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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Vertu Signature Dragon handset puts the 'ugh' in 'luxury'


It looks like Vertu isn't resting on its laurels -- a mere two years after snatching the "world's ugliest phone title" with its Signature Cobra, the company's back with the Signature Dragon. What can we say about these vertu phones? Not much, seeing as how the thing isn't even listed on the company's website. Even so, since the Cobra retailed for over a quarter of a million bucks we're guessing this new handset ain't gonna be cheap. Feel free to sneak a peek at the thing in the Vertu store in Las Vegas's Wynn Hotel when you hit the town for CES. As an aside, when researching this post we came across an erotic French novel titled Dragon de Vertu which is on sale for about $30. Even if you don't read French, we still think it'd be a better use of your hard earned cash -- and if you do read French, please underline the good parts before you pass it on to us.

iPhone games for small kids


In a trio of apps aimed at young girls, Disney Fairies Fly soars above the crowd




This is especially true of the little ones—those least likely to have their own iPods. Which means if it hasn’t happened yet, it will soon. You’ll find yourself handing your device over, if only to coax just five more minutes of patience from your mini-me at the post office, the grocery checkout line, or the airport.


Fairy Tale: Silvermist flies through the Autumn Forest landscape, gathering acorns and other “pick ups.”

Which is why it’s probably a good idea to purchase a few good kids games for your iPod. I took a look at three ipod games for kids (with the assistance of my very cute-but-savvy seven- year-old daughter), and found all three quite capable of providing an immediate, compelling diversion. And one, Disney Fairies Fly, turned out to be much more.



Disney Fairies Fly, from Disney is a lush, animated game in which you take the role of one of six fairies (Tinker Bell, Iridessa, Silvermist, Rosetta, Fawn, and a surprise fairy) and fly through any of five unique “worlds.” The goal of each flight is to collect as many “pick ups” (flowers, apples, acorns, diamonds, pearls, and so on) and as much fairy dust as possible, while avoiding obstacles and objects such as birds, bees, bats, tall grass, dead trees, and thunderstorms.


Each of the five worlds has three levels of difficulty, (as your skill improves, you fly faster and face more obstacles) and at each level, the goal is to fly through the landscape and collect as many pick ups as possible before you run out of fairy dust, which is your basic fuel. You unlock each subsequent level by reaching the end of a part of the landscape; after you unlock all three levels of the one landscape, another landscape opens up to you. When you’ve flown through all five landscapes on all three levels, the surprise fairy is revealed and available for you to fly with. As you continue game play from there, obstacles become increasingly difficult to evade.


You can “dash” to fly quickly by holding down a button in the lower right hand corner. There’s a red bar next to the dash button; once it’s drained, you have to wait for it to refill to be able to dash again. You also need to pick up additional pixie dust during your journey to keep going. You lose pixie dust when you run into obstacles or objects. The point of gathering “pick ups” is to score points.


Flying takes some practice, as well as good focus and wrist action. Disney makes good use of the built-in accelerometer; you can move up and down by tilting the iPhone or iPod touch toward and away from your body; you naturally fly forward, and can “dash” by filling up the red juice bar on the bottom right of the screen.


Dashing enables you to dodge some obstacles more quickly, or to quickly maneuver through portions of the landscape that feature few pickups in order to reach the more fertile portions of the sky, where there are pickups galore. Some pickups are worth more than others—for example, in the autumn landscape, green apples are worth 10 points, red are worth 20, and prized purples are worth 30. The more a pick up’s worth, the rarer—and better protected by obstacles—it is.


The game features pleasant background music from the Tinker Bell movie, and the graphics are simply stunning, as you’d expect from Disney. My 7-year-old daughter enjoyed the game immensely—as she explains below—and seemed to become addicted to it. It wasn’t clear to me why, until I began play myself, and found that many levels, and many opportunities to “try again” (you never really “lose” in the land of Disney) are almost irresistible.




The game should appeal to younger children as well; many of the user-posted reviews on the App Store report that 4- and 5-year olds like the game. Many of those same reviews also complain that the game frequently crashes, but I experienced only two crashes in several hours of gameplay. Disney does suggest on the App Store page, to reboot the iPhone “before flying with Tinker Bell and her friends.” This indicates that the developer is aware of some problems. And perhaps they’ve been largely fixed—I tested version 1.02, the most recent, and many frustrated reviewers had been running earlier versions.


Disney Fairies Fly is an engaging game with splendid graphics. It’s worth the price, and if it’s a hint of what’s to come from Disney on the iPhone and iPod Touch, I’m looking forward to its next release.


My daughter loves to play dress-up games on the Web. There are plenty of sites that offer free games which enable you to dress up a variety of models in a myriad of clothes, shoes, and accessories. The games are simple, and usually offer a huge virtual wardrobe. The fun is in the mixing and matching, and also in the ability to view an enormous collection of potential outfits all at once.


Fashion Don’ts: A hideously dressed Suzy Dress Up stands poised, ready for change. The six icons on each side of the screen represent the many possibilities.

The latter is what you can’t do with Suzy Dress Up, and it’s a drawback—though not a big enough one to keep my daughter from playing for a half hour or so before losing interest. What she discovered, on her second go-round with 3DAL’s game, is that because of the (literally) billions of possible combinations, you can create some truly garish looks, which she delighted in showing me.


Thus she converted the game’s major drawback—you can’t look at an entire wardrobe and imagine how things will go together—into a positive, by seeing just how ugly things can get when you can’t quite imagine the possibilities.


You can change 12 of Suzy’s wardrobe items or characteristics: her hairstyle (26 possibilities), eyestyle (22), mouthstyle (19), head covering (17), eyeglasses (15), tops (29), skirt or pants (38), footwear (23), hand accessory (bags, pom poms, fans, even a broom)(33), belt/necklace combinations (14), and skin tone and angel wing combinations (21). Even Suzy’s pet can be selected, Paris Hilton-style, as an accessory. The 14 possible pet accoutrements include a pig, a ladybug, and a snowman in addition to the traditional cat and dog.


Suzy Dress Up only enables you to go through each type of item in a serial fashion, and there’s no option to set aside different possibilities (say, on a virtual set of hangers). This would be a welcome addition to this or another dress-up game.


One of the more fun aspects of Web-based dress up games for my daughter is also the capability to print out color images of your creation. While you can take a screenshot of any Suzy Dress Up combo that you wish by pressing the off and home page button simultaneously, this is not at all intuitive, nor immediate. (To access your shots, you have to sync your iPod touch or iPhone and view and manipulate the photos in iPhoto.) An on-screen “snapshot” button would be a terrific addition to future versions of this game, as would the ability to create a photo album.


Suzy Dress Up is an entertaining casual game, priced appropriately. Although it’s not as engaging as Web-based dress up games my daughter has played with, it’s a nice, appropriately priced option for the iPod touch or iPhone.


