Friday, February 29, 2008

Video: Nokia N82 Review on G4TV



ZD|Net, which turned into ZD|TV, which changed into TechTV, which transformed into G4|TechTV and finally got hit in the face with a shovel to become G4 is an American television channel dedicated to computer hardware, gadgets, girls, videogames, cars, basically a channel for people who love gear. For an American channel to review a phone that isn't provided by an operator is amazing in it of itself, for the presenter to literally be drooling and saying "buy it, it's great" is a jolting shock to my senses after once living in the land of Emo kids cutting themselves with RAZR's to get their parents attention for $400 to buy an iPhone.


[Via: All About Symbian, Lonely Bob]


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International Trade Commission Will Not Review Administrative Law Judge?s Initial Determination In Patent Infringement Complaint Filed by Qualcomm Aga

SAN DIEGO, /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Qualcomm Incorporated (Nasdaq: QCOM), a leading developer and innovator of advanced wireless technologies and data solutions, announced that the International Trade Commission (ITC) will not review Administrative Law Judge Paul J. Luckern's initial determination (ID) that Nokia's GSM/GPRS/EDGE-only handsets (i.e., GSM/GPRS/EDGE handsets that do not also implement WCDMA) do not infringe three Qualcomm patents. The action relates to 2G products and
is not related to Nokia's WCDMA or "3G" products that are at issue in other cases. Qualcomm will decide whether to appeal the ITC decision to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Qualcomm filed a complaint against Nokia with the International Trade Commission in June 2006.

"While Qualcomm is disappointed with the Commission's decision, we are focusing on the recent consolidation of the arbitration with the case in Delaware. We believe that the consolidation will resolve many important contract disputes between Nokia and Qualcomm more quickly and efficiently," said Don Rosenberg, general counsel of Qualcomm. "The consolidation will bring these disputes before one of the most respected courts in the country and we are preparing for the tentative trial date of July 21, 2008."

Qualcomm Incorporated (http://www.qualcomm.com) is a leader in developing and delivering innovative digital wireless communications products and services based on CDMA and other advanced technologies. Headquartered in San Diego, Calif., Qualcomm is included in the S&P 500 Index and is a 2007 FORTUNE 500(R) company traded on The Nasdaq Stock Market(R) under the ticker symbol QCOM.




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S60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 2 and Nokia N78 preview


pic5_n78_eldar.jpg


Rafe Blandford from All About Symbian posted a preview of the Nokia N78 based on his limited time with the device at the Mobile World Congress. Eldar from Mobile-Review however has a prototype in his hands and posted his initial, Russian only, thoughts on it. Give it a few days to 1 week for the translation to occur.


Likewise since Eldar has the N78 he can also play around with S60 3.2 and has thus posted a massive preview of FP2 with tons of screenshots.


The last paragraph simply states, rough translation of course:


As a result, being repulsed from the base functionality FP2, it is possible to assert that today this is one of the most powerful platforms on the market for smartfonov, and soon its domination nothing threatens, nothing analogous "from the box" none of the producers thus far propose can.


Basically S60 3.2 kicks tons of ass and no smartphone platform comes close to competing with it.


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Geneva ?08 Preview Koenigsegg CCX and CCXR Edition

The Swedes seem to have a way of cutting through the hype. While its rivals call the special versions of their supercars things like "Hermes edition" and "Versace edition", Koenigsegg simply calls theirs the Edition. Too cold up there to tolerate fancy fashion labels tarting up their supercar.

Koenigsegg CCX and CCXR EditionKoenigsegg CCX and CCXR Edition-2It's been three months since we brought you the news of the Koenigsegg CCX and CCXR Edition, and the extra-special exotics will finally have their day in the spotlight as the Scandinavians make their way southwards to Geneva. As a quick refresher, the Edition models feature a twin-supercharged 4.8-liter V8, producing 888 hp in the CCX Edition and 1,018 hp in the ethanol-burning CCXR. Like Henry Ford said, you can have it in any color, as long as it's black: the Edition models come in bare carbon fiber, heavily lacquered to make it shine, with red accents for the ethanol version.

Extra equipment, from the carbon-fiber wheels to the rearview camera, come as standard, while special interior touches round out the package, including color-matched leather carpets and special instruments and controls. Only 14 CCX Editions will be made, and just 6 of the CCXR Edition, the first two of each already spoken for at over $2 million apiece with the first delivery taking place right under our noses at the Geneva show.

� Source: autoblog
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Geneva ?08 Preview Magna Steyr MILA Alpin concept

Three years ago, Magna Steyr debut what it called the Mila concept car -- Magna Innovation Lightweight Auto. Conceived as a pure driver's car, it was an environmentally-conscious single-seater that ran on natural gas up to 120 mph. Last year around this team, Magna followed up the Mila CNG with the Mila Future, a further evolution of the concept that bore two seats, completely covered wheels and an impossibly complicated folding hard top.

