• Samsung Armani - Giorgio Armani Phone by Samsung Released UK

    The new Samsung Armani or Giorgio Armani Samsung phone has been officially released into the UK.
    Giorgio Armani Samsung mobile phone
    Today fashion has expanded to encompass our way of life, not just how we dress, but how we design our home, the hotels we stay in, the car we drive and the technology we buy. In fact, we make as much of a personal statement with the mobile phones that we carry or the televisions we have in our living rooms as we do with the shoes and bags we wear or the furnishings we chose to place in our homes.
    These are all lifestyle decisions, where design and performance are the criteria. Samsung has successfully anticipated the growing role for consumer electronics in our lives, while recognising the importance of self-expression in the development of its products.

    In collaboration with one of the World's Leading Fashion Designer's, Samsung and Giorgio Armani have come up with this little beauty.

    Although the Manufacturer's title is the Samsung P520, it looks as though this has been dropped in favour of being called the 'Giorgio Armani-Samsung Mobile'.

    Packed with features it's hard to know where exactly to start with the Samsung SGH-P520.

    The sexy design of the Giorgio Armani-Samsung P520 is a definite winner and the 2.6 inch QVGA touch screen only adds to its appeal but looking further you will find an array of features making this not just a handset but a crucial and vital part of the everyday managment and success of your life and business.

    In terms of a business tool, the Samsung P520 offers GSM/GPRS, EDGE technology, Bluetooth wireless with A2DP Stereo support, USB connectivity, miroSD memory expansion, web browser, email and a document viewer enabling access to word, excel, powerpoint and pdf files.

    From a personal use point of view, the Giorgio Armani - Samsung Mobile is a multimedia device offering everything from a 3.0 mega pixel camera, video recording, MP3 Music Player, built-in FM Radio and a TV Out port.

    And it's certainly easy to see why Samsung have come up with such a powerful and dynamic handset when the likes of the Apple iPhone and the LG Prada set such a high standard to follow.
    Source:http://www.prlog.org/10051680-samsung-armani-giorgio-armani-phone-by-samsung-released-uk.html

  • Cell phone can read documents for blind

    Chris Danielsen fidgets with the cell phone, holding it over a $20 bill.

    "Detecting orientation, processing U.S. currency image," the phone says in a flat monotone before Danielsen snaps a photo. A few seconds later, the phone says, "Twenty dollars."

    Danielsen, a spokesman for the National Federation of the Blind, is holding the next generation of computerized aids for the blind and visually impaired.

    The Nokia cell phone is loaded with software that turns text on photographed documents into speech. In addition to telling whether a bill is worth $1, $5, $10 or $20, it also allows users to read anything that is photographed, whether it's a restaurant menu, a phone book or a fax.

    While the technology is not new, the NFB and the software's developer say the cell phone is the first to incorporate the text-to-speech ability.

    "We've had reading devices before," Danielsen said, noting similar software is already available in a larger handheld reader housed in a personal digital assistant. Companies such as Code Factory SL, Dolphin Computer Access Ltd. and Nuance Communications Inc. also provide software that allows the blind to use cell phones and PDAs.

    Inexpensive hand-held scanners such as WizCom Technologies Ltd.'s SuperPen can scan limited amounts of text, read it aloud and even translate from other languages.

    However, the $2,100 NFB device combines all of those functions in one smart phone, said James Gashel, vice president of business development for K-NFB Reading Technology Inc., which is marketing the phone as a joint venture between the federation and software developer Ray Kurzweil.

    "It is the next step, but this is a huge leap," Gashel, who is blind, said in a telephone interview. "I'm talking to you on the device I also use to read things. I can put it in my pocket and at the touch of a button, in 20 seconds, be reading something I need to read in print."nokia mobile phone,N95

    Ray Kurzweil, who developed the first device that could convert text into audio in the 1970s and the current NFB device, said portability is only the first step. Future versions of the device will recognize faces, identify rooms and translate text from other languages for the blind and the sighted.

    The inventor plans to begin marketing the cell phone in February through K-NFB Reading Technology. The software will cost $1,595 and the cell phone is expected to cost about $500, Kurzweil said.