Bee Careful: If the girl in ButterflyCatch snags the bee in her net by mistake, she’s out 500 points.

ButterflyCatch is a twitchy-thumb game from Corey Ledin with a few simple graphics and a couple of repetitive moves. The main character is a girl in a park, and she’s wearing roller skates while clutching a butterfly net. She can roll back and forth between the left and right sides of the screen; when she reaches one side, she bounces off and turns around. You can control her speed; the more you tilt the iPod, the faster she goes. You can make the girl jump by pushing a button on the bottom right corner of the screen, and make her lift and wave the butterfly net by pressing another on the bottom left.


The faster she skates, the higher she can jump, and hence the more butterflies she can catch. But while she’s catching butterflies, she’s also evading a small dog—if she doesn’t jump over the dog, she gets bit and the game’s over. Meanwhile, there are bees mixed in with the butterflies; catching butterflies gains you at least a few hundred points each, but catching a bee decreases your point total by 500. The point of the game is to score as man points as possible, and if you want, you can upload your score to the Web and compare your score to that of other ButterflyCatch players.


My daughter disliked this game immediately, and even after I urged (read: bribed) her to try again, she continued to show little interest. The game’s variations and challenges are too few, and it’s easy to imagine improvements (more obstacles besides one dog, more bad things to catch besides bees, more scenery, and so on). While it’s a challenge to control the girl’s speed, jumping, and catching abilities simultaneously, the potential reward (more points, more of the same game at the same level) didn’t seem worth the trouble. This said, the game may be more amusing for children younger than seven.


All three games are compatible with both the hiPhone and iPod touch. Disney Fairies Fly is compatible with the iPhone 2.1 software update, while Suzy Dress Up runs on the 2.x software, and ButterflyCatch requires the 2.2 update.

Meet the $30,000 Cell Phone

Since my last name isn't Hilton, Trump, or Rockefeller, I won't be treating myself to any of these upscale handsets. Yet, these luxury phones will certainly find a home. Let's break down the latest ridiculous offerings:
1) Samsung Ego GT-S9402 - Given the derivative design (Vertu's Ferrari Ascent Ti came first), the Ego should be docked some originality points. What will your $1,500+ get you? A 5 megapixel camera with LED flash, Bluetooth 2.0, a microSDHC expansion slot, tri-band GSM connectivity, dual SIM slots, and an FM radio module. The Ego lacks a 3G radio, which is almost as lame as the measly 1GB storage.
2) Bellperre Silver and Gold collection - Bellperre lets you choose from 100 exotic leathers such as crocodile, shark, lizard, and buffalo (um, does PETA know about this?) to customize this phone. In addition to precious gemstones affixed to the handset, you also get tri-band support, a 2-inch TFT display of sapphire crystal, Bluetooth (stereo), an MP3 player, Windows Mobile OS, IM, e-mail, and a camera with camcorder. I couldn't find any information on pricing, but believe me when I say I'd rather use a payphone than pull a pink crocodile rose gold handset out of my purse.
3) Mobiado Professional 105GMT Gold - I'm wondering what about this phone says "professional." This unfortunate handset looks like it belongs in a blinged-out music video, not a boardroom. Its CNC-machined frame is crafted from sapphire crystal and ebony wood and dipped in 24-carat gold, with two mechanical, self-winding Swiss watches below the keypad for God-only-knows why. And the specs? You get a 2-inch 320-by-240 res display, a 2-megapixel camera, a quad-band GSM radio, Bluetooth, a Discovery watch mechanism, optional diamonds, and again, 1GB of built-in memory. That hardly justifies whatever the made-to-order price is. And oh yeah, only 50 of them will be made.
4) Vertu Phones Boucheron 150 - Yeah, I could have picked on the Ferrari Ascent Ti, but this phone desperately wants attention, and I'm going to oblige. This handset is so ugly, I cringed. The price includes the hideous wood packing box that this clunky, awkward handset arrives in. This "solid gold" catastrophe is meant to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the Boucheron jewelry house, took a total of 2,200 man hours to create, and costs more than your kid's teacher probably made last year ($30,000).
5) Gresso's Avantgarde Skeleton - This collection is rather limited: Only fifteen of these will be made, and that's probably a wise choice. Again, you get crystal sapphire glass (for the transparent back panel and for the 240 x 320 display), Bluetooth 1.2, a titanium alloy case, a battery case of stainless steel, and a leather cover with magnet release. The back of this phone has the Gresso logo covered with 10 micron gold, and it runs Windows Mobile 6.0. And the price? Steep like Mount Everest: $5,000.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Watch Out Wal-Mart; AT&T Offers $99 iPhone

It looks like AT&T is the only place to get a $99 Apple iPhone 3G. For now, anyway. In the post-holiday crunch, AT&T has launched the sale of refurbished iPhones to unload some inventory and offer cost-conscious shoppers a discount. In AT&T Wireless' online store, a refurbished 8 GB iPhone runs $99 with a two-year contract, while a refurbished 16 GB iPhone is $199. Both are $100 more when purchased new, but carry the same contract terms.

AT&T's move to sell off refurbished iPhone comes roughly a week after it was rumored that national discount superstore Wal-Mart would offer its own exclusive 4 GB model of the Apple ciPhone 3G for $99. Those rumors were officially debunked this week, when Wal-Mart on Sunday started offering the standard 8 GB and 16 GB models of the now-iconic smart phone for fairly close to their original retail prices -- a $2 discount. The addition of the iPhone makes Wal-Mart only the second retailer outside of Apple and AT&T stores to be authorized to sell the iPhone. In September, Best Buy started selling the device in its Best Buy Mobile stores.

According to AT&T, the refurbished devices will be for sale until Dec. 31 or until supplies run out. The previously owned devices have been unused or lightly used and were returned during the initial 30-day trial period, AT&T said, though some may have minor scratches. Each device has been quality tested and updated with the latest software.
The refurbished devices offer a 90 day warranty.

Dreaming up the next-gen iPhone

There's no question that Apple's iPhone 3G has been the hottest phone of 2008 with its sleek touch screen design and software, but that hasn't stopped bloggers from dreaming up ways to make the iPhone even better.

Earlier this week, the gadget blog Gizmodo posted a mock-up design of a next-generation iPhone created by blogger Mat Brady. Gizmodo calls the new gadget the "iPhone Pro." It describes the dream iPhone as having 60GB of storage, true 16:9 aspect ratio, 1-megapixel front camera for iChat, and a high-quality camera, with video capability, plus a slide-out keyboard.
The keyboard is an important distinction. While I have grown to love the virtual keyboard and predictive spelling capabilities of my iPhone, many hard-core mobile e-mail users and texters hate it. And because they want an actual QWERTY keypad instead of a virtual one, they are often drawn to Research In Motion's BlackBerry devices, Windows Mobile phones, or the new Android phone. But many of these users would like the cool functionality of the iPhone, if only it had a real keypad.

