Senin, 26 April 2010

BlackBerry Curve 8300


The moment you think about mobile e-mail, the first thing that would strike your mind would be Blackberry. It has created a special place for itself in this area. Though many of the other mobile phones such as Symbian and a lot of other well-known models have this feature, Blackberry has almost completely conquered it.



The moment you think about mobile e-mail, the first thing that would strike your mind would be Blackberry. It has created a special place for itself in this area. Though many of the other mobile phones such as Symbian and a lot of other well-known models have this feature, Blackberry has almost completely conquered it.

Trackball navigation:

Blackberry had been traditionally using the side mounted scroll wheel. In the past few Blackberry phone models, the side mounted scroll wheel has been replaced by a small pearl like round ball, which can be moved to make any navigation and , when pressed, it makes a selection. Since this navigational ball is placed right below the screen, this is well suited for both right handed and left handed people. It has made the four-way pad look lethargic and outdated. Since this navigational trackball looked like a pearl, the first Blackberry to come out with this was called as, Blackberry Pearl which was released in march 2007 and this series was followed by traditional style Blackberry 8800.



Stylish and light:

Coming to the model that we are to review, the BlackBerry Curve 8300, you might be wondering which feature of it must have given its name to be “Curve”. It is because, it has a smooth & curvaceous casing which has soft edges and feels smooth to hold in the user’s hand. The edges of the phone gives you a rubberised feel that allows you to grip the phone well Unlike the dirty blue, which most of us hated, the Blackberry Curve 8900 comes in a stylish silver colour. The silver and black theme has made Blackberry look more stylish than ever. It looks very compact and light weighted when compared to the other Blackberry models. Its dimensional specification seems to be 107 X 60 X 15.5 mm (H X W X D) and weighs 111.4 grams.


Good display:

RIM Blackberry Curve 8300 seems to be very user friendly. It has a colourful 2.5″ large screen that can display up to 650000 colours with a good resolution of 320 X 240 pixels. Since the display is light sensitive, it has the ability to adjust itself according to the lighting conditions in which it is used, which enables the user to view the display clearly and saves your battery too. The screen has a good wide viewing angle but is prone to glaring, which cannot be helped much.

The QWERTY keyboard:

Curve 8300 comes with a full QWERTY keyboard. This keyboard is of great use while typing in emails and messages. The QWERTY keyboard also has the numeric keys that are overlapped on a few of the alphabets which are having a black background. The subtle backlight provided to the keyboard is of great help as it indicates the spacing between the keys well. Blackberry has included the spell checker in its e-mail software for the first time ever, a feature that should have been included long time before.

The text entry yet, requires some amount of concentration. You would be first searching for a dedicated ‘@’ and period keys. But once you get used to it, we are sure that you will be typing swiftly.

Toy camera:

RIM had finally made up its mind to focus on the common people too and has provided the phone with a camera. Having a great deal of messaging and sharing features, the pictures taken using the camera can be shared swiftly. The camera has a resolution of two mega pixels and a LED flash. It has only basic features and images are miserable, suffering nasty colour tints, blurry detail and dull exposure. The media player is better, with tunes sounding acceptable, especially through decent headphones. Curve uses the standard 3.5mm headset and provides us with stereo earbuds.

Multimedia features:

As the BlackBerry Curve 8300 phone supports MP3, MIDI and polyphonic ring tones, you can now set ring tones and alert tones of your choice. The desktop software has also included a feature that lets you to copy multimedia on to Blackberry Curve. The Roxio software from Sonic included, which is the first time media manager for RIM also includes CD ripping, editing and media library management.

The voice activate call feature is a very interesting feature that allows you to make calls very easily. The Curve is much better at plain old voice calls, with a clear, crisp loudspeaker and much impressively, the voice dialling that actually works. You can just speak a phone number out loud, at a normal speed and with background noise, and the 8300 will usually recognise it. It is slightly less reliable on contact names from the phone book

Memory:

BlackBerry Curve 8300 smartphone comes with 64MB of internal flash memory and if this is not enough for your needs, then you may use the MicroSD slot of expand your phone’s memory. But the slot is placed under the battery cover near the SIM card, where it is a bit hard to handle.

The email and messaging support:

The email support that Blackberry Curve possess has complete document attach support which make practical mailing possible. Its features works well. But the blot is that the documents, media files and PDFs cannot create or edit files beyond the basic text memos. When the Blackberry internet service that was designed for the POP3 email customers, it certainly kept up to date with all the important emails, and unfortunately with the spams too. There is a way to prevent spams as it is very easy to delete the mails either using the device or the server. The speed will depend on the sender’s and your email servers and network coverage.

With the feature of instant messaging being available, you can easily chat with your contacts and even share photographs and tunes. That is, along with instant messaging you can also use the traditional SMS, MMS and Blackberry messenger too.



