, nor will it build any new phones that work on its proprietary Linux Java platform, which was formerly called JUIX.
Motorola will complete any devices on those two platforms that it has already committed to building, but moving forward will rely on Windows Mobile and Google’s Android for its mid-tier and high-end devices in an effort to reduce its R&D costs. It will use its P2K platform or ODM solutions for the low and very-low end markets.
Jha said that Windows Mobile and Android will be used for both consumer and enterprise devices, and that the company’s first Android powered device will not come to market until the holiday shopping season in 2009, a year from now.
Motorola also said that it is no longer expecting to spin off the Mobile Devices wing of Motorola in Q3 of 2009, as it had indicated earlier. It will, instead, take longer. The company would like to return to profitability first, considering the current economic climate.
Palm’s latest in its long line of smartphones is also its smallest, and probably its best looking.
It’s also returned to the Palm operating system that the company seemed to temporarily abandon with its recent run of Windows-based handsets (that would be the Treo 750v and 500v, in case you’re wondering).
Slim phone, streamlined features. It’s about time the company updated the Treo look, but while this comparatively sleek model has the good looks and petite proportions to look like a proper smart phone (as opposed to a PDA workhorse with a few phone apps tacked on), many of the features leave a lot to be desired.
There’s no 3G or Wi-Fi, for example, the 1.3-megapixel camera is below the standard you’d expect on a mid-range phone in 2008 and the music player could be kindly described as basic.
The screen is noticeably smaller than previous Palms but it’s plenty big enough for web browsing or viewing documents. A shame then that with 64,000 colours it’s not a bit sharper, though it’s certainly bright enough.
It’s touch-sensitive too, which gives a greater amount of options when scrolling through the menus, but it can be a nuisance switching between the hard keys and the virtual ones.
A closer look at the Centro’s design. The Centro doesn’t feel as sturdily built as Treos of yore, the plastic battery cover on the back of our sample being creaky and feeling a bit loose. It can handle up to 4GB of MicroSD memory card, although you won’t find one of any stripe in the box.
The slot is on the side, fairly well camouflaged (we couldn’t find it until we took the back off) and quite fiddly to get into – but at least you don’t have to remove the battery. The too-flexible plastic stylus, meanwhile, which slips into a pocket on the top, is certainly practical but feels inexcusably cheap.
In typical Treo fashion, the snug QWERTY keypad includes the numerical keys and though the keys are crammed very close together, their protruding bulbous shape made from a sort of spongey plastic makes them distinctive enough to be easy to use.
They feel quite good too, and the D-ring with its central ‘Palm’ button and surrounding four soft keys are equally easy to use, with a minimum of slippage.
A switch on top switches off the ringer for meetings or other times when you don’t want to be disturbed.
Pressing the call end button brings on the key lock, which also comes on automatically if you leave the phone for 30 seconds, and there’s instant access to voice memos via the dedicated button on the side, below the volume buttons.
Camera and music player. The 1.3-megapixel camera with 2x digital zoom feels shabby and underpowered next to even the 2-megapixel models which already feel like minimum spec on a midprice phone.
There’s no flash and no quick access button to the camera either, which makes quick snaps more awkward than they should be, though at least there are various Palm picture-editing apps available if you’re prepared to go looking for them.
The pTunes music player will handle MP3 music files and allow you to sort them by artist, album, genre and playlist, but other than that it’s a very basic player.
The built-in loudspeaker on the back is actually pretty good – louder than most with a reasonable amount of bass, though it does come with a warning about its internal magnet, which could conceivably affect credit cards.
The supplied mono headphone however seems to have been hardly worth the effort – if you go to the trouble of including a music player on a phone, stereo headphones are a must, though you can always add a pair since the Centro uses a standard 3.5mm jack plug. It also has A2DP Bluetooth for wireless listening.
Palm’s excellent OS Browsing the internet using the Blazer browser was surprisingly quick, although it took a little bit of getting used to – pressing the bottom rim of the D-ring for instance allows you to scroll down the page, but you’ll need to press the sides to move the cursor.
Finding the browser was a bit awkward too, since you have to scroll to the bottom of the menu page to find it.
Palm’s distinctive OS still has some things going for it. It is still awesomely easy to use and to find your way around, and of course there are masses of additional apps that you can add.
The provided software includes all four flavours of Office documents and Google Maps, which works perfectly well, though it’s with applications like this that the lack of a 3G or Wi-Fi connection becomes noticeable and irksome.
As with the Treos, Palm’s Versamail system is present and correct and a joy to use.
Battery power has been an occasional problem on various Palms, but the Centro’s seems decent enough, getting within spitting distance of the claimed four hours of talktime and 12-day standby.
The Centro phone could provide a better looking and more lightweight alternative to Palm Treo users with distorted pockets, but its underpowered spec is unlikely to win over new converts.
Looks: 3.5/5
Ease of use: 3.5/5
Features: 3.5/5
Call quality: 4/5
Value: 3.5/5
Motorola officially announced its new MOTO Q 11 smartphone, a device that started popping up in South America over the past week. The Q11 looks similar to the company’s Q9c and Q9h smartphones, but sports an updated body design and has had its feature set whittled down a wee bit to make it more affordable. To that end, the Q11 lacks any kind of 3G connectivity at all and makes due rather with quad-band GSM/EDGE support, though it maintains the same Windows Mobile 6.1 operating system.
