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Tuesday, August 26, 2008Lenovo ThinkPad X200 Ultraportable Notebook ReviewPosted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | Personal_Computer | Consumer_Electronic_News | Personal_Computer_News | (0) Comments |
"It is obvious from its feature list that the X200 isn’t quite as advanced, in terms of its mechanical design, as the X300. Despite being of similar weight and size as the X300, the X200 doesn’t have an internal optical drive, nor is it as thin and it doesn’t even have a touchpad. It also sports a 12.1” screen like the X61, rather than the 13.3” LCD that the X300 is equipped with. However, the X200 isn’t lacking in its base hardware specification, that’s for sure. It incorporates all of the same communications, networking and connectivity options and features as the X300. In addition, it’s also built on Intel’s new Centrino 2 platform which offers support for the new Penryn-based Core 2 Duo mobile processor. The X200 is available with the Penryn P8000 series, which is an upgrade of the original Merom mobile Core 2 Duo processors and it offers 3MB L2 cache, a 1066MHz FSB, front-side bus throttling, and the SSE4 instruction set. Most impressive of all, it has a TDP of only 25W, 10W lower than Merom, despite packing more features and higher frequencies.” Hot Harware found the X200 to be an excellent value with excellent built quality. The X200 had great processor performance with a great battery life. The unit had good connectivity and plenty of features. On the dislike side of the fence they poo poo’d the lack of a touchpad and no built-in optical drive. Nokia announces U.S. 3G optimized N79, N85 and N96 Posted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Mobile_Phone_News | (0) Comments |
Today Nokia announced that it will be shipping three 3G optimized Nseries phones to the United States in the fourth quarter of 2008. The phones are: N79: featuring a 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics, 10 pre-loaded N-Gage games, FM transmitter, Xpress-On smart covers N85: featuring a 2.6” OLED screen, N-Gage gaming (with at least 10 games pre-loaded), music with integrated FM transmitter, 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics, Dual LED Flash, A-GPS (for geotagging and navigation), WiFi, and an 8GB microSD card N96: featuring a 2.8” screen, 16 gigabytes internal memory, built-in kick stand, expandable memory card slot, 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics, Wi-Fi, A-GPS, N-Gage games, and more HTC Expands Mobile Phone Portfolio With Introduction of S740 Posted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_Interest | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Windows_Mobile | Windows_Mobile_News | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Mobile_Phone_News | (0) Comments |
The S740 follows the sleek design of HTC’s Touch Diamond. This slim smartphone features a matt black facetted back, a 2.4 inch QVGA display and slide-out QWERTY keyboard, 7.2Mbps HSDPA on the 900 and 2100MHz bands, quadband EDGE, a 3.2-megapixel fixed focus cam, WiFi, GPS. All that run on Windows Mobile 6.1 Standard and a Qualcomm MSM7225, 528 MHz chipset.
The HTC S740 will be available across Europe from September 2008. [Press Release for the HTC S740]
NAVIGON Unveils New Premium 7200T GPS Device Posted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Mobile_Phone_News | (0) Comments |
The unit features a 4.3-inch, 16:9 touchscreen display, 2GB of flash storage, a SiRF GRF3i+ GPS chip, microSD card support, 64MB of RAM, powered by a Centrality Titan I 600MHz CPU. NAVIGON 7200T will sell for $449 (MSRP) in the U.S. and Canada. It hits stores shelves and online retailers in October 2008. Customers can already pre-order NAVIGON 7200T devices at Amazon.com. Wednesday, August 20, 2008HAI Now Shipping WL3 for Windows Home ServerPosted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Mobile_Phone_News | (0) Comments |
WL3 allows you to change your home’s temperatures, adjust the lights or security settings, or view any supported camera securely and easily. It also allows you to view cameras in your home of from public IP cameras around town, such as traffic and weather cameras. WL3 can also record video based on an event and/or send e-mails or text messages. Recorded videos and snapshots are categorized and can be viewed anytime you log in, locally or over the Internet. WL3 continually monitors your home and can inform you of events such as the alarm system being disarmed, or a car entering the garage. Furthermore, WL3 is customizable and allows you to change the user interface by applying different graphic and color schemes, add RSS feeds, weather, sports, news, personal blogs and more. WL3 will retail for $329 and requires an Ethernet enabled HAI home control system and a Windows Home Server. New unlocked Palm Treo Pro takes on Blackberry Posted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Palm | Windows_Mobile | Windows_Mobile_News | Palm_News | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Mobile_Phone_News | (0) Comments |
The Treo Pro smartphone, based on the Windows Mobile 6.1 platform with:
* One-touch Wi-Fi button—Easy, fast Wi-Fi connection experience (802.11b/g).(1)
It will be available in the United States in the fall through the Palm online store (http://www.palm.com/store) as well as select Internet, retail and enterprise resellers for a suggested retail price of $549. The U.S. version is unlocked and unsubsidized, simply insert your existing active SIM card and immediately start using their Treo Pro without a new contract.