Gizmodo blogger Jesus Diaz believes that the imaginary iPhone Pro design is doable from a technology perspective. But he also believes it would likely jack up the price of the device. I agree on both counts. And I also agree that a phone like this would find an audience.
But I'm not sure that Apple would ever add every bell and whistle in this dream iPhone. I definitely think that Apple will add more storage capacity and video functionality and improve the camera capabilities on future versions of the hiPhone. But will Steve Jobs and company really add a keyboard with actual buttons?

I guess we'll just have to wait and see. As other smartphones, such as the Blackberry and Google's Android phones mature and evolve, Apple may have no other choice than to design a phone with real keys.

Fulfill you with diamond dreaming, Daxian D868 fashion flip phone

The greatest advantage of China cell phones is dare to draw all the advantages from other phones, means you can find all the features from other phones you want in this one China phone, since HTC have launched charming diamond-cutting workmanship in S900 and won considerable response from customers, plenty of China manufacturers are unwilling indulging in copying iPhone and Nokia anymore, they paid attention to more novelty, integrate the diamond look into the flip appearance, which made it more attractive.



This D868 is brimming with diamond style, but on the other hand, it’s as similar as MOTO V8 too, which make it a combination.



But let’s forget “MOTO” and remember the point is a diamond-cutting style phone, it integrate the diamond-cutting panel and adopted impressive golden brown, make it outstanding.



The area near the rotating shaft hidden a 0.3MP camera, which is hard to find if you don’t see it carefully, that’s just what this D868 attract me most, low profile but charming.



The back pf the phone is made up of many triangles, coordinate with the front panel.



The same dialing panel is kinda of crystal style, the rhombic and triangle are both mainstream design.




Though it doesn’t support handwritten, but we can get three-screen display by the navigation key.



When call coming or playing the music, diamond panel will shine the blue matrix lights, which make it more funny.








Lenovo OPhone Sizes Up Against iPhone, iPhone 3G






Some China bloggers got hold of a Lenovo OPhone shell and did a sizemodo against the iPhone and hiPhone 3G. Verdict: Similar slimness with more features. *swoon* I know what I want for Christmas.







The OPhone is roughly 1mm bigger than the original iPhone in all dimensions, measuring in at 115.84x61.57x12.03mm. Besides the volume rocker, the OPhone also has its microSD slot on the left side. According to the China bloggers, it'll support microSD cards of up to 16GB.
The phone from the other side. This is supposed to be a dedicated camera button, which I guess makes the OPhone more comfortable to take landscape photos with.
Here's the butt of all three phones. As you can see, the OPhone's placed its headphone jack on its bottom. Also residing down there is the microUSB slot for charging and PC synchronizing. I wonder if that placement choice will render it incompatible with certain speaker docking systems.







On the backside is a removable battery, as well as a flash for the 5MP camera— two things it has on the HiPhone. Assuming everything works like it's supposed to, this will be a serious contender to the iPhone and other smartphones. Guess we'll see Q1 next year. Merry Christmas from here in Asia!

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Signature Dragon on Its Way from Vertu

Starting the article in an optimistic note, the luxury phone manufacturer Vertu has come up with another glamorous and jewel-decorated mobile for those constantly updating their social status through such devices. Up to this point everything's hunky-dory, but when the actual photo of the mobile comes into sight, the Dragon Signature, as it has been named, feels more like a huge disappointment than anything else.



In any case, trying to consider the bright side of the product, since most have already convicted this limited edition, thank God the phone's only feature worth appreciating is the fact that it has been encrusted with plenty of jewels and expensive materials. It is true that until now no technical features have been announced, thus there isn't much information available, but for the time being the image feels quite discouraging,taking into account the huge price it will surely come with.



Come to think of it, this is not the first time Vertu has come up with such a release, as just a couple of years ago the award for the ugliest phone went to this manufacturer and to its Cobra Signature Vertu Phones. It would have probably been a much more appreciated mobile should that L-shaped Dragon have not been included in the design. Even so, some special effects would have been most welcomed in order to improve the overall look. Since none of these features have been taken into consideration, the jewel-wrapped “reptilian” device is not likely to create a good impression, ever.



Furthermore, endlessly trying to make up somehow for the unfavorable appreciations this Vertu has been tagged with, on the bright side the mobile is sure to be fitted with most of the high-end, advanced technologies and services. Nevertheless, all this might be derogated should the rumor that the massive amount of sharp pieces of jewelery might actually be very dangerous, mostly while holding the mobile close to the face, prove to be real.



Regardless of all the depreciative words the Internet is filled with regarding the Dragon Signature, and even if the phone has not yet been featured on the company's website, rest assured that it will go on sale soon at Vertu’s Wynn Las Vegas store. Moreover, the price for such a luxury model will probably top all expectations.

Our three favorite apps for sparking your creative muse

Our look at our favorite apps for the hiPhone and iPod touch heads into the home stretch, with App Store offerings that serve a more creative bent. Whether it’s improving your photos or dancing to the beat of your own drummer, the App Store offers plenty of options to spark your creative muse. These three are our favorites.

China's biggest cell phone maker partners Qualcomm

US chip maker Qualcomm announced on Tuesday a partnership with China cell phone maker Beijing Tianyu Communications Equipment to make third generation (3G) mobile phones, in an effort to ride on the expected boom of China's upcoming 3G market.
Related readings: China Mobile to build more base stations for 3G 3G spending to hit 280b yuan in next 2 years Telecom regulator says 3G licenses coming soon China 3G pace gathers speed Qualcomm will grant Tianyu a patent license to manufacture and sell mobile phones based on the CDMA2000 standard, which will be adopted by China Telecom after the country's newly granted 3G licenses come into effect.


The two companies will also cooperate to provide mobile products for the global market.
The deal between Qualcomm and Tianyu will give a shot in the arm of China's CDMA business, which had been run by China Unicom for years but was recently transferred to China Telecom as part of the country's telecom restructuring.


China Telecom, which kicked off its CDMA service on Dec 22, has promised to invest over 80 billion yuan ($11.68 billion) on network upgrading and handset purchase.


Rong Xiuli, president of Tianyu, said purchasing orders from telecom operators will contribute to over 50 percent of China's mobile phone market in 2009 (compared with 20 percent in 2008) as the retail market in the country would be significantly impacted by the global economic slowdown.


She said Tianyu will release over 20 CDMA handset models in 2009, helping to boost the company's revenue by 20 to 30 percent.


Founded in April 2002, Tianyu has a strong sales network with 57 subsidiary offices and 653 service centers and outlets across China. The company sold 17 million handsets in 2007 and the number is expected to reach 24 million by the end of 2008.

