Archive for 2009

By January 27, 2009 Read More →

Samsung to release new Windows Mobile handsets

Our friends over at eXpansys have just given us some news about several new handsets that Samsung are planning to release ‘early in 2009’. The lineup will apparently include two new Windows Mobile devices and one, the Samsung ‘Pivot’ aims to be among the first devices to be powered by WM 6.5!

There isn’t much information to be had at the moment but the key features are listed below. We’re trying to find out more at the moment!

 

Samsung B2100 

A follow up from the Samsung Solid M110, the Samsung B2100 shares many of the same features with the older B2700 but skips the 3G, flash and pedometer features. Like the B2700 it will be IP54 certified, adding to its “tough phone” credentials.

Samsung_B2100

Samsung B2100

 

Samsung Louve (Code Name)

Looking very much like a TyTN II and running Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional. A 3.2 MP camera and tilting screen with a customised interface (like the widgets found on the i900) the Louve looks like an interesting handset.

louve-pivot

Could the Samsung Louve look something like this?

 

Samsung Pivot (Code Name)

A follow up to the Samsung i780, the Pivot will be one of the first handsets to feature Windows Mobile 6.5. On board you’ll find a 5MP camera, QWERTY thumb board, LED flash, AGPS, Bluetooth, Wifi and host of other features.

 

Posted by: Matt

Posted in: Phones
By January 27, 2009 Read More →

LG’s modular Versa is coming for Verizon

image LG’s Versa is a simple slab touchscreen device with a neat twist. It has all the bells and whistle’s that would expect in a high end touchscreen phone. Including a  3 inch WQVGA screen, EVDO, and Bluetooth. The difference with this phone, is its modular accessories. In what may be a first for any carrier subsidized phone in the USA, there is an available detached QWERTY thumbboard, with other modular additions possible, including a game pad. The add-on potentials don’t stop there. I could imagine a speaker add-on too.

This isn’t the first time something like this has been proposed. Including an iPhone case, and the theoretically already available zzzPhone (this phone even includes a projector module). These new concepts are exciting for their future potential, call me old fashioned, but I still prefer my keyboard attached to the phone.

The Versa may be available as soon as February.

Source: MobileBurn

Posted in: Phones
By January 26, 2009 Read More →

Windows Mobile 18 month plan

image Microsoft’s Andy Lees has been talking at length to CNET News about the future for Windows Mobile and as we expected the big changes we all want for the platform won’t appear until Windows Mobile 7 which will be seen in 2010 at the earliest. The upcoming 6.5 update will be a pacifier to provide more of a cosmetic update whilst the OS is re-written from the ground up. According to Andy, Microsoft embarked on a new strategy some time ago that will come to fruition over the next 18 months. The first steps in that strategy, he said, will be announced at the Mobile World Congress conference that takes place in Barcelona in the middle of next month.  "You are going to see a bunch of announcements at Mobile World Congress but also it is going to be the beginning of a 12-18 month period where you are going to see a whole bunch of different stuff," Lees said.

Posted in: Phones
By January 26, 2009 Read More →

ForPlay for iPhone released

fpad ForPlay is an application designed to be a bit of fun for couples. If you can remember the game love dice then this is what this application is all about but obviously without the dice. Basically you take it in turns to spin the three dials by a button press or a shake of the iPhone, when they stop you have a three word challenge you then have to perform with your partner. It’s a little bit of fun to get you in the mood for some love.

Posted in: Phones
By January 26, 2009 Read More →

Palm Pre Facebook Q & A

image Palm’s Matt Crowley (Product Manager) is currently holding a questions and answer session on Facebook and its not too late to get your question to him as it is open until the 28th of this month. So far some of topics being answered have been about the lack of storage expansion and the reasons behind the decision, how good is the Pre for one handed operation, what type of USB interface the Pre has and also will turn by turn navigation be available from launch. You can visit the Facebook page here but you have to be a Facebook user to post a question.

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Posted in: Phones
By January 26, 2009 Read More →

The Art of Smart

Orange and Blackberry have come up with an excellent and unique promotional video competition; ‘The Art Of Smart’.

artofsmart 

 

Through a series of videos you have to decide how and when to use your Blackberry to get your date and reach your destination. It’s a little weird but very well put together and showcases what you can do with your Blackberry.

You can handle a smartphone, but can you handle this challenge? You need to get to Paris. You have to decide the smart move to make. And all you have to fall back on is your wits and the BlackBerry® smartphone. For your chance to win click here to play: www.artofsmartchallenge.co.uk

Prizes include Xbox 360 consoles and Weekend Trips to Paris so it’s well worth a go!

 

Posted by: Matt

Posted in: Competitions
By January 25, 2009 Read More →

Windows Mobile 6.5 Beta video on HTC Blue Angel

b86bc418de4df32f6ac3e00e2a39909c Sun_dream over at XDA Developers has uploaded a ROM and some videos of Windows Mobile 6.5 running on an HTC Blue Angel. Both videos give you a small idea of how the interface works however the ROM is not a fully operational ROM. Videos after the break.

