Friday, 10 December 2010

Nokia X3 touch and type


Nokia telah meluncurkan ponsel touchscreen entry level yang unik, The Touch X3 dan Jenis (X3-02). Nokia X3 Touch dan Jenis yang rapi dengan menawarkan kedua layar sentuh dan tombol keypad 12-tradisional dan memiliki kombinasi yang unik dari sebuah layar sentuh dan tombol telepon tradisional. X3 Nokia-02 telepon mengikuti langkah dari X3 Nokia asli.

Touch X3 Nokia dan Jenis (X3-02) dilengkapi dengan layar sentuh resistif TFT 262.144 warna, 240 × 320 piksel, 2,4 inci, slot kartu microSD (sampai 16GB), kamera 5 megapiksel dengan 4X zoom digital yang dapat mengambil keduanya masih dan video foto. Perangkat ini juga dilengkapi dengan kombinasi yang unik dari sebuah layar sentuh dan tombol keypad tradisional 12 ponsel dan akan menjadi ponsel GSM dengan 802.11b/g/n WiFi, empat band untuk suara,, 3G 10.2Mbps HSPA, pemutar musik, seorang FM radio dan Bluetooth v2.1 (A2DP).

Touch X3 dan desain Jenis tipis pada pada 0,38 inci, tinggi 106mm, lebar 48mm dan beratnya hanya 78g membuatnya menjadi salah satu dari "ponsel Nokia tertipis yang pernah dan relatif kelas atas dengan tubuh aluminium.

Desain candy bar dipilih karena Nokia percaya mengetik yang paling baik digunakan untuk texting dan jaringan sosial, sementara sentuhan lebih baik untuk fungsi-fungsi seperti browsing web, pengaturan alarm, dan mengendalikan pemutar musik. Touch Nokia X3 dan Jenis juga mendapat pesan khusus musik dan tombol untuk akses cepat ke pemutar musik dan email.

Touch Nokia X3 dan Jenis adalah perangkat pertama Nokia untuk menggunakan rebranded Comes With Music, kini Ovi Musik Unlimited dan tersedia dalam 5 warna berbeda Putih Silver, Dark Metal, Bensin Biru, Pink dan Lilac. Touch X3 dan Jenis dijadwalkan untuk mulai dijual sebelum akhir September dengan harga 125 Euro atau $ 161.

Size
Dimensions 4.18 x 1.91 x 0.38 inches (106.2 x 48.4 x 9.6 mm)
Weight 78 g

Display
Type TFT resistive touchscreen, 256K colors
Size 240 x 320 pixels, 2.4 inches

Camera
Primary 5 MP, 2592 x 1944 pixels
Video Yes
Secondary No

Sound
Alert types Vibration, MP3 ringtones
Speakerphone Yes
- 3.5 mm audio jack
- Dedicated music key

Memory
Phonebook Yes, Photocall
Call records Yes
Card slot microSD, up to 16GB

Data
GPRS Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 – 48 kbps
EDGE Class 10, 236.8 kbps
3G HSDPA, HSUPA
WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n
Bluetooth Yes, v2.1 with A2DP
Infrared port No
USB Yes, v2.0 microUSB

Features
Messaging SMS, MMS, Email, IM
Browser WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML
Radio Stereo FM radio with RDS
Games Yes + downloadable
Colors White Silver, Dark Metal, Petrol Blue, Pink, Lilac
GPS No
Java Yes, MIDP 2.1
- Windows Live Messenger, Yahoo Messenger, Gtalk
- Facebook, Twitter
- MP4/H.263 player
- MP3/WAV/eAAC+ player
- Organizer
- Voice memo
- T9

Battery
Standard battery, Li-Ion (BL-4S)
Stand-by Up to 408 h (2G) / Up to 408 h (3G)

Talk time Up to 5 h 20 min (2G) / Up to 3 h 30 min (3G)

kisaran harga 1,7 - 1,9jt rupiah lho....

Wednesday, 20 October 2010

Nokia N8 Review


Siapapun pasti akan terpana oleh teknologi yang diusung oleh Nokia N8. Seri terbaru hape nokia yang sudah menggunakan operating system symbian^3 yang sudah tidak diragukan lagi kehebatannya. Dukungan yang diberikan, termasuk multi-touch, flick scrolling, dan pinch zoom.

Dibekali dengan kamera 12MP Carl Zeiss, flash Xenon, dan sensor besarnya menjadikan N8 ini dapat disejajarkan dengan kamera digital. Untuk membuat video berkalitas tinggi (High Definition) pun, N8 ini cukup mumpuni. Di sini pengguna dapat menyuntingnya menggunakan program penyunting terintegrasi yang intuitif.

Dari sisi fitur nokia N8 dapat dijadikan sebagai hape full multimedia, pasalnya hape bertype slider ini dapat menyiarkan web TV on Demand serta layanan aplikasi Ovi Store.

Untuk urusan jejaring sosial semisal Facebook atau Twitter kita dapat mengakses kedua layanan ini langsung dari halaman pertama.

Dibalut dengan body alumunium plus layar lebar 3.5 HD Capacitive touchscreen membuat kita nyaman ketika sedang memutar file video dalam berbagai format. Tersedia juga sebuah konektor HDMI yang memungkin hape ini terhubung ke HD TV.

Menurut sumber yang saya baca, hape nokia N8 ini dibandrol dengan harga 370 Euro (belum termasuk pajak dan subsidi) dan siap dikapalkan pada kuartal ketiga tahun ini. Kira-kira pas tiba di Indonesia, harga nokia N8 ini berapa yach? Kita tunggu kehadirannya.

Spesifikasi Nokia N8

Dimensi Ukuran: 113,5 x 59 x 12,9 mm

Tampilan
* Ukuran layar: 3.5 ”
* Resolusi: 16:09 nHD (640 x 360 piksel) OLED
* 16.7 juta warna
* Layar sentuh Capacitive
* Orientasi sensor (Accelerometer)
* Kompas (Magnetometer)
* Jarak sensor
* Pendeteksi cahaya sekitar

Data Jaringan
* GPRS / EDGE kelas B, multislot kelas 33
* HSDPA Cat9, kecepatan maksimum hingga 10,2 Mbps, 2,0 Mbps HSUPA CAT5
* WLAN IEEE802.11 b / g / n
* Dukungan TCP / IP
* Dapat dijadikan modem
* Mendukung sinkronisasi MS Outlook dari kontak, kalender dan catatan

Memori
* Memori internal: 16 GB
* Slot kartu memori MicroSD, hot swappable, hingga 32 GB

Frekuensi Operasi
* GSM / EDGE 850/900/1800/1900
* WCDMA 850/900/1700/1900/2100
* Peralihan otomatis antara band WCDMA & GSM
* Modus penerbangan

Konektivitas
* Bluetooth 3,0
* HDMI
* Konektor Charging 2mm
* Micro USB dan pengisian
* High-Speed USB 2.0 (micro USB konektor)
* Konektor AV 3,5 mm

