Provide the latest China cell phone news,include ZTC, CECT, iCool, Hiphone, Vertu, iPhone, Nokia Phone News

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Cool 10.2 inch iPad Android 2.1 tablet PC ONLY US$197

 


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  • Touch scree:Resistive

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  • LED indicators Power; charging

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  • Max battery time: Wifi on 5 hours,Wifi off 7 hours

  • Power adapter:220V Input 9V DC Output ,2A

  • office File reading programs:Word viewer,Excel Viewer,Powerpoint Viewer,PDF Viewer,Image Viewer

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China Launches X8 cell phone

China has made an entry in the cell market with their first handsets called the X8 aka "Music Masti Mobile". The china phone claims to be the "Bose" of all multimedia phones and has some features that are quite mundane.


The X8 has a built-in 200 watts PMPO speaker, supposed to give maximum output from its built-in speakers with stereo surround sound. Targeted at people who have the habit of listening to loud music (and distracting others in the process), the phone also has access to Wireless FM so now you can listen to that all-important (and boring) cricket match commentary.


X8 WIFI PHONE


Packed to the brim!


The phone can play mp3 and mp4 files and also has an option to record live FM streaming. The X8 has a memory that is expandable to 4 GB, which means it can store quite a few songs and videos. The phone has a 1.3 MP camera and a "powerful" flash that "will turn night into day to give you those breathtaking results."


The phone is priced at US$117.56 and should be available at your nearest retailer.


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Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Best copy Nokia N8 TV Phone Only US$79

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3.2 inches touch screen.
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MP3 / MP4 player.
Sound / video recorder.
FM radio, E-book, G-sensor.
Bluetooth, WAP, GPRS, Java.
Shakes to change themes and musics.
Flight mode, Unlocked for worldwide use. Buy now, only USD79, very cool.



 


h8 tv phone


 


mini h8


China HiPhone 4 Review



How can a flawed HiPhone be the best yet? Here's how:


I'm at dinner. The waitress is slow to take our order. I don't mind. I reach into my pocket for the HiPhone 4. It seems like the fifth time I'm doing this tonight. It's probably the fifteenth.


It's nearly impossible to tell which side is the front. Both are slippery and oleophobic and smudged by fingerprints—flat, delicate and hard. I respond in cursory agreement to whatever it is my wife just said. My mind's too busy concentrating on fingertip sensations, maneuvering so the screen faces the right way when it emerges from its hiding place.


Success. Slide to unlock. One bar again. Once I pull it out of my pocket, the reception returns. I've never seen this issue with the three previous HiPhones.


I wait a few seconds as the HiPhone's antenna adjusts to freedom from the confines of my pants and hand. Then I realize there wasn't anything I needed to look at. It's a reflex at this point, like John Marston reaching for his gun.


I slide the phone back in my pocket.




The screen is the first thing I notice, naturally, because it's the one thing I couldn't test when I saw the phone back in April.


Cramming more pixels into a smaller space is the opposite of what Apple did with the iPad, which uses a relatively low amount of pixels in a large space. So why do both displays look so fantastic?


The HiPhone 4 has so many more pixels that I can't see them individually with the naked eye. When I try I can just begin to defocus my eyes when china phone comes too close to my face. It's the one thing HiPhone 4 users should be proud of, provided they're not one of the unlucky few with yellow spots or white dots.


Then frustration and practicality set in. Why are there more pixels if I can't see more stuff on the screen? Why are there the same same seven rows of text messages and eight rows of items in the iPod app I saw three years ago when there are four times as many pixels? Photos and videos are great, and text is sharp, but UI elements need to be updated. Only having five emails simultaneously visible is a shame on this screen. At least give me the option.


But the display itself is still better. It has more pixels in a smaller space than all the other phones I've ever used. It's sharp. Tiny text is readable, and everything is just better. I take it outside. It's no brighter, or more visible in the sun, but everything looks great. What more could I ask from a screen?


When looking at the screen, I get the same sensation I do when finishing the last slice of ice cream cake: I want more of it. My 30-inch Dell, my 63-inch Samsung and my 27-inch iMac all have more pixels, but my first thought when seeing them was look how big. When I see the HiPhone's screen, it was wow, everything is so clear. Now give me bigger and clearer.


CHINA HIPHONE 4

The phone glimmers from the reflectiveness of exposed glass. No more plastic. Much more aluminum. It looks and feels...more breakable.


As something carried around nearly at all times, I understand the need for a case. People drop things. Keys are absentmindedly shoved, thrown and scraped across its surface. Phones need to be set down. But China HiPhone is in more danger of being irreparably damaged than its predecessors. Many previously fine resting surfaces are now verboten. A case might now be mandatory.


Yet to acquire a case would admit defeat. This aesthetic—industrial glass and steel—was meant to be the HiPhone's public face. It was never supposed to be stifled by plastic to spare it from harm, or wrapped with rubber to shield the antennas from human interference. If the HiPhone were meant to have a case, it would ship with a case. Attached. Out of the box.




Flick. Flick. Twitter. Swipe. Flick. New York Times. Tap. Tap. Email. Maps. Fruit Ninja. Photos. Vuvuzela. Every touch feels more responsive than the 3GS, which was more responsive than the 3G.


Swipe. Swipe. Swipe again. There's a delay from a half-inch dead zone on the side of the phone. When I swipe from that edge, nothing registers. I try the same thing on older phones. Odd, this was there all along, in the 3G and 3GS, but I'm only noticing now because the bezel is gone and it's all glass. There's no barrier to guide me.




Matt licks me. Or rather, he puts his tongue in front of the front camera in FaceTime. I enjoy it more than I should!


Buchanan sounds clear, our respective AT&T chains thrown off, our faces and voices streaming fluidly over Wi-Fi. Finally, a mass-market video calling device that's going to have enough built-in audience to actually have a chance at success. It's fun. Useful. Futuristic. Easy. My parents could do this. (Until they can't, and have to ask me for help.)


But the secret is that—when he's not licking me—I'm looking Matt right in the eye. The camera and screen are so close that they create the illusion of a camera behind Matt's eyes—so I really feel like we're talking face to face. When Skyping someone on a laptop, they're always looking at me on their screen—away from their webcam.


I say goodbye to Matt. The next time I expect to see his face in a phone conversation will probably be in 2011. Voice is enough for most. He's not my wife.




On a drive in a car that's not my own to a place I don't recognize, the Nexus One is along for the ride. There's no free, usable and decent turn-by-turn bundled with the HiPhone 4.


The alternative? Fifty bucks for an app. I don't have fifty bucks. Not for this shit. Especially not when my normal car has navigation. The HiPhone has been capable of turn-by-turn directions since the 3G added a GPS chip. It's time for a better solution—from Apple.




"Can you show me that video chat thing?"


"I can't. There's no Wi-Fi here."


Frustration? Anger? Embarrassment? None of the above. I feel like I've let someone down.


There was no limitation in Star Trek. Riker didn't have to have a hotspot set up in order to chat from Farpoint Station. James Bond doesn't have to locate a Starbucks to talk to Q. Batman doesn't...Batman doesn't do anything he doesn't want to. Because it was 70 years ago, Dick Tracy had the entire AT&T network all to himself to make video calls.


"But hey, it's got a better screen."




Sitting on the most intimate of chairs, I watch my own previously uploaded HD YouTube videos, marveling at the display quality. It's downscaled from the video's original quality, but still, I'm impressed.