Magna Steyr MILA Alpin conceptMagna Steyr MILA Alpin concept-2For the next evolution of the MILA, Magna apparently thought that no one was serving the mountain climbing concept car market and stepped up to the challenge. The Mila Alpin is a chunky little off-road number that can climb 45-degree angles, runs on CNG, has 3+1 seating and what looks to be a seriously small turning radius. We hope the Magna stand in Geneva has a model Matterhorn so we can try it out.

� Source: autoblog
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Wednesday, February 27, 2008

HTC Touch Cruise gets reviewed

HTC Touch CruiseHTC's TouchFLO user interface offers the touch-based experience that Windows Mobile should have from the get-go. It's so good, in fact, that Microsoft will reportedly be working to improve the TouchFLO interface and integrate it more closely with upcoming versions of Windows Mobile.


The latest and greatest Windows Mobile 6.0 Professional smartphone to rock the TouchFLO goodness is the HTC Touch Cruise. With a Qualcomm MSM7200 CPU clocked at 400Mhz, 128MB RAM/256MB ROM, A-GPS, WiFi (802.11b/g), quad-band (850/900/1800/1900Mhz) GSM/EDGE radio, tri-band (850/1900/2100Mhz) HSDPA, Bluetooth 2.0, 3.0 megapixel camera, VGA video-call camera, and microSD card slot, the HTC Touch Cruise is more like an HTC TyTn II Kaiser (AT&T 8925 Tilt) than a sibling of the HTC Touch. Of course, this vertical sliding TouchFLO device is bigger in all regards than the HTC Touch, but still manages a svelteness that belies its dimensions.


HTC Touch Cruise review


HTC Touch Cruise review


Mobility Today has had some time to play with the device and they've posted a fairly succinct "first look" review. The highlights of the HTC Touch Cruise are the flush, 2.8-inch touchscreen (a nice departure from the recessed pressure-sensitive touchscreens that we're used to seeing), the rotating/scrolling navigation pad, strong signal quality and strength, and the feel of the device in the hand. The soft-touch finish gives the HTC Touch Cruise an elegant presence, while the GPS and HSDPA features make it a true power-player.


HTC Touch Cruise review


Overall, if you want the raw power of a flagship smartphone like the HTC TyTn II Kaiser, but don't want the bulk/weight or the QWERTY keyboard, then the HTC Touch Cruise is your best bet. In place of the QWERTY keyboard, you'll get a slimmer profile and the highly touted TouchFLO interface.


Head on over to Mobility Today for the full review.


[Via: Mobility Today]


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Review: Hello Kitty Mobile Phone Emergency Charger


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Deep inside every grunting, smelly, chest pounding man there exists a kitty who occasionally comes out to say Hello! My Hello Kitty fetish goes back, way back, to the days when my bed had Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles sheets. Elementary School was not an institution for learning, but an 8 hour strut on the cat walk for you to show off how many things you can possibly own with your favorite logo or cartoon character painted on.


Your Trapper Keeper had to match your book bag which had to match your shoes which had to match your shirt. Power Rangers one month, Ren and Stimpy the other, back then I had a sense of style so developed the ladies were practically buying me chocolate milk.


There was one click you couldn't mess with and that was the Asian girls with their Hello Kitty everything. The Kitty itself didn't represent anything, but the sheer fact that the brand was attached to so many objects, things I wouldn't even think about branding, made me sit down with my juice box and ponder at what new things could I stumble upon with that damn cat somewhere on the product.


As luck would have it a friend of mine went to Taiwan to celebrate the Chinese New Year with her family. I asked her nicely to get me something, anything Hello Kitty related.


She got me a phone charger.


Here is the front of the box, Kitty removed:


hello_kitty_front.jpg


The back:


hello_kitty_back.jpg


Inside there is a pouch that holds Kitty along with 3 cables, all having mini USB on one end and the plug on the other side being: Nokia, Sony Ericsson, mini USB:


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Here is the Kitty itself:


kitty_card.jpg


Where do you plug the mini USB cable? On the side of her head of course, quite disturbing:


kitty_head.jpg


Kitty is powered by 2 AAA batteries, which you can find at just about any shop, really handy if your phone died and you need to top it up:


kitty_aaa.jpg


The feet that detach are hard to put back on with just your bare hands, you'll need a blunt flat object, like a business card, to push the batteries down a millimeter or two for the feet to reattach. Here is Kitty charging my N95:


kitty_on_top.jpg


Notice her face? Her cheeks light up! Here is a close up:


kitty_light_up.jpg


How well does it work? If your phone is dead, and I've used this on my N82, you'll be able to get 2 bars of battery from 2 AAA batteries. Not a lot, but enough to make that emergency phone call or check up on that important email. Next week I'll be reviewing the Pro Porta Travel Survival Kit which has saved my butt more times than I care to count.


Thanks Carol.


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