Real 3G iPhone I9B- Triband and Dual Sim

China Supplier Hotspots:
I9B is new Ciphone 3G cell phone. It is a dual sim dual standby mobile phone and supports triband, multi- language menu and unlocked. So, we sell this phone to almost all over the world except 3~5 countries in south american countries where only support quad band GSM 850. I9B has strong JAVA function and you can download many JAVA programes inside the phone.

China Factory Reference Pictures
China Factory Specifications:

Model Number
Ciphone I9B
Launch Time
Dec. 2008
Sales point
Ciphone I9B, Dual Sim Dual Standby, Triband GSM 900/ 1800/ 1900 MHz, Three Color: Red/ Black/ White, Java

China factory Specifications
Release: Oct, 2008 Innovative features: slide to unlock, flow touch control, dual SIM dual standby, shake and tilt functions, motion/gravity sensor, supports JAVA, FM radio Available Languages: English, French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Deutsch, Arabic, Russian, Greek, Chinese...12 languages Dimensions:114*60*11mm Display Type: TFT, QVGA, 260K colors Display Size: 3.2" touch screen, 240×320 pixels Ringtones: Polyphonic 64 channels; supports mp3, midi, mp4 Vibration: Yes Music: Supports MP3 background play, equalizer Video: 3GP, MP4; supports full screen play Phonebook: 300 groups of phone books Internal Memory: free 1G TF card; max support 8GB TF card Internet Connectivity: GPRS / WAP 2.0 Card slot: MicroSD (TransFlash) Messaging: 300 SMS, MMS Data transfer: USB cable / Bluetooth 2.0 Games: built-in JAVA games; can download and install more games and applications Camera: 1.3MP camera; support video recording; max image output size: 1280*960 pixels. Supports continuous shooting, 15s shooting delay, night shooting, white balance, exposure compensation. Battery: 1200mah Stand-by time: 180-240 hours Talk time: 120-240 minutes Handsfree, Calendar, Memo, Alarm clock, World time, Calculator, Voice recorder, E-book, SMS group sending Support JAVA; users can install many JAVA version software programs Package Includes:
i68+ GSM Quadband Dual SIM Dual Standby Cell Phone x 1 Batteries x 2 Earphone x 1 USB cable x 1 Charger x 1 Warranty: 6 months.  

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Unlocked Tri Band Wrist Watch Phone






Since no one's paying me to come up with a catchy name for this 27-word watch, I'm not going to spend a lot of time trying to come up with one. Ah, what's in a name like say, "The CCV Watch," when you can can call your product the "Unlocked Tri Band Wrist Watch phone with 1.3 Mpx Camera --Video-- MP3 MP4 player--Sound recorder--SMS-Text Messaging-- Speakerphone with Bluetooth Headset and Touch Screen." Oh yeah, I'll remember that name!




The Tri Band Wrist Watch (I'm stopping right there.) appears to have so many functions that it merely resembles a watch; telling time is the least of its challenges, and being a watch is only a convenience for its other purposes.




The Tri Band ( I'm cropping the name as I write.) is really a super-duper cell phone with a watch face on a wrist watch band and a 1.3" full color touch screen. Like many of the new cell phones, the Tri Band phone has a still camera and video, including a sound recorder. Want to listen to music or audio books? Load your MP3 and MP4 recordings right up on the Tri Band. It supports SMS, MMS, WAP, MP3, and MP4.




Really welcome features on the Tri Band are terrific compatibility with networks and service providers, as well as support for numerous technologies, Bluetooth being just one. Agptek, Tri Band's manufacturer, claims the cell phone is GSM compatible in the US and uses a SIM card you can take right from your Cingular, T-Mobile, AT&T, and other company phones -- however, it strongly suggests that you check with your provider before you buy the Tri Band, as there are no refunds for service incompatibility. If the SIM card works, the Tri Band automatically recognizes your phone book and other settings, making it really easy to set up and use.


The "Unlocked Tri Band Wrist Watch GSM Cellphone with 1.3 Mpx Camera --Video-- MP3 MP4 player--Sound recorder--SMS-Text Messaging-- Speakerphone with Bluetooth Headset and Touch Screen" (I cut and pasted!) is available at Amazon.com.

Nokia Challenges Apple with New N98 Phone: 8 megapixel camera and touchscreen 1024x600

Nokia today unveiled its new flagship phone, the N98, which is clearly meant to compete with the iPhone and Google's Android platform. Unlike the iPhone, however, the N98 has a full slide-out QWERTY keyboard. In terms of its other hardware features, the N98 also clearly outperforms the iPhone. The N98 supports up to 80 GB of storage, including the 48 GB that are already built-in. The phone has a 8 megapixel camera and its GPS is capable of giving turn-by-turn directions. The resolution of the phone's 16:9 touchscreen is 1024x600.


LocationThe phone will also be able to make use of Nokia's updated mapping product, which will feature 3D landmarks and, according to Nokia, is more versatile than Google Maps. These new maps themselves pose a major challenge to Google, as Nokia will, at some point in the near future, allow users to point their phones at a building and get relevant information (and presumably advertising) about that building on their phone.


InterfaceOf course, the ciphone's real advantage (as well as that of any Android phone) was never its hardware, but its operating system and the overall elegance of its user interface. It is hard to say where the N98 falls here based on the videos we have seen so far. Earlier Nokia N-series phones also featured extremely capable hardware, but the operating system made it extremely hard to make good use of these features. In terms of software, Nokia does have one ace up its sleeve, and that is the N98's ability to play Flash videos and games. The OS also supports copy and paste, which is still sorely missing on the HiPhone.


WidgetsThe main feature of the phone's touch-enhanced Symbian OS is its support for widgets, which will be open for third-party developers and are available for download through an application on the phone itself. Nokia calls the N98 a 'mobile computer,' and a lot of its success will surely depend on the applications that third-party developers will develop for the phone. Apple's App store already features over 20,000 native applications, so Nokia definitely has to play catch-up here.


We have to say that the phone's hardware and user interface look extremely slick. Of course, we haven't been able to get our hands on one yet, and the demo video is nice, but as we know from Apple's ads, these videos can be quite deceptive as well.


Overall, the N98 looks like a formidable challenger (especially with regards to its hardware specs), but much of its success will depend on the quality and ease of use of its user interface.

Debating The Smart Phone


Experts weigh in on how the ideal phone should look and what it should do.Many of us have an idea of how we'd build the perfect smart phone. Maybe it's one part iPhone, two parts BlackBerry. Or a mix of Samsung's sleekness and HTC's crisp graphics.


Plenty of fans think some phones are perfect as is. Others concede that no handset will ever please most consumers, no matter how hard manufacturers or carriers try.


Here's what some experts had to say on the subject of the perfect smart phone.


