Sony Ericsson C905 Copper Gold

Saturday, November 8, 2008 6:37
Posted in category Sony Ericsson

Sony Ericsson C905 Cyber-shot is a HSDPA slider-format phone featuring a 8.1 megapixel camera with face detection, Xenon flash, auto focus, horizontal camera UI and illuminated icons for settings shortcuts. The C905 also features a 320×240 pixel 262K TFT QVGA display, 160MB internal memory, Wi-Fi, GPS and a DLNA (Digital Living Network Alliance) server to connect to compatible devices.

The Sony Ericsson C905 is the first phone to feature Sony Ericsson Project Capuchin bridging technology and belongs to the JP-8.4 sub-category which is differentiated from previous JP-8 sub-categories by including the Project Capuchin API.

New Sony Ericsson X2 concept

Saturday, November 8, 2008 6:26
Posted in category Sony Ericsson

New Sony Ericsson X2 concept

Nokia N85 Nseries revved up review

Saturday, November 8, 2008 6:24
Posted in category Nokia

Gsmarena have posted their review of the Nokia N85. Here are the key features, main disadvantages and final conclusion.

Key features:
2.6″ 16M-color OLED display of QVGA resolution
5 megapixel autofocus camera with dual-LED flash and AF assist light
Camera lens cover
Symbian OS 9.3 with S60 3.2 UI
ARM 11 369 MHz CPU
3G with HSDPA support
Quad-band GSM support
Wi-Fi with UPnP technology
Built-in GPS with A-GPS functionality and 3 months of free voice-guided navigation
FM transmitter
Dual slide design with dedicated gaming/audio keys
microSD card slot with microSDHC support
8GB memory card included in the retail package
Built-in accelerometer for UI auto-rotation
3.5 mm audio jack
TV out
Stereo FM Radio with RDS
Navi wheel navigation
VGA video recording at 30fps
USB and Bluetooth v2.0
One free N-gage game
Keylock switch

Main disadvantages:
No office document editing out of the box
Not the best sunlight legibility
Unconvincing camera performance
Poor Navi wheel performance
Zooming in on a picture takes bloody ages

The good thing Nokia N85 does is take (almost) all the Nseries have delivered to date and put it in a neat and tasteful package. There are no groundbreaking novelties but what you get is quite worth it. And the display… well you do need to see it.

Nokia N85 didn’t hit the market so bitterly overpriced as the N96. Nor was the wait so hyped - instead it almost instantly felt right where it belongs.

While the N85 certainly doesn’t have the best 5MP camera on the market or the best styling there is, it is certainly one of the best all-rounders we’ve encountered. There is virtually no aspect of its performance where it totally fails (okay, zooming in the gallery is not that important).

And - having said all that - the best thing about Nokia N85 is it can tempt both Symbian newcomers and upgraders. It’s quite a list of phones that can lose their owners’ favor to N85.

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Samsung takes No.1 spot in U.S. cellphone market

Saturday, November 8, 2008 6:19
Posted in category Mobile Phone News

Samsung Electronics Co Ltd passed Motorola Inc in the third quarter to become the leading cellphone handset vendor in the United States, research firm Strategy Analytics said on Friday.

The research firm said handset shipments in the United States — the largest cellphone market in the world — defied the economic gloom and grew 6.2 percent from a year before to 47.4 million phones in the quarter.

“Attractive bundling schemes from operators, healthy subsidies and aggressive pre-stocking by distributors ahead of the holiday season helped to lift volumes,” said Neil Mawston, director at Strategy Analytics.

South Korean vendors Samsung and LG Electronics Inc both won more of the market, controlling 22.4 percent and 20.5 percent respectively.

“Samsung’s growing retail presence and an attractive high-tier handset portfolio for all of the big four operators have proved crucial in grabbing the prestigious title of the No. 1 vendor in the world’s single largest handset market,” analyst Bonny Joy said in a statement.

At the same time, Motorola, which had been the top vendor in its home market since 2004, saw market share drop to 21.1 percent from 32.7 percent a year before.

Last week Motorola warned that its fourth-quarter results would miss expectations and said its struggling mobile phone business would weaken further in the first half of 2009.

Still, all three in total sell less phones globally than Finland’s Nokia, which dominates emerging markets and has a global market share of around 38 percent.

In the U.S. market, Nokia saw its share fall from a year ago to 8.4 percent — which was still up from levels seen earlier this year.

“It doesn’t feel to us like a sustained recovery. Nokia is still struggling,” Strategy Analytics’ Mawston said. In the U.S. market Nokia also trailed Blackberry-maker Research in Motion Ltd, which had more than 10 percent share for the second quarter in a row.

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Hands on video review of the HTC Touch HD touchscreen smartphone

Saturday, November 8, 2008 6:14
Posted in category HTC

Hands on video review of the HTC Touch HD touchscreen smartphone.