Subscribe to RSS Subscribe to Comments

Smart Phones of today

The Samsung SGH-i620 Smartphone

samsung-i6201.jpgThe Samsung SGH-i620 Smartphone has a compact slider form factor, with a slide down QWERTY keyboard. When the i620 is opened, the phone measures 5? long. Use the 5-way navigation keypad to access applications quickly. For prolonged use, like replying to emails, the keyboard is there for easy input. Weighing just 105g, this light weight smartphone has great communication options and runs Windows Mobile Standard (WM6). It boasts a 2 Mega Pixel camera, Bluetooth 2.0 and a Micro SD slot.

The sliding and locking action on the phone?s slider keeps the top half from popping down on the user while keying. The natural shelf formed by the back half of the device, situated behind the raised front, is a comfortable place for the user to rest their fingers while using both thumbs to type.

The i620 measures exactly 3.73? long x 2.34? wide x 0.69? thick (with extended battery installed) or 0.66? (with standard battery in place). On the front upper right, there is a video camera for those who live in HDSPA enabled areas. The 320 x 240 screen measures approximately 2.1? diagonally, and underneath is a different button cluster than we have seen before. Instead of typical buttons, these only activate when the phone is opened. They are backlit, and touch-sensitive; when your fingertip touches them, there is a sound response in the form of a ?snap?, and its hard to describe, because it almost seems as if you can feel the snap; although I am almost positive that is just my imagination. Going clockwise, directly under the screen are two soft buttons, a back button, the hangup button, call button, and Home button. Bear in mind, I am using the term ?button? very loosely - as they are not actual buttons, more like ?areas?. In the center is a wheel that at first glance operates very similarly to the one on an Ipod, but closer examination reveals that it is instead an actual revolving surface that moves with the user?s finger; there is a select button in its center. The case is composed of glossy black plastic rimmed with chrome covered plastic; all in all, this is one shiny fingerprint magnet - make no mistake about it.

The last thing I want to mention the memory. The i620 is listed as having 128MB ROM and 64MB RAM, but when I looked at the memory management screen on a wiped device, it only showed 46.3 RAM / 22.1MB available and 33.9 ROM / 11.8MB available. Is it just me, or does that seem really low?

Key Features of Samsung SGH-i620:

  • Network: HSDPA / GSM 900 / GSM 1800 / GSM 1900
  • OS: Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.0 Standard Edition
  • Display - Type TFT, 65K colors; Size 320 x 240 pixels
  • Memory - 46.3 RAM / 22.1MB available, and 33.9 ROM / 11.8MB available; Phonebook 1000 entries, Photocall; Call records 30 dialed, 30 received, 30 missed calls; Card slot microSD (TransFlash)
  • Data - GPRS: Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps; HSCSD: No; EDGE: Yes; 3G: HSDPA, 1.8 Mbps; Bluetooth: Yes, v2.0 with A2DP; Infrared port:No; USB:Yes, v1.1 miniUSB
  • Messaging: SMS, EMS, MMS, Email, Instant Messaging
  • Browser: WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML, RSS feeds
  • Camera: 2 MP, 1600?1200 pixels, video, flash; secondary VGA videocall camera
  • Additional Features - Java MIDP 2.0; WMV/3GP/H.263/MPEG4 player; WMA/MP3/AAC/AAC+/OGG/ASF player; Organiser; Document viewer (MS Word, Excel, PPT, PDF); Built-in handsfree




Will the iPhone 2.0 directly confront the BlackBerry

iphonerim.jpgThe iPhone has always been an unusual product in the Apple Inc. line-up. Apple announced the iPhone months before the device went on sale, something the Cupertino, Calif. company never does.

Then Apple cut the iPhone?s price by a third just two months after it launched. Apple?s not exactly famous for cutting prices.

And last week it spilled the beans on new iPhone enterprise functionality, and rolled out the tools independent software developers need to write third-party applications for Apple?s hardware. And it?s running well-publicized beta tests for both. Apple doesn?t do big public betas.

That makes iPhone 2.0 ? the term CEO Steve Jobs used to describe the update coming this summer that will expand the iPhone?s skill set ? an interesting story all by itself. Add to the mix the iPhone?s first serious foray into corporate territory and the beginning of what will probably become another Apple development platform, and that story has far-reaching implications.

The story will play out for months, but we wanted answers to a few questions right off.

What exactly is iPhone 2.0? Jobs and his executives unveiled a pair of projects that together make up the update they dubbed iPhone 2.0. The first is support for Exchange, the Microsoft Corp. mail server that rules the corporate messaging roost. The second is the previously-announced software developer kit, or SDK ? the tools and documentation developers need to craft applications that will run on the iPhone.