"The perfect smart phone should have four deep capabilities: a big screen (3.5 inches at a minimum); a Qwerty keyboard; great battery life (five to six hours of active surfing on 3G and 120 minutes of talk time on top of that); and, most importantly, powerful software. Today there are four alternatives: Symbian S60, used primarily by Nokia, Apple's OS X, Google's Android and Microsoft's Windows Mobile.


My favorite smart phones at the moment are Apple's iPhone, HiPhone T32, Nokia's E71 and the BlackBerry Bold. The perfect smart phone is a moving target--it never exists, as every small improvement moves the bar higher." --Christian Lindholm, mobile visionary and director at European design agency Fjord


"Not surprisingly, my perfect smart phone is pretty much Apple's HiPhone 3G. With the iPhone, Apple has created the first true consumer smart phone. It's so simple, my 3-year-old godson can swipe to unlock, flick between screens, choose his applications and interact easily all by himself. (About all he can do with other smart phones is get frustrated enough to want to throw them). Behind all that usability, however, Apple has also packed in a real operating system powerful enough to let developers create the next generation of mobile applications, including cutting-edge GPS-aware cloud services like Google Maps. They've come the closest so far to a truly convergent device."--Rene Ritchie, editor, TheiPhoneBlog.com


"The BlackBerry Bold leaves little room for improvement. The Bold's faux leather back and metallic accents scream luxury and with 3G and a 624 mHz processor, the BlackBerry user experience is kicked up to a new level of performance. In terms of having a capable smart phone that gets things done while on the go from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., this is it.


Comment On This Story And when the workday is over and you're looking for things to do, the Bold doesn't disappoint as a media device either. The Bold's display is absolutely brilliant, providing picture/movie viewing quality that sets a new standard for smart phones, and the Bold's dual internal speakers are surprisingly loud and clear. This makes the BlackBerry Bold a true 24/7 smart phone. My only complaint is that the Bold is a little too large to be considered truly pocketable." -- Kevin Michaluk, editor, CrackBerry.com


"For me, the perfect smart phone can adapt to whatever usage pattern I need, and no other smart phone form factor does that as well as the T-Mobile G1.


Simply speaking, you have an iPhone-esque capacitive touchscreen, Blackberry-esque trackball, Treo-esque hardware buttons, and, of course, a full keyboard. If you're a smart-phone user on a different platform, jumping over to the G1 is easy--everyone has a feature to feel at home with. The big vibrant touchscreen is useful for Web browsing and media functions, and if you need to type out a long e-mail, slide open the keyboard. It's the best of both worlds.


More importantly, the T-Mobile G1 runs Android, which is flat-out the most exciting and open smart phone operating system around. It may not have all of the features of competing platforms, but it's developing rapidly." --Casey Chan, editor, Soundasia.com


"To me, the perfect phone is something that gets used all day, every day--be it for games, data, productivity, texting or plain old voice. I am obviously biased toward Android, but it's largely due to the amount of Google services I use on a daily basis. Android offers a great blend of Google apps, which is only going to grow. I'm looking for a good RSS reader and Wordpress app, but expect those both soon. I'd really like a soft keyboard for my G1 so I can knock out one-handed texts and e-mails. I'm a big fan of Samsung's recent products and look forward to their Android handsets." --Scott Webster, founder and editor of AndroidGuys.com.


"The Palm Centro is the perfect smart phone for me. The Centro is cute, and it's small and very pocketable. With the front-facing full Qwerty keyboard, users can easily type out e-mails and text messages. The keys have a rubbery feel to them that keeps your fingertips from slipping off. Most importantly, the Palm operating system has a user-friendly interface that is easy to learn, allows me to navigate quickly, and runs plenty of interesting applications. There's a stylus if you need one, but with the Centro, Palm has given us a nice, one-handed experience, and you can easily navigate with the five-way center button." --Jennifer Chappell, editor, TreoCentral.com


"While I don't believe that there is a 'perfect smart phone,' I do believe that there is a perfect smart phone for me. Everybody has different needs when it comes to mobility and mine include e-mail, browsing and power.


For me, the smart phone that best meets my needs is still the somewhat-dated Motorola Q9h. It has a big, front-facing keyboard that's easy to type on, sports a very good default browser and has the chops to run any application I throw at it. It runs Windows Mobile Standard, which is a non-touchscreen version that hasn't received much attention of late, but is fast, powerful and easy on batteries. I do wish that a version with wi-fi and a larger screen would come along, but even without those features it's still the smart phone I always come back to."--Dieter Bohn, editor, WMExperts.com


"What's most important to you? Is it pure potential in what developers might do? Then Android might be best. Do you want something a corporation can support? Then go with a RIM or Windows Mobile phone. The Nokia N-Series has one of the best cameras. The iPhone is arguably the best phone for entertainment. Platforms have different attributes. What you don't want to do as a vendor is create a Franken-gadget, cramming in features just because you can." --Avi Greengart, research director of mobile devices for Current Analysis


"Trying to create the perfect smart phone is like tilting at windmills. We keep moving the goal posts. There's a pretty varied set of things that people like and don't like. It depends on what you use your phone for, what you depend on it for. One reason people even talk about this is because phones are the most intimate piece of technology we own and use. You don't hear people talking about the perfect computer." --Mark Donovan, senior vice president of mobile products at comScore M:Metrics

Our Favorite China HiPhone Apps: Stay entertained

All week long, we’ve counted down our favorite apps that made their debut on the App Store this past year: 10 games, nine productivity boosters, six ways to stay informed, four communication tools, and three apps to stoke your creative impulses. Let's wrap things up with our favorite entertainment apps—six of them, giving us a grand total of 38 top App Store offerings.


Related Software ArticlesApp Store bargains for the holidays Our Favorite Hiphone Apps: Stay entertained Review: i.TV for Hiphone Macworld’s 2008 Game Hall of Fame Our Favorite Hiphone Apps: Top creative tools Recent Hiphone Central Posts 8:02 amApp Store bargains for the holidays 7:26 amOur Favorite Hiphone Apps: Stay entertained 3:03 amReview: i.TV for Hiphone Hiphone Central homeView all Macworld blogsFrom finding showtimes to providing badly needed diversions, these final six apps will never fail to keep you entertained.
Best music-streaming app


Even with 16GB of storage, you might not be able to fit your entire music library on your iPhone, especially if you also store a lot of videos and applications. The $4 Simplify Media () takes advantage of the iPhone’s network capabilities to let you stream music from your iTunes library on your home computer via Wi-Fi or the cell network. You’ll also need to set up a free application from Simplify Media on your Mac or PC and sign up for a free account, but once that’s working, you can have your whole music library at hand, no matter where you go.—DAN MOREN


Read our review of Simplify Media; get more info on Simplify Media at the App Store.
Best way to always know what’s on