Jobs reportedly acknowledges 3rd party app failure to launch issue Posted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Windows_Mobile | Windows_Mobile_News | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Mobile_Phone_News | (0) Comments |
Quote: "I actually still see the issue on my original iPhone, upgraded to the version 2.0.1 firmware and the reinstall method seems to work for me most of the time. I returned my iPhone 3G last week because I found it to be less stable than my other S60 and Windows Mobile devices who can handle 3rd party applications much better since they are now mature platforms. It seems that the iPhone update and 3G device were a bit rushed to market or else the testing with 3rd party applications was limited. I do look forward to a stable iPhone experience, but it seems we will have to wait until at least September to see such a device." On a related issue Mike Temporale of mobilejaw.com has this to say on WinMo 3rd party apps and stability. Quote:
"In my recent post about stability, I talked about Windows Mobile and how it is a stable platform. The source of all that instability is poorly written 3rd party applications. To help prove my point, I’m taking on the “No Reboot Challenge”. The idea is simple, no more reboots of my phone for any reason and let’s see how long I can go before it starts acting funny or crashing. Furthermore, I won’t be killing or stopping any process’s. I’ll leave that up to Windows Mobile and Microsoft to see if they truly know best when it comes to managing memory on the device. The only applications that I will close are ones that have an Exit option in the menu."
Monday, August 18, 2008iPhone vs iPhone 3GPosted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Mobile_Phone_News | (0) Comments |
Quote: "So your probably sitting back in your chair wondering “Why would you buy the new iPhone if you already have the old one?” Don’t worry, I’ve asked myself the same question. The lower price of $199 makes the iPhone extremely appealing to impulse buyers, however the additional $10 a month for the 3G iPhone plan cancels out the reduced price. Additionally the price of $199 is only available to those that are eligible for an upgrade, already own the original iPhone, or to those that want to sign up for a new contract. If you are stuck between a rock and a hard place, much like I was, on whether or not to upgrade from the older first generation iPhone to the new one, here’s my advice - don’t do it. The only new features are GPS (not even a real turn-by-turn GPS), and the 3G speeds, which eats up your battery. If I hadn’t signed the 2-year contract already with AT&T, I would go back to the old iPhone and save the $10 a month.” They seem to do a nice job of making the rundown of the two units, give it a read: iPhone vs iPhone 3G @ Techware Labs Wednesday, August 13, 2008Review: HTC Touch SmartphonePosted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Windows_Mobile | Windows_Mobile_News | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Mobile_Phone_News | (0) Comments |
Quote: Timing is everything. The HTC Touch was introduced on June 5th of last year, 24 days before the first iPhone launched in the US. The device bears great similarity to its cousin from Cupertino, from the simple, largely button-free hardware to an overall focus on operation with the fingers. Although the two devices look like they share some blood, I think that the Touch is special in its own right. HTC has put a great deal of thought into the design of the Touch, inside and out. They’ve written an entire UI modification suite that actually works the way it should, which is more than can be said for most manufacturers’ efforts in this area. At the end of the day, however, you may just have to look at what you need from a “smartphone,” because the Touch is definitely a different kind of Windows Mobile phone than what you’ve come to expect. That may be a good thing, though.