Platform software & Antarmuka pengguna
* Symbian ^ 3 untuk Nokia
* Java MIDP 2,1
* Qt 4.6.2, Web Runtime 7,2
* Flash Lite 4,0
* 1,2 DM OMA, OMA Client provisioning 1,1

Aplikasi
* Kunci aplikasi: Kalender, Kontak, pemutar musik, internet, pesan, foto, Ovi Store, Maps, Video, Webtv, editor dokumen Office, Video & photo editor, Mail, Chat, Radio
* Aplikasi PC: Nokia Ovi Suite, Nokia Ovi Player

Manajemen Informasi Pribadi (PIM)
* Informasi lengkap kontak
* Kalender
* Daftar agenda
* Catatan
* Perekam
* Kalkulator
* Jam

Email dan olahpesan
* Email client dengan dukungan lampiran untuk gambar, video, musik dan dokumen doc, Xls, Ppt, Pdf, Zip
* Format HTML untuk email
* Unified email client untuk beberapa protokol: Mail Yahoo, Gmail, Windows Live, Hotmail dan / POP IMAP layanan populer lainnya, Mail for Exchange, IBM Lotus traveler
* Mengedit dokumen kantor kunci
* Widget web Email di halaman muka
* Mendukung pesan instan Chat: OVI Chat, Yahoo, AIM, Windows Live, Gtalk, MySpace *
* Unified MMS / SMS editor
* Tampilan Percakapan untuk SMS
* Push email dan Nokia Mesenger
* Tampilan halaman web standar
* Web browsing dengan kontrol sentuh
* Mendukung: HTML, XHTML MP, WML, CSS
* Protokol yang didukung: HTTP v1.1, WAP
* Dukungan TCP / IP
* History, HTML dan dukungan JavaScript
* Flash Lite 4 akan mendukung sebagian besar konten Flash Player 10,1
* Nokia Mobile Search
* RSS reader
* Dukungan untuk video streaming
* Akses langsung dari halaman utama Facebook dan Twitter melalui Ovi oleh Nokia Social client
* Profil jejaring sosial terlihat dalam kontak telepon
* Upload dan melihat foto dan video dan melihat lokasi klien melalui Ovi oleh Nokia Social client
* Jejaring sosial terlihat dalam kalender acara telepon

GPS dan navigasi
* GPS terintegrasi, A-GPS receiver
* Ovi Maps dengan free car & navigasi pejalan kaki
* Wi-Fi Positioning
* Kompas dan accelerometer untuk orientasi layar
* Nokia Ovi Suite untuk mentransfer / upload peta ke memori handphone

Kamera
* 12 megapiksel dengan optik Carl Zeiss
* Fullscreen 16:09 View finder dengan parameter touchscreen mudah digunakan
* Xenon flash
* Pendeteksi wajah
* Autofocus
* Panjang focal: 5,9 mm
* Nomor F / Aperture: F2.8
* Format file gambar: JPEG / EXIF
* Zoom sampai 2x (digital) untuk gambar diam
* Zoom 3x (digital) untuk video
* Kamera sekunder untuk panggilan video (VGA, 640 x 480 piksel)

Berbagi video dan Player
* HD playback 720p HD video pada TV melalui kabel HDMI
* Dolby Digital Plus surround sound saat bermain dengan HDMI & home teater
* Dukungan untuk download, streaming, dan download progresif
* Video editing software
* Video aplikasi: koleksi video yang disimpan
* Webtv On Demand widget untuk menonton streaming TV
* Mendukung video Flash
* YouTube browsing dan streaming
* Mendukung panggilan video (layanan jaringan WCDMA)

Fitur musik
* Cover album untuk menelusuri koleksi musik
* Layanan musik berbayar
* Nokia Music Player
* Toko Musik Ovi
* MP3, WMA, AAC, eAAC, eAAC +, AMR-NB, AMR-WB, E-AC-3, AC-3
* Bit rate hingga 320 kbps
* DRM dukungan WM DRM, OMA DRM 2.0
* FM transmitter

Permainan
* Untuk bermain game menggunakan layar sentuh
* Prosesor grafis dengan OpenGL 2.0 untuk menjalankan grafis 3D
* Game Java
* Menggunakan accelerometer (layar horizontal) untuk bermain game

Monday, 18 October 2010

Nokia X5 Review


Nokia X5 Review, Harga Dan Spesifikasi Lengkap

Setelah mengeluarkan Nokia X2 bulan lalu, Nokia kembali mengeluarkan Nokia X Series terbarunya yaitu Nokia X5. Bila Nokia X2 berdesain candybar, kali ini Nokia X5 berdesain sliding dengan keyboard QWERTY. Nokia X5 dibanderol dengan harga Rp1.800.000 yang mana harganya dan kemampuannya lebih baik bila dibandingkan dengan Nokia X2. Sekarang mari kita lihat spesifikasi Nokia X5 dibawah ini.

Spesifikasi resmi : Nokia X5 review, harga dan spesifikasi lengkap.
-Jaringan Quad Band GSM/GPRS/EDGE 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
-HSDPA/WCDMA 850/1900/2100
-Layar TFT landscape 262K warna berukuran 2.36 inci beresolusi QVGA (320 x 240 pixel)
-Desain sliding QWERTY
-Kamera beresolusi 5 MP dilengkapi dengan lampu flash LED dan perekaman video beresolusi VGA dengan kecepatan 15 frame perdetik
-Konektivitas Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g dan Bluetooth versi 2.1 dengan dukungan A2DP
-OS Symbian 9.3 dengan tampilan S60 versi 3.2
-Prosesor ARM 11 600 MHz
-Browser HTML dengan dukungan flash lite versi 3.0
-Aplikasi pembuka dokumen office
-Radio FM stereo dengan dukungan RDS
-Jack audio standar 3.5mm
-Slot eksternal microSD yang dapat diekspansi hingga 32GB

Kelebihan :

-Browser dengan dukungan flash
-Wi-Fi yang cepat dan stabil
-Performa keseluruhan cukup cepat
-Kualitas suara speaker berkualitas
-Bahan material pembuat handphone berkualitas
-Kamera dengan hasil yang cukup baik
-OS Symbian dengan dukungan banyak Aplikasi di Ovi Store
-Harga cukup murah untuk Fitur selengkap ini

Kelemahan :

-Tidak terdapat tombol shutter kamera
-Tidak ada autofokus pada kamera
-Tidak ada GPS

mau beli hp ini??? hubungi saya aja ya...