    Dave Doermann, president of College Park-based Applied Media Analysis said his company is working on similar software for smart phones that could be used by the military for translation and by the visually impaired.

    "We don't anticipate ours being that expensive, but unfortunately we're not quite to the release yet," said Doermann, who is also co-director of the University of Maryland's Laboratory for Language and Media Processing.

    Doermann said the company, which has received funding from the Department of Defense and the National Eye Institute, hopes to have its software ready in the next 12 to 18 months.

    Kurzweil's device uses speech software provided by Nuance, said Chris Strammiello, the director of product management at Nuance, who said the company has also developed a prototype reader that uses the Internet to access more powerful server-side computers.

    "As you can harness the power of remote environments and do that so quickly with the Web technologies, it gives a lot more capability, flexibility and options to the way you solve these type of problems," Strammiello said.

    There are about 10 million blind and visually impaired people in the U.S., a number that is expected to double in the next 30 years as baby boomers age.

    Kurzweil said those with vision problems are not the only ones expected to benefit from the technology. Dyslexics, for example, are expected to be among the users of the current device because of its ability to highlight each word as it's read aloud, helping them cope with their disability, which affects the ability to read. The highlighting function can also help them improve their reading skills, he said.

    "What's new here is both blind people and kids can do this with a device that fits in their shirt pocket," Kurzweil said.

    Marc Maurer, president of the National Federation of the Blind, said the device and its PDA predecessor are a "form of hand-held vision" that will make the visual environment "much more readily available to the blind."
    source:http://www.keprtv.com/news/tech/14484547.html

  • Sony Ericsson R306 Radio

    Sony Ericsson announced the launch of a new Radio mobile phone, the Sony Ericsson R306 Radio, designed to deliver a credible radio-listening experience to a global audience, and ideally suited to emerging markets such as India. "The Sony Ericsson R306 Radio allows you to tune-in to your favourite music shows or sports reports, across both AM and FM broadcasts,” said Howard Lewis, Vice President and Head of Entry Level Products at Sony Ericsson. “The new cell phone certainly looks and sounds the part, offering a radio-inspired design."

    Sony Ericsson Radio through the loudspeaker

    The Sony Ericsson R306 Radio is designed to have a clear radio look-and-feel. Sit the phone on its side and let the radio blast out through the dedicated loudspeaker... in stereo. Preset buttons on the front of the Sony Ericsson R306 Radio lets you switch easily between your favourite stations. It takes just one click to boost the volume when you want to share music on the radio or the live action from the sports ground.

    Sony Ericsson R306 Radio - Features

    • True radio design - Dedicated radio speakers and preset channel buttons

    • Loud sound - 3D sound enhancement & volume boost for noisy environments

    • AM/FM Frequencies - Tune-in to your favourite station

    Sony Ericsson R306i Radio - Record a clip

    The new Sony Ericsson mobile phone really lets you get the most from the radio. Set it as your alarm clock or record the final moments of your team's winning match and play back the commentary again and again. You can even record a clip of a song and use it as your ringtone.

    Sony Ericsson R306 Radio phone - TrackID

    TrackID is now a familiar feature on many of Sony Ericsson's high tier phones. It now comes as standard on the Sony Ericsson R306 Radio cell phone, turning listeners into instant music experts! Record a clip of a song from an external source, such as a sound system in a coffee shop or bar, and find out within seconds who sang it, the name of the track and which album it is from. All in just one click.

    Sony Ericsson Radio R306i - Stereo speakers

    The Sony Ericsson R306 Radio opens up into a clamshell with two integrated stereo speakers that face the listener. Again featuring the Audio Enhancer key, you can activate volume boost when listening to the radio through the speakers or 3D sound enhancement when you have the stereo headset plugged in, ensuring a first-class radio listening experience even when it is noisy around you. See which station you are tuned-in to on the phone's external display. The Sony Ericsson R306 Radio phone features Bluetooth technology, allowing you to handle your phone calls handsfree with optional accessories such as the Sony Ericsson Bluetooth Headset HBH-PV703.