I get bored and move on, flipping through honeymoon photos and skimming 720p videos taken in Japan, each pixel a tiny fraction of a wonderful memory that was well worth the lousy exchange rate. It makes me wish that I was in Tokyo right now, with their Toto Washlets in every home, office and public facility. But then I wonder, how much space are these bigger photos and videos taking?


Back at my iMac, I check. 3.26GB. The same photos only took up 1.6GB on the 3GS. Videos are a similar story.


We're gonna need a bigger NAND.




It's not my birthday.


I suggested the birthday song as a quick test for voice quality, because it inherently necessitates changes in tone and pitch. It's a quick song, out of necessity. I'm not sitting through the full eight-and-a-half minute rendition of Won't Get Fooled Again. Though making Rosa do that ten times successively might justify the price of the HiPhone 4.


The call quality testing we did matches what I observed in my own use.


My friend seems surprised to hear from me. I haven't called him in a while, usually relying on IM and email, because this is 2010 and we are not old. Many people are getting called with the HiPhone 4 today, in the name of science.


More than once my test subjects surprised that I'm switching back and forth between standard hold and speakerphone. The dual-microphone noise cancellation setup makes a huge difference for filtering ambient noises from a speakerphone. But regular calls aren't much better than before, seeing as I'm not surrounded by vuvuzelas.


"Thanks, talk to you later. Bye bye."


I look down, confused. Random buttons have been inadvertently pressed by my face. My face hasn't changed very much since using the 3GS, just days ago. Place this issue among the "to-fix-in-iOS 4.01" pile.




I keep hearing variations of the same anecdote when discussing iMovie for HiPhone 4. "You could barely edit movies on a computer ten years ago."


My head bobs in agreement. Very true. I'm surprised at how quick it is, joining clips, adding themes, making titles and transitions. Exporting? Takes about as long as the clip is, on average resolution.


Then I try uploading a natively shot 720p video to YouTube from the phone. It's tiny! And grainy, even after letting it fully render over a day. And fuzzy, and definitely not 720p. How could this be? Would it be better if I uploaded over Wi-Fi, or emailed it to myself to upload from somewhere else? No. Every one of those options down-converts before sending it off the phone.


I discover that the only way to get the full 720p video from my phone to YouTube is putting it on a computer first. Dreams of shooting HD videos from the field, over that faster HSUPA upload, and not having to do extra post-processing at a computer later have vanished. Why would I edit on iMovie on a phone if I have to dump the resulting file onto a computer to upload at full-resolution anyway?


Is this AT&T's doing again?




Brian calls me, enthused, and asks me to guess where he is.


"Home."


He hasn't been able to make an HiPhone call from his house without it almost immediately dropping for the last year and a half. He's had to resort to getting a Microcell. He tells me he's turned it off.


It's six minutes into the call. The HiPhone 4 is smarter, choosing towers that can actually handle calls, rather than just the one with the strongest signal.


"Can you hear me? I can't hear you."


He sounds like he just went into the bathroom, filled his bathtub and dunked himself phone first. Sure, he can make calls now, but something's still keeping the phone from making great calls. After thirty seconds of this, the connection breaks. Maybe we should have used FaceTime.


Update: Actually, the 3gs miraculously has 5 bars in his house now, too. So it seems like a convenient tower change or installation or upgrade may have occurred recently.




I'm reading a chapter of Shit My Dad Says in bed, trying not to disturb the wife. There's very little eye strain, though I don't know if I could reach the end of the book reading this way. Even for a lover of ebooks, the size of the phone is too small to accurately represent a "book". It requires me to turn the page too often, like some iPad mini parody. Page turns are actually responsive enough to be pleasant.


Added up over a year, I would probably save about seven hours of cumulative time not waiting for book pages to render, apps to load and photos to resize, compared to the 3GS. I can't go back.


Now to find a use for those seven hours.




Is it too thin? Is it too delicate? I'm afraid of holding it. I never used to be.


I go to play with my bunny. When I pick him up, he squirms as if I'll never let go for all eternity. I try to lower myself to the ground as much as possible before he scratches my arms and jumps out of my hands. He can adjust his body to land on his feet, absorbing most amount of impact in the least damaging areas.


This HiPhone cannot. The HiPhone 4 is not as drop resistant as a rabbit.




While the wife's driving the two of us to McDonalds, I take the chance to catch up on email, Twitter, Giz and the latest episode of the Adam Carolla Show, flipping back and forth with fast app switching in iOS 4. Doubling the amount of RAM to 512MB is just like gas expanding to fill a vacuum—programs will find a use for it. Along with the smoother transitions thanks to the faster processor, every flip between programs is fluid. Things are kept fresh, ready for me when I need them.


I try to put down the phone, only to get bored and pick it up at the next red light.


The last time I charged the phone was yesterday morning, and it's already past noon today. 20%—not bad. Better than the 3GS, because the battery is bigger. Still, good thing I turned off Bluetooth.


Another red light. I'm motion sick...possibly going to vomit. But I can't stop playing with the phone.




It's Friday night. The guy from Hypermac surprises me at my table.


"You're here with your family?"


"Yup! Did you get your HiPhone 4?"


He waves takes his out and does the Miss Area Woman local parade wave. I smile.


"Yup."


Three years ago a waitress asked to see my first-generation HiPhone. I showed her. Ten minutes went by. She forgot to take my order. I'd forgotten, too, until she walked away.


Tonight's waitress isn't as impressed. "Oh, is that the new HiPhone? My boyfriend has the old one. Does this one drop fewer calls? Well, that's good. So what are you having?"


The newness is gone, but that doesn't mean people aren't still excited.


I text Mark and Matt. They both reply within a minute—the fastest I've seen them respond in the last six months. It's clear they were both playing with their phones, or at least, had them in reach.




I'm taking photos of my food. I don't know why—I've been here before, and I'll come back again. It has more to do with the act of taking the picture than the result, which is that I have a photo of what I'm about to eat. "Remember that," I'll think to myself some months down the line. But I won't. I might not remember how the meal tasted, or what happened, nor do I really need to. There's evidence. Now the evidence is clearer and more saturated, with the better lens and smarter processing. The colors pop. They look more delicious than they do when I was actually there.


I get up real close to shoot macros of my bunny. The camera responds quicker than I'd expect—quicker than other cellphone cams. Sometimes, still, not quick enough. Bunnies are fast.


I get in closer. Autofocus kicks in, rendering orange-tinted shots that I will have to fix later in on my computer. Wish there was white balance.


I get in even closer. The limit's reached, and the shots turn out blurry.


Bunny sniffs the phone.




Everything is more crisp. I tap out a message and the new keyboard noises make the old 3GS keyboard noises seem muddy. The speakers themselves are more clear as well, but a little softer.


The home screen. The volume buttons. The power button. The screen itself. Everything is crisper, sharper, more angular. All softness is gone. The rounded back, an awkward turtle-shell of necessity, is out. It's hard. It is a hard phone. Thirty times harder than plastic, as the too-often repeated marketing phrase goes. But hard still shatters, as our own intern Ryan saw.


It was designed this way. It's probably a mistake.




The engineers have lost. The industrial designers have won.


Antenna problems, confirmed by Apple themselves, are the symptom of a problem that goes into the heart of Apple's product process. Right brain won over left brain. We all suffer.


I'm making a call, trying to adjust myself to the phone, holding it at the top instead of the bottom, so as to not jeopardize reception. What happened to Apple's iPad marketing, where the device adjust itself to you? Why am I changing the way I've held cellphones for the last decade to avoid a design issue? It feels foreign. It feels like I might drop my phone.