Friday, 20 August 2010

Nokia X2 Xpress music


Yeah inilah handphone yang cocok untuk Anda para penggila musik. Nokia X2 merupakan ponsel yang diluncurkan untuk para penggila musik dengan radio FM, pemutar musik dan speaker yang mantab abiz. Nokia X2 dilengkapi juga dengan layar QVGA 2.2 inci, Bluetooth, kamera 5 megapiksel dengan fixed focus, slot microSD hot-swap dan 3.5mm audio jack . Nokia X2 berjalan di atas platform S40 dimana dilengkapi dengan stereo speaker serta radio FM dengan RDS dan antenna internal. Handphone musik yang mempunyai ketebalan 13mm dengan berat hanya 81 gram ini akan muncul pada akhir bulan Juni 2010 di Eropa kemudian akan menyusul ke negara lainnya. Kabarnya Handphone Nokia X2 ini akan tersedia dalam dua jenis warna yaitu Red on Black dan Blue on Silver. Hem benar-benar menarik untuk ditunggu kehadirannya.

Nokia X2 merupakan music mobile phone yang dilengkapi dengan stereo speakers, radio FM dengan RDS, dan sebuah antena internal. Ponsel Nokia X2 ini juga dilengkapi dengan a 2.2 inch QVGA display, 5 megapixel camera, bluetooth, 3.5mm audio jack dan a microSD slot.


Dari segi ukuran, ponsel ini cukup tipis dengan ketebalan 13 mm dan berat 81 gram. Ponsel ini dirilis dalam dua warna, yaitu Blue on Silver dan Red on Black.

Spesifikasi Nokia X2 secara lengkap adalah sebagai berikut:

Nokia X2 Specs:
General Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
Announced 2010, 2Q
Processor
SAR Rating
Color Available Red on Black, Blue on SIlver
Size Dimensions (mm) 111 x 47 x 13.3
Weight (g) 81
Display Type TFT, 256K colors
Size 240 x 320 pixels, 2.2 inches
Lines 0
Menu Numeric Keypad
Design Type Candybar
Antenna Fixed Internal
Keys Navigation D-Pad
QWERTY No
Soft
Other
Lighting
Memory Phonebook 1000 entries
Internal (MB) 48 MB
Expansion microSD, up to 16GB
Battery Type Standard battery, Li-Ion 860 mAh (BL-4C)
Stand-by (hrs) Up to 624 h
TalkTime(min) Up to 810 min
Ringtones Polyphonic
Customization Yes
Audio Format MP3/WMA/eAAC+
MP3 Player Yes
Voice
FM Radio Yes
A2DP Yes
Video Format MP4/3GP
Recorder Yes
TV Null
Entertainment Games Yes, Bounce Tales, City Bloxx, Snake III, Block’d, Diamond Rush, Rally 3D, Brain Champion, Sudoku
Messaging SMS Yes
Total SMS 1000
MMS Yes
EMS Yes
Email Yes
IM
Push-To-Talk Yes
Connectivity HSDPA Null
EDGE Class 32
Bluetooth Yes, v2.1 with A2DP
3G No
GPRS Class 32
Infrared (IrDA) No
USB Port Yes
WIFI/WLAN
Data Cable Yes
Data Modem
Software Java (J2ME) Yes ,MIDP 2.0
WAP Yes Ver 2.0
Platform OS Proprietary – S40
Browser WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML (Opera Mini)
Predictive Text Entry T9
Speech Codes
PIM Application Organizer, Voice Memo
Others Application Photo Editor
Personal Themes Yes
Caller ID Yes
Profile ID Yes
Camera Lens Type CMOS, 5.0 Megapixel
Digital zoom Yes
Max. Resolution 2592×1944 pixels
Flash Yes
Night Mode Yes
Multi Shot
Frame Types
Extra Features Fixed Focus
Photo Format JPEG

Harga 1.2jt - 1.5jt

Wednesday, 19 May 2010

sony ericsson vivaz


Sony Ericsson's no stranger to phones with decent cameras, and the Vivaz with European 3G frequencies aims to be one of them; after all these months we've finally got hold of this S60 device, which is the first phone capable of continuous autofocus on 720p video recording courtesy of its speedy 720MHz Cortex A8 and PowerVR GPU. Compared to its predecessor, the Vivaz bears a similar button layout and GUI to the Satio's, but lacks a front-facing camera, Fast Port (replaced by a micro-USB port and 3.5mm headphone jack), and a slide cover for the camera. The resistive touchscreen (sigh, more on that later) has been downsized from 3.5 inches to 3.2 inches but retains a similar resolution (640 x 360), while the camera sensor is also scaled down from 12.1 megapixels to a more sensible 8.1, possibly for the sake of picture quality and component cost.

Hardware

We have mixed feelings about the Vivaz's appearance -- on one hand the 'human curvature' approach (as applied on the Xperia X10, we've been told) is a fresh change to Sony Ericsson's usual rectangular form factor, but at the same time this does come with a bloated look that some may or may not fancy. The shiny, hollow-sounding plastic chassis is a bit of a downer -- it's the only feature that has turned the Vivaz's lightness (at 3.42 ounces) into a drawback, as the combination inevitably brings the illusion that this £300 / $448 device (as offered by 3 UK) is a budget phone instead. Another niggle is that the back cover's proven to be quite a challenge to rip open, so mind your fingernails. So much for a natural grip, eh?

In terms of buttons, the Vivaz has managed to get away with two fewer buttons than the Satio -- the function of the old lock switch is now ported to the power button at the top (tap twice to lock), and while the media playback button on the right side has been killed, the dedicated shutter button now also triggers the still camera function (thus turning the old combo button into a dedicated video recording button). The buttons for volume control (one of which also does search), phone calls and menu are at their original spots. There's hardly anything to fault here as this simpler button layout is pretty easy to pick up, although the lack of lock switch has allowed the phone to unlock itself on several occasions while in our pocket (by pressing the "Unlock" virtual key at the bottom left of the screen).

There's no AMOLED magic on the 3.2-inch display, but at 640 x 360, this crisp resolution (229 dpi) will help you check that your lens is in focus while snapping and filming -- not to mention the sharp visual multimedia playback you'll get as well. We did, however, notice that our screen had a slight yellow tint, and we haven't been able to confirm whether this applies to all the Vivaz units. Moving on to a more touchy subject: this phone uses a resistive touchscreen (as the pointy stylus above suggests), but we were almost fooled by its unusual hardness as conventional ones tend to be spongy, so at least it feels good to the touch. We won't go into the whole capacitive versus resistive debate again, but we will say this: resistive is fine only if the user interface is designed in such a way that a stylus is not needed; in other words, the virtual keys need to be finger-friendly, and that pages can be scrolled without the sole reliance on narrow scroll bars. We'll check on this later.

Camera

Those who are familiar with the Satio should notice this similar camera interface on the Vivaz. You get an identical set of "Scenes" (auto, portrait, landscape, twilight landscape, sports, document, twilight portrait, beach/snow) and "Shoot mode" (normal, panorama, smile detection, touch capture) but without "Bestpic" -- a tool that lets you take a sequence of photos and then pick out the best shot to keep. "Exposure" and "Auto mode" are still there, but the button for disabling the LED flash "Photo light" (same light as the X10's) is now replaced by a "Focus" menu (auto, face detection, macro, landscape); to fiddle with the light, you'll need to go into Settings at the bottom right corner -- probably a pain for more people so we're not sure why Sony Ericsson did this swap.

