Saturday, January 10, 2009

Nokia 5710 Music Xpress

Nokia 5710 Music Xpress




Nokia 5710 XpressMusic made another early appearance - this time on the Nokia US website. It still looks just the same as the swivelling 5700, but upgrades its specs. We hope the curtain will fall soon and there will be an official announcement.

Nokia 5710 XpressMusic, the successor of the popular 5700, has been spotted on the Nokia USA official web page. On the small banner we can see the long time rumored picture of the handset. The design is similar to its predecessor with the swiveling two-faced keyboard. The black body color and blue outlines make it quite similar to the Nokia 5700 Transformers edition.

Increasing rumors online in the past few months show that the primary upgrades of the Nokia 5710 include a 3.2 megapixel camera with autofocus and LED flash and GPS functionality.

Sony Ericsson W508 Walkman

The Sony Ericsson W508 is a Walkman clamshell that comes with eight interchangeable StyleUp covers (one extra cover included in the retail pack) plus the well-known Walkman features such as external music keys, Shake control, SenseMe and TrackID. The built-in accelerometer also allows for screen auto rotation and motion gaming.



Additionally, the nice looking W508 comes with Gesture control much like the Sony Ericsson W380. Gesture control allows you to mute calls or silence the wake-up alarm with a wave of your hand.

The Sony Ericsson W508 has a 2.2-inch QVGA main display plus a monochromatic scratch-resistant 1.1-inch external OLED one with a resolution of 128 x 36 pixels. The device is also supposed to offer 24 hours of constant music playback. Threaded SMS/MMS (conversation style messaging) is also included as with all other Sony Ericsson phones announced today.

A 3.2 megapixel fixed focus camera, quad-band GSM support, HSDPA, FM radio with RDS and 1GB M2 card completes the Sony Ericsson W508 spec sheet.





The Sony Ericsson W508 is expected to hit the market from Q2 2009 in both Metal Grey and Poetic White color versions. In either version it will have one extra Style-Up cover in one of eight the available colors: Sunny Orange, Forest Green, Architectural Purple, Mysterious Graffiti, Midnight Summer, Splashed Art, Radial Blue or Street Hip-hop.

[via: gsmarena]

Thursday, January 08, 2009

The Sony Ericsson W715



Sony Ericsson are making a big announcement today. The Sony Ericsson W715 is a Wi-Fi/GPS-enabled slider made exclusively for Vodafone, while the Sony Ericsson W508 is a Walkman clamshell with 3 megapixel snapper plus Shake and Gesture control.

The Sony Ericsson W715 Walkman phone is practically identical to the Sony Ericsson G705 that we already reviewed. Wi-Fi (with DLNA), GPS receiver, a 3 megapixel snapper with geotagging and an accelerometer that allows for auto screen rotation and motion gaming are its main selling points.

Additionally, the W715 is loaded with Walkman goodies such as the latest Walkman music player, TrackID, SenseMe and Shake control. Threaded SMS/MMS (conversation style messaging) is among the latest Sony Ericsson features that's also on board the W715.

As we already said, the Sony Ericsson W715 is made exclusively for Vodafone and uses their turn-by-turn navigation solution called Vodafone Find&Go (as well as Google Maps).

The Sony Ericsson W715 has quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support plus dual-band UMTS/HSPA 9100/1200 connectivity.

The Vodafone exclusive Sony Ericsson W715 will be available in Galactic Black and Luxury Silver. Country availability is yet to be announced.

Sony Ericsson C905: tender rose color

Sony Ericsson C905





Sony Ericsson C905
The other news today is the new Tender Rose color version of Sony Ericsson C905 that seems especially fit for the ladies.

This novelty however is nothing special compared to the expected software update for the 8-megapixel Sony Ericsson C905, which adds quite some new functionality to the popular cameraphone. The changes include:
  • Smile Shutter
  • YouTube client
  • Wayfinder Navigator 8 (as opposed to the original ver. 7)
  • Threaded SMS/MMS (conversation style)
  • Snapfish wireless printing application by HP

The new software update for the Sony Ericsson C905 will be available from mid-February 2009. Users will be able to upgrade the device by themselves by simply downloading the needed files from Sony Ericsson website.

[via: gsmarena]

Sony Ericsson C510

Sony Ericsson C510





The new Sony Ericsson C510 is dubbed as the most affordable Cyber-shot to date - it has a 3 megapixel camera, imaging shortcuts and Face detection plus Smile Shutter. The Sony Ericsson C905 is also getting the Smile Shutter treatment via a software update that should be available somewhere in February 2009. A new color version for the 8 megapixel C905 is also made available for the ladies.