The first, Exchange support, is a big deal, but it appeals to a subset of iPhone owners. With Apple?s emphasis on the consumer market ? and its less-than-stellar reputation among old-school enterprise IT ? not every iPhone customer will care whether the device can grab e-mail from a server at the office HQ.

The second, however, will affect everyone who has, or plans to buy, an iPhone, because everyone buys software, or downloads free software.

As it stands, the iPhone is like a computer that runs only the software built into the operating system or bundled with the machine. The SDK will change that by making it possible for third-party developers and software companies to create new applications, making the iPhone even more computer-like in its functional flexibility.

The developer tools that make up the SDK won?t actually be part of the Phone 2.0 update, but they make possible the programs which will go on sale or be offered gratis when that update reaches users.

When do I get the new iPhone software? ?Late June,? said Jobs. Knowing Apple?s taste for the dramatic, we?ve circled June 27 as the most likely release date; that?s the final Friday of the month, and the one closest to the one-year anniversary of the iPhone?s 2007 debut, which also took place on a Friday.

Apple is accepting applications for a limited number of slots ? it hasn?t said how many ? for a beta-test program for the Exchange support part of iPhone 2.0 Interested enterprise types can apply here.

Developers can download the free SDK, from Apple?s site and apply to either the Standard ($99) or Enterprise Program ($299) from the same page.

Will I be able to download iPhone apps from the Web? Not like you?re probably thinking. Software will be distributed straight to the iPhone through App Store, the online mart which will open in June. Alternately, users will reach App Store from iTunes on a Mac or PC; the computer will later push the downloaded applications to docked iPhones.

In other words, Apple controls the distribution channel, and won?t allow users to simply grab anything from anywhere.

Of course, that doesn?t mean it won?t happen. Expect to see hacks that circumvent App Store, just as there are now ?jail breaks? that let users install unsanctioned software onto current iPhones.

Will companies that create in-house iPhone software have to use App Store, too? No, or at least not the public version of the online store. In a short Q&A that followed the iPhone 2.0 roll-out, Phil Schiller, who heads Apple?s marketing, said the company is working on a way for businesses to get internal iPhone apps to their employees.

Some have speculated that the same mechanism, whatever it is, might be used by software developers to seed an invite-only group of beta testers with preliminary versions before the final hits App Store.

What kind of programs will developers write for the iPhone? If the few that Apple trotted out last week during brief demos were any clue, everything from games ? Electronic Arts, for instance, showed a scaled-back version of Spore ? to hardcore business applications, such as the glimpse Salesforce.com gave of how it could push data from its software-as-a-service CRM application to the device.

The SDK gives developers access to the iPhone?s gesture-based multi-touch screen, animation technology, storage space, the accelerometer (the small sensor that automatically switches between landscape and portrait display), the built-in camera and more. So with some exceptions, it appears that the sky?s the limit as far as what developers work up.

What exceptions? At one point during last week?s presentation, a slide reading ?Illegal, malicious, unforeseen, porn, privacy, bandwidth hog? popped up behind Jobs. ?There will be some apps that we?re gonna say ?no? to,? he said.

Jobs didn?t get specific about the criteria Apple?s gatekeepers will use to deny some software a spot on App Store, but because each application with be digitally signed, it?s probable that Apple will have the ability to shut down an already-installed iPhone app if, say, the software later crosses whatever line in the sand Apple?s drawn.

In the Q&A afterward, Jobs also said that unlocking software ? programs that hack the iPhone so it can be used with more than just that market?s exclusive mobile carrier ? would be banned from App Store. But Skype-style VoIP (voice over Internet protocol) programs will be permitted as long as they access Wi-Fi only, not the cellular network.

How much will iPhone apps cost? That?s up to the creators of those programs. Apple set no minimum or maximum, but instead talked about two general categories: free and paid.

Software designers are free, so to speak, to slap ?Free? on their work, in which case Apple bears the cost of marketing and distributing the programs. ?There is no charge for free apps,? said Jobs. ?There is no charge to the user, no charge to the developer.?

Developers who charge a fee, on the other hand, must share revenues with Apple, which takes a 30% cut. ?We keep 30 [percent] to run the App Store,? Jobs said.

That combination of free and paid means that the business model used by many developers ? offer a free version, then try to upsell customers to a second, paid edition with more features ? would be possible on the iPhone.

But whether Apple will allow a developer to give away software that includes ads ? another popular business model, especially for Web apps ? is unclear. Knowing Apple?s penchant for taking a slice of the pie, that seems doubtful. Revenue sharing is a possible model, but since that would be based on the developer?s numbers, the plan might not get a green light at Cupertino.