The MOTO Q 11 features a 3 megapixel fixed-focus camera and a microSDHC(INFO) card slot for up to 32GB of storage expansion room. Like the Q9, the Q11 sports a 2.4″, 262k color QVGA resolution display and offers GPS functionality. It even comes equipped with support for the latest Bluetooth 2.1 standard as well as WiFi.
With its standard 1170mAh battery installed, the Q11 measures 117mm x 64mm x 11.7mm (4.6″ x 2.5″ x .46″) in size and weighs a respectably light 115g (4.1oz). The battery should last for up to 450 minutes of talk time or 8 days of standby time. The battery can be recharged through the Q11’s standard micro-USB connector.
The Motorola Q11 is expected to be available for purchase in December of 2008. No pricing or specific market availability information has been provided at this time.
Verizon Wireless and Vodafone announced their exclusive claim to being the first family of carriers to offer the new RIM BlackBerry Storm smartphones. Verizon Wireless will have exclusive rights to the BlackBerry Storm 9530 smartphone while Vodafone, one of Verizon’s parents, will claim rights to the BlackBerry Storm 9500 in Europe, India, Australia, and New Zealand. No specific launch dates have been given, but the joint press release mentions availability “later this fall.”
As the first touchscreen BlackBerry device, a lot is riding on the Storm for RIM. BlackBerry devices have always been known for their fine, usable keyboards and the devices on a whole have been the tool of choice for many people that rely on email to do business. As such, the introduction of a touchscreen on a BlackBerry is something of a risk, as touchscreens have long been considered poor when it comes to text input – and a BlackBerry is nothing without text input.
To that end, RIM is using what it calls the first “clickable” touchscreen display on the market for the Storm. RIM president Mike Lazaridis says that the Storm “solves the longstanding problem associated with typing on traditional touch-screens” by responding more like a physical keyboard. The 360×480 pixel resolution touchscreen has a certain amount of give to it, and users will feel a positive click when they press on it. On top of that, the display also supports multi-touch input and finger gestures for navigation and application control.
The touchscreen is also backed up by an accelerometer, which enables it to automatically rotate with the device. As such, RIM is able to have the Storm use a SureType 20 key virtual keypad design, similar to that of that BlackBerry Pearl, when the phone is held vertically while offering a full QWERTY layout when used in landscape mode. The auto-rotation also helps when used with the web browser, which has a row of buttons across the bottom of the screen that allow users to switch between page and single column modes as well as control whether the user’s finger controls the mouse pointer or is used for panning and scrolling. Another feature of the browser that people will appreciate is the double-tap zoom control, like that found on the iPhone and in Opera’s 9.5 browser for devices like the HTC Touch Diamond and Samsung i900 Omnia.
And since RIM knows just how important text is to a BlackBerry user, the Storm also supports copy and paste functionality. We don’t have a lot of other details on the phone yet, but we do know that there will be GPS support for navigation, and that the browser can handle RSS feeds. A 3.2 megapixel camera with autofocus is on board, backed up by special versions of Flickr and Facebook, and Bluetooth stereo support is there along with a regular 3.5mm headphone jack socket.
The RIM BlackBerry Storm 9500 for Vodafone will support 3G UMTS(INFO) and HSPA(INFO) data on the 2100MHz band as well as quad-band GSM/EDGE. The Verizon version goes a step further by offering all of the network support of the 9500 as well as EV-DO Rev A(INFO). support for Verizon’s 3G network for true dual-mode(INFO) 3G world roaming. It measures about 112.5mm x 62.2mm x 14.0mm (4.4″ x 2.4″ x .5″) in size and weighs about 155g (5.5oz). It offers 1GB of internal storage space and supports microSD cards as large as 16GB in capacity.
We still don’t have any word on pricing or availability for the new Storm line, but we are certainly anxious to get our hands on one to test out that new touchscreen.
Best Buy has been steadily increasing the number of smartphones that it offers, and rumors show that more are on the way. It appears as though the electronics retailer is planning to add the Palm Treo Pro, BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8220, and BlackBerry Bold to its smartphone lineup soon.
We have also confirmed that Best Buy will be carrying the T-Mobile G1 soon, as well. Best Buy also currently stocks both the Nokia N95 8GB and Nokia E71 smartphones, both unlocked and available without a carrier contract. Pricing on the various new smartphones is not confirmed
A few snafus at HTC today have led to the unexpected release of a few new smartphones, including the new Touch Viva. The Viva is an entry level addition to HTC’s Touch family of smartphones that is intended for emerging markets. It has specs that mostly mirror those of the original HTC Touch, but the Touch Viva has a non-flush mounted display and more RAM (128MB) than the original.
The Touch Viva sports a 2 megapixel camera as well as a microSD card slot for storage expansion. The 2.8″ touchscreen display has QVGA (240×320 pixel) resolution, and the phone supports WiFi for high-speed connectivity since it is otherwise limited to GSM/EDGE speeds.