    Sony Ericsson R306 Radio - 1.3 Megapixel digital camera

    The Sony Ericsson R306 Radio boasts a step-up to a 1.3 megapixel camera on-board. So whether you are listening to the radio or not, this new Sony Ericsson phone is set to hit the right note. The R306 Radio will launch in two colours: Coffee Black and Champagne White. It is a GSM/GPRS 900/1800/1900 phone that will be available in selected markets from Q3 2008. The Sony Ericsson R306a Radio is a GSM/GPRS 850/1800/1900 phone, available in the same timeframe.

    source:http://www.letsgomobile.org/en/2855/sony-ericsson-r306-radio/

  • Nokia's Next Phone May Come from Romania

    The tiny village of Jucu in northwestern Romania, which will host a new factory making Nokia mobile phones, currently earns its livelihood from farming vegetables such as peppers, tomatoes and eggplants.
    nokia mobile phone, mobile phone

    It doesn't have a full-time doctor, a school-house or indoor toilets. Some 60 houses don't have running water. But it does -- still -- have relatively cheap labor.

    A decision by the Finnish mobile handset giant to move a major production line to Romania this year sparked rage in Germany over job losses, but in the nearby city of Cluj in Romania it calmed fears foreign investment was drying up.

    Over the past year, alarm bells have been sounding all around eastern Europe about a rising shortage of labor that may stunt the growth and long-term development prospects in some of the poorer regions.

    "In our area we are only missing workers in the construction sector," Nicolae Beuran from the Cluj chamber of commerce told Reuters. "Many builders went to Germany, some went to Spain or wherever else they got paid more."

    The fears are that ballooning wages and migration to western labor markets have eroded the competitiveness of manufacturing in eastern Europe and could stop an influx of foreign cash.

    Industry observers say Romania is missing hundreds of thousands of workers in some sectors since migration depleted the workforce. Roughly one in 10 Romanians lives abroad.
    Hidden Labor Force

    But Nokia appears to have found a pocket of labor supply around Cluj, a Transylvanian university town dating back to the Roman era, where residents hope that thousands of graduates will attract foreign cash and well-paid jobs.

    "We can offer what we have," said Beuran. "We are a big university centre and have a hundred thousand qualified students."

    Even though unemployment is as low as three percent in Cluj, local officials say foreign investors are managing to attract labor by paying more than local employers.

    Average pre-tax salaries are 450 euros a month in Cluj -- one seventh of levels in Germany's state of North Rhine-Westphalia which includes Bochum, the economically depressed region that Nokia is to quit for Romania.

    The pay is still low despite Romania's double-digit real wage growth in recent years as it speeds up towards western European living standards and taps cash from the European Union, which it joined a year ago.

    Some foreign manufacturers complain about skill shortages, while the state Employment Agency in Cluj says there is a "crisis" in the labor market.

    But city authorities say there is more foreign investment in the pipeline. According to city council head Marius Nicoara, Cluj is talks with several companies, including a large U.S. firm in the auto industry which wants to invest $200 million.

    "We are in advanced discussions with other investors but can't offer them as much land and electricity as they want. So we are in a great position to choose," he said.
    Modernization?

    For Cluj and the impoverished countryside surrounding it, Nokia's 60 million euro ($88 million) investment spells a promise of much-needed government cash, modernization and basic facilities.

    "We need many things here and I hope they will be resolved faster thanks to Nokia," said Jucu mayor Dorel Pojar. "Since its arrival, there is a prosperous future ahead of us."

    He hopes the Bucharest government will funnel more cash -- and faster -- for development projects and infrastructure to spruce up the area, a long valley surrounded by farmland and barren, greyish-brown hills.

    Local authorities in Cluj say they are investing dozens of millions of euros on infrastructure projects in the region, building up roads, water networks and industrial parks to bring in foreign manufacturing.

    A multi-billion-dollar highway project connecting central Romania with western Europe through Hungary is planned to run just km away from Jucu.

    "I will work if I can find work," said Ana Gherman, 66, a pensioner from Jucu who used to bake biscuits and make juice for the village bar. "I could be a babysitter for a family which moves here to work for Nokia.

    "But if it doesn't happen for me, the Nokia plant is still a future for the children here."

    Nokia, which plans to start production in Jucu in the first quarter, reported a 57 percent rise in its October-December earnings per share on Thursday, with booming demand in emerging markets boosting its global market share to 40 percent.