Posted in: Phones
By January 25, 2009 Read More →

Windows Mobile 6.5 Beta for Touch Pro/Fuze

pic11-thumbXDA-developers also has a treat for those with the lovely HTC Touch Pro/Fuze/Raphael device. From the screen shots it looks like the today screen is going to be more along the lines of Windows Mobile Standard with the HTC modifications. Will be interesting seeing video emerge with more of the feature set. Screen shots after the break.

Posted in: Phones
By January 25, 2009 Read More →

Nokia N79 review

You may have seen my Nokia N85 review recently. The N79 and N85 are basically the same phone in different cases. The N79 is a mono block phone; the N85 is a Dual Slider. The two of them came to us as pair to review, so rather than simply repeat ourselves here we thought we would highlight the differences for you. And since they are built on the latest Nokia S60 Operating System, in this review we look at the advanced email connectivity in a bit more depth.

n79_angled

The Nokia N79

 

Unless mentioned below the Nokia N85 and Nokia N79 specifications are the same:

The main differences between the two are:

  • N79 is a Mono Block / Bar phone, the N85 a Dual Slider
  • N79 supplied with 4Gb MicroSD, the N85 supplied with 8Gb MicroSD
  • N79 supplied with 3 different coloured back plates.
  • N79 not supplied with TV Out Cables.
  • N85 has dedicated buttons for Media Player/ Game Play.
  • N79 has a standard backlit screen, not OLED.

 

What’s in the box?

The phone, a 4Gb MicroSD card. Mains charger, USB data cable. Ear phones, wired remote controller for the MP3 player. Manuals, software DVD, and an Activation code to enable one Trial game to the full game. Blue, green and bronze Xpress-on smart covers. Check out Matt’s Nokia N79 unboxing video for more information.

Nokia N79 Specification:

  • Dimensions: – 110 x 49 x 15mm
  • Weight: 97g
  • Battery: – Talk Time: 330 mins
    – Standby Time: 406 hrs
    – Music Playback: 29 hrs
    – Video Playback: 264 mins
    – Capacity: 1200 mAh
  • Display: – 240 x 320 pixels/2.4 inch (Main)
  • Network: – GSM: 850/900/1800/1900 (Quad-Band)
    – WCDMA: 900/2100 HSDPA (Dual-Band)
  • Camera: – 5 mega-pixels (auto-focus) (Main)
    – 0.3 mega-pixels (Secondary)
    – 20 x Digital Zoom
    – Dual LED Flash
    – Red Eye Reduction
    – Geo Tagging
  • Video: – Hi-Resolution VGA Video Recording
    – 30fps Video Recording
    – 8 x Digital Zoom
    – Video Light
  • Music: – Supported formats: MP3, AAC, eAAC, eAAC+ & WMA
    – FM Stereo Radio
    – Visual Radio
    – Nokia Music Store
    – Nokia Podcast Support
    – Nokia Music Manager Support
    – Windows Media Player Sync
    – 3D Effect Stereo Speakers
  • Ringtones: – Monophonic
    – Polyphonic (64)
    – MP3
    – AAC
    – Talking Ringtones
    – Video Ringtones
  • Messaging: – SMS
    – MMS (with video)
    – E-mail (POP3, SMTP, IMAP4, MS Exchange)
  • Memory: – Phone Book (unlimited)
    – Dialled Calls (30)
    – Missed Calls (30)
    – Received Calls (30)
    – 50MB (internal)
    – microSDHC (external)
  • Connectivity: – microUSB
    – Nokia 3.5mm AV connector
    – Bluetooth (2.0)
    – Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11g)
    – GPRS Class 32
    – HSDPA (3.6 Mbits)
  • Navigation: – AGPS

 

Full specification can be found on the Nokia website.

 

General

On the front the N79 has the standard 12 key phone pad plus 7 function buttons and the Nokia NaviWheel.

n79_main

Nokia N79 front view

 

On the left side a mini Nokia charging socket and a cover protecting the memory card slot and MicroUSB socket.

n79_left

Nokia N79 left side

 

On the right side, speaker grills, volume control and camera button.

n79_right

Nokia N79 right side

 

On the top the power button, a manual slide to enable and disable the keyboard lock and a multifunction 3.5mm socket that accepts standard stereo headphones or Nokia’s remote control (supplied) or the Nokia TV Out cable (not supplied).

n79_top

Nokia N79 top view

 

On the back the 5Mpixel camera and the twin LED flash/video light. The whole back cover removes to change the battery and fit the Sim.

n79_back 

Nokia N79 back view

 

 

Which to choose?

It’s really personal preference here. Both phones are nicely made and look great. The N79 has different coloured back plates which also automatically change the colour of the display theme, so if you fit a green back cover, a little connection on the cover sets the phones display theme to a mostly green style to match, some people will love this, some people will just think it’s a nuisance to keep extra bits of phone around the house… I liked the red one, but it wasn’t supplied with our test phone. It is possible to buy a red or silver one separately from Nokia’s website.

The N85 certainly looks dark and impressive when closed and the extra few Media Player buttons helped when using it as a MP3 player, but despite the slick lines of the N85, personally I preferred the simplicity of the mono block N79 over the Dual Slide action.