Read the full review of the HTC Touch Smartphone @ thetechlounge
Mobile Voice Search: Maximizing the Potential of Mobile Devices Posted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Consumer_Electronic_Aricles | General_PDA_Reviews | Mobile_Phone_Reviews | (0) Comments |
Clearly, recent advances in mobile technology are part of the answer. Today’s mobile devices have more computing power, more bandwidth, more storage capacity and many more services available than cell phones did just a few years ago. As a result, users can now download video content, watch streaming television broadcasts, and store thousands of songs and hundreds of movies on their mobile devices. Read More: Mobile Voice Search: Maximizing the Potential of Mobile Devices Infineon Chipset May Be Cause of IPhone 3G Issues Posted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Mobile_Phone_News | (0) Comments |
Quote: "Richard Windsor of Nomura published a research note… Tuesday singling out the iPhone 3G’s chipset, made by Infineon, as the probable culprit for the reception problems we reported on Monday. The dropped calls, service interruptions, and abrupt network switches experienced by iPhone 3G users reminded Windsor of similar complaints five years ago, when 3G phones were first launched in Europe. ‘We believe that these issues are typical of an immature chipset and radio protocol stack where we are almost certain that Infineon is the 3G supplier,’ Windsor wrote. ‘This is not surprising as the Infineon 3G chipset solution has never really been tested in the hands of users. Some people will not experience these problems as it is only in areas where the radio signal weakens that the immaturity of the stack really shows.’" Review: Willcom D4 (Sharp WS016SH) Posted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Personal_Computer | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Personal_Computer_News | (0) Comments |
OS: Windows Vista Home Premium
Check out pocketables Review: Willcom D4 (Sharp WS016SH)
Wednesday, August 06, 2008Bedol Introduces Eco-Friendly Clock That Operates With Only Water and SaltPosted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_Interest | Consumer_Electronic_News | Science | (0) Comments |
From the website: This new clock has a set of metal electrodes inside that extracts energy from the compound particles that reside in water. It uses water (and a dash of salt) and turns it into energy to power the clock. Sooo it’s like a chubby AA battery then. Not bad for $16 I guess. http://www.bedolwhatsnext.com/clocks-waterpowered-clock-c-89_199.html Tuesday, August 05, 2008Warcarting: wardriving on a budgetPosted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_Interest | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Personal_Computer | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Personal_Computer_News | Mobile_Phone_News | Science | (0) Comments |
From the project page: To understand the Warcart requires one understand a bit of history first. Wardriving, that is, driving with a laptop computer and tracking WiFi access points, first became popular around 2001. Within a short time span, people invented warwalking, and millions flocked to walk the streets with a laptop and WiFi card in hand. Then the craze really took off when someone flew a Cessna airplane with a laptop and became the first warflyer. Within no time at all, the press and every tech blog on the internet was covering the latest war-something. There was warrocketing, warballooning, warbiking, and warboating. There were talks and seminars. News stories and blog posts. Television reports and radio shows. All about the latest in WiFi tracking. It soon became apparent to the larger community that most of these methods are highly elitist. Here are car-driving, personal-plane-owning, leisure-hot-air-ballooning, yachting aficionados armed with laptop computers. What the world needed was a low-cost, yet powerful alternative. And thus, (mostly as a joke and for reasons that will be disclosed in this talk at Defcon 16), the Warcart was born. Monday, August 04, 2008New Wave of LiMo Handsets Feature Unique Mobile Experiences and ServicesPosted by Bill Landon in Consumer_Electronics | General_PDA | Mobile_Phones | Consumer_Electronic_News | General_PDA_News | Mobile_Phone_News | (0) Comments |
* MOTOZINE ZN5 from Motorola;
Several of the latest LiMo handsets include advanced enabling features that herald the forthcoming Mobile 2.0 experience for global consumers. These include international 3G/High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) roaming capabilities, Global Positioning System (GPS), mobile TV and advanced video streaming, secure payment and advanced mail functionalities - all presented through higher-resolution displays and intuitive user interfaces.
More details on the new LiMo devices can be found through the Handsets section of http://www.limofoundation.org
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