Subscribe to RSS Subscribe to Comments

Smart Phones of today

LG launches CDMA LG10000

The competition for the iPhone seems to be getting hotter by the day. After a slew of releases by GSM band competitors now LG has launched a CDMA handset to compete with it. The LG10000 can be used on the Reliance mobile network in India. It is a clamshell model with a 2.8 inch touchscreen and QWERTY keyboard.

LG launches CDMA LG10000 to take on iPhone

The competition for the iPhone seems to be getting hotter by the day. After a slew of releases by GSM band competitors now LG has launched a CDMA handset to compete with it. The LG10000 can be used on the Reliance mobile network in India. It is a clamshell model with a 2.8 inch touchscreen and QWERTY keyboard.

It has a memory of 8 GB and a 2 megapixel camera. The phone is compatible with Microsoft Exchange Server and is capable of HTML browsing. It has 240 minutes of talk time and 480 minutes of standby time.

The phone has been in the US markets for some time now and is being sold as Voyager. It has been one of the main competitors to iPhone. The war for market share has shifted to India with this launch.



The Samsung Omnia review

Personally I’ve never been a fan of any Samsung mobile phones. But following the hype surrounding the Samsung Omnia mobile phone, I decided to write a simple yet concise review of this mobile phone. Before you read further, you might want to view the following video to get an idea of the features of this Samsung mobile phone.

The Samsung OMNIA is powered by Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional and comes packed with MS Office (PowerPoint, Excel, and Word). Even though the OMNIA is 100% touch screen, Samsung included an optical mouse for ease of navigation – the optical mouse is similar to what you?d find on laptops.

Also included on the OMNIA is a 5-megapixel CMOS camera with auto-focus (AF), face and smile detection and auto-panorama shot. OMNIA comes in 8 or 16GB memory configuration and additional storage can be added via extendable slot. Of course, a smart phone called OMNIA can?t go without having a GPS, including navigation and geo-tagging capabilities, so you?d never get lost wherever you are.
Some of the cool features of the Samsung Omnia are as follows: 7.2Mbps HSDPA 2100, quadband EDGE, 5 megapixel autofocus camera, 3.2-inch capacitive WQVGA touchscreen, GPS, Windows Mobile 6.1, WiFi, and 8 or 16GB of Flash with microSD expansion, all wrapped in a tight little brushed metal case. This mobile phone is definitely positioned as a premium product by Samsung.

Most mobile phones who have jumped into the WinMo bandwagon have offered various skins and customized menus to mask its primitive interface. Samsung has also provided its TouchWiz interface similar to the TouchFLO interface offered by HTC. But the menu buttons seem to be a tad too primitive. Luckily you can customize the skins according to your liking. There is also a mouse pointer offered in the phone which helps navigating around the menu quite easily. Only problem could be the narrow buttons of the QWERTY keyboard (which is a virtual keyboard). Could be quite a challenge with some of us with fat fingers.

Despite its shortcomings, the Samsung Omnia mobile phone definitely ranks well among other WinMo mobile phones. A true contender for the iPhone?



gPhone vs iPhone

Mobile phone manufacturers are starting to test prototypes and prepare an initial wave of handsets for FCC certification, with public sales likely late in 2008.

The arguments among software developers are starting to heat up as Apple gets its iPhone SDK (software development kit) ready to ship, while Google continues to revise its Android SDK. Android is Google?s software platform for smartphones.

On one side, AndroidGuys claims that the first generation of Android-powered smartphones will suffer from quality control problems, incomplete software and bugs. That?s probably true. Of course, iPhone had some initial issues right out of the box, too.

On the other side, droidworks counters with an important difference between the two platforms. Apple?s iPhone is a high-end smartphone that is tightly integrated with Mac software and iTunes.

The Android platform is based on open source software, and is highly scalable. We?ll see more Google Phones in India and China than iPhones, simply because Android is much cheaper to license and easier to deploy with inexpensive chipsets. There will be gPhones from a wide variety of manufacturers. Android phones do not require a full QWERTY keyboard or a touch screen, but the software will support these features if they?re included in the hardware.

Apple, on the other hand, will remain the sole brand for the iPhone.



Sizing Up The iPhone?s Competition

Samsung i900 OMNIA

First, the touchscreen. I?m fond of touchscreens, and the OMNIA?s touchscreen is good. It doesn?t come with a stylus (the Samsung people said it will come with a stylus, but the phone does not have a slot for one, so that?s doubtful; they did provide stylus during testing), so you have to use your fingers. The TouchWiz user interface is a Samsung custom UI for Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional. The icons are large enough so that you can easily point to the right icon. What I like about the custom UI is that Opera Mobile is available as an alternative to IE Mobile. This is a great addition. More on this later. Of course, you can revert to the traditional WinMO UI.

Haptic feedback is available, but I had it turned off, as I find it annoying. Basically, the phone vibrates every time you press an icon. It is not a useless feature, but as I have said, I am annoyed by haptic feedback, and I felt it is a waste of battery.

There is a mouse pointer that is controlled by an optical touch pad below the screen. It is like having a touchpad on a phone. I find it odd, but it has its uses.

The on-screen keyboard remains a lot to be desired; people with large fingers will have to get used to it. The keys are too narrow for the thumbs. That is why I think the lack of stylus is a drawback.