I want to know more about the Exchange part of iPhone 2.0. Apple has licensed Exchange ActiveSync, a communication protocol that synchronizes messages, contacts, calendar items, notes and tasks between a mobile device and an Exchange 2003 or Exchange 2007 server. Unlike tethered sync, which the iPhone now supports, the synchronization happens over a wireless connection, cellular or Wi-Fi.

According to Microsoft, the two started talking about ActiveSync even before the iPhone launched last June.

Once armed with the protocol, Apple was free to write support into the iPhone, either in new applications or by revamping the ones already on the smart phone. Apple chose the second approach.

So what will I be able to pull from my company?s Exchange server come June? Apple?s Phil Schiller ticked off the new functions: push e-mail, push calendar, push contacts and access to the company?s global address list.

That information, said Schiller, will sync with the e-mail client already included on the iPhone, with the phone?s calendar and with the address book that?s part of the phone function of the device. Those Apple-built apps will undoubtedly be tweaked to make them ActiveSync-aware, but from what Schiller said, the user experience won?t change.

What in iPhone 2.0 is aimed at my company?s IT department? Apple will also deliver a mass configuration utility in June that will let administrators set everything from password policies to VPN (virtual private network) options, and deliver certificates and individual e-mail server settings. According to Apple, enterprise IT staff will be able to send the configuration information via e-mail to users, or direct them to a Web site where they?ll grab them with the iPhone.

Other elements come courtesy of ActiveSync, which provides for remote wiping ? erasing the memory of a missing or stolen iPhone to keep sensitive information from reaching the wrong hands ? as well as establishing policies on password length and complexity.

Finally, separate enhancements in iPhone 2.0 will add support for Cisco IPsec VPN, which in turn offers encryption and certificate-based authentication, and offer WPA2 (Wi-Fi Protected Access 2) wireless security.

Whether the new enterprise bits in iPhone 2.0 are enough to tip the scales in Apple?s favor, some of the early reaction wasn?t exactly enthusiastic. Some analysts, for example, questioned whether the device?s security improvements were enough , while several senior IT executives were, at best, skeptical.

?I will believe it when I see it,? said George McQuillister, client computing architect at Pacific Gas and Electric Co. (PG&E) in San Francisco, in an interview last week.

The BlackBerry is the corporate smart phone of choice. Is Apple gunning for RIM? Apple executives have bandied about various stats. Jobs put up a slide that said the iPhone accounted for 28% of the smart phone market, second only to Research in Motion Ltd.?s BlackBerry, which leads all others with 41%.

But Apple never directly confronted the BlackBerry in the presentation. Instead, it gave it a couple of sideswipes.

?[These devices] do get push e-mail and push calendaring and contacts, and you think that they come from the servers in the [enterprise] environment, but they don?t. They first come from a network operations center that?s outside your firewall, it?s even outside the country for most people.

?That adds risk to reliability, as we?ve seen from time to time,? said Schiller, clearly referring to the RIM outage last month that cut off e-mail to most users for several hours.

Later, in the Q&A portion of the event, Jobs took a shot at RIM himself. ?Every e-mail goes through a NOC [network operations center] up in Canada,? the CEO said, according to a story posted Thursday by Forbes. ?That provides a single point of failure, but it also provides a very interesting security situation, where someone working up at that NOC could be potentially having a little look at your e-mail. Nobody seems to be focused on that. We certainly are. We think that a direct connection could be a little more secure.?

Enough about iPhone 2.0. I?m on board, but I don?t have $399. What are my options? Short answer: iPod touch.

(It?s appropriate that this question wraps up the FAQ, since Apple mentioned the iPod touch almost an afterthought last week.)

iPod touch, as a reminder, is the same size and shape as the iPhone, and the same inside too ? except it lacks the cell phone features, and thus access to AT&T?s cellular data network. Apple said that the iPod touch ? which currently sells in three models at $299, $399 and $499 ? will also get a 2.0 update in June.

Said update will, like the one aimed at the iPhone, add Exchange support and App Store. Two caveats, of course: the iPod touch will sync with the office?s Exchange server only when the device is in WiFi range of a hotspot, and iPod touch owners must fork over a not-yet-set fee for the upgrade.

That fee, Jobs explained, is required ? so Apple says, anyway ? because of the difference in how it accounts for iPod and iPhone revenues. The former?s full amount gets dropped onto the balance sheet when one is sold, while iPhone income is spread out over the multi-month span of the carrier contract (in the U.S., it?s 24 months ? the minimum service contract with AT&T).

Apple did something similar in mid-January when it released a major update for the iPhone and iPod touch; the former was free but the touch?s came with a $19.99 price tag.