The camera app can be launched by holding down either camera buttons (thus launching the corresponding capture mode), even when the phone's locked. Some may see this as a handy feature for quickly capturing short-lived comical moments, but this also brings the risk of accidentally turning on the camera when it's in your pocket (which has happened to us a few times).
Once you're in, you can switch between three aspect ratios (4:3 at 8 megapixels, 3:2 at 7 megapixels, 16:9 at 6 megapixels) and smaller sizes for still shots, whereas in video mode you can choose either 720p or 640 x 480. Picture quality is pretty decent overall -- great colors and sharpness for shots taken in the daylight, albeit with fairly noticeable artifacting in the blue sky; at night, we've had the occasional struggle with the focusing, but the Vivaz's impressive noise reduction is worth the multiple attempts for each shot.

Like many compact cameras these days, the Vivaz also offers some fun camera modes as seen on the Satio. We started off with the smile detection mode -- once chosen, you need to press on the shutter button to activate the detection, and it responded best with a bit of teeth. Next up is the panorama mode -- it relies on the accelerometer to guide you through the three-stage shoot, and it worked brilliantly as long as our camera was pointing straight ahead and level for all three shots. Lastly, touch capture was equally impressive and pretty handy for close-up shots. If you don't mind sacrificing a bit more battery juice, you can also enable geotagging for your photos.

There aren't as many fancy toys to play with in video capture mode, but the YouTube uploader and the overall video performance alone are enough to keep us satisfied. Again, picture quality is great during both day and night, although the latter does suffer from some color noise. Audio's good, especially with picking up nearby voices even in a noisy environment, but it won't do much good if you're in the wind. Most importantly, the continuous auto-focusing -- a first on a 720p-recording phone -- worked well for us. You can see it all for yourself in the demo video below (and remember to turn on HD playback).

Software

Earlier we mentioned how the resistive touchscreen is still acceptable as long as its interface accommodates the finger well, as in avoiding the stylus wherever possible. Sadly, the Vivaz isn't entirely finger-friendly -- the full landscape QWERTY keyboard isn't available in all apps, and some menus are only scrollable using the thin vertical bar on the right. This alone isn't as much of an annoyance as the inconsistency across the menus and apps, so hopefully Sony Ericsson will get this fixed before users go grey.

The homescreen consists of five tabbed panels in this default order: favorite contacts, Twitter, "Flow" (some cool accelerometer-based wavy animation that doesn't seem to do much else), camera gallery and shortcuts. You can change the panel type by holding down its tab, thus getting the above list plus two more options: aquarium and album. On each panel you can summon the same shortcut box by clicking on the hang-up button, then you'll have quick access to the dialer, media gallery, messages and search, plus the music playback buttons (accompanied by album artwork) if you have some tunes playing in the background.

The Twitter panel is essentially a simple Flash-powered app. How do we know? It says so in the many memory-related error messages we've seen, and the only way to relaunch the crashed app is by restarting the phone. On top of the slightly laggy scrolling, it's also disappointing to see the full QWERTY keyboard missing for Twitter -- we've had to rely on the little stylus to log in (for every boot, that is, as it didn't store our credentials) and compose tweets. The lack of reply and direct message filters is a frustration, too, but you can always hit the Twitter website from the app for your regular Twitter features and the full keyboard. On a more positive note, the minimalistic camera gallery panel is pretty slick -- it's essentially a vertical-scrolling, one-at-a-time photo / video viewer, so from afar the panel appears to be a wallpaper showing the latest picture / video still from the camera. Clicking on the image will launch the full media gallery.

We've found a few nice apps preloaded on the Vivaz, namely YouTube, Rally Master (simple accelerometer-based car-racing game), SSX 3 (accelerometer-based snowboarding game), WorldMate (travel planner), GTalk, Google Maps (without multitouch, of course), TrackID (song identifier) and Facebook. You also get a 30-day trial for the Navteq-powered Wisepilot turn-by-turn navigation app, and while we cannot comment on its accuracy since we didn't have a car, we were impressed by the vast amount of POI data that it offered. If you want a different navigation app then you're out of luck, as the PlayNow store doesn't seem to offer any alternatives. Similarly, there are only four free games offered on PlayNow, so you're most likely looking into spending at least £4 / $6.10 per game; you get more free non-game apps, while paid ones start from £2.50 / $3.80 each. Regardless of the prices, looks like PlayNow's got a pretty tall mountain to climb here in comparison to the other platform's app stores in terms of content.

There's little to complain about the bog-standard apps such as the media player and organizer. In fact, the delightful music player is pretty much identical to the Satio's -- good to see a familiar feature that works well. The only black sheep here is the web browsing performance and experience -- the phone insists on asking us to pick the connection method (WiFi or 3G) every time we wanted to use Twitter, Facebook or the browser, and then you need to develop the habit of using mobile websites as the browser's crashed on us a few times due to insufficient memory. Neither are acceptable for a smartphone these days, especially the former -- we'd be so much happier if the phone can at least remember or determine our preferred connection method.

Wrap-up

The Vivaz is no doubt a good specimen for showing what Sony Ericsson does best -- great video and photo capture along with a user-friendly media playback interface, not to mention being a world's first with its nice continuous auto-focus 720p video recording. On the other hand, though, the user interface needs some tweaking for the sake of mainly consistency, ease of web access, security (as in so the phone is less likely to unlock itself) and stability (and we hope a software patch will be offered to fix all these). Not much can be done about the phone's build quality now, but we'll let it off this once given the nice curvature for gripping. All in all, we'd say hold off until Sony Ericsson comes up with some software patches -- if they ever get around to it, that is.

Friday, 30 April 2010

3 New Nokia Qwerty Keyboard Phone


Nokia announced Symbian smartphone the Nokia C6 seems the most complete as it is equipped with a touchscreen and a sliding keyboard.Nokia announced the launch of three new mobile services to facilitate access to email and social networks. Smartphone Nokia C6, Nokia C3, and Nokia E5 relate primarily to the public. The Nokia C6, the most comprehensive of the three, features a 3.2 inch touch screen displays 640 x 360 pixels in 16:9 and a sliding QWERTY keyboard. Finally, the C6 runs on the Symbian S60 operating system touchscreen edition.

The Nokia C6 is designed to meet the expectations of users connected on the move. Social networks like Facebook can be integrated with Symbian interface and gather information from contacts in a single menu. Its mobile broadband, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth will take care of data transfer. With an A-GPS module, the smartphone offers free and subscription free Ovi application pedestrian navigation maps and road. Finally, for fans of multimedia, the C6 offers FM radio, a 5 megapixel camera (with flash and autofocus) with an additional sensor, smaller on the front (for video calls) and a decision 3.5mm.