It has an accelerometer on board, so that when you turn the phone, the UI changes its orientation. The orientation can be sluggish when, for example, Opera Mobile is running and showing Plurk in mobile mode, for example. But that is hardware limitation, which is understandable.

Probably one of the best features of the phone is its camera. It has a 5-megapixel camera, though the flash is just LED. It has camera functions that are not found in other camera-enabled phones. For example, you can take a panoramic shot with the phone, and you can stitch up to 8 images for a panoramic shot IN THE PHONE. There are other helpful features for taking shots, and I think some of them are quite useful.

One problem that I had found with OMNIA is that it runs out of memory that fast. For example, using Task Manager, the apps that were currently running were Main Menu and Task Manager, which consumed less than 1MB of memory combined. But when I tried launching Camera, I got the insufficient memory error message. Good luck running the Camera app while Opera Mobile is loaded.

I have not tested the multimedia capabilities of the phone – these features are not on top of my preferences for a phone, and there were no available video files for viewing.

The phone is nice when held, though it is shiny and fingerprint magnet. It does not feel flimsy, and you will not be embarrassed to be seen using it. Heck, I?d want this as a phone, though the lack of stylus and keypad would make me pause.

HTC Touch Diamond

    What I like about the HTC Touch Diamond

  • At the outset, HTC is already pretty well-known for producing reliable and function-rich PDA phones.
  • It looks really sleek, with a glossy piano black surface and, as the tagline proclaims, is ?not too big, not too small?.
  • It runs on HSDPA for Internet connectivity and is the fastest you can get on mobile phones right now. I tried it. It?s really fast.
  • The interface is kinda like the iPhone. You can use your finger or the attached stylus to grab stuff on/off the screen.
  • It has a graphics processor! Which means watching videos on this phone is really sweet.
  • When surfing the net, you can zoom in to read passages of text and the phone automatically wraps the text for you so you don?t have to scroll left-right!! And the zooming is instantaneous, no waiting for the browser to reload the page.
  • It doesn?t allow external memory but has 4GB of storage, which I think is enough.
  • When you?re in a phone conversation and pull out your stylus, the phone automatically displays a notepad so you can take notes.
  • It has a built-in Google Maps GPS program so you will never need to get lost again!
    What I don?t like about the HTC Touch Diamond

  • The interface is kinda sluggish, with a 1-2 second delay, when you navigate the touch screen with your fingers. That problem seems to be minimised when you use the stylus, though.
  • HTC claims that it has an intuitive interface that mimics tasks you do daily so you won?t need to read a menu to learn how to use the phone. But I wouldn?t say it?s immediately intuitive. Like, when I wanted to scroll through the phone book to watch the nifty animation, I ended up calling some guy, instead. Then I couldn?t figure out how to stop the call and go back to the phone book.
  • It?s too expensive.

TALE OF THE TAPE:

Samsung i900 Omnia

  • 240?400 resolution
  • Touchscreen display with stylus support
  • 8GB internal hard drive
  • Display supports auto-rotation for apps and there is a TV-out function
  • GPS, WiFi 802.11b/g, Bluetooth 2.0 and GMS/EDGE
  • HTC Touch Diamond

  • 480 x 640 resolution
  • TouchFLO 3D finger swipe navigation
  • 4GB internal hard drive
  • 528 Mhz processor
  • GPS, WiFi 802.11b/g, Bluetooth 2.0 and EDGE
  • I?m interested to hear what you readers think about the competition. Has anyone tried these other smartphone? If so, I?d like to hear your opinion.



    iPhone Killer won’t be a phone

    Ever since iPhone?s launch there?s been a lot of flurry over the iPhone Killer, there?ve been plenty of Top 10 iPhone Killers lists. Every time a flagship product is launched or announced from leading handset manufacturers it?s touted to be the iPhone Killer.

    Unlike Motorola?s RAZR, iPhone will not be killed by another phone, simply because it?s not just a phone, it?s a platform with a kick-ass phone at the center and an ecosystem around it where developers can easily create and publish applications and users can easily download and use them. This is unprecedented in the mobile industry, never before has creation and distribution of applications been so simple. As Techcrunch?s Andy Merrett puts it

    The beauty of the iPhone is that you can add a collection of applications that uniquely identify you, and help you do the things you want when mobile

    True competition to iPhone will not come from another phone but from another platform like Google?s Android or Nokia?s Open Symbian.

    GigaOm captures the essence of this paradigm shift really well

    In this platform game, the winner is going to be the one that can attract the most developers

    And develpors love iPhone because it takes the operator out of the picture and gives them a platform where user engagement is 50 times more than any other platform because of the amazing user experience. Over 60 million iPhone apps were downloaded within one month of iPhone 3G?s launch, that?s a huge number to contend with.

    Not that others don?t realize this, Google?s Android Developer Challenge was aimed at luring developers to their platform. With 14 phones shipped every second, Nokia?s hard to ignore by developers due to sheer numbers, and although it has floundered a very big opportunity in the past it?s bound to come back with a vengeance with it?s Ovi strategy. Not to be outdone, Samsung plans it?s own Ovi type strategy.

    We?re in for some very interesting times. What do you think?



    admin