New Sony S-Series Walkman Goes Live Accidentally – Full Pictures And Specifications



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Well, the new S-Series is essentially a slam-dunk at this point with this uncovered listing of the device at materiel.net, a French-based entertainment retailer. The full specifications of the S-Series Walkman are an attractive update the series and confirms to our initial leak. The 8gb Sony NWZ-S544 (129 and 16gb Sony NWZ-S545 with a 16:9 (320 x 240, 262k colors) 2.4 inch QVGA LCD screen feature built-in stereo speakers on the front of the player to share or enjoy music out loud. Sony says 42 h Audio and 6.5 H Video battery life, but we all know that means at 128kbps music quality.

The player is drag n’ drop, which is nothing new for Sony but still great – it also boasts compatibility with iTunes and Windows Media Player as usual. FM radio (with 30 presets) strengthens the appeal and codec support includes mp3, WMA, and AAC. Video quality is up to 30fps and can play back the usual formats like H264/AVC, MP4 and WMV. Sony has also included voice recording with a built-in microphone. I’m almost wondering if they should add a microphone port and make a the future Minidisc hybrid. The earphones included with the new S-Series aren’t too hot, and we didn’t spot any mention of digital amplifier, clear bass and so forth but I’m sure Sony is just trying to offer a competitively priced music/video player with good functionality.

Thanks LG1, Ascariss and Dark Side for their help with this information.


N908 phone in Hong Kong..



NEC has announced a new credit card size N908 in Hong Kong today. The N908 is as small as a credit card, furthermore it is only 12.8 mm, you can put in your pocket easily. The phone does not have a keypad, instead it has a touch screen for you to do all the input. By removing the keypad, it is able to cut down its size.

NEC N908 is one of the features rich slim phone this year, it is indeed a small gadget, but it comes with all the multimedia function you need. First the phone can play music and video files, it can read MP3 / AAC / AAC+ / 3GP / MPEG4 format. Not enough with the internal memory? Just grab a microSD card to store more files on the go. A 1.3 megapixel camera is at the back, you even get a dual stereo speaker at the 2 side of the camera. Quick access button for camera, volume control, power on/off, and keylock control is put at the side of the phone.

You can sync the phone with your pc through the USB connection. Bluetooth connection is also available for wireless connection. NEC N908 will be released to Asia market in Q3 this year.


LG KP500 Cookie




The price tag pretty much says it all about the retail package of LG KP500 Cookie. You can of course count on it that the essentials are covered, but the Cookie retail box just won't go any further.

The included handsfree is one piece, which means you're s(t)uck with the provided headphones. If you want to change them you will either need a set with the proprietary LG plug or a third-party adapter.

LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie
The retail package: nothing but the bare minimum

The other items in the box are a USB data cable and a DC charger. You also get a screen protector, the user manual and a mini CD with the software required for syncing your Cookie with a computer.

LG KP500 Cookie 360-degree spin

LG KP500 Cookie is one of the most compact touchscreens on the market. When talking touch phones, there is only a handful of devices to be as friendly in terms of size. The names that instantly come to mind are HTC Touch Diamond, Samsung F480 Tocco and Samsung Armani.

So, the Cookie will be easily squeezed in any pocket and it won't even bulge, as the handset is the nice 11.9 mm thick. And the first time you hold it in hand you'll be amazed by its weight - the mere 89 grams make it one of the lightest chaps around.

Design and construction

Simplicity must have been the first thing on their mind but it sure looks like the LG designers were having fun working on the KP500 Cookie. There's nothing to suggest simplicity was driven by frugality. The neat and cute handset projects a cheerful attitude and manages a lot more style and personality than the price tag suggests.

There's nothing fancy and frilly about the rubbery finish at the back but it adds to the solid feel and friendly charm of the phone. It's also quite practical and fingerprint-resistant.

Actually, the keys design is the only thing that differentiates the Orange exclusive LG KP501 from the LG KP500.

LG KP501 Cookie LG KP501 Cookie
The Orange-exclusive LG KP501 Cookie comes in pink and silver

The rest of the front panel is taken by the 3" display, above which you'll notice the centrally placed earpiece and LG logo.

The volume rocker, the universal connectivity port and the lanyard eyelet are on the left. The connectivity port is covered by a small plastic lid to prevent it from filling up with dirt.

LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie
The left side of the Cookie: volume keys in the middle, sealed connection port above

The right side is where the shutter key and the lock key are placed. Those are too tiny for our taste and a proper press is really hard at times. Press feedback is poor and the touchscreen lock key especially has a very low stroke.

The microSD card slot is also here, hidden under a small plastic lid. The handset had no trouble handling a 16GB microSD card, which is the largest currently available. This means the Cookie won't fail you in terms of storage space.

LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie
The right side: camera and lock key could've been better; no complaints with the microSD slot

The top of LG KP500 Cookie is completely plain while the bottom hosts the mouthpiece and the stylus compartment. Peculiarly enough, the stylus goes in horizontally instead of vertically.

LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie
The top and bottom are rather plain • the stylus goes in the other way

The back side of the handset is also far from crowded, the 3 megapixel camera lens getting all the attention. There is no flash of any kind to boost low light performance.

LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie
The 3 megapixel camera lens is in the top left corner at the back

Opening the battery cover reveals the 900 mAh battery. In moderate use, it can keep the phone going for about two days, which is not exactly a great achievement. Frankly the quoted 350 hours of standby and 3 hours and 30 min of talk time had us fearing worse, but middling is probably what defines it best.

LG KP500 Cookie
A 900 mAh battery; could've been better, could've been worse

The build quality of the LG KP500 is better than its price tag. But what's more important, the Cookie has a distinct personality and wide-reaching appeal. Some will go for the neat and simple styling, while others will respond to the cheerful and friendly attitude. And all will appreciate the nice handling and solid feel.

LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie
Affordability does not rule out inspiration

Display is quite good

LG KP500 Cookie is equipped with a 3" 256K-color resistive touchscreen display of WQVGA resolution. Resistive screens do require more pressure (as opposed to capacitive ones) for a command to be registered. This may sound self explanatory, but one can easily feel and appreciate the difference between the Prada II we just reviewed and the Cookie. The Prada (like the iPhone, which uses the same touchscreen technology) was quick to respond to the lightest touch, which made the Cookie feel a bit clumsy at first.

Luckily, the screen of the Cookie is one of the most sensitive we've tried, so after a short while operating the phone became quite comfortable.

The touchscreen technology is otherwise the only difference between the Prada and the Cookie in the display department. 3" WQVGA screens are to be found in a number of LG touchscreens - from the first Prada, through the Viewty and F700 to the Renoir. Neither the size, nor the resolution is quite the cream of the crops at the high end. But they make perfect sense in the Cookie's price bracket.

LG KP500 Cookie LG KP500 Cookie



Samsung Tocco Ultra S8300



Samsung's efforts to break the mobile phone market have been going swimmingly thus far; it's been a constant innovator and a leader in pushing the boat in terms of convergence.

So will the latest in its long line of flagship handsets, the Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition, live up to the hype of a massive advertising campaign and deliver a handset worthy of the top billing? Or will it be a damp squib in the year of exciting touchscreens releases?

Design

Designed to be the jewel in the Samsung mobile phone crown, the Tocco Ultra Edition is clearly specified up to its (virtual) eyeballs with the cream of mobile phone hardware. A 2.8-inch AMOLED touchscreen uses the latest in display technology, with the active matrix OLED giving brilliant colours and a deep contrast ratio, as well as being low on battery power.

The 8MP camera is the most detailed available at the moment, and incorporates a dual LED flash to help bring night pictures to life. Assisted GPS is included as well should you feel the need to geotag photos, or just get involved with some Google Maps fun.

The overall feel of the device, clad mostly in grey but with a stripe of red down the side (as well as the keypad) is an odd combination but works very well, giving the handset a refined and stylish look.

The mark of a good phone often comes from the feel in the hand (the iPhone excepted) and this handset is up there among the best. Although it has a brushed aluminium front framing the touchscreen and a plastic back, it feels solid and weighty in the hand and fits nicely when slid up or down.

However, the sliding action, especially one handed, is a little bit uncomfortable, especially when the ergonomics dictate that you must press the display to slide up the phone by placing a digit on the touchscreen - it took a long time to get used to not accidentally activating an application on the screen, and even after some familiarity it wasn't easy to avoid.

A number of buttons around the side allow you to control things like volume / screen zoom in differing applications, a camera key (that can be re-configured to access the media icons, ie music player, browser, main menu, calls and games) as well as a lock key and the charger / headphon

Samsung Tocco Ultra S8300



Samsung's efforts to break the mobile phone market have been going swimmingly thus far; it's been a constant innovator and a leader in pushing the boat in terms of convergence.

So will the latest in its long line of flagship handsets, the Samsung Tocco Ultra Edition, live up to the hype of a massive advertising campaign and deliver a handset worthy of the top billing? Or will it be a damp squib in the year of exciting touchscreens releases?

Design

Designed to be the jewel in the Samsung mobile phone crown, the Tocco Ultra Edition is clearly specified up to its (virtual) eyeballs with the cream of mobile phone hardware. A 2.8-inch AMOLED touchscreen uses the latest in display technology, with the active matrix OLED giving brilliant colours and a deep contrast ratio, as well as being low on battery power.