Features Nokia C6
• 3G Network
• 3.2”Touch Screen 640 x 360 pixels 16:9
• Sliding Qwerty keyboard
• 5 megapixel camera with autofocus and flash + lens front
• A-GPS Module
• Stereo FM radio
• Wi-Fi + Bluetooth 2.1 EDR
• Audio 3.5mm
• MicroSD memory card slot
• Symbian S60 5th edition
• Talk time up to 5h (3G) or 7am (GSM)
• Dimensions: 113.4 x 53 x 16.8 mm 150 g

The new smartphone will be offered Nokia logged in a price is 309 Euros. TTC from the second or third quarter of 2010 (Q3 2010). The Nokia C6 will be available in two colors: black and white.

The new Nokia C3 adopts the use of messaging and social networks with a full QWERTY keyboard, while positioning it self as a mobile very accessible.

Announced in conjunction with Nokia C6 and Nokia E5, Nokia C3 is the smartphone the most accessible, without neglecting the essential features required today: social networks and managing email accounts. These practices are confirmed by the mobile format that makes room for a non-touch screen 2.3 inches and displays a QWERTY keyboard. Compatible with EDGE but not 3G, the C3 is catching up with the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.

The operating system of C3 Nokia, Symbian S40 is designed primarily for mobile classic Finnish firm, but is being reworked to incorporate for the first time information from social networks. Again, Facebook and Twitter are honored and incorporated directly to the home screen. In addition to these essential functions for the target audience, Nokia shipped C3 also 2 megapixel camera and FM radio.

Features Nokia C3
• EDGE Network
• Screen 2.3”320 x 240 pixels
• QWERTY Keyboard
• 2 megapixel camera
• Stereo FM radio
• Wi-Fi + Bluetooth 2.1 EDR
• MicroSD memory card slot
• Talk time up to 7h
• Dimensions: 115.5 x 58.1 x 13.6 mm 114 g

The Nokia C3 will be offered in the third quarter of 2010 (Q3 2010) in gray, pink or white gold. This mobile looks as accessible as it will show a price of 119 Euros TTC without subscription.

End of the Nokia E series smartphone, the Nokia E5 embeds a Symbian S60 and offers both professional features that direct access to social networks. If Nokia C6 and C3 are intended for a public appetite for social networks, the new Nokia E5 brings a professional touch to the entertainment features are still present. It describes itself as the little brother of the Nokia E72 and E63 which it borrows the format monoblock with QWERTY keyboard on the front and compatibility Mail for Exchange and IBM Lotus Notes Traveler.

An internal storage of Nokia E5 is 250 MB reserved for mail and applications. Have fun, the Nokia E5 shows a 5 megapixel camera with LED flash and an A-GPS module with the application Ovi Maps, which offers support to navigation and pedestrian traffic for free.

Features Nokia E5
• 3G Network
• 2.4”Screen 320 x 240 pixels
• QWERTY Keyboard
• 5 megapixel camera
• A-GPS Module
• Wi-Fi + Bluetooth 2.0 A2DP
• Internal Memory 250MB + microSD memory card slot
• Symbian S60 System
• Talk time up to 5:30 (3G) or 18.30 (GSM)
• Dimensions: 115 x 58.9 x 12.8 mm 126 g

Announced for the third quarter 2010 (Q3 2010), Nokia E5 priced at $ 249 inclusive of black and white.

Friday, 16 April 2010

sony ericsson Xperia X10 review


Of the world's largest phone manufacturers, perhaps none has taken a more twisted road to smartphone ubiquity than Sony Ericsson. It began its journey back in the pre-joint venture Ericsson days by throwing its weight behind Symbian, a smartphone platform that would ultimately become the world's most popular -- but it made a fatal error in supporting the doomed UIQ flavor that never saw even a fraction of the support its S60 cousin did. UIQ's untimely (but predicted) collapse last year left the company nearly rudderless and ill-equipped to deal with competitors like Nokia, HTC, and Apple, all of whom had long since embraced other platforms -- all with fighting chances of market dominance.

Left without a platform to champion, Sony Ericsson would ultimately continue supporting Symbian through its involvement with the Symbian Foundation and phones like the Satio and Vivaz... and it would ramp up support for Windows Mobile with the Xperia X1 and X2... and it would bring Android into the fold with the X10, all within a few months of each other. All told, Sony Ericsson enters 2010 actively supporting three unrelated smartphone platforms, and comments by CEO Bert Norberg at MWC in February lead us to believe that they'd be happy to take on a fourth (or more) if the opportunity presented itself. It's an odd strategy to be sure, particularly for a company that's struggling mightily and shrinking its workforce more than any other top-five manufacturer. How it intends to effectively compete on three different fronts without spreading itself hopelessly thin, well... that remains a huge question mark.

That said, the Xperia X10 is perhaps the most promising of Sony Ericsson's confusing crop of modern smartphones, combining attractive hardware with killer specs, Android, and an intriguing custom skin. Does it hold its own against modern competitors like HTC's Nexus One and Desire? And more importantly, can it keep Sony Ericsson from going over the brink? Read on to find out.

Note: Sony Ericsson contacted us shortly after the review was published to let us know that this particular X10 is running pre-production firmware, which may account for some of the issues we had with keyboard performance and occasional sluggishness. Let's hope!

Hardware
In terms of appearance, we think the X10 is pretty polarizing, which might be a surprising statement considering that it's little more than a large slate -- and who doesn't want that, right? Specifically, we took issue with two things here: first, the front of the device is glossy plastic. Often, glossy plastic looks good when it's new and clean -- in pictures, anyhow -- but a few smudges and a brush with your car keys in your pocket later, it can easily be transformed into a war-scarred hellscape. As you might imagine, we didn't scratch test the X10 (we can't imagine our gracious handlers at Sony Ericsson would appreciate that too much), but it's a cause for concern. What's more, holding the X10 back-to-back with the Nexus One -- perhaps its nearest competitor on the market today -- quickly makes you appreciate the HTC phone's superior materials; it simply feels more solidly-constructed, and that's something that can make a big difference when you're buying a $500-plus handset.

Secondly, with a 4-inch full wide VGA display, the X10 is big, very nearly approaching HD2 territory. That's not a problem for this huge-handed reviewer, but friends with more diminutive statures specifically called out the X10 as being a hassle to hold (fortunately, the upcoming X10 mini should be just what the doctor ordered for those folks, at the cost of screen real estate and processor power). Around back, the X10's battery cover is made of a lovely, high-quality soft touch material that is pretty much exactly what we like to find on the back of every phone we review. It feels nice, and the gentle, sloping curves make sure it's comfortable to hold. The phone clocks in at 13mm thick, not the thinnest on the market (the HD2 is an astounding 11mm, for example) but thin enough to look and feel... well, pretty thin. No one's going to accuse this of being a portly device, rest assured.