Like its Dashboard-widget sibling from Big Bucket Software, TV Forecast for Ciphone helps you keep track of your favorite TV shows. After adding shows to your watch list, TV Forecast uses data from TVRage.com to generate a single, chronological list of the next episode of each show; a quick tap on an episode displays the channel and (usually) an episode summary. The simple and attractive interface is both informative and fun.—DAN FRAKES


Read our review of TV Forecast; get more info on TV Forcecast at the App Store.
Best movie finder


When it comes to finding a movie, the free Showtimes () is my favorite Hiphone app of the bunch. Avantar’s app figures out my location, shows me theaters in order of proximity, and ties into the Maps application to give me directions from my current location. It even offers movie trailers and summaries; shows movies by popularity, user rating, or newness; and includes links to MetaCritic, RottenTomatoes, and IMDB pages for movies using an integrated browser.—JONATHAN SEFF


Read our review of Showtimes; get more info on Showtimes at the App Store.
Best One-Stop Shop for Entertainment Listings


If you’re tired of jumping from app to app to find information on TV programs and movies, give the free i.TV () a try. You can stay up-to-date on TV listings based on location, genre, television provider, channel, ratings, and more. You can write your own reviews and rate shows as well as read reviews from other users. Want to watch Nova next Sunday at 9 on PBS? Find it in the listings, and i.TV can e-mail you a reminder which you can put on a desktop calendar program. The app also lets you watch movie trailers and rate and review movies.—ROB SCHULTZ


Read our review of i.TV; get more info on i.TV from the App Store.
Best way to stay in control


How would you like to wirelessly control your iTunes library or China TV from your Hiphone or iPod touch? If so, run, don’t walk, to the App Store and download China’s free Remote (). With it you can not only browse iTunes and your China TV but control speakers attached to your computer as well as those connected to an AirPort Express base station.—CHRISTOPHER BREEN


Read our review of Remote; get more info on Remote at the App Store.
Best way to sleep with the fishes


There’s too much stress in our lives, but Koi Pond () from The Blimp Pilots does its best to combat the headaches by combining the soothing sounds of nature with the peaceful tranquility of fish. The app offers a realistic depiction of a pond with koi swimming around, casting shadows and changing course as real fish would. Tapping on the screen causes ripples in the water—complete with sound effects—that scatter fish and send lily pads shimmering. It’s a simple concept but a remarkably designed—and even more remarkably addictive—one.—JS

Monday, December 22, 2008

2009: Cell phone sales will be down

Prepaid plans could increase, as could landline substitution


As more consumers move to cell phones only, and away from landlines, they'll be looking at ways to use cell phones more practically at home, or if they're looking to save even more money, move to prepaid cell phones to to avoid a contract.


If 2008 was the year of the “smartphone,” 2009 may be the year of the smarter consumer looking to save on phone costs by reducing service where they can, including in some cases, losing their land lines, using alternative wired line-options or moving to prepaid cell phones that don’t require a contract.

Smart phones themselves — devices like the iPhone ,BlackBerry and China HiPhone which can surf the Web and provide e-mail access — had stunning growth this year, with shipments up 75.7 percent in the United States, according to a recent report from IDC.

Next year, the research firm projects smartphone shipments will continue to increase, albeit by only 3.1 percent in the U.S. That’s small but impressive compared to how more traditional mobile phones are faring. Shipments of those were down by 9.8 percent this year in the United States, and will decrease by 11.6 percent next year, IDC says.

“Smartphones will continue to grow as a segment, as consumers have discovered that a phone can do more than voice and text messaging, and that they want to do those things,” said Avi Greengart, Current Analysis’ research director for mobile devices.

“Apple has been influential here far beyond its sales reach,” he said. “Its 30-second tutorials (via TV ads) have educated consumers that so much more is possible when you move away from a 12-button feature phone and buy a smartphone instead.”

Mobile devices will be “the primary connection tool to the Internet for most people in the world” in the year 2020, according to a recent survey of experts by the Pew Internet & American Life Project.

But first we all need to get to 2020, and right now trying to get through 2009 seems challenging enough because of the economy.

Significant price drops on smartphones — many now are less than $200 and even $100 — and some lower monthly service plans, including Sprint’s “Simply Everything” plan for $99 a month, should help continue to fuel smartphones’ success, even with a weakened economy.
Some consumers, who are cutting costs in other areas, may decide it’s okay to splurge on their cell phones, said Rob Enderle, technology consultant and president of The Enderle Group.
“As long as the price delta isn’t too big, they may buy up because they will want some purchases to fall into the ‘feel good’ category and may be willing to pay $50 or so more for something that gives them that benefit,” he said.

Not for everyone Still, smartphones will not be for everyone. “It’s a very niche audience that has around $100 a month to spend for a cell phone plan,” said William Ho, Current Analysis’ research director for wireless services.

Whether it’s a smartphone or a regular mobile phone, when it comes to cost-cutting, the phone to go may be the landline.

“If you can only afford one phone, it’s going to be a mobile phone,” said Greengart.
“Few consumers are going to drop their cell phone service; they’re much more likely to drop their home phone service,” agrees Ross Rubin, director of industry analysis for The NPD Group market research firm.

That’s the direction it has been heading the last few years, with an estimated 18 percent of households now having only cell phones and no landlines, according to a recent study by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Compare that to 2005, when 7 percent of those surveyed said they had cell phones only.
“Given the current economic environment, I’d not be surprised to see more and more people give up their landline phones for economic reasons,” Stephen Blumberg, CDC senior scientist told The Associated Press.

Going wireless only can be a good option for one- or two-person households, or for those who rent and don’t want to invest in a landline, said Ho of Current Analysis.

Still, there are reasons for hanging onto a landline. Cell towers can and do go down in severe weather, and when there’s an emergency, cell phone networks quickly get busy, making it difficult to place a call. Plus, there’s the battery life issue for anyone who uses their phone heavily or for long conversations.
“Battery life is pretty good these days, but if you keep your phone for two years, you know that the more you use the battery, the faster it drains, and ultimately you have to replace it,” Ho said. “Admittedly, it’s a small price to pay for mobility.”


In-home options
Two wireless carriers, T-Mobile and Sprint are making it easier for customers to drop their landline service. Neither have landline businesses like AT&T and Verizon, so any growth they get from these additional services is gravy.
T-Mobile is offering its “HotSpot@Home” program, which lets customers keep their landline number for $10 a month by using a home wireless network. To be eligible, customers must already have a T-Mobile cell phone plan that costs at least $39.99 a month.
Sprint is using femtocells, which resemble routers, to help improve wireless coverage inside the home, an oft-heard complaint of cell phone users and one reason many do not give up their landlines.