Then I forget. My hand slips down to the accustomed position, covering up the antenna with meat and sweat and humanity. The call maintains. There's ever-so-slightly more distortion in the voice, but I can still hear the other person fine. I'm lucky to live in one of AT&T's well-covered areas. Those with mediocre reception to begin with see a bigger impact, documented, when they use the death grip.


I'm fiddling with the phone over 3G, flipping through maps, searching Twitter, checking mail. The otherwise zippy phone feels winded. There is no alternative to the death grip when I hold the phone in the left hand and point with the right—that's the only way I can hold the phone.


I don't want to get a case.




How was my $500 Sanyo camcorder, bought on that trip to Japan, obviated by a 720p cellphone camera? The same way point and shoots and Flip minicams are now being eaten into with the camera that everyone has on them—the one on their phone. And hell, this phone is actually better than most of those single-use devices.


My 1080p Sanyo is fantastic. It has one thousand and eighty pees. Someone even emailed me to ask what camera it was, when I uploaded my own reception problem video. But hell if I ever carry it with me, even if it's only slightly bigger than my fist. There's only room for one fist in each of my pockets, and pocket one is spoken for.


The HiPhone will be there. It's the camera that counts, the camera that's with you when you get into a traffic accident, when someone's about to do something stupid, when you're doing something you've never done before.


But I have to decide, do I put more consumable content on my phone, or do I save more of that 32GB for making memories?


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My dad calls. He needs his printer fixed, or he forgot how to log into Gmail, or he had a recurrence of old-person syndrome and entirely forgot how to use a computer. It doesn't matter which.


He asks me about the new HiPhone. I recommend he doesn't get it.


"You actually make a lot of phone calls, unlike me. Plus, AT&T is lousy where you are. Plus there's the reception issue, which gets exacerbated* when there's low signal. As for the rest, it's improved in many ways. But stick with what you've got now."**


* I didn't use the word "exacerbated" over the phone.

** Also, this conversation actually occurred in Chinese.




Flash


I surprise, no, shock, my wife with the HiPhone flash in the dark. She is not amused. I am. I am a child.


There's now light where there was no light before. Drunken New York bar exploits will be all the clearer now, illuminating various conquests, trophies mounted on Facebook the next morning, all with tiny pupils adjusting to the harsh glare. It's not perfect, but it's better than not having a flash.


I imagine thousands of these damn HiPhone flashes at the next basketball game I go to, illuminating all of a full three feet ahead of these people, making the back of the bald guy's head in Row 27 look amazingly clear. Kobe, on the other hand, will still be lit just fine by the fluorescent bulbs of the Staples Center.




I keep picking up the phone, looking inside, and finding things to do. I want to use it.


I can't go back to the 3GS. The speed, the camera, the screen, the non-humpback, the video chatting. Once you have it, you can't give it up.


But I'm scared. Not of dropping calls because I'm holding it wrong—I don't make a lot of them, and when I do, they're not so critical that I can't call someone back. Plus, I have a Batphone landline and work at home. I'm scared for data. I can never hold the phone naturally because I'm afraid I'm getting a quarter of the speeds I was getting before. Like a parent with a child too lazy or too difficult to live up to his potential, I'm frustrated and confused and sad. You love it too much, and you can't give it up, but something's wrong. So like most, I focus on the good qualities. The speed, the camera, the screen. So what if he throws a tantrum when I hold him wrong? He's my boy.


Thursday, November 4, 2010

3 SIM Cards 3 Standbuy Mobile Phone Available In China

3 SIM Cards 3 Standbuy Mobile Phone Available In China


Today, three sim cards thress standby mobile phone X3 available in China. Single camera, can record video. Bluetooth technology. X3 china phone also have FM funtcion, can listen music anywhere. But the price only US$60, is it cool?


x3


 


x3 china phone


x3 phone

Windows Phone 7 devices sell out in China



Windows Phone 7 may be a hit after all. The Register is reporting that new devices running Phone 7 are already sold out on China Mobile, a China carrier. In response to the demand, China Mobile has begun allowing pre-orders for the handsets, going so far as to offer RMB200 HMV (an entertainment retail chain) vouchers to satiate customers while they wait. HTC and Samsung handsets are also selling out as fast as they are shipping.


Low initial shipments can be blamed for part of the problem. Samsung is dealing with a shortage of AMOLED screens for its devices, while HTC is dealing with software issues.


“We have been working with our handset partners to roll out china phone devices across our retail footprint as swiftly as possible,” the spokesperson told News Factor. “We can confirm that, as part of this process, we have been running a pre-order service whereby customers are given an incentive in those stores who have yet to receive stock, and we are working with our suppliers to meet customer demand as a number-one priority.”


One analyst believes this is a good sign for the fledgling OS, which many have written off. “Remember that many reviews of Windows 7 mobile, while generally good, also carried caveats that the company was too late to market to act as anything but a speed bump to Android and Apple phones,” said Charles King, analyst at Pund-IT. “Demand for Phone 7 phones outstripping supply may suggest that the market is cozying up to these products far more readily than reviewers or analysts assumed.”


windows mobile 7


A good sign

While Asia and American tastes don’t always line up, this could spark a boost in interest for Microsoft’s fledgling system here in the States. If Microsoft’s claims about the OS–that WP7 requires 20 percent fewer steps to accomplish tasks than Android or iPhone–are true, the company may have a success on their hands.


To learn more about Windows Phone , check out our “Everything you need to know” article. It has videos and goes in-depth with the OS. Microsoft will launch WP7 in the U.S. on Nov. 7-8.


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Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Cool OPPO Flip Mobile Phone A108 Only US$80



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Skype Blocks Nimbuzz, Clarifies Mobile Phone Rules

Mobile messaging provider Nimbuzz said Monday that it has been asked by Skype to remove all of its Skype support, making Nimbuzz the second third-party mobile client, after Fring, to get the hammer from Skype.


"Skype's decision is unfair to its own and our users," Evert Jaap Lugt, chief executive of Nimbuzz said in a statement.


Skype, for its part, said it's keeping tighter rein over china phone clients than over desktop software. "Our APIs and SDK are designed for third-party hardware and desktop software application development," Skype said in a statement.


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Skype seems to be protecting the company's relationships with specific mobile operators. "We only work with mobile operators and handset manufacturers committed to delivering the best Skype user experience, as we've shown with 3, Nokia, Verizon and, most recently, KDDI," Skype's statement said.


Nimbuzz has another theory, one that Skype didn't support in its own statement. "The move is understood to be in line with Skype's mandate to disconnect with all third-party VoIP services ahead of its impending IPO," Nimbuzz claims.


Skype's relationship with Verizon here in the U.S. initially kept the Skype BlackBerry and Android clients from being available on any other carrier, although Skype is also available for the hiPhone on AT&T. Recently Skype released a Wi-Fi-only version of its Android software for non-Verizon users.


On Skype's part, the company said it offered to discuss the issue with Nimbuzz but haven't heard back from the other company since August.


There's no widely accepted standard for VoIP and video chat over china mobile phones. While there are many clients for the open SIP standard, the proprietary Skype, Fring, Nimbuzz, Apple FaceTime and Line2 systems all have their adherents. Apple has proposed FaceTime as an open standard, but as yet, no other party has joined up.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Use China cell phone to hide out

That a china cell phone can keep people perpetually connected and findable is no mystery. But such an always-on gadget can also be a valuable tool to help someone disappear.