Around the sides, you find all the buttons and connectors you expect, including power and both micro-USB and 3.5mm headphone jacks at the top, volume and two-stage camera controls on the right, and the typical menu, home, and back buttons below the screen up front. The micro-USB port is covered with a flap, which improves the aesthetic appearance of the upper edge of the device but probably serves little practical function (we've seen micro-USB ports behave just fine with some pretty extreme lint packed in there), makes the daily task of charging more of a chore than it needs to be, and risks being broken off with repetitive use. There's no indication of a dock connector anywhere on the phone, so unless there's some inductive capability that Sony Ericsson has yet to discuss, that port will be the one and only way of juicing your phone day in and day out.

Notably absent is a dedicated search button, which might leave some existing Android owners upgrading to the X10 feeling like a fish out of water -- it's not that there aren't other ways to access search bars throughout the phone, naturally, but we could definitely understand missing one-press access to them. Adding to the potential for confusion is a silkscreened magnifying glass icon below the volume rocker, which makes it look like you might be able to press and hold the volume down button to get a search bar, but no -- it's actually indicating that the rocker doubles as a zoom control (which, admittedly, is a perfectly valid alternative use of the magnifying glass).

What about the camera? At 8.1 megapixels, the X10 represents just about the highest-res cam you can find on an Android phone today. Yes, granted, it's a well-worn truism that megapixel count has little to do with actual picture quality, but Sony Ericsson has historically taken a lot of pride in producing cameraphones that really hold their own, and we're happy to report that the X10 is no exception. At the risk of talking a little bit too much about software in the hardware section of this review, we'll say that we're pleased both with the picture quality we were able to achieve (even in less-than-perfect lighting) and also the camera's interface, which has been thoroughly and completely reworked from the stock Android UI -- it even whips the updated UI found on Eclair devices. You've got access to a variety of autofocus modes including fixed infinity focus and smile detection, multiple metering and scene modes, white balance control, a self-timer, and the list goes on. Heck, the phone even lets you adjust how big of a smile it should look for. If it's got a weak spot, it's macro -- we weren't able to get in as close as we've been able to do with some other phones, but as long as you stay further than three or four inches from your subject, you're golden.

Oh, and that light next to the camera lens? Your first guess might be that it's an LED flash, but Sony Ericsson has apparently decided not to buy into the fallacy that a single white LED can ever be considered a "flash" in the true sense of the word -- instead, it's a "photo light" that can be toggled on and off. When it's on, it stays on for the entire time you're in the camera application, which helps you frame your shot and get the autofocus tuned. It's a nice (and honest) feature, but we would've liked an icon in the viewfinder's HUD to toggle it rather than having to call up advanced settings through the menu button. Bottom line: the X10 will produce perfectly fine impromptu shots. As usual, you're not going to expect to replace your DSLR with this (or even your higher-end point-and-shoot), and you're not going to want to print out an 8-by-10 and frame it, but we'd feel much better about having this in our pocket for on-the-go shooting than, say, a Droid.

So Cyber-shot is one of Sony Ericsson's big co-branding schemes, but what's the other? Walkman, of course. As a music player, the X10 fares pretty admirably; we'll touch on the software in the next section, but from a hardware perspective, both the jack placement and the quality of the audio that the X10 produces are decent. The music was a little less punchy on the bass side of the spectrum than we'd like -- even with our Shure SE530s and triple-flange tips, both of which tend to accentuate low frequencies -- but the signal-to-noise ratio seemed superb throughout our testing. We could barely detect the presence of any electrical noise on the line; in fact, when we first plugged in, there was absolutely none. That's pretty rare for a phone.

The low-noise trend continues through to the earpiece while on calls. We were surprised at how the X10 was able to suppress line static without sacrificing volume; it was so good, in fact, that we had trouble at times figuring out whether we were still on the call when the person on the other end wasn't speaking. Likewise, the speakerphone is exceptional, both loud and clear enough to be useful for those impromptu conference calls we all have to take from time to time (or for when we're driving and we're caught without a headset). Sony Ericsson smartly placed the loudspeaker port on the side of the phone, not the bottom, so setting the phone down in any position has no ill effect on volume or usability.

Software
The X10 isn't just an Android phone -- it's also the first to introduce Sony Ericsson's rather comprehensive Android skin, a package we'd first heard of in the middle of last year under the codename "Rachael." Unfortunately, it's taken the company so long to get Rachael good enough to launch that we're now two releases of the Android core beyond where the X10 stands; this phone comes with 1.6 out of the box, while devices like the Nexus One, Droid / Milestone, and Legend are putting along on 2.1, and we've no doubt that the next big version is just around the corner. Sony Ericsson has wisely committed to updating the phone on an ongoing basis, but it speaks to the same problem with which HTC and Motorola are already well-acquainted: when Google's iterating on its mobile platform at this breakneck pace, it's virtually impossible for the heavily-customized skins like Blur and Sense to keep pace.

That said, Android 1.6 (née Donut) is still a perfectly serviceable version of the platform, and Sony Ericsson has injected a few key modifications that make some of the benefits of 2.0 / 2.1 moot. The meat of these tweaks revolves around two applications, Timescape and Mediascape. Timescape starts by going down the same social aggregation path that Motorola has with Happenings and HTC with Friend Stream -- basically, a chronological timeline of your friends' status updates across Twitter, Facebook, and MySpace -- but keeps going by offering other timelines for other services within the phone (photos, SMS and MMS messages, emails, and so on). These timelines are presented in ultra-trippy 3D stacks that Sony Ericsson has coined "Splines," and once status updates have been properly loaded into memory, these so-called Splines perform pretty well -- they're slick and smooth as you flick them up and down with your finger. There's some pretty nasty initial jerkiness, though, if you haven't viewed Timescape in a while.

Speaking of jerkiness, the X10 suffers from the same issue that plagues the Nexus One: despite the blazingly fast 1GHz Snapdragon core that's aboard, portions of the interface feel barely quicker than a lowly 528MHz MSM7201A. Since we've seen similar issues on the Nexus One, we can't really chalk up the problems to Sony Ericsson's customizations, so we're not sure how or where to place the blame -- it's just inconsistent, even without having loaded any third-party apps. Things that seem like they'd be extraordinarily processor intensive (scrolling through a Timescape Spline, for instance) can be super fast, while a drop dead simple operation like opening a pop-up menu can momentarily bring the phone to a halt. We don't get it, but we're hoping it's something Google and Sony Ericsson can tighten up over time through software updates.

Anyway, back to the second part of Sony Ericsson's one-two punch: Mediascape. Anyone who's used any stock Android device -- 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, doesn't matter -- can tell you that the in-built music app is in desperate need of tender loving care, and these guys have given it just that. Basically, Mediascape is your one-stop shop for browsing music, videos, and photos on the device; there's also support for the company's PlayNow store, though we weren't able to test it (it still hasn't launched in the US, though it's available in a number of European markets). The app makes clever use of album art, presenting you with a list of recently-played and favorite tracks when you first start -- there's some Timescape integration as well, where you'll find the art in a Spline representing your chronological consumption of audio. Naturally, it's got support for a variety of browsing modes (album, artist, and so on), background playback, and everything else you'd expect from a basic music player. Well, almost everything -- as we'd mentioned in the hardware section of this review, we were a little underwhelmed with the X10's bass response over the headset, and we would've loved a graphic equalizer in here to help clear that up. No dice.