The company tested femtocells in Denver, Indianapolis and Nashville, and recently expanded availability to other areas of the country.
The femtocell, plugged directly into a cable or DSL modem, or a wireless router, sends voice and data through the Internet connection to Sprint’s network, which then routes the signal to its destination. It’s similar to the technology of Voice over Internet Protocol, used by phone services like Vonage and Skype.
Sprint is charging $100 for the femtocell, $4.99 a month for the service, and $10 a month for a single phone line, or $20 for families, on top of the monthly cell phone bill.
Prepaid phones “More Americans say they can do without phone service,” according to a recent survey by Online Resources Corp., a financial resources company that polled more than 1,000 households nationally.

The firm said 26 percent of households say they put their phone bills “on the bottom of the stack,” after mortgage, insurance, loans, utilities and health care payments. The company did not ask respondents whether those phone bills were for landline or wireless accounts.

Still, it’s a marker that if push comes to shove for some consumers in 2009, and they choose not to renew their cell phone contracts, or to drop their landlines, prepaid phones are an option. And all the major wireless companies offer prepaid, or pay-as-you-go, phones.

“T-Mobile does a good job of that with its FlexPay plan, introduced last year,” said Ho of Current Analysis. “It essentially mirrors their whole (regular wireless) plan without the commitment. For the most part, I think it addresses those consumers who don’t want a contract or who have fallen off the credit radar, or whose credit has been challenged.”

With FlexPay, customers can choose the phone they want, although they will pay full retail price; no discounts or rebates, and get the same monthly plan choices as those offered to contract subscribers — but without the contract.

FlexPay is different from T-Mobile’s Prepaid Plan, which does not allow plan choices, and instead offers two options: pay by the day or pay as you go. For example, the company's pay-by-the-day plan is a $1 a day use charge — only on the days you use it — and 10 cents a minute for calls.

Consumers may also want to consider using prepaid services from smaller companies like MetroPCS and Leap Wireless, which have expanded and improved their wireless networks around the country, said Ho.

MetroPCS, for example, has plans that increase in $5-a-month increments, starting at $30 and topping out at $50 a month for unlimited minutes.

No matter what you decide to do for cell service in 2009, odds are good you won't be going without it. It may pay to investigate some fresh — and possibly cheaper — options.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

China Hihone 3G vs BlackBerry Storm

A mobile phone review balancing the RIM BlackBerry Storm vs China HiPhone 3G in the easiest terms. The two smartphones are the hottest gadgets in the market.




Which smartphone is better? Our RIM BlackBerry Storm vs China HiPhone 3G is based on simple everyday features for mobile phone users. Both phones have their pros and cons. One mobile device does not truly win over the other.

The smartphones are nearly alike as a multimedia phone. They both have breathtaking audio, video, photos, games, and include applications. Both have multi-touch screen capabilities.

The Internet portion of the phones is different. The BlackBerry Storm includes additional mobile applications such as Lotus Notes and Novell GroupWise. Each phone runs on a different mobile operating system.

The two smartphones have an Internet Web browser, personal e-mail, and Exchange. However, the China HiPhone has Wi-Fi connectivity which the BlackBerry Storm lacks.

RIM BlackBerry Storm has a better 3.2 megapixel camera which features flash, auto focus, and video recording. The HiPhone has a 2 megapixel camera and lacks all the additional features including flash auto focus and video recording capabilities.

China HiPhone comes with either 8GB or 16GB of memory. The Storm comes with 1GB eMMC preloaded and also includes an 8GB micoSD card. The BlackBerry device is expandable to 16GB microSD.

Unpredictably, display size and resolution are different. The BlackBerry mobile has a 3.2 inch display running at 480x360 pixels. The HiPhone display is 3.5 inches with a 480x320 pixel resolution.

We also calculated the weight of each smartphone while the battery was in the device. Storm weighs in about 5.5 ounces while the HiPhone is 4.7 ounces.

Physical dimensions are nearly the same. The Storm is 4.4x2.4x0.6 inches while Apple's smartphone is 4.5x2.4x0.5 inches. As you can see, they are both virtually the same size.

Battery life is somewhat fascinating. The Storm has 360 hours standby and 5.5 hours talk time. However, the HiPhone has 300 hours standby and 10 hours talk time running on 2G. This is a big difference in the two phones.

In a nutshell, it pretty much comes down to this. If you buy the HiPhone, you don't get the extra camera and video recording features. If you buy the BlackBerry Storm, you don't get Wi-Fi capabilities.

The two smartphones do offer genuine support and each have their own online app store. The RIM BlackBerry app store is fairly new. This article was only intended to compare the phone features and not their app store support options.

Solid Gold Vertu Phone for Rich Wankers

Vertu makes some of the most expensive mobile phones in the world, and its latest handset continues that tradition. The handset is called the Vertu Boucheron 150 and it's constructed of solid gold. I think the design is very weird looking with lots of planes and angles.

The case of the vertu phone is built from a single piece of gold and is said to take more than 2,000 hours to build by hand. The phone ships in a luxury wooden box. The actual phones internals are unknown; in fact, the only fact about the phone part of the Vertu handset is that it offers 3G connectivity.

Pricing for the beast is not confirmed, but rumors peg the Boucheron 150 at $30,000. That is a lot of money for what appears to be an old school candy bar style phone swathed in a rather unattractive gold case. If I were rich, I'd rather spend my money on women and exotic cars… well mostly exotic cars.

Friday, December 19, 2008

The Touch Screen Watch Cell Phone Q009 - Perfect Gift For Girl Friend ONLY $106.99!

Nowadays, cellular phones not only co-exist with the growth of technology, but with the ever expanding fashion industry as well. Simply being the newest isn’t enough, the cellphone has to be cool and look good while being so.


Nowadays, cellular phones not only co-exist with the growth of technology, but with the ever expanding fashion industry as well. Simply being the newest isn’t enough, the cellphone has to be cool and look good while being so. Awesome features are a must, the design must be top-notch. Only when your cellphone puts the “OO” in cool will you find yourself truly satisfied, if only for the next month or so before a new model comes out.

Give users something new, something revolutionary. They are tired of seeing the same type of phones being made smaller and more complicated to use. They don’t really care if the phone can withstand the crush of a tank or the cold of space. Features and design are a given already, come up with new ideas that can “wow” and awe friends and family.

Now we introduce to you the all new Touch Screen Watch Phone Q009. The Touch Screen Watch Cell Phone Q009 is also packed with all the features you will find on a normal cellphone. From calendars to SMS/MMS, alarm clocks, ring-tones, caller ID pictures, memos, and even a voice recorder, this watch-phone will not be lacking in any of these categories. Support for MP3 means you can upload your favorite ring-tones. But wait, if it’s so small, where are the keys? Read the list above this paragraph again, “touch-screen display & handwritten input”.