The Sony Ericsson C510 Cyber-shot has a 2.2-inch QVGA scratch-resistant display, quad-band GSM support plus tri-band UMTS/HSPA connectivity. On board there's an accelerometer for auto screen rotation and motion gaming plus an M2 memory card slot and stereo Bluetooth. Threaded SMS/MMS (conversation style messaging) is among the latest Sony Ericsson features that's also on board the C510.

The C510 metallic-looking body has a 12.5mm of thickness and the sliding camera cover makes a bold statement about its imaging capabilities.

Meant as an affordable cameraphone, the Sony Ericsson C510 has a 3 megapixel auto focus camera with Face detection and Smile shutter. There's no xenon flash as you might have guessed it (only a LED one) and you can get geotagging but only by cell triangulation, as there's no actual GPS receiver in there.

The Sony Ericsson C510 Cyber-shot will be available Q1 2009 in Future Black and Radiation Silver.

[via: gsmarena]

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Motorola W233

Motorola W233




Motorola W233
The last announced phone is the Motorola W233 Renew. It is the first environmentally friendly handset by Motorola, having a body made of recycled plastic bottles.
Other than that the phone has very limited functionality including dual-band GSM support, miniUSB connectivity and a 65K color CSTN display with a resolution of 128 x 128 pixels. There is also support for memory cards up to 2GB.

Motorola W233 Renew will be available for environmental-conscious users to grab starting from the beginning of Q1 2009 presumably through T-Mobile USA.

[via: gsmarena]

Motorola VA76r


Motorola VA76r


The clamshell Motorola VA76r or otherwise known as Motorola Tundra (wasn't that a Toyota in the first place), offers midrange functionality and is going to be exclusive to AT&T. It's a ruggedized device that has been certified to MIL-STD 810F US military standard for resistance to rain, shock, vibration, dust, humidity, salt fog and extreme temperatures much like most Panasonic Toughbooks, Sonim XP1 and XP3, and Verizon's Casio G'zOne Type-V mobile phone.

The Tundra VA76r comes with a 2.2" 262K color QVGA main display and an 1.05" external one with a resolution of 96x80 pixels. Having quad-band GSM support makes it capable of worldwide roaming but the dual band UMTS with HSDPA support has limited usage outside the US.

The other more important features of Motorola VA76r include a 2 megapixel fixed-focus snapper, USB and Bluetooth connectivity, 100 MB of internal memory and a microSD card slot. It also comes with AT&T Navigator and supports all of its location-based services.

The Motorola VA76r will become available via AT&T starting from January 13th at 200 US dollars after a $50 mail-in-rebate.

[via: gsmarena]

Motorola A3100




Motorola A3100

With only two days left before the start of CES 2009 Motorola gave its fans a reason to be looking forward to it. The American company announced three new handsets that are going to make their first public appearance at the event.

The WinMo-powered fully touch-enabled Motorola A3100, previously leaked as Attila, is definitely the most interesting of the bunch. The other two offerings are the AT&T-exclusive rugged-looking VA76r and the W233 Renew that has a body made entirely of recycled plastic water bottles.

Motorola A3100 nicknamed MOTOSURF, runs on the Windows Mobile 6.1 Pro and supports quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE and tri-band UMTS (with HSDPA). It sports a 2.8" QVGA display and a 3 megapixel autofocus camera.

The A3100 MOTOSURF utilizes the all too familiar MSM7201A Qualcomm chipset and has 128 MB of RAM. There is also a microSD card slot for expanding the built-in flash memory of 512MB with up to 16 GB. The other highlights of Motorola A3100 include Wi-Fi, GPS, USB v2.0 and Bluetooth.

Motorola A3100 is expected to be available in selected markets by the end of Q1 2009.

[via: gsmarena]

Monday, January 05, 2009

Nokia Morph concept phone

Nokia Morph concept phone



Launched alongside The Museum of Modern Art “Design and The Elastic Mind” exhibition, the Morph concept device is a bridge between highly advanced technologies and their potential benefits to end-users. This device concept showcases some revolutionary leaps being explored by Nokia Research Center (NRC) in collaboration with the Cambridge Nanoscience Centre (United Kingdom) – nanoscale technologies that will potentially create a world of radically different devices that open up an entirely new spectrum of possibilities.

Morph concept technologies might create fantastic opportunities for mobile devices:

  • Newly-enabled flexible and transparent materials blend more seamlessly with the way we live
  • Devices become self-cleaning and self-preserving
  • Transparent electronics offering an entirely new aesthetic dimension
  • Built-in solar absorption might charge a device, whilst batteries become smaller, longer lasting and faster to charge
  • Integrated sensors might allow us to learn more about the environment around us, empowering us to make better choices

In addition to the advances above, the integrated electronics shown in the Morph concept could cost less and include more functionality in a much smaller space, even as interfaces are simplified and usability is enhanced. All of these new capabilities will unleash new applications and services that will allow us to communicate and interact in unprecedented ways.