Otherwise, there's not much installed out of the box: a handful of productivity apps from Moxier, a MySpace client, Mobile Systems' OfficeSuite viewer for checking out (but not editing) Office docs, the Quadrapop game, TrackID, and turn-by-turn navigation from Wisepilot that includes a 30-day free trial. The suite has built-in weather forecasts which is nice, but it's hard to say why anyone in the US would consider plunking down for this with Google Maps 4.1 -- and free turn-by-turn along with it -- just a download away.

Keyboard input -- a pretty important topic, if you ask us -- was a surprisingly big problem on the X10. First off, you can't consistently use the back button to clear the keyboard like you can on virtually every other Android device we used -- here, it deletes everything in your current text field and keeps the keyboard up on the screen on occasion, thought we can't nail down the pattern of the behavior. Much, much more dangerous, though, is the fact that we're seeing all sorts of missed inputs. You'll press a letter (and you get the character pop-up, so you know the keyboard has registered it), and maybe somewhere between 2 and 3 percent of the time, it won't "take" -- it just won't go into your input box, which makes entering almost any text a maddening procedure. Virtual keyboards have enough difficulty as it is without something this egregious coming into play, and we're hoping it's a bug that Sony Ericsson can pin down and fix posthaste.

Wrap-up
Even in 2010, high-powered Android devices are still surprisingly difficult to come by. You can basically count the models seriously worth considering on a single hand, and the X10 certainly joins that elite team on the wings of its gigahertz-class Snapdragon core and gorgeous 854 x 480 display that clocks in at a whopping four inches -- a size that bests every other Google-powered phone on the market today (though it certainly won't hold that title for long).

Thing is, it's not just about the hardware; when it comes to Android, unless you buy a so-called "Google Experience" device, it's never going to be about the hardware alone. Any company that tries to aggressively skin a mobile platform is going to have issues -- possibly major ones -- on its first iteration. That's a pretty unavoidable reality of engineering, and it's a growing pain that both Blur and Sense have gone through (in fact, you could argue that Blur's still in the thick of that fight). The X10's input problems alone would unfortunately be enough to turn us away from the phone within a few days' use -- we just write way too much email and way too many text messages to deal with a situation like that -- but it feels like these guys are just a few minor tweaks away from a great custom platform that pairs rather beautifully with a phone that easily goes toe-to-toe with the Nexus One.

But ultimately, would we actually take this over a Nexus? Give us a few bug fixes, Sony Ericsson -- and a hard date for an Eclair upgrade -- and you might just have a deal on your hands.

Thursday, 8 April 2010

Nokia X6 Review


Nokia X6 is a touchscreen smartphone within a compact and square for music lovers, since it provides up to 35 hours of uninterrupted music. Not to mention the 36 GB of internal memory that stores a large number of tracks and more. other specifications of the phone include support for UMTS network, HSDPA, 3.2-inch display with 360×640 pixel resolution, Wi-Fi connectivity, a 5 megapixel camera with autofocus and LED flash, integrated GPS receiver with Ovi Maps on Symbian OS v9.4 S60 fifth edition, video calling, media player with graphic equalizer, playlists and other advanced features to play music at its best.

As we suspected, the Nokia X6 looks a lot thicker than you would (should) expect from a touchscreen device without physically qwerty keyboard.

This is partly because the device is designed that the top and bottom a little ’slope’ (see pictures below this Artkel), but the X6 is an extremely compact device. This course does not necessarily, but if you look to the first press photos that were raised or impressed. In practice, it falls in that area so a bit disappointing.

Which of course the Nokia X6 is a big improvement over many other devices, both Nokia touschreen itself and its competitors is the fact that the X6 is equipped with a so-called capacitive touchscreen. This makes operation and the perception of the Symbian S60 Touch UI much more comfortable and looks, and is all a lot smoother. Switching between menus, applications and browse the photo gallery is all just a little smoother, and smoothing back faster than the N97. You do not so hard to rub on the display. Owners of an iPhone or the Android phones that are already for sale immediately know what I mean.

Another nice detail is that the Nokia X6, like the N97 Mini, failed to provide a camera cover. ;-) For perhaps the thinking in damage (other than the now infamous cover) to prevent the camera from Nokia has the X6 slightly sunken in the back. Not much (no milimeter I estimate) but just enough to lay down and scratches on tables to avoid sliding. Of course that does not help against small keys and money in bags and (trousers) bags, but a touchscreen device you always in my one (hip) storage bag. Hopefully Nokia will soon be a standard protective bag or case in which is one of the drawbacks of the N97. That is not supplied. Buy yourself? Of course, but devices from 500 + Euro may (read: should) that I think is standard in the box.

All features of the device are adapted to the market segment where it is placed: the more expensive. With a Nokia X6 retail price of 459 euros plus VAT is the unit close to the iPhone.

Genuine Nokia fans, and there are many, they get the chance to buy an upmarket device that must lie alongside the iPhone. Whether it has enough appeal to whom the iPhone window beckons, do look up the other side, well over one months will prove if the X6 is actually in the store.

Simultaneously Nokia launches the N97 with its combination of touchscreen and keyboard, and the X3 for about 140 euros in the store will be a classic example with mobile access to the extensive portfolio of Ovi Music Store.