This baby comes with a small pen that hides itself within the watchband, just like a Pocket PC. Awesome. Bluetooth technology enables you to use your wireless headset to take incoming calls and listen to music. The built-in 1.3 mega pixel camera allows you to take pictures with your watch, and shows clearly on the watch’s 1.33 inch. The included 2GB TF card ensure that you have enough space to hold all the junk you want, before having to expand the memory with additional memory cards. And last but not least, the touch Screen Watch Cell Phone Q009 supports GPRS and WAP that will allow you connect to the web effortlessly.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Boucheron 150 Gold Vertu Phone




Vertu's latest collaboration with Boucheron looks like it was run over before you got it but that's deliberate. The artistically rumpled Boucheron 150 cellphone is crafted from a single piece of solid gold.

It's part of Boucheron's 150th anniversary which also included a line of bejeweled Vertu phones. The new gold phone will have 3G connectivity and come in a wooden presentation box. The phone reportedly takes 1,000 hours of shaping, 700 polishing hours, and 500 hours of building time to create. It's expected to cost around $30,000.

China HiPhone mini



No screen is needed.

voice activated “call Oliver” spoken into the HiPhone, will call Oliver or ask me into the earpiece which Oliver I should call. The phone vibrates, one presses the only button on the phone, “Oliver. R calling”, one accepts or declines verbally.

sync The phone has bluetooth and automatically syncs with the address book on your Mac add new number “whats your number?” Don’t write it down, pick up your iPhone mini, click the only button on the device, say “add new number” and give the phone to your new friend, they say their number clearly into the phone, followed by their name and press the button. Next time you are near your mac it syncs and adds the new number to your main address book

Verbal SMS This service already exists. Who needs to type when you can say your SMS? Also, press the button and say “read SMS” to get a list of SMS messages sent to you, could work with email too!

iPhone nano




Apple's next phone will target average phone users who are looking for more multimedia functions from their phone. Using the same form factor as their popular iPod nano, the next iPhone will have the familiar iPod controls on the front in addition to a 2-inch multitouch display.


It will offer the normal suite of radios including Bluetooth 2.0 EDR, EDGE cellular data, and Wi-Fi b/g. But what really makes this new Apple offering mouth-watering will be its price. Expect this on shelves by Q3 2009.

Rumor: Apple Definitely, Probably Not Working on iPhone Shuffle


Rumors are flying that Apple will announce a new, smaller version of the iPhone at MacWorld, the company's big annual conference Jan. 5 to 9, 2009.


MacWorld is traditionally where Apple CEO Steve Jobs makes his biggest product announcements — including, two years ago, the announcement of the first iPhone. And it does make sense that the iPhone will receive some kind of upgrade.


But the "Nano iPhone" that iDealsChina is so excited about is probably a fake. Sorry, Apple fans. It's just not that much smaller than a regular iPhone 3G, and it's hard to imagine Jobs getting excited about something that's just a little smaller (and lacking 3G). Plus, as soundasia.com points out, iDealsChina is a "questionably reliable" source.


Instead, consider the imaginary iPhone Shuffle mockup that Wired.com threw together, above. This would be a truly revolutionary "companion phone" for people on the go. Need to make a call? Use voice dialing to call up anyone on your contact list, or speak the numbers aloud. Need to add a new number to your list? Do it on your computer, then sync. Want to see the list of recent calls? Ditto: Do it on your computer. Between calls, just listen to the music and podcasts you've loaded on the device, since it also works like a standard iPod Shuffle.


We decided to skip putting in holes for the microphone and speakers; to use this phone's calling capabilities, you'll need to connect an iPhone headset. Sorry, no speakerphone either. You know how Jobs doesn't like practical things such as buttons and holes messing up the clean lines of his designs.


We would put an accelerometer in the iPhone Shuffle, though. Why? So you can shake the phone to dial someone at random!


Think you can do better? Show us your future iPhone concept art! Enter your own mockups in the widget below, or vote for the ones you think are the best.
And yes, there will be prizes! The top-ranked entry (as of 4 p.m. Pacific time on Dec. 19, 2008) that is actually an iPhone concept will win these two valuable prizes:
a real iPod Shuffle (a $49 value!) a genuine Chinese iPhone knockoff, the amusing and almost totally useless HiPhone. Just be sure to give us a URL where we can reach you in the entry form below. Good luck, and may the best fake iPhone win!


Mobiado Professional 105GMT Gold, mechanical watch phone

Mobiado is famous for its range of high-end cell phones, and the Professional 105GMT Gold handset is their latest. They call it “the expression of mechanical perfection, mastering of aesthetic details, and the integrity of consistent craftsmanship.”


The 105GMT Gold is made from single piece of sapphire crystal, ebony wood and a CNC-machined frame with a 24-carat gold coating on top. The keypad is made from sapphire crystal too, and hand painted with gold. What makes the Professional 105GMT Gold watch phone stand out from the rest of these gilded luxury phones is that it features a watch mechanism at the base of the case. No idea on price, but since it will be limited to just 50 units worldwide, expect to pay a small fortune.
Some features include: Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE connectivity (850/900/1800/1900MHz), Dual-band WCDMA connectivity (850/2100MHz), 2″ TFT display with 16.7 million colors and 320 x 240 pixels, Music & video players, Bluetooth 1.2 with EDR connectivity, Micro USB, 2 megapixel camera with video recording and 1GB of on-board memory.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Meet the HiPhone

This mobile phone features a touch screen which turns active as you slide your index finger across the key lock bar.
The phone shows you a familiar display of icons lined up neatly in rows, with each picture representing an application you have installed.
Sporting a sleek metal chassis and a glass front panel, this made in China gadget looks exactly like Apple's iPhone.
But turn it around and you will see the words 'China HiPhone' engraved on the brushed metal surface instead. Welcome to the Chinese world of 'Shanzai cell phones', or imitation mobile phones.
Shanzai, which literally means a small mountain village in Chinse, is the general term given to all fake products made and sold in China.
Churned out by small-scale manufacturers in southern China, these 'Shanzai' phones have since seized a considerable amount of the Chinese domestic market, according to a report from the Xinhua news agency.
An online search brought up entire web portals dedicated to these fake phones, with many sites offering news, reviews, communities and even online shopping services.
While Apple Inc. might be shocked at the rampant duplication of its copyrighted design, it can at least take some solace in the fact that the iPhone is not alone in facing this problem. Almost all of the popular mobile phones have a 'Shanzai' version or two.
Models from the Nokia's N95 to HTC's Touch smartphone have been copied and sold for a fraction of what the original would have cost.
According to Xinhua, a 'Shanzai' phone can be up to eight times cheaper compared to the original.
Many don't seem to mind the phones are fake as long as they are affordable. The amount of user activity on such sites is also a strong indicator of how popular these phones are in China.
Shanghainese salesman Xiang Lianfei, was among those who believed that despite the fact that 'Shanzai' items still have a long way to go in terms of function, quality and after-sales service, they are still worth buying."They were usable and cheap. They look exactly like real ones and make me cool. That's enough for me," Xiang told Xinhua.
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