The 8MP camera is the most detailed available at the moment, and incorporates a dual LED flash to help bring night pictures to life. Assisted GPS is included as well should you feel the need to geotag photos, or just get involved with some Google Maps fun.

The overall feel of the device, clad mostly in grey but with a stripe of red down the side (as well as the keypad) is an odd combination but works very well, giving the handset a refined and stylish look.

The mark of a good phone often comes from the feel in the hand (the iPhone excepted) and this handset is up there among the best. Although it has a brushed aluminium front framing the touchscreen and a plastic back, it feels solid and weighty in the hand and fits nicely when slid up or down.

However, the sliding action, especially one handed, is a little bit uncomfortable, especially when the ergonomics dictate that you must press the display to slide up the phone by placing a digit on the touchscreen - it took a long time to get used to not accidentally activating an application on the screen, and even after some familiarity it wasn't easy to avoid.

A number of buttons around the side allow you to control things like volume / screen zoom in differing applications, a camera key (that can be re-configured to access the media icons, ie music player, browser, main menu, calls and games) as well as a lock key and the charger / headphones adapter socket under a dust cover.

These feel fairly poorly positioned, as apart from the volume up and down buttons the others all require you to move the phone in your hand significantly to access them. The lock key in particular is frustrating, as it requires a long press to re-activate the screen.

The Samsung M8800 Pixon uses the same OS and button system and only requires a short press - you can see why a longer press is more likely to keep the phone from activating in your pocket, but given the amount of times it is used in your hand it's particularly annoying. We found it easier to simply activate auto lock in the settings, meaning that you only have to slide the phone up and down to unlock.

The front three keys, call / terminate and a back button, are well-placed; however we can't help but feel that the central key, which is in the middle of a small diamond frame, should have been a direction key as well allowing navigation around the screen, but it still feels nice under the thumb.


LG Viewty Smart (GC900)



LG Viewty Smart GC900 is finally official

The second Viewty phone, called LG Viewty Smart or LG GC900, is finally official, after several leaks and last week’s accident that brought us press photos with the handset.

Now LG officially announced the GC900 as the successor of the original Viewty, which, according to the South Korean company, was sold in more than 6.5 million units worldwide.

As you probably know, LG Viewty Smart has an 8 Megapixel autofocus camera with Schneider-Kreuznach lens. LG blessed the phone with an Intelligent Shot Mode which automatically analyses scenes and lighting conditions in order to adjust the camera settings. The company says that this mode “completely eliminates the need to check settings before taking a photo.”

The 8MP camera also features: sensitivity up to ISO 1600, Multi-Face Detection, Touch Shot, Panorama Shot, Beauty Shot, Art Shot, Continuous Shot, DVD-quality D1 video recording and LED flash – yes, there’s no Xenon flash in the second-generation Viewty, although the first has it.

lg-viewty-smart-gc900

The full list of specs LG Viewty Smart GC900 comes with includes:

  • 3.0 inches TFT touchscreen display with 800 x 480 pixels
  • S-Class Touch UI (like the LG Arena)
  • Quad band GSM connectivity (850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 MHz)
  • HSDPA 2100 connectivity
  • A-GPS, geotagging
  • Wi-Fi
  • Bluetooth 2.0 with A2DP
  • Music player
  • DivX/XviD/MPEG4 player
  • 1.5GB of internal memory
  • MicroSDHC card support, up to 32 GB
  • 100.8 x 55.8 x 12.4 millimeters

lg-viewty-smart-gc900-11

lg-viewty-smart-gc900-21

LG GC900 Viewty Smart will hit the market in May, via several European carriers (Orange is probably one of them, since we saw the phone with its logo on it). After that, the Viewty Smart will be released in other markets around the world.

The handset’s price was not announced by LG.

A promo video with the Viewty Smart can be seen below:


Apple iPhone 3G S



Apple iPhone 3G S

Apple iPhone 3G S

The new Apple iPhone 3G S cell phone offers twice the capacity for the same price with a 16GB model for just $199 and a new 32GB model for just $299. And beginning today, iPhone 3G is available at the breakthrough price of just $99 for the 8GB model - a huge milestone for the high end smartphone market. "The Apple iPhone 3G S handset is the fastest, most powerful Apple iPhone yet and we think people will love the incredible new features including autofocus camera, video recording and the freedom of voice control," said Philip Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of WorldWide Product Marketing. "And with a breakthrough price of $99, we are thrilled to get iPhone 3G into the hands of even more users who want them."

iPhone 3G S

iPhone 3G S features

The Apple iPhone 3G S mobile phone offers incredible speed and performance, on average up to twice as fast as Apple iPhone 3G, so you can render web pages quicker and launch applications faster. The Apple iPhone 3G S takes advantage of the OpenGL ES 2.0 standard for stunning high-quality 3D graphics, making mobile gaming and other graphic intense applications better than ever. The Apple iPhone 3G S handset is not only faster, but with longer battery life you can watch more videos, listen to more music, browse the Internet or keep using your favorite apps even longer. The new Apple iPhone 3G S also supports 7.2 Mbps HSDPA for faster networking speeds.

