Thursday, May 20, 2010

worlds most expensive cell phone still 2010

T-Mobile G1 Leather Flip Type Case (Black)





T-Mobile G1 Leather Flip Type Case (Black)

At $20.55 Be The First Buy.

HTC Touch Pro 2 (T-Mobile) Rubberized Snap On Protector Hard Case Leather Paint Cover Blue




 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HTC Touch Pro 2 (T-Mobile) Rubberized Snap On Protector Hard Case Leather Paint Cover Blue 

Only For $4.49 

Up coming New Samsung SGH-T669



















Samsung T669 is a touchscreen side-slider, sporting a full QWERTY keyboard. It will opt to provide you with some additional functionality for a mainstream feature phone, being equipped with a Dolphin browser. It is said to run an optimized version of the TouchWiz interface and will have a 2MP camera.

SPCIFICATION:
  • Releasing in june 2010
  • Battery Li-Ion
  • Touch Screen
  • microSD/microSDHC
  • Full Keyboard
  • Internet HTML
  • 2.1,Stereo Bluetooth
  •  Ring ID,
  • Picture ID, 
  • Multiple numbers per contact, 
  • Caller groups 
  • Alarm, 
  • Calendar,
  • To-Do / Tasks, 
  • Calculator 
  • Recording, 
  • Speaker Phone 
MARKET STATUS : NOT YET RELEASE.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Up coming LG KS360 Phone


















LG has recently introduced its KS360 cell phone at CommunicAsia. The phone features 2.4 inch QVGA display screen, sliding QWERTY keyboard, 2MP camera, stereo Bluetooth connectivity, and an integrated FM radio. Unfortunately, this handset does not support 3G.

SPECIFICATION:
  • 2G Network
  • weight 111.5g.
  • 240x320 pixel,2.4 inches
  • QWERTY keyboard
  • Touch Screen Dialing
  •  Phone Book 1000 entries, Photocall
  • 64 MB Internal Meomory 
  • External memory microSD, up to 4GB Buy summury
  • DATA:GPRS,EDGE,3G,WLAN
  • Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP
  • USB v2.0 (proprietary)
  • Camera 2 MP, 1600x1200 pixels
  • Messeging SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, IM
  • Stereo FM radio
  • Colors Black and red, Black and silver, White and soft pink, Titanium and bright blue
  • JAVA  MP3/eAAC+ player
    - MP4/H.263 player
    - Organizer
    - Office document viewer
    - Photo/video editor
    - 3D image gallery
    - Voice memo
    - T9
  • Battery Standard battery, Li-Ion 800 mAh
LGKS360, for me its unique nd am enjoying it cos am really browsing wit it just like a nokia phone its cool ! Nice work dudes.  

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Igoogle for mobile phones





















Now igoogle for Mobile users
Features
  • News
  • Weather
  • Finanace
  • Mail
  • Movies
  • More
Suporting phones are
  • Android
  • Blackberry
  • Iphone
  • Nokia S60
  • Windows
Get Igoogle For Your Mobile  Click here

Two Scenarios Microsoft and Google in the Smartphone War



















With the red-hot Android 2.2 on the horizon, and Microsoft's much-anticipated Windows Phone 7 hoping to resurrect the company's smartphone OS, there's a lot on the line for the industry as a whole. Let's take a look at two possible scenarios—one if Android takes the lead, and the other if Windows Mobile does.

Scenario One: Android Takes the Lead

In mid-March, the news hit the wire that Android devices had collaboratively overtaken the iPhone in US market share, unleashing an explosion of news sounding the death knell for iPhone and the crowned future for Android. While there was a definite element of hyperbole, it's important to realize the significance of this news. For Android, an operating system only a few years old, to have captured 28 percent of the US smartphone market, plus become the platform of choice for heavyweights such as HTC, is pretty momentous.
This scenario predicts Android continuing to leap forward, maybe even eventually surpassing RIM's BlackBerry, the smartphone leader. From there, Android could even overtake BlackBerry in the enterprise, where it's currently the clear leader. (Again, a stretch, but if it continues uptake at its current rate, it's possible.)
The two biggest contributors to Android's success thus far, in my opinion, are (1) the failures of Windows Mobile, which has pushed an army of leading manufacturers to follow Android, and (2) Android's open-source nature, which has propelled its app store forward, allowing it to compete with Apple's app marketplace. For Android to truly take over, the platform will need to continue to evolve to serve enterprise needs, especially in Exchange support.