Connectivity:

Wireless transfers between devices is made possible with the Bluetooth technology and since the Curve supports it, you will be able to establish connection with another Bluetooth enabled device in seconds. It also has the EDGE technology which make high-speed data transfers possible, at almost thrice the speed of GPRS.

The Blackberry maps feature is available. The Bluetooth being built-in, with the help of the GPS antenna, you can forget your need for any other GPS device. But, since you can download the maps on the air, it does cost you.

Browser:

RIM Blackberry Curve 8300 Smartphone uses a HTML browser, allowing you to make use of the internet on a fly. A disappointing fact is that it cannot display full HTML emails and displays the text only version, the undesired one. Since the phone uses Quad band technology, international roaming has become possible.

Secure:

You can rest in peace of you have left your Curve outside because, it comes with password protection for additional security to save your confidential details from prying eyes. The keypad lock, as you know prevents accidental pressing of the keys on the mobile. All the day to day smartphone features are also available like that of the alarm clock, phone book, memo pad, task list and an organiser.

Battery:

It has a talk time of four hours and stand by time of about 408 hours which is really good for corporate people who go on long tours.

Verdict:

The Blackberry Curve 8300 is a highly capable device with a lot features aiming not only the corporate sectors but others too. The Curve 8300 has finally proved to be a good business tool and a great entertainer too. The absence of Wi-Fi and 3G cannot be really felt, but it would have been great if it was included too.

BlackBerry Bold 9700

Bold 9000 and 9700RIM's Bold 9700 (right) and the old Bold 9000

9700spec39700spec19700spec29700spec49700spec5

BlackBerry Bold 9000

  3G iPhone Killer - the BlackBerry Bold 9000 is now with various high-speed connectivities, such as HSDPA, EDGE, WiFi, Bluetooth etc



Power the passions you pursue with a smartphone that expresses your style and simplifies your life.
The BlackBerry® Bold™ smartphone embodies elegant design — without sacrificing the features or functionality you expect from a premium smartphone.

BlackBerry Bold 9000


Selasa, 06 April 2010

Sony NV-U75 GPS navigation system


SONY-nv-u75

Sony NV-U35 GPS navigation system



We haven’t heard much about the Sony NV (or Nav-U, whatever you want to call it) series lately. Well, Sony just came out with a multipurpose GPS navigation system called NV-U35 that is designed to be used in automobiles, on bicycles, or just on foot.
What makes Sony NV-U35 different than most other sat nav systems out there is that it has a direction recorder and is IPX5 water resistant. It does also include a digital compass.
Some other features of the new NV-U35 include the 3.5″ QVGA touch screen, 8GB of internal storage that can be used for various multimedia formats including support for audio, video, and still images…
It will be coming out in Japan mid March.

Sony Ericson Xperia x10



Log on to The Sony Ericsson Product Blog for more information: http://blogs.sonyericsson.com/products
The Sony Ericsson XPERIA X10 at a glance
Camera
  • 8.1 megapixel camera
  • Up to 16x digital zoom
  • Auto focus
  • Intelligent face recognition features
  • Geo tagging
  • Image and video stabilizer
  • Photo and video light
  • Send to web (photo and video upload)
  • Smile detection
  • Touch focus
  • Video recording
  • Recent shot tray
Music
  • Album art
  • Bluetooth™ stereo (A2DP)
  • Media player
  • Music tones (MP3/AAC)
  • PlayNow™
  • TrackID™
Web
  • Bookmarks
  • Google™ search (from standby)
  • Web feeds
  • WebKit web browser
Communication
  • Sony Ericsson Timescape™
  • Speakerphone
  • Vibrating alert
Messaging
  • Conversations
  • Email
  • Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync®
  • Picture messaging (MMS)
  • Predictive text input
  • Text messaging (SMS)
Design
  • Auto rotate
  • Gesture control
  • Picture wallpaper
  • Touchscreen
Entertainment
  • 3D games
  • Media browser
  • Infinite button
  • Video streaming
  • Video viewing
  • YouTube™
Organiser
  • Alarm clock
  • Calculator
  • Calendar
  • Flight mode
  • Infinite button
  • Office suite
  • Phone book with dialer
  • World clock
Location-based services
  • A-GPS
  • Google Maps™
  • Wisepilot™ turn-by-turn navigation* (free trial version)
  • *The service may not be available in every market. For more information, go to www.sonyericsson.wisepilot.com
Connectivity
  • 3.5 mm audio jack
  • Bluetooth™ technology
  • Micro USB connector
  • Synchronisation
  • USB support
  • Wi-Fi™
Preloaded applications
  • Sony Ericsson Timescape™
  • Sony Ericsson Mediascape
  • Sony Ericsson Home with clock widget
  • Sony Ericsson Sync
  • Android Market™ Client
  • Gmail™
  • Google Calendar™
  • Google Maps™ with Street View
  • Google Media Uploader
  • Google phone-top search
  • Google search widget
  • Google Talk™
  • Google Voice Search™
  • Network Location Provider
  • Set-up Wizard
  • YouTube™
Screen
  • 262,144 colour TFT touchscreen
  • 4.0 inches
  • 480 x 854 pixels (WVGA)
  • Scratch-resistant
Accessories
In-Box:
  • XPERIA™ X10
  • Battery
  • Stereo portable handsfree
  • 8 GB microSD™ card
  • Micro USB cable for charging, synchronisation and file transfer
  • User documentation
Optional:
  • Hi-Fi Wireless Headset with FM Radio MW600
  • Car Charger AN300
  • Screen Protector ET902
Facts 1)2)
  • Size: 119 x 63 x 13 mm
  • Weight: 135 grams
  • Phone memory: Up to 1 GB
  • Memory card support: microSD™
  • Memory card included: 8 GB
  • Operating system: Google™ Android Donut, version 1.6
  • Processor: 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon™ QSD8250
Availability and versions
  • Networks
  • UMTS HSPA 900/1700/2100
  • GSM GPRS/EDGE 850/900/1800/1900
  • UMTS HSPA 800/1900/2100
  • GSM GPRS/EDGE 850/900/1800/1900
  • Available in selected markets in Q1 2010
Colour
  • Sensuous Black
  • Luster White
se-xperia-x10