3G S

New 3 megapixel autofocus digital camera

The Apple iPhone 3G S features a new 3 megapixel autofocus camera that takes amazing pictures and video, making it easier than ever to capture, edit and share those moments instantly with family and friends. The new autofocus camera adjusts focus, exposure, color and contrast for the best possible image and includes an automatic macro focus for extra close up shots. With the new "tap to focus" feature, you simply touch the display to select an object or area of interest and the camera automatically re-adjusts focus and exposure. You can record incredible high-quality video clips and edit them right on your Apple iPhone 3G S by simply trimming the start and stop points. With iPhone 3G S you can send photos and video by email or MMS and post them to MobileMe or YouTube with just one tap.

iPhone 3G S voice control

Apple iPhone voice control feature

The voice control feature in Apple iPhone 3G S offers hands free operation for both iPhone and iPod functions. Simply speak the appropriate commands into the built-in microphone or headset microphone to dial by name or number. With voice control you can play your favorite music by artist, album or playlist and activate the Genius feature by saying "play more songs like this." You can also tell iPhone to pause the music, play the next track, turn on shuffle or ask, "What's playing now?"

Apple iPhone 3G S GPS navigation

Built-in digital compass for instant GPS navigation

The Apple iPhone 3G S features a new built-in digital compass for instant navigation. The Compass app shows you which way you are headed and rotates as you change direction. You can orient yourself to true north or magnetic north, and iPhone's built-in GPS automatically displays the coordinates of your current location. The new built-in digital compass is also integrated within Maps, so it automatically orients any map to the direction you are facing.

Apple iPhone 3Gs


Apple iPhone 3Gs multimedia features

The new Apple iPhone 3G S provides new accessibility features including VoiceOver, a screen reader that speaks what appears on the Apple iPhone 3G S display, enabling visually impaired users to make calls, read email, browse web pages, play music and run applications. The new universal Zoom function magnifies the entire screen, and the White on Black feature reverses the colors on screen to provide higher contrast for people with low vision. The Apple iPhone 3G S also supports Mono Audio which combines left and right audio channels so that they can be heard in both earbuds for those with hearing loss in one ear.

Apple iPhone 3G S software

Apple iPhone 3G S software applications

The Apple iPhone 3G S includes the new iPhone OS 3.0 software with more than 100 new features including: Cut, Copy and Paste; MMS; Spotlight Search to search across iPhone or within Mail, Contacts, Calendar and iPod; landscape keyboard for Mail, Messages, Notes and Safari; expanded parental controls for TV shows, movies and apps from the App Store; and the ability to capture and send audio recordings on the go with the new Voice Memo app. iPhone 3.0 software also includes a new Find My iPhone feature that works together with MobileMe so you can locate your lost iPhone on a map, send a message that will appear on the screen or play a sound to help you find it even if your phone is set to silent. If you cannot find your iPhone, you can erase all data and content on your iPhone with the new Remote Wipe feature. New iTunes® features available with iPhone 3.0 software include wirelessly downloading movies, TV and audio programs as well as iTunes U so students can download learning materials on the go.

Apple iPhone 3G S review

iPhone 3G S price & availability

The Apple iPhone 3G S handset will be available in the Unites States on June 19 for a suggested retail price of $199 (US) for the 16GB iPhone and just $299 (US) for the new 32GB model in both Apple and AT&T's retail and online stores, Best Buy and Wal-Mart stores. The Apple iPhone 3GS requires a new two year contract with AT&T for qualifying customers. The iPhone OS 3.0 software will be available on June 17 as a free software update via iTunes 8.2 or later for all Apple iPhone customers. Beginning June 8, iPhone 3G will be available for just $99 (US) for the 8GB model. New MobileMe features for iPhone require iPhone OS 3.0. MobileMe is available for an annual subscription price of $99 (US). The Apple iPhone 3G S also features built-in Nike + iPod support making it an incredible workout companion. Users simply place the optional Nike + iPod sensor ($19) in their Nike + shoe to seamlessly connect with iPhone 3G S to track miles run or sync with the latest generation gym equipment. The Apple iPhone 3G S handset will also be available in more than 80 countries in the coming weeks. As soon as we receive a Apple iPhone 3G S test sample, we will publish a photo gallery with high resolution pictures, followed by an extensive Apple iPhone 3G S review.


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