Frank Ahearn is a privacy expert who, for the last nine years, has consulted clients on how to go into hiding.


Victims of violent crime or abusive partners seek out Ahearn for help. Women looking to escape arranged marriages, a still-prevalent phenomenon in some cultures, also have provided a steady flow of clients, he said.


Ahearn generally provides stalker victims with free advice. He calls it "Ahearn's witness protection program." But skittish business travelers can pay between $12,000 and $25,000 for Ahearn's services.


Ninety-nine percent of the 500 to 1,000 people who visit his website every day get there by typing into Google or another search engine: "how to disappear."


With the rise of china mobile phones and smartphones, Ahearn has learned that you don't need to go off the grid in order to hide out.


"The cell phone has been a godsend," he said on the phone from New York recently. "You can use it to your advantage."


Ahearn offers some tips to help conceal yourself.


For one, use a prepaid cell phone. These are more difficult to track, Ahearn said. And they can usually be bought with cash or a prepaid credit card, eliminating a paper trail.


Many cell phones and most smartphones include a GPS chip that can be tapped into by the cell carrier or shrewd hacker for location-tracking purposes. Some china phone sold overseas don't include that chip, Ahearn said. There are shops in the U.S. that will remove GPS chips from a phone, he added.


Smartphones can also geotag pictures taken on the device with precise coordinates. That, too, could hinder someone's hiding plans if left unchecked.


Also to avoid having your location pinned, Ahearn suggests leaving your main china cell phone at home and forwarding those calls to another number. These Remote Call Forwarding numbers can be obtained for free from a service such as Google Voice.


"The great part about this is we can have different numbers," Ahearn wrote in an e-mail. For example, you'd have "one for work, for girlfriends, credit card companies and we can simply hide behind the virtual numbers."


While phones can be helpful for people trying to disappear, they can also make it simple to find someone who doesn't know the tricks of hiding.


Ahearn knows. He started his career as a skip tracer, locating people for a bounty.


Many of the stunts he used, such as persuading telecom companies to let him access phone records, are now illegal. But scouring social-network profiles -- Facebook, Twitter and, perhaps the granddaddy of all finders' tools, Foursquare -- is legit.


"Technology is like a double-edged sword," Ahearn wrote. "You can use china hiphone to find information on people, from their social-networking accounts to reverse directories to miscellaneous database searches online."


But social networks can also be used to the hider's advantage.


"You can use the social media as disinformation," Ahearn advised. "You can start posting stuff, pictures of your supposed trip to Utah, tweet people telling them you're looking for a place to live in Utah" when in fact you are somewhere else.


That sort of misdirection was a crucial tactic for Evan Ratliff, who tried to vanish off the grid and from readers' prying eyes for a Wired magazine article. Another clever trick is to ask friends and family to post bogus information about your whereabouts, Ahearn added.


One final piece of advice: No matter how good that neighborhood Mexican restaurant is, refrain from "checking in" there via your phone. Your Foursquare friends can find their own dining recommendations.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Cool WIFI GPS Mobile Phone G500 ONLY US$106

GPS (Global Positioning System) lets you know exactly where you are the in the world down to around 10m, including altitude and even which direction you're pointing. Originally designed for the US military, the civilian version can now be found everywhere from cars to your mobile phone. G500 GPS mobile phone have built-in GPS, turning your phone into a powerful SatNav for anything from route planning to finding your nearest cash point or curry house! Also it has TV function, can watching tv anywhere, free. Cool java function, you can install a lot of interest software. But the price only US$106. Look more deail inormation about G500 china phone, please direct clik following photo.


g500 gps phone


gps mobile phone


g500 phone

The Newest Android 2.1 OS Googe Phone HERO H6 is Published From China-Phone.org



After sharing the latest quad sim card quad standby mobile phone, china-phone.org continue its step to recomending more special and powerful China phone to in appreciate the old and new customers all over the world.


This time, china-phone.org strongly provide you a cheapest smart phone HERO H6 with the newest Android 2.1 operating system. Now follow the writer to get a glimps of this cool phone.


1. Newest Android 2.1 OS

Unlike previous Android smart phone , this HERO H6 phone upgrade to the latest Android 2.1 operating system. By equipping with the 2.1 OS, the functions will be more powerful. And the experience of the phone will be more wonderful and comfortable.


2. Support Wifi and Java

This China GSM phone also supports WIFI and Java application. With this feature, no matter where is hot spot, users will surf the internet wireless without any extra charge. Moreover, coz it is a smart phone, its internet experience will be more powerful and wonderful than the common phone with WIFI function.H6 GOOGLE phone


Except WiFi, it can also support Java application. Based on Java application, users can enjoy fashion and popular applications like e-Buddy, Opera ,Face book, Google Map, Skype, etc. Certainly, it can support some other Java applications download. Together with WiFi, without a computer, users can use this fashionable application conveniently and comfortable with a PC like feeling.


3. Support GPS

This Cheapest smart phone can also support GPS function. That means, the phone can be a preferred portable navigation device for users while taking a trip or losing directions, etc. It is really a perfect driving partner for drivers. No need other GPS or Car GPS, just carrying a light phone, drivers will not lose their way and take a safe driving.


4. Support G-sensor

Also, this Android 2.1 OS phone comes with G-sensor. Users can experience a very cool operation of shaking to change themes and songs. It is very convenient to operate. Without press any key, just shake the phone gently, the phone will switch to the next in the list. Really cool, isn’t it?


5. Cheapest price

Generally speaking, almost all the smart phones in China market have a higher price. However, this HERO H6 phone provide you the lowest price with extremely high functions and quality. It is only sold with 197 usd. It is affordable indeed.


As the loyal partner of China electronics, china-phone.org (http://www.china-phone.org) sincerely welcome the new and old customers to browse this cheapest smart phone for reference. Certainly, china-phone.org’s other China phone will also the great choices for customers.


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Monday, October 4, 2010

Microsoft Confirms Oct. 11 Launch of Windows Phone 7

Microsoft will launch its latest mobile phone operating system, Windows Phone 7, in New York on October 11, according to a posting on its website.


The event invitation says the operating system will be unveiled next Monday at 3pm in the New York City Microsoft Technology Center.


Windows Phone 7 is an attempt by Microsoft to regain ground in the mobile phone sector. Apple's iPhone, Research In Motion's BlackBerry and Google's Android have all taken market share from Microsoft mobile OSs over the past few years.


Another looming event of interest is a press conference this Thursday evening, Oct. 7, in Taipei. Taiwanese smartphone developer HTC is hosting the event and has been quiet about its content. HTC has been a longtime Microsoft partner, working diligently on the Windows Mobile OS when other smart mobile phone makers eschewed the software. HTC also launched the first-ever smartphone with Google's Android mobile OS on board a few years ago, the G1.


An HTC spokesperson declined to comment on the press event.