    The company declined immediate further comment on its choice of Romania, but has said the move aimed to lock into lower wage costs to defend its profit margins: at just under 24 percent on cellphones, these are already much stronger than its rivals.
    Accustomed to Cycles

    Local authorities hope the boost to the region's economy should ensure sustainable growth even if Nokia moves factory again after some years.

    Like Germany's Bochum, which has lost its historic mining and steelmaking industries and now is about to see 2,300 Nokia jobs disappear -- Cluj lost much of its heavy industry following the 1989 fall of communism.

    source:http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,141862-c,cellphones/article.html

  • Nokia N82 review

    Nokia has introduced a couple of new software additions in the past few months for various Nokia mobile phones. Remember for example the Nokia Ovi Internet browser and the new NGage games. Besides these new software additions, the N82 has also been equipped with an integrated GPS receiver, navigation software and a five Megapixel digital camera with Xenon flash. The N82's digital camera is able to exceed any other camera phone with ease thanks to its superior image quality, speed and user-friendliness. Nokia awaken some high expectations here and the question is; can Nokia live up to these expectations?• Read our full Nokia N82 review.

    Nokia N82 digital cameraNokia N82 mobile phon review

    The Nokia N82 has been equipped with a five Megapixel digital camera. The camera offers auto focus, an auto focus assist lamp for correct focussing and a xenon flash. When we take a look at the five Megapixel devices such as the LG Viewty and the Samsung G800, we notice that integrating (electronic) image stabilizer and face detection belong to the possibilities. Nokia did not integrate these innovations just yet. The Finnish phone giant is well-known for not wanting to be the first manufacturer to integrate these innovative features.

    Nokia N82 cell phone review

    The menu of the Nokia N82 is like all Nokia mobiles, well structured and easy to use. For those who are already in possession of a Nokia handset it will be no problem at all to find their way inside the menu of the N82. The user not used to a Nokia cell phone will find a dead-easy user's interface. Within the menu you will also find the WLAN wizard to use wireless internet and the Nokia NGage games. Read our full Nokia N82 review.
    source:http://www.letsgomobile.org/en/2828/nokia-n82-review/

    mobile

  • Nokia introduces E51 device for business mobility

    Mobile handset maker Nokia on Thursday launched a new set - Nokia E51 bolstering its E-series portfolio of business devices.

    With this launch, the company has over seven E-series devices (E50, E65, E90 communicator, E60, E61, E62 and E61i) in India.

    "The device is ideal for business professionals who require reliable, real-time access to business applications, need to manage time effectively and value a single device that is easy to set up, maintain and use," Nokia Enterprise Solutions Country General Manager G K Chakrapani told reporters here.

    "With India amongst the top 10 nations in the world to use smart phones that offer mobile internet services for corporate and business professionals, mobility has acquired a status of a necessity," Chakrapani said, adding that the numbers of users in this segment were growing fast.

    By 2009, there will be 880 million mobile workers worldwide and by 2010, 80 per cent of key business would involve exchange of real time information, demonstrating that mobility has begun to go mainstrseam, he added.

    The prices of the new E51 model is Euros 300, plus taxes, he added.

    Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/News_By_Industry/Telecom/Nokia_introduces_E51_device_for_business_mobility/articleshow/2409244.cms

  • Sony Ericsson Unveils P-Series

    Sony Ericsson mobile company formally presented the P1i business phone, a complete mobile office device to the business community in Nigeria at a colourful occasion in Lagos recently.

    According to the company the Sony Ericsson P1i is the latest edition to the P-series pioneers smartphone technology, offering users a complete mobile office. The pocket sized P1 is a small package, with a large offering. Push email, high speed connectivity and a true multimedia package, all in the 106 x 55 x 17mm casing.

    Mr. Emeka Nkpa, the National Accounts Manager, Sony Ericsson Nigeria explained that "The Sony Ericsson P1i is an evolution of our P-series smart phones, built to push forward the best attributes of its predecessors with significant improvements in design, speed and battery performance."

    In her comment, the Special adviser to the Deputy Governor, Ronke Azeez, who represented her boss at the occasion, laid emphasis on the convenience of owing a P1i. She said, "With the P1i phone, it means you don't need to travel or move around with your laptop. You just pick up your P1i phone and you can work from anywhere".