The NEW Nokia N78

nokia-n781.jpgThe Nokia N78 is causing a stir at the moment by its solid feature set, more-so than the N96 which is amazing since it is classed as an entry level Nseries device!

With a wide range of mobile phones out in the market, you would be thinking it?s now doubly hard to look for an all-in-one mobile device that shows off the outstanding features of a real multimedia phone? at an affordable price. The latest addition to Nokia?s roster of savvy phones will defeat that thinking.

Here comes Nokia N78, the newest phone in town that will surely capture your heart and tastes. Nokia N78 is practically a multimedia pocket pc that brings together the latest technology of digital photography, sounds, usability and interactivity into one ultimate gizmo. The best part of it is that you can enjoy these top-notch wonders at the inexpensive price of a single package.

Now, Nokia N78 is a scaled-down version of the released Nokia N82 series. However, unlike Nokia N82 cell phone, Nokia N78 is not born to replace its predecessor. In fact, N82?s camera shoots at 5 megapixels while N78?s cam shoots at 3.2 megapixels.

Despite that, N78 still calls for celebration because it is packed with the most powerful mobile technologies and software?s that will fascinate you. N78 comes with A-GPS including Nokia Maps, WLAN and high-speed HSPDA 3G connectivity and 8 GB microSD support for your music and data files. The bonus is ?geo-tagging? of pictures and added FM transmitter.

Music is still superb, and remains to be the best feature as this is what the Nokia Nseries phones are designed for. However, the interesting part of this multimedia phone is that the integrated FM transmitter allows music to be played on any equipment that receives FM signals, such as the car or home radio. Not only that, N78 also comes with an Internet radio.

To sum up, the extra cool features of the N78 plus its new sleek design make it a distinct mobile phone that is worth keeping.

I think from what I have seen andread, the N78 is a sensible update to the popular N73 and it is great to see that Nokia are concentrating on improving and enhancing the software side of the device instead of cramming in evolutionary new hardware into the handset

A look at the Nokia N78 screen:

nokia-n78-2.jpg

The camera again without any mechanical form of protection:

 

nokia-n78-3.jpg



iPhone sales in the UK just under initial expectations

i-phone.jpg

The anticipated sales of the Apple iPhone in the UK fell just short of what O2 had expected. O2 is the mobile operator exclusive network for the Apple iPhone in the UK.

Shortly before the iPhone was released in the UK on November 9th, it was expected that sales would reach more than 200,000 models within just the first two months.

People who are familiar with the situation, however, said that the figures were closer to 190,000 for those first eight weeks.

This led the way to O2 overhauling the cost of using the iPhone within the first two months after its UK release. Due to the lower numbers, O2 has now promised iPhone owners who currently pay the lower tariff rates of ?35 and ?45 per month a much better package.

They also introduced a ?super-tier? contract that will set users back ?75 per month. This new contract will allow users to have up to three times more free calls and text messages for the same monthly price.

Users on this plan will enjoy 3,000 talk minutes and 500 text messages each month. The customers on the ?35 tariff will now receive 600 free monthly minutes of talk time instead of the original 200.

The company also stated that the ?55 monthly plan will be eliminated from their options, which will instantly move those customers on this plan currently to the new ?45 per month plan, which will give them the same features.

While the cost of the iPhone itself is not expected to drop below the ?269 that it currently costs, and the length of all contracts will remain at 18 months, O2 has stated that it is happy with the performance of the iPhone and that they expect all their existing customers to be more than satisfied with the monthly tariff changes.



ASUS ZX1 Lamborghini unveiled

While poking around the ASUS booth this morning we had a chance to witness the world premier unveiling of the ZX1 Lamborghini. We even took a few shots before it went under the glass. However, the real treat is the UI based on a Windows Mobile 6.1 core running special ASUS tweaks. It?s ?just like the iPhone? according to our friendly ASUS guide. The device is expected to fetch an unsubsidized ?1,000 ($1,500) price tag when this 3G world-phone launches in Europe this May. Maybe you?ll think it?s worth it when we get back to you in a few with a video of the GUI albeit sans all that Lamborghini theme nonsense. Essentially, we are looking at a 400MhZ QVGA smartphone with GPS and WiFi - nothing particularly interesting here.

Now it?s time for the real world photos ladies and gents it is my pleasure to introduce you the first photos of the Lamborghini-branded smartphone - ASUS ZX1 Lamborghini. The picture above ? and more after the jump ? were taken during the CeBIT which is currently taking place in Hanover, Germany. Now I can only hope this baby runs as fast as some Symbian phones do. Yeah, I love Symbian more than I do Windows Mobile, but the raging bull can make anyone switch platforms.



admin