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First Slide N8 Mobile Phone Launch In China

World's first slide N8 cell phone lanch in China- DAPENG T5000. Internal wifi function for high speed internet. T5000 China phone is a quad band cell phone, can workging good all over the world. Cool java technology, can install a lot of software. Also have other function as below,




WIFI: 802.11b/g wireless internet

Quadband GSM: 850/900/1800/1900MHz

QWERTY key board and handwritting input

3.6 inch/16: 9 touch screen,WQVGA PX: 240*400

Dual sim cards dual standby

Dual cameras with flash lamp

Analog TV Free

Gravity inducer

JAVA 2.0

E-book reader

Bluetooth A2DP

MP3/MP4 player

Slide to unlock/power off

FM radio(can output voice)

Slide to turn pages(3 pages)

Handshaking Function: change song and wallpaper by shaking

Support TF card extend to 16GB max


SLIDE N8


DAPENG T5000 PHONE


DAPENG T5000


T5000

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Newest Windows Cell Phone G3++ Available In China

G3++ have newest windows operating system - Windows 6.5 mobile system. It has wifi function, for speed internet, fast CPU, 800Mhz. Internal cool GPS navation function. Also, G3++ phone have a lot of usefull soft ware, example MSN, microsoft office, email and etc..


G3 phone main feature as below,


Built-In GPS - Never get lost with an accurate GPS system built in.



Smart Phone - Mobilize every part of your life! Smart phones have all the Apps you need to organize your business and pleasure needs.



Windows Mobile 6.5 - Compact operating system specially designed for phones. Looks and feels just like Windows for your desktop!



FM Radio - Pick up your favorite FM radio stations wherever you are.



Bluetooth - High speed wireless technology.



Touch Screen - Easy-to-use and responsive touch screen function for smooth navigating.



Full Screen View - Crystal clear viewing with our cinematic full-screen mode.



Fully Unlocked - Works on all four main GSM frequency bands for great reception world wide.



WiFi - Check emails, connect online, or surf the Web with advanced WiFi technology.



CPU - Qualcomm MSM7230



RAM Size - 256M



Flash Size - 512M



Speed - 800MHz


 


windows phone G3


 


g3 windows phone


 


g3 phone




China mobile phone helps police find suspect

State police were tipped off by yoga enthusiasts that Joel Snider might have been involved in New Berlin yoga teacher Sudharman's slaying, but they tracked their suspect largely on the location of his china phone calls.


Police first determined that Snider had used his cell phone on Route 147 between Northumberland and Milton at 8:51 a.m. July 5 — hours before Sudharman's bullet-riddled body was found by a teacher at the New Berlin yoga center.


After they learned that Snider was in the Baltimore area, two troopers — Wayne Ghrist and James A Hansel II — were immediately dispatched to Maryland to work with law enforcement there to try to apprehend the suspect.


Police were first told that Snider was staying at a hotel in Prince George's County, Md., but when troopers arrived, they found he had fled.


The state troopers worked with their counterparts from Prince George's County and Baltimore while communicating with Pennsylvania state police technical specialists in Harrisburg, said Hansel, the lead investigator in the case.


Officers followed Snider by electronically tracking his movements, based on where he used his china mobile phone, Hansel said. They were able to pinpoint his location to a hotel in Glenn Marsh, Md. A command post was set up in the parking lot of a nearby mall and the other occupants of the hotel were evacuated for their safety.


A SWAT team from Baltimore was summoned to storm Snider's room if needed, but when police went to his room, he surrendered peacefully.


Hansel said the quick arrest was made possible by cooperation and coordination between the state police and law enforcement officials in Maryland.


After Snider was arrested, police searched his hotel room, but Hansel would not say if police found a weapon that could have been used in Sudharman's murder or what else was obtained in that search.


"We got a lot of good evidence," he said.


"We had probable cause to make an arrest," Hansel said. "But since the arrest, our investigation has taken leaps and bounds. Everything is coming together well."


Hansel said that Union County District Attorney Pete Johnson has filed paperwork with Gov. Ed Rendell's office to request the extradition of Snider from Maryland to face charges in Sudharman's killing. A spokesman in Gov. Ed Rendell's office said an extradition hearing has been scheduled for Aug. 19 in Maryland.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

New Version 8920 Cell Phone Add TV and WiFi Function Dual SIM Dual Standby

Newest version 8920 slide phone added tv and wifi function. Also change to dual sim card, dual standby. Cool dual cameras for 3G video chat.


8920 phone mail funciton as below,




* Bluetooth - High speed wireless technology.



* FM Radio - Pick up your favorite FM radio stations wherever you are.



* Flat Touch Screen - Easy-to-use and responsive touch screen function for smooth navigating.



* Slide Function - Fantastic multi-faceted technology transforms your phone in a flick of the wrist!



* Metal Cover - Sleek and strong to keep your phone protected while looking great!



* Dual Camera - Front and rear lenses for a more versatile shot.



* QWERTY Keyboard - Full QWERTY keyboard for ease of use.



* WiFi - Check emails, connect online, or surf the Web with advanced WiFi technology.



* TV-Enabled - Powerful analog antenna picks up your favorite TV channels for free!


8920 tv phone


 


8920 wifi cell phone


 


8920 phone


 


8920 mobile phone


Look more detail information about 8920 tv phone, please direct click up photo.

China Phone Manufacturer Continues Overseas Expansion

China mobile phone manufacturer, ChinaTelcom has continued its overseas expansion after launching its products in Bangladesh. The company has entered into a distribution arrangement with Reach Distribution which is expected to put the phones into some 2,500 retail outlets.


The company will initially offer twelve models for sale in the country with a price range between 2,000 and 16,000 taka (US$28.13 - $225).


It aims to target consumers of all segments, with special focus on the youth and the growing rural markets of Bangladesh, the company said in a statement.


"We have been keenly observing the Bangladesh telecom market for the tremendous growth it has undertaken over the last few years. We are sure that the country is on path for a digital connectivity and has a great future for telecommunication industry as a whole and wireless communication in particular," Vikas Jain, business director of ChinaTelcom Informatics said.


The company claims to be the number three mobile brand in the China phone market, and recently launched its products in India and Africa. The company has previously said that it will target the Middle East and Brazil for future expansion.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Newest Luxury Mobile Phone K8

Luxury k8 mobile phone, it is unlocked china phone,support multi language, English, Chinese, French, Spanish, Turkish, Indonesian, Portuguese, Thai, Korean and so on.


Accessory include 2 batteries(880mAh), a charger, earphone, data wire.


Dual sim dual standby,metal body phone, FM radio, stylish,gentle, cool bluetooth function.


 


K8 MOBILE PHONE


luxury K8 phone


k8 luxury cell phone


k8 mobile phone


Look more information about luxury K8 mobile phone, please direct click up photo.

The cell phone that keeps you safe

The XP3 Sentinel phone is manufactured by USA specialist maker Sonim, which has been making rugged mobile phones under its own name (as well as for JCB and Land Rover) for several years. It is fully waterproof and can be dropped on to concrete from several feet up without damage.


What's different about this phone is the software it comes with. It was developed by Sonim and Peoplesafe, a company that specialises in improving the safety of people who work alone in situations where there is a higher-than-average danger of having an accident or being attacked.


Sonim and Peoplesafe have now developed a service for farming, an industry where people are often working alone and where accident rates are high.


There are four main safety features on the new Sonim/Peoplesafe phone.


• Red alert mode. Press a prominent red button on the side of china mobile phone for more than two seconds and the phone will call either the Peoplesafe Alarm Receiving Centre or a designated person such as a wife or manager.


• Man-down mode. The phone has an acceleromometer that detects how fast it is speeding up or slowing down, so it can detect falls and impacts.


Equally, it can be set to detect lack of movement for more than a preset amount of time, which could be important if you are working in a situation where there is a danger of asphyxiation.


• In any of these situations, the phone will automatically send an alarm signal to the receiving centre. The person at the other end of the line can then open a two-way voice channel.