Nokia actually managed to keep a couple of surprises back for the start of Nokia World 2009, and the pick of the bunch is the new Nokia X6.

Despite being accompanied by a much cheaper little brother, the X6 managed to steal the show with some exciting new looks and the lovely title of being Nokia's fifth proper touch phone.

Nokia x6

This is clearly positioned as Nokia's flagship music device, as the manufacturer said that it would only be available as a Comes with Music device.

Nokia x6

Packing a whopping 36GB of memory out the box (32GB internal, 4GB on a microSD card) the X6 is a serious piece of kit for the music lover, and we reckon you'll probably fill your boots early on with loads of OTA music downloads.

The Nokia X6 is a pretty good phone to look at, with a sharp, angular chassis and a lovely chrome rim. It's packing the S60 5th edition OS, and with it, something of a first for Nokia.

Nokia x6

A capacitive screen, the first on a touchscreen phone from Nokia. We've seen it on the Samsung i8910HD, so proving it works on the platform, but up until now Nokia has been content to ply us with all manner of styluses to keep the resistive train going.

Nokia x6

The new screen, a 3.2-inch effort, is a lot, lot better than previous resistive options from Nokia (although bizarrely not as good as the N900) meaning that scrolling through things like contacts isn't actually a problem any more.

Nokia x6

We struggled terribly to swipe through the contact picture on our home screen with the 5530 XpressMusic recently, but the new X6 seems to have solved that problem nicely.

The phone itself is actually fairly chunky at 13.8mm thick (considering it doesn't have a keyboard) but isn't too bad in the pocket (putting it in there seemed to give the guy giving us the demo a few heart palpitations).
Nokia x6
It's essentially the same Symbian S60 5th edition OS we've been used to before, but with a few tweaks here and there. This means the decent scroll bars are back again, RSS feeds of friends via their contact details, but in the X6, the contact list features a larger thumbnail picture than usual (we know, it's not a big thing).
Nokia x6

The internet has been tweaked too - now a double tap will zoom you in, a triple tap will take you in even further, bouncing in and out in three steps with each prod.
The X6 also comes with three games 'designed exclusively for it' according to our stand bunny, although we think Asphalt 4 has already appeared on a number of other Nokia phones. Still, we liked the DJ Mix Tour game, even if it is a blatant rip off of Guitar Hero.

Nokia x6
Another neat option is the ability to choose a playlist of songs depending on your mood. You simply swipe a few slide bars up and down, for sad, long music or fast and happy tracks, and the phone will refresh and display these for you.

Nokia x6

The Nokia X6 apparently uses an internet database to work out which kind of song you're after, so if you don't have all the necessary metadata on the track, this feature might not work.

Nokia x6

The camera, another 5MP Carl Zeiss effort with dual LED flash, doesn't come with a lens cover, so you'll need to keep it safe in the pocket.

Nokia x6

For nearly £400, the Nokia X6 is a pricey device. It might have a million billion tracks available for download thanks to Comes with Music integration, but it will be interesting to see whether a capacitive touchscreen and a few very minor tweaks to the OS entice enough away from the likes of the 5800 XpressMusic or the Samsung i8910HD.
-techradar.com

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