    The occasion witnessed the demonstration of some of the technical features of the Sony Ericsson P1i smart-phone.

    Source:http://allafrica.com/stories/200710120751.html

  • Nokia 6301 UMA Phone announced, the Perfect Convergence of Mobile and Fixed/Land-Line Technologies

    Nokia has introduced its latest Nokia 6301 mobile phone, which offers its owners flawless voice and data mobility across GSM cellular and WLAN networks through Unlicensed Mobile Access (UMA) technology. The sleek Nokia 6301 makes use if UMA technology to bundle in the advantages of landline and a mobile phone, including seamless indoor coverage, sound quality and affordability.

    Peter Ropke, Senior Vice President, Mobile Phones, Nokia said, “The convergence of mobile and fixed/land-line technologies means consumers are looking for products that can help make their lives easier.” Ropke added, “With the Nokia 6301 utilizing UMA technology, worldwide triband GSM coverage is combined with superior indoor WLAN coverage to create a device that people can use in virtually any situation.”

    The UMA technology applied in the 6301 phone makes it possible for its owners to use the GSM network or a broadband Internet-connected WLAN network for mobile services. This guarantees awesome indoor coverage at the office as well as at the residence. The consumer can have one multi-mode handset that works everywhere with advanced and convenient voice services. And, WLAN/UMA offers excellent coverage and sound quality, even in areas where mobile phone reception has previously been poor.

    What’s more, with UMA technology, the Nokia 6301 benefits operators as well, making it possible for them to deliver voice and data services to subscribers over WLAN, significantly increasing mobile service availability while decreasing the costs related to network deployment.

    Orange has been chosen as the very first operator to offer the Nokia 6301, as part of its Unik/Unique portfolio.

    Yves Maitre, Senior Vice President, Devices, Orange stated, “The Nokia 6301 is a stylish new addition to our Unik range of converged fixed and mobile phones. Orange’s Unik offer brings together the convenience of a single phone and tariff at home and on the move and the widest range of UMA handsets. The Nokia 6301, with its sleek candy bar design and attractive stainless steel exterior adds to the appeal of Unik for Orange customers.”

    Embellished in a sleek stainless steel design, Nokia claims that its 6301 phone is an evolution of the modern monoblock design.

    The feather light Nokia 6301 weighs just 93 grams and measures less than 13.1mm thin. It comes with an attractive desk stand, making it perfect for home and office. The Nokia Desk Stand DT-23 holds the phone and keeps its battery charged while connected to WLAN.

    The other key features of the Nokia 6301 mobile phone are:
     2 MP camera with 8x digital zoom

    •  Full screen viewfinder
    •  2-inch QVGA screen
    •  USB/PC Synchronization
    •  Internal user memory of 30MB and 128MB in-box microSD card, with support for up to 4GB microSD cards
    •  Voice dialing, voice commands and voice recording
    •  MP3 player, FM radio
    •  Integrated hands-free speaker
    •  Talk-time of up to 3.5 hours and a standby time of up to 14 days

    Slated to start shipping by Q4 of 2007 in Europe, the Nokia 6301 phone is expected to be priced at around 230 euros (excl. subsidies or taxes).

  • Apple unveils German winner of iPhone contract

    US technology giant Apple picked mobile phone operator T-Mobile on Wednesday to launch its iPhone handset in Germany, with deals in more countries expected as the group prepares for the European roll-out of its latest gadget.

    Germany and Britain will simultaneously launch the touch-screen iPhone in Europe on November 9, offering Internet access, telephone service and iPod-like music as well as the ability to play videos.

    Under an agreement announced on Tuesday, the phone is to be distributed in Britain by O2.

    Press reports said that the choice of T-Mobile was the result of concessions agreed to by parent group Deutsche Telekom, which would reportedly pay Apple up to 30 percent of sales connected to the iPhone.

    That would represent a first in the European mobile market, and highlighted the commercial significance of the deal for Deutsche Telekom, a former monopoly which is placing its fortunes in services aimed at a younger market.