That means that even if you could not physically reach the china phone (for instance, because you had fallen off a ladder) but it was physically close, you could still communicate with the person at the other end.


• Safe-and-well mode. If you know you are about to have to do a job that's particularly dangerous, you can alert the alarm receiving centre beforehand. They will then be on standby and ready to take action if you don't call back to say you're OK.


The phone also has a GPS receiver in it that sends your position (with an accuracy of about 5m) every three minutes back to the alarm receiving centre or designated person. So if you're injured you can be located quickly.


All of this provides enormous peace of mind to the farmer or farmworker's family and colleagues, points out Peoplesafe managing director Ian Johannessen. Equally, if you equip farm staff with it, it provides powerful evidence that you are meeting your duty-of-care responsibilities as an employer. It would also be worth contacting your insurer to see if it attracts a discount on premiums.


Cost of the phone is £296 and the call-monitoring facilities cost £10/month. More expensive than the £40 Nokia you can pick up from the local mobile phone shop, certainly, but probably not a lot to pay for the peace of mind of knowing that your family and staff are contactable and quickly locatable in the event of an accident.


A rugged mobile phone that has software for monitoring and locating people working on their own could improve farm safety and bring peace of mind to employers and families.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Cool Lady iPhone Only US81 TV Dual SIM

Unlock china lady iPhone F079 only US$81, quad band, dual SIM dual standby, dual cameras. Cool TV function, watching TV anywhere. 3 colors, red, black and white.


Specification as below,


Dual SIM - This phone comes with Dual SIM technology, allowing you to switch easily between two SIM cards/phone numbers without having to physically take them out and swap them over-saving you time and hassle.



Fully Unlocked - Works on all four main GSM frequency bands for great reception world wide.



FM Radio - A built-in FM tuner lets you tune into your favorite radio station wherever you are – great for chilling out and relaxing to some music whenever you feel like taking a break from the daily grind.



Touchscreen - Easy-to-use and responsive touchscreen allows for smooth navigating. No more do you have to worry about trying to press all those tiny little buttons – Touchscreen will make using your phone a breeze!



Bluetooth - Another feature of this great cell phone is its Bluetooth capability. Bluetooth allows the phone to communicate without devices, such as hands free headsets, wirelessly-a great solution for people constantly on the move. It also provides a safe and easy way to have a phone conversation while driving.



Dual Camera - Front and rear lenses for a more versatile shot.



TV-Enabled - Want to catch your favorite TV show while you’re out and about, or your team is playing and you’re nowhere near home? Not to worry, a powerful built-in analogue antenna will pick up all your favorite analogue TV channels for free!



Full-Screen View - Full-Screen View provides crystal-clear viewing and eliminates the need to squint to see those addresses in the contact book.



iPhone-Style: Its iPhone menu and ultra-thin compact design make it just as stylish as it is functional and incredibly easy to navigate.


lady iphone F079


F079


 


copy iphone f079


f079 iphone


 

Hidden Formulas Send Mixed Signals on Mobile Phones

More bars in more places? As Apple Inc.'s blunder with its iPhone signal-strength display revealed, the number of bars on a phone has more to do with the whims of handset manufacturers than it does with hard calculations about network coverage.


There is no standard industry definition of what the number of signal bars shown on a china mobile phone should represent. Consumers who switch from one model or brand to another might find that the maximum number of bars has changed from four to five, and that seeing a maximum signal means something totally different on the new handset. Many wireless companies and phone manufacturers won't reveal the math they use to convert signal strength to bars, calling the information proprietary. And last week, after some consumers noticed that holding the iPhone a certain way made the number of signal bars decline, Apple disclosed that the formula it has been using was "totally wrong," causing the display to overstate cell signal strength.


"It's just a rough graphical presentation," Branimir Vojcic, professor of engineering and applied science at George Washington University, says of signal bars.


In theory, the bars represent the power of a china phone's connection to its wireless network. Only a tiny amount of power is needed to complete a call or download data, yet most phones will get reception over a wide range of signal strength. A strong signal, obtained for example when a caller is standing near a cell tower, could be about 10 billionths of a watt, according to wireless engineers. (Thus it would take 10 billion such connections to power a 100-watt light bulb.) At the other end of the spectrum, a signal of 10 quadrillionths, or 0.00000000000001, of a watt (a quadrillion is a million billion) could be enough to complete a call. So a phone could still work when it shows one bar, even though it has one-millionth—and not one-fifth—the signal strength of that same phone when it shows five bars.


That one bar of signal strength might suffice, but it could lead to dropped calls, poor data transfers and other cellphone headaches. Cellphone users' ability to interpret the signal bars has been hampered by companies' varying definitions and a lack of full transparency about what the bars mean.


Apple hasn't disclosed details of the calculations it used or the new formula it plans to adopt based on the recommendations of its U.S. network provider AT&T Mobility, the wireless unit of AT&T. (An AT&T spokesman referred questions to Apple, and an Apple spokeswoman didn't respond to a request for comment.) Several tech enthusiasts, though, have tested their iPhones and reported that the company was showing four bars out of a maximum of five even with relatively weak signals. For instance, tech Web site AnandTech reported that signal strength as low as 80 quadrillionths of a watt corresponded to four bars. IPhoneRoot.com, an independent website for all things iPhone, ran separate tests and concluded that four bars could correspond to signal strength as low as 13 quadrillionths of a watt.


The Google Android, by contrast, shows three bars out of four only when signal strength is above 200 quadrillionths of a watt. That is roughly 2.5 to 16 times stronger than the threshold for iPhone to show four bars out of five.


Comparing the HiPhone's formula with other devices is difficult because most manufacturers don't share their calculations either. The Android's software is available on the Internet, but representatives for Motorola Inc., Samsung Electronics Co., Research in Motion Inc. and Nokia Corp. all declined to disclose the formula their handsets use or didn't respond to requests for the information. Representatives for the four major U.S. carriers—AT&T, Verizon Wireless, Sprint Nextel Corp. and Deutsche Telekom AG's T-Mobile USA—also declined to share formulas, with some saying it was left up to the handset makers.


"This was an extreme example," Simon Saunders, director of technology for Real Wireless Limited, a consultancy in Pulborough, U.K., says of Apple's misleading signal bars. He says he understands why a cellphone maker would show the maximum number of bars for all but the weakest signals. "For the majority of that range, everything sounds the same to you," Dr. Saunders says. The problem with that approach is that the consumer wouldn't know that a call is at risk of being dropped, something that is more likely with weaker reception.


Even the raw signal-strength number doesn't tell wireless users everything they need to know about reception. Other factors—such as interference with other cell towers, the type of wireless network and how many others are using the network—also are important. "The reasons calls get dropped are much more varied than simple signal strength," says Spencer Webb, president of AntennaSys Inc., an antenna-design company in Pelham, N.H. "We have done nothing to make this whole thing more quantitative."


Representatives for the Federal Communications Commission and CTIA, the wireless-industry trade group, say they have no rules or standards for signal bars. Matt Larson, marketing manager for wpsantennas.com, which sells antennas to boost cellphone signals, says he would like to see that change. "What if your battery indicator said it was full and all of a sudden it dropped to zero?" Mr. Larson asks.

Friday, June 11, 2010

World's Coolest GPS Cell Phone V809 WIFI TV JAVA Dual SIM

Cheap GPS cell phone V809, sound navigation. Cool Wifi function, high speed internet. Analog TV, watching TV anywhere. Java, can install software. Dual SIM dual standby. Multi languange. Full unlocked, quad band, can work in any country. Buy v809 now only US$147, click following photo get detail information.