Flexible & Changing DesignMorph Phone Operating

Nanotechnology enables materials and components that are flexible, stretchable, transparent and remarkably strong. Fibril proteins are woven into a three dimensional mesh that reinforces thin elastic structures. Using the same principle behind spider silk, this elasticity enables the device to literally change shapes and configure itself to adapt to the task at hand.

A folded design would fit easily in a pocket and could lend itself ergonomically to being used as a traditional handset. An unfolded larger design could display more detailed information, and incorporate input devices such as keyboards and touch pads.

Even integrated electronics, from interconnects to sensors, could share these flexible properties. Further, utilization of biodegradable materials might make production and recycling of devices easier and ecologically friendly.

Self-Cleaning

Nanotechnology also can be leveraged to create self-cleaning surfaces on mobile devices, ultimately reducing corrosion, wear and improving longevity. Nanostructured surfaces, such as “Nanoflowers” naturally repel water, dirt, and even fingerprints utilizing effects also seen in natural systems.

Advanced Power Sources

Nanotechnology holds out the possibility that the surface of a device will become a natural source of energy via a covering of “Nanograss” structures that harvest solar power. At the same time new high energy density storage materials allow batteries to become smaller and thinner, while also quicker to recharge and able to endure more charging cycles.

Sensing The Environment

Nanosensors would empower users to examine the environment around them in completely new ways, from analyzing air pollution, to gaining insight into bio-chemical traces and processes. New capabilities might be as complex as helping us monitor evolving conditions in the quality of our surroundings, or as simple as knowing if the fruit we are about to enjoy should be washed before we eat it. Our ability to tune into our environment in these ways can help us make key decisions that guide our daily actions and ultimately can enhance our health.

[via nokia]

Nokia E63 vs E71 in pictures! (side by side)


You can check it out here

[Via: momworld]

5 things love and hate about the Nokia 5800 - by the guru

The symbian guru has publishes 5 things he loves and hates about the Nokia 5800.

It's a good read.

The 5800 XpressMusic Goes On Sale In India



As of a few hours ago the much awaited Nokia 5800 Xpress Music handset has gone on sale in India at price fluctuating between Rs. 20-22,000 (450$) depending on the dealer and region. To reflect this development, the Nokia India website has also switched from displaying ‘Soon your touch will play music’ to the above - NOW!

The handset comes bundled with a pair of Sennheiser LX90 earphones (pictured above) and the retail package contains the headset, data cable, TV-out cable, carrying case, Video Stand, a 8 GB microSD, a plectrum chord and the usual contents. The 5800 also comes packed with over 250 tracks.

The above begs the question, are you getting your’s? I meanwhile will try to get my hands on it as soon as possible. If you have already gotten your’s please share your experiences with the ‘Tube’.

[via: thesymbianblog]

Friday, January 02, 2009

Nokia 8800 Princess Edition


Goldstriker announced a new member of its luxury family. It’s the beautiful Nokia 8800 Princess Edition which will go on sale in the Colette store in Paris in January 2009.

There is, however, some reasoning beyond the price. The custom-made Nokia 8800 will boast 8.2 carats of diamonds on the front and rear, solid platinum finish and will be housed in a handmade, leather-lined, granite or marble box.

Specs wise, the Princess Edition is identical to the original 8800, but I guess tech features are not what potential buyers of this piece of jewelry are looking at, anyway.

Finally, you may want to know about the price, you ask (or not)? It’s 12,000 GBP, which may sound kinda steep, but the end result will make you bling no matter where you happen to be.

[via: intomobile]

A year of stress test for the Nokia N95



zomgitscj has published his stress test of an entire year of the Nokia N95. You can check it out here

Nokia 5800 Music Express damage testing by Erazer007



Erazer007 has published Damage testing for the new Nokia 5800 Music Express.

You can check out the whole article here.

Nokia 5800 stress test extreme!

Symbian-freak has published an extreme stress test of the new Nokia 5800. Check it out

Click here

Thursday, January 01, 2009

Nokia 2228 Lightweight Phone has Flashing LED Indicator

Nokia today announced its 2228 handset, a slender monoblock device that combines an ultra lightweight design with an LED indicator.

The 2228 has an integrated 1.3-megapixel camera and built-in media player. It comes with speaker dependent voice recognition, an integrated handsfree speaker and can be used as a modem to connect to a PC for Internet access.

The design features a unique lanyard hole and LED indicator that flashes with incoming calls or messages waiting. It "pulses" in cycles at user-defined intervals, allowing users to always see if any messages await them.

The Nokia 2228 is expected to launch in select CDMA markets in the fourth quarter of 2008.

[Source: Mobiledia]