  • Palm Treo 500v Review: Windows Mobile 6 Smartphone

    As anyone who has been tracking the various ups and (considerable) downs of Palm’s fortunes recently will know, there’s quite a lot hanging on this latest release for the company.

    Although both Windows and Palm OS versions of their Treo smartphones sold pretty well and received generally good reviews, there has been growing discontentment amongst loyal followers that Palm’s Innovation Dept have been on an extended dinner break for too long. After all, the form factor of the recent Treo range has barely altered physically from its Handspring days, with the recent Palm 680 offering very little over their long serving Treo 650 handset.

    Early this year, the company launched their first Windows Mobile Treo phone, the Treo 750v (reviewed here in May 2007), and although it garnered praise for its usability and feel, we felt it still lagged behind the market leaders.

    The Treo 500v sees Palm coming up with their first real new design for years, targeting the handset at the 24-35 year old business/consumer demographic.

    Available in two colour schemes - grey/silver and white/silver - and given away free with some Vodafone contracts, the 500v presents a sleek, modern and affordable look that invites comparisons with the Blackberry Curve.

    Considerably slimmer than its Treo predecessors, the phone measures 110mm x 61.5mm x 16.5mm (4.3″ x 2.4″ x .65″) and weighs just 120g (4.2oz) in total. Not bad at all for a phone sporting a QWERTY keyboard and a decent sized screen, and positively anorexic compared to the lardy lines of the previous Treo range.

    In the hand
    Our first impressions of the phone were very positive. Although the white finish is asking for trouble with messy types like us (we prefer the look of the grey number), the handset looks fresh, contemporary and rather stylish to our eyes. It felt pretty sturdy too.

    The 320×240-pixel screen was bright, clear and crisp and easy to read in sunlight. We also had no problems using the phone at night, with a strong backlight illuminating the entire keypad and control keys.

    A metal strip across the centre of phone contains four flush buttons, an oval ‘D’ pad and the call start/end buttons, but despite some initial misgivings about the ergonomics, we found the controls very responsive in use.

    The keyboard
    The problem with trying to wedge a QWERTY keyboard onto a compact mobile device is that something has to give: make it too small and it becomes unusable to all but pixie-fingered peckers; make it large enough to comfortably type on and you’ll end up with a pocket ripper.

    Some manufacturers have opted for slide-out keyboards or virtual onscreen keyboards, but these invariably render the phones pretty useless for one handed operation.

    While there’s no denying that the keys on the 500v are pretty small and not for sausage fingered prodders, we liked it and had no problems knocking out texts and emails.

    The slim and wide shape of the phone meant it sat nicely in the hand and was substantial enough to let us type messages one handed with our thumb.

    Turn it off!
    We can only assume that Palm’s designers had been passing the crack pipe around when they arrived at the decision to remove the sound on/off slider from the top of the phone.

    It was one of simple but craftily inspired selling points of previous Treos - and a ruddy brilliant idea to boot - so we can’t imagine what possessed Palm to remove this must-have feature. It’s a really frustrating omission and we hope they put it back for the Centro.

    At the bottom of the unit is another annoyance with Palm sticking to a 2.5mm headphone socket instead of an infinitely more useful standard 3.5mm jobbie.

    Happily, Palm have finally moved away from their proprietary connectors and added a mini-USB slot, so it’s not all bad.

    Looking to the left hand side of the phone, there’s two buttons for volume up/down and a dedicated button for launching Internet Explorer.

    Spinning the phone around, we can see a 2MP camera at the back and speakerphone grill. Thankfully, they haven’t bothered with those pointless face-distorting convex mirrors that turns your face into a fairground attraction.

    At the top of the phone sits the power on/off button.

    A look inside
    Getting the back off the Treo took a bit of a Herculean effort - so much so that we were fearful of breaking the thing.

    Once we’d finally slid off the back cover, we found a user replaceable Li-ion 1200MaH battery sitting tightly inside with the SIM and miniSD card slots lurking below.

    Taking out and inserting cards from both slots was straightforward enough, although we wouldn’t like to make a habit of getting the back off.

    In part two, we’ll take a look at how the phone performed in use and examine its full feature set.

    Source:http://digital-lifestyles.info/

Footer:

The content of this website belongs to a private person, blog.co.uk is not responsible for the content of this website.