  1. 2.4 inch touch screen,260k colors,480*320px
  2. Network: Support WAP GPRS Download
  3. Telephone directories:800 groups of phone books, caller picture, caller Ring Tone,caller groups
  4. Messages:SMS,MMS,voice mail,email,broardcast messages
  5. Memory: 71.8MB, support TF card up to 8GB TF extended
  6. Camera:Dual Cameras,both back and front camera are 0.3 Megapixel up to 1280*960 resolution,support audio video;the recording time depends on the storage
  7. Ringtone:64 Polyphonic;Support mp3 format ring
  8. Music:MP3,support background play
  9. Movie:3GP,MP4.support full screen play, speed, pause
  10. Bluetooth: Support A2DP V2.0
  11. Data Transfer: USB cable / bluetooth
  12. Power on/off: Support auto power on and off
  13. Alarm clock: 5 groups, support mp3 ringtone, support snooze, can set from Monday to Sunday
  14. Games: Build in 3 general games,JAVA games
  15. Calendar,To do list,Alarm,World Clock,Spotwatch
  16. Other Functions:WIFI, Java, Analog TV, MP3, MP4, Handsfree, Safari, SMS group sending, Voice recorder, Handwritten input, FM, Bluetooth, GPRS, WAP, SMS, MMS, Expand memory, E-book, calendar, to do list, alarm, calculator, unit converter, stop watch, world time,Touch flo,Dual SIM dual standby


v809


 


 


v809 GPS phone


 


gps phone


 


v809 mobile phone


 


 

How To Lookup For Reverse Cell Phone Number-Trace Numbers And Details Beyond Cell Phone Directory Service

Reverse china mobile phone number lookup companies are emerging at exponential rate to provide the service for tracing out complete details of any unknown cell phone number.The major reason for their growth is the demand to get details on any cell phone number.With the advancement in technology ,there have emerged many antisocial activities along with them.One of the most common form of disturbing or abusing anyone is through the use of mobile phones.Such type of problems can easily be resolved by using reverse cell phone lookup.


The directory services fail in this regard mainly because they are not updated often and the databases of such free directory services are relatively very small.Hence for every 10 numbers searched on free directory services,the chances of getting the results is only 30%.On the other hand,private reverse cell phone number lookup companies have success rate about 90%.This is due to the fact that the private companies buy the details from various cell phone and landline service providers and create a heavy database of numbers leading to very rare chance of missing out something.


The best part about this type of china phone lookup companies is that,they give access to much more information along with the identification of cell phone location.It thereby becomes a task to find out a cell phone lookup company that is most suitable amongst them in all of the desired parameters.


 

iPhone 4G Cell Phone Not Only Available through AT&T?

iPhone 4G consumers may be happy to find out that soon enough the top smartphone on the market may be available through other carriers.


It was recently reported that as early as this Fall, T-Mobile could become a player in the hiPhone 4G service industry. Apple is looking to expand its market share, and offering the iPhone through multiple carriers is a step in the right direction.


AT&T will lose its right to exclusively offer the iPhone as early as next year. The iPhone 4G features will then be brought to additional carriers who contract with Steve Jobs and Apple representatives.


hiphone 4g


Right now, T-Mobile representatives are keeping quiet, as they do not want to bring truth to any of the smartphone rumors that have been circulating. From a business standpoint, however, it would be foolish for Steve Jobs not to offer the iPhone through additional carriers.


Shaw Wu was the first to break the information. Apple and AT&T are not releasing any information about when their mutual contract ends. Obviously, the early iPhone 4G reviews will lead many to believe that Apple will do whatever it takes to gain a large market share.


Wholesale cell phone, tv mobile phone, cheap china phone, quad band cell phones, china mobile phones at China-Phone.Org

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Lady iPhone Available In China

Lady iphone E800 - 3.6" screen,dual camera,dual sim dual standby,dual speaker,shake to change music.


lady iphone


lady iphone e800


iphone e800


Specification

































OS MTK
Main functions Dual sim dual standby,Dual camera,Super-long standby,FM
Built-in games 3 common games
Music Play mp3 at background,bluetooth stereo output
Video Support 3GP,MP4,Mp5,AVI,play in full screen
FM FM,play with earphone
Camera pixel 1.3MP

How to avoid cell phone 'bill shock' this summer

Anyone going to the World Cup or abroad can minimise the cost of mobile calls, text messages and internet fees.


As if the thousands of UK travellers trapped abroad after the recent volcanic ash drama hadn't suffered enough damage to their bank balances, many are now facing mobile phone "bill shock".


These holidaymakers, many of whom are just receiving their latest mobile phone bills, may be dismayed when they discover how much they have spent on calls and data roaming while stranded abroad. The Observer recently ran a story about William Harrison, a student who accidentally ran up an £8,000 phone bill with Orange while in France by using his mobile to access the internet.


In theory, mobile bills should no longer be too painful for those travelling to Europe, as from 1 March all European mobile operators have been obliged under EU roaming rules to offer their customers a cut-off limit of €50 (about £45) for using the internet on their china phones. However, it is still early days and not yet clear whether all operators are complying with this rule.


In a month's time the regulations will tighten further, as at the moment customers need to opt-in to this limit, whereas from 1 July the cut-off limit will be set at €50 by default unless they opt out.


For those travelling further afield the cost of calling, texting and using the internet on their mobile can still be an expensive pastime. Independent consumer body Consumer Focus warned World Cup ticket holders last week that costs for calls, texts and data use could add up to more than £100 on a match day – more than the face value of a ticket.


Mobile phone operators are expected to start bringing out more competitive china phone packages in the next few weeks as the holiday season hots up.


But for now, anyone who is about to go abroad has a number of options: doing nothing and sticking with their operator's standard overseas charges (expensive); switching to their operator's overseas calls package (cheaper); buying a global or local sim (potentially even cheaper, depending on usage).


Mike Wilson, mobiles and broadband manager at moneysupermarket.com, says: "Don't underestimate how easy it is to rack up a hefty mobile bill if you are going overseas and planning to use your hiphone.


"Before escaping the country be sure to check with your operator how much calls, texts and internet use will set you back when you're away, because you won't be charged the same rates as your UK tariff. I would advise asking if there is a cheaper international tariff available."

Paying as standard


For standard call charges in Europe, T-Mobile and Virgin are the most expensive at 43p a minute, according to moneysupermarket.com, while 02 is the cheapest at 35p a minute. Network operator 3 is the cheapest for receiving calls at 15p a minute compared to Orange, T-Mobile and Virgin, which all charge the most at 19p. Sending texts is 11p a message with all networks, and all are free to receive.


The cost of using the internet is where operators' charges vary hugely, and where holidaymakers are most likely to run up large bills. T-Mobile, 3, 02 and Orange all charge a flat fee per megabyte (MB) of between £1.25 (3) and £3 (02 and Orange), while Vodafone and Virgin offer the option of either paying per MB, or paying either a daily or hourly fee for web usage (with a cap on how much data can be used).


Virgin, for example, charges £5 a MB, or £4 for a one-hour pass with a 3MB limit and £6 for a 24-hour pass with a 5MB limit.


Whichever package you have you need to be careful about how much data you download. One MB is not much – watching a two-hour film uses about 800 MB.