Price difference? Web prices for the N79 are about £20 less than the N85, but the N79 has a smaller Memory card, a standard backlit screen rather than the N85’s OLED and doesn’t ship with a TV Out cable.

Review

These phones aren’t just pretty fashion items; they really are advanced pieces of engineering. The S60 Operating system is common to the N96 flagship model and even the N97 Communicator. So the GPS receiver is an Assisted Global Satellite Positioning receiver (AGPS) meaning it’s integrated with the phones internet connectivity to give faster response and more features to the Mapping software. The N-Gage games can network with other players over the internet. The phone itself and many of its applications can update with bug fixes and or new features directly from the Nokia website.

All very good! But for me, I was interested to see what it could do with email. I send and receive a lot of email, and these days most of it from my phone. In my computer support role I have seen many people moving to mobile email in one form or another. It’s clear, as devices improve and data charges fall that this trend will escalate in the coming months. Currently though I see comparatively few Nokia phones used for remote email, strange as years back it was Nokia that first wowed us with the early Communicators and their fold up QWERTY keyboards. I still have one somewhere.

The N79 (and N85) support POP and IMAP email which are the basic email account formats. They don’t (yet) support HTML email, like Hotmail and Yahoo. Though Yahoo may have a POP option for a few pounds a year. I couldn’t see a Blackberry client either; some non Blackberry phones have a software upgrade to allow use with the Blackberry email system. The other main email format is Microsoft’s Exchange Push Email which works like a Blackberry, keeping a synchronised copy of your work emails, contacts and calendar on your phone. When you update (or add) a contact on your phone it instantly and seamlessly updates your office Outlook address book. It works the other way around too and with your email and calendar entries. For people that work out of the office this quickly becomes an essential communication and management tool.

Nokia also provide two other ways of managing and synchronising phone data, the first is Nokia PC Suite which allows transfers by USB cable or Bluetooth. This software’s good and integrates with Outlook well, the limitation is that your phone and PC must be relatively close to each other.

Recently Nokia have introduced OVI, again a system for personal users that synchronises email and contact information, but this time “Over The Air” (the mobile phone network) in a similar way to the Direct Push or Blackberry services.

I didn’t test the OVI system as it’s only a few weeks out of Beta testing, and when I spoke with Nokia engineers there were enough ums, errs and pauses to tell me to wait a while until it matures J

I didn’t test the POP or IMAP setup either as they are simple enough to expect them to work first time.

So Exchange support! The phone doesn’t ship with the Exchange Direct Push software; it’s a free download from Nokia. I downloaded mine directly through the phones web browser, and it was installed in minutes. No problem there. Then into the Exchange setup. You would need information from your business technical support department at this stage, or the hosting company if you are using a third party Hosted Exchange setup. Armed with this though a reasonably competent end use should be able to setup their own phone. You may also need to install a SSL Security Certificate (a small file), again not really difficult, your office tech support would supply it, then just copy to the phone by a USB connection or onto the MicroSD card, and double click from the phones file manager to install.

Once that’s all entered you should see all your Contacts start synchronising, followed by the last 3 days of emails and your Calendar entries.

I had a glitch at this point in that I had to manually allow the synchronisation each and every time it checked for emails. I had a quick chat with Nokia’s first line support, although they wouldn’t let me talk directly to the Exchange trained support team they did ask questions for me and then offer to check my Certificate settings if I cared to send it in. As this was for review purposes I declined. But that’s not bad response for free support these days.

Having got my phone syncing how did it fare? The phone remained responsive enough even with a few thousand Contacts downloaded into main memory. However it only brought the first few lines of the Notes fields over, other systems will bring half a page of text at least. And although the screen was very sharp and high definition, the text size remained so large that reading emails or even long email addresses was a tedious process of scrolling backwards and forwards.

Conclusion

Nice phone. Clever phone. If I didn’t use a lot of mobile email I would look seriously at one myself. Though the N85 seems slightly better value given the higher spec screen and the extras.

The phone and its Direct Push software did what is said on the label, but the text to screen ratio and absence of a QWERTY keyboard or touch screen made it too cumbersome for practical email use, in my opinion. Nokia’s N97 Communicator no doubt overcomes this problem, but is quite a lump compared to other offerings out there.

Dear Nokia Wish list: How about a N85 device with a slide out QWERTY?

 

Review by: Daniel des Baux

[ Post Tags: Nokia, N79, Symbian, smartphone news, reviews, unboxing video, tracyandmatt.co.uk ]

Posted in: Reviews
By January 25, 2009 Read More →

Nokia’s E75 is beautiful, probably coming soon

nokia-e75-and E71 Earlier in the week, a new side sliding phone from Nokia was first spotted when the XpressMusic 5730 was spotted on a Russian gadget site. Now we have some high quality shots of  the new side sliding E-Series phone, supposedly known as E75. The E75 takes its design cues from the E71, and the E66, it also appears to share a similarly slim form factor, and it’s coming soon. How do we know it’s coming soon?

Posted in: Phones
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