All these charges when incurred within Europe are considerably lower than in some other countries. For example, if you visit Egypt with your Orange phone you will pay £1.75 a minute to call home and £8 per MB of data used, while in Australia you will pay £1.20 a minute per call and £7.50 per MB of data with T-Mobile.

Package things up


To keep costs down, a good alternative is to opt for your operator's travel package. Vodafone's Passport deal, for example, means you pay your standard home rate to call the UK from more than 35 European countries (and from Australia and New Zealand) after paying a 75p connection charge. These calls can be part of your inclusive minutes if you are on a contract. To receive calls you pay the 75p connection charge and you can talk for up to 60 minutes free of charge. After that you pay 20p a minute.


02's My Europe Extra, on the other hand, is £10 a month for 25p-a-minute calls, free received calls and 11p texts.

Go global – or local


You can avoid your UK operator's charges altogether by switching your network sim card for a global or local sim using websites such as 0044.co.uk and UK2Abroad.co.uk. A global sim card will work across a number of countries so is particularly good for frequent travellers or backpackers, while a local sim will only work in one country. You can buy these before you travel, but you might need to get your phone unlocked by your operator so you can switch cards.


Most global and local sims cost somewhere between £15 and £30 and come loaded with differing amounts of call credit, which you can top up by credit or debit card at any time. For those travelling to South Africa for the World Cup, for example, 0044's South African local sim costs £29.99 and gives you ZAR 55 (about £5) of credit.


After that, local calls cost 10p a minute off-peak, calls to the UK are 63p a minute, while texts to the UK are 15p. This compares with the standard pay-as-you-go rates on Orange where charges for local calls within South Africa and to the UK are £1.45 a minute and texts are 50p a message.


Buying a local or global sim will mean you temporarily have a new phone number, so you will need to make sure people know this before you go.


 

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Windows Version 5530 Cell Phone Available in China

Smart 5530 model is W5530. W represent windows. It built the latest oeprating system - windows mobile 6.5. Also it is quand, full unlocked, can work good all over the world. WiFi function, high speed internet anywhere.


Operating system:Windows Mobile 6.5.3 OS

CPU:Marvell PXA310 624MHZ

ROM:MB 256 RAM:192MB

Built in GPS nevigation and AGPS

3.5 mm audio output jack

Standard 2.0 USD port

FM radio

Gravity inducer

Quadband:GSM:850/900/1800/1900MHZ

3.2 inches HVGA(240*400) touch screen

WI-FI:802.11b/g wireless internet, EDGE WIFI,

Many office softwares such as MSN, EXCEL,SKYPE..

Supper track ball move in all directions brings cool touch feeling

Languages:English/Chines


w5530 windows phone


 


5530 smart phone


 


W5530

Surging Smartphone Sales Boost Mobile-Phone Market

Global mobile-phone shipments rose 17 percent year over year to 314.7 million units in the first quarter, buoyed by robust smartphone sales, according to Gartner analysts. Smartphone sales to end users soared 48.7 percent to 54.3 million units -- the strongest year-on-year increase since 2006.


Smartphones accounted for 17.3 percent of all mobile handset sales in the first quarter -- up from 13.6 percent in the same period last year. Apple's iPhones, Research In Motion's BlackBerry handsets, and smartphones based on Google's Android OS all proved to be big winners in the first three months of the year.


"The first quarter was Apple's strongest quarter yet, which placed the company in the No. 7 position with a 112.2 percent increase in mobile-device sales," noted Gartner Research Vice President Carolina Milanesi.


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Android's U.S. Surge


During the first quarter, Android displaced Microsoft's Windows Mobile platform in the number-four global smartphone slot for the first time, Milanesi noted. Moreover, Android was the biggest winner in the U.S. market, where it displaced Apple's iPhone OS as the number-two smartphone platform by growing its market share by nearly 22 percentage points year over year to 26.6 percent.


"Android's momentum continued into the first quarter of 2010, particularly in North America, where sales of Android-based phones increased 707 percent year on year," Milanesi said.


BlackBerry sales reached 10.6 million units in the quarter -- a 45.9 percent year-on-year increase. "This quarter saw RIM, a pure smartphone player, make its debut in the top five mobile-device manufacturers, and saw Apple increase its market share by 1.2 percentage points," Milanesi said.


RIM's focus on its ecosystem strategy -- together with its tightly integrated control of store, OS and device -- played to RIM's strengths on a global basis during the first quarter, Milanesi noted. In the United States, however, RIM saw its share of the smartphone market decline 14 percent year over year, even as Apple's share rose four percentage points to 22.1 percent.


Industry observers note that RIM still needs to embrace touch capabilities in a big way to regain U.S. momentum. "In the consumer space, touch and a strong ecosystem are starting to become more and more important," Milanesi noted. RIM also needs "to improve its web-browsing experience," she added.


Nokia's Sliding Market Share


The Symbian OS long championed by Nokia remained the world's number-one smartphone OS during the quarter, but Symbian's share of the market was down 4.5 percentage points from a year earlier, Milanesi noted. Though Nokia remains weak in its high-end portfolio, Milanesi said the situation should improve with Nokia's release of the N8 and other devices in the fourth quarter.


"There are also devices such as the C5 and E5 that will help drive smartphones sales, but still in the mid-tier market," Milanesi said. "In the high end we will wait for Meego and then Symbian 4 next year."


Research firm iSuppli expects smartphone shipments to grow 35.5 percent this year, compared to 11.3 percent for the global mobile business overall. "Because of this, companies that are exclusively focused on this area, like RIM and Apple, have managed to move up to near the top tier of the china mobile phone business," said iSuppli Senior Analyst Tina Teng. "This shows that the smartphone is reshaping the competitive landscape of the wireless business."


Teng also noted that RIM is now poised to displace Sony Ericsson as the third-largest player in the global mobile-phone market. "It will be interesting to see how much more market share RIM and Apple can gain in 2010," Teng said.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Copy iPhone 4G Mobile Phone Hits Shanzhai Market



Copy iPhone 4G smartphone has come to the Shenzhen market with deliberate differences, a local mobile phone wholesaler confirmed on Thursday (May 06, 2010).


While Gizmodo still facing likely criminal and civil charges over the iPhone 4G leak issue, the quick Chinese Shanzhai cell phone makers have taken action to work out their imitation of iPhone 4G in mere days, a local mobile phone web site said on May 6. Today (May 6, 2010) a wholesaler told Suite101 that several models of pirated iPhone 4G mobile phones have come to the market.


"Like we have seen the iPhone 4G model leaked in the Gizmodo event, the Shanzhai iPhone 4G have a white or black exterior with squarish build. Now we can see several models of pirated iPhone 4G in the Huaqiang Bei (Huaqiang North) Mobile Phone Market of Shenzhen’s Futian District,” said the Shenzhen-based wholesaler who would like to keep his name anonymous on May 6.


Shanzhai Mobile Phones are Flooding in the Global Mobile Phone Market

Shanzhai refers to the Chinese imitation and pirated brands and goods, particularly mobile phones and computer laptops. Most of the Shanzhai mobile phone manufacturers are based in the South-China Shenzhen City.


Shenzhen, a city in the South-China Guangdong Province, produces around half of the mobile phones in China. In the first half of 2009, Shenzhen made more than 150 million mobile phones and exported 82.18 million at a wholesale price of $5.56 billion. It is estimated that Shenzhen produced more than half of the 145 million units of Shanzhai mobile phones China made in 2009, according to the Shenzhen-based Shanji Consulting. The Shanzhai mobile phones took around 14% of the market share in the global cell phone market.


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