Nokia X6 Specs

Brand Nokia
Type X6
Model Candybar
Color Black / Red, White / blue
Network
[:: There are three basic networks available, GSM (= for EU and USA) CDMA (= for Asia) and 3G/4G (not region-specific). The network and the frequency, determine where the phone can be used geographically. Frequencies for the GSM network, dual band (= 900, 1800), Tri band (= 900, 1800, 1900) and Quad band (= 850, 900, 1800, 1900). The standard frequency for the CDMA network in 2000.]
GSM 3G network, EDGE, GPRS, GSM, HSCSD, HSDPA (3G)
Service 850, 900, 1800, 1900, 2100
Connectivity
Provides insight into the available connections, Bluetooth (= sending files via radio waves), Infrared (= sending files through infrared), Wi-Fi (= wireless network) and USB connection (via cable to a file = PC). 
Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP
Infrared No
Wi-Fi (WLAN) Yes
JaMicroUSB USB v2.0
Fax / Data Yes
Display
Here you type display, the number of colors, size and resolution of the main display. If there is one extra front display is also shown here (mostly by Shell Clamp phones). 
Main display Color TFT touchscreen
Color display 16.000.000 colors
Size 81.28 mm.
Resolution 360 x 640 pixels
External display No
Memory
Besides the internal memory, most new mobile phones also have the opportunity to expand the memory with an external memory card. You can also find here the type of memory that the memory is expandable. 
32GB Internal Memory
No expandable memory
Memory slots No
No Storage Medium
Performance
There are two common types of batteries, Lithium Ion and Lithium Polymer. Lithium Polymer batteries are developed along the lines of Lithium Ion batteries, and others have the advantage that they are not combustible. The number of hours the phone with full battery pack can be displayed at the stand-by time (= at least use) and talk time (= to much use). Temperature changes can affect these values. 
Battery Standard battery, Li-Ion 1320 mAh (BL-5J)
Standby time 401 hours
Talk time 8.5 hours
Call
Provides information about whether to have a vibrating alarm and the possibility of a photo-ID to a phone number to add. Furthermore, the different types of mobile phone ring tones support as the standard monotone polyphonic ringtones, or more like MP3 ringtones. 
Vibrate alert Yes
Photo ID Yes
Ringtones MP3, Polyphonic
Camera
If the phone has a digital camera here parts as the amount Megapixels and the presence of digital and optical zoom defined. Also find here information about the presence of a video function and half (front) camera to conduct video calls. 
Camera Yes
Megapixels 5 megapixels
Maximum photo resolution 2592×1944 pixels
Digital zoom Yesx
Optical zoom No
Autofocus Yes
Flash Yes
Video Recording Yes
Second (front) camera Yes
Messaging
Functions as SMS (= text messaging) and MMS (multimedia messaging =) are now appointed, along with whether to have a T9 predictive text feature. Furthermore messaging options like browsing the Internet and have e-mail on your phone defined. 
SMS Yes
MMS Yes
T9 text function Yes
E-mail Yes
Internet browsing Yes
Entertainment
Extra options as an FM radio and Java are specified here. If the phone has an MP3 player under the title, this audio player included, while the supporting file types are described. Furthermore, here, if applicable, the type of video function can be found. 
FM radio Yes
Java Yes
Audio player AAC, M4A, MP3, RA6, WAV, WMA
Video player 3GP, MP4, RV, WMV
Features
If you yourself can add ringtones to this phone are included here, along with whether to have a video call feature, which can be a video conversation. In addition, various organizer functions specified here. You will also find other details any additional features of the phone. 
Add ringtones Yes
Organizer Document viewer (Word, Excel, PowerPoint), Voice command / dial, Handwriting recognition
Video call No
Other features Symbian OS v9.4, Series 60 rel. 5, Auto turn-off, Auto-rotate, 3.5 mm audio jack, touch Dedicated music keys, GPS with A-GPS support; Ovi Maps 3.0, TV-Out
Format
Subject information about the weight and dimensions of the phone. When the weight is the number of grams of the phone including battery included. The dimensions are shown in Height x Width x Depth. 
Weight 122 g.
Dimensions (H x W x D) 111 x 51 x 13.8 mm.

Friday, 26 February 2010

Sony Ericsson Xperia X2 Review


The Sony Ericsson XPERIA X2 has been in the center of attention ever since its first unofficial shots leaked online. Much like most other gadgeteers, we've had our hands itching to get one and luckily our wishes just came true.

The Sony Ericsson XPERIA X2 is one impressive device full of industry leading features - it's the first Windows Mobile smartphone with an 8 megapixel camera and WVGA video recording and it's actually the first ever full QWERTY phone to have that sort of imaging prowess as well. The XPERIA X2 most other features, though not as innovative, are a nice match as well. We guess they are worth going through one more time.
Sony Ericsson XPERIA X2 at a glance:

* General: GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz, UMTS 900/1900/2100 MHz, EDGE class 10, HSDPA, 7.2 Mbps; HSUPA, 2 Mbps
* Form factor: Slide-and-tilt QWERTY touch phone
* Dimensions: 110 x 54 x 16 mm, weight 155 grams
* Display: 3.2" TFT resistive touchscreen, 800 x 480 pixels
* Platform: Qualcomm MSM 7200 528 MHz processor
* OS: Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.5 Professional
* Memory: 110MB storage, 256 MB RAM, 512 MB ROM, microSD card slot
* Camera: 8-megapixels auto-focus camera, LED flash, touch focus, geotagging, face detection, image stabilizer, Smart Contrast, WVGA@30fps video recording
* Connectivity: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1 with A2DP, standard microUSB port, GPS receiver with A-GPS, 3.5mm audio jack, TV-out
* Misc: Optical trackpad, accelerometer for motion-based gaming, office document viewer and editor, XviD video support
* Battery: 1500 mAh Li-Po battery

We just got the XPERIA X2 and we wanted to share with you our first impressions of the device. So consider this article as a quick and dirty preview, with a more detailed one coming up in the following week. We hope to get as much as possible from our encounter with the X2 and you can bet we surely won't keep anything to ourselves.

The XPERIA X2 should be available in two colors - Elegant Black and Modern Silver. There's hardly anything missing from the broad range of connectivity options. Perhaps the only two things it seems to lack are the FM radio and the automatic screen rotation. Yes, there's an accelerometer on board alright, but the screen doesn't auto rotate to match the orientation of the handset.

While the XPERIA X2 uses the vanilla Windows Mobile 6.5 Professional, the thing that sets it apart from competing products is the X-panels interface. X panels have gone a long way since the XPERIA X1 and have turned into a full featured system for using various animated and interactive homescreens. But we'll get to that further down.

Anyways, enough talking, let's get to some walking. Jump on as explore what the XPERIA X2 is made of with even a brief rundown of the interface later on.

Sony Ericsson XPERIA X2 360-degree spin

The XPERIA X2 measures 110 x 54 x 16 mm and weighs 155 g. The dimensions and weight are almost the same compared to the old XPERIA though X2 is a tag wider due to the larger 3.2" display.

Design and construction

The new XPERIA X2 seems to incorporate noticeably less metallic elements compared to XPERIA X1 and for some of us that's actually a step back. The nice and sleek black plastic on the front that you've seen in the press images, actually looks cheap in reality and it's a real fingerprint magnet. The same cheapo-looking plastic is used for the keyboard keys quite in contrast with the metallic styled keyboard of the X1. But those design elements are usually subjectively perceived so we'll stop with the disgruntled mumble here.

Most of the front of Sony Ericsson XPERIA X2 is taken by the large 3.2" touch screen. Unlike the front plastic frame, the back of the X2 is made from stainless steel and is quite immune to fingerprints.Beneath the screen, the navigation deck doesn't have the proprietary X-pattern but is more ordinary incorporating the available four buttons in a regular grid. The large optical trackpad is dead center compensation for the fact that there is no D-pad on the X2. There's no X-panel shortcut this time, the bottom left key this time opens the Sony Ericsson Media center, which now has new items such as Call history, Messages, Calendar, and Panels setup.The 4-row QWERTY keyboard of X2 is quite distinctive in terms of shape and design compared to X1, but the controls and keys order are almost the same. Though the shape of the keys is very comfortable and the arrow keys also add to the usability, the plastic material doesn't impress at all.The right side of the XPERIA X2 hosts the volume rocker at the top and the camera shutter key. The keys are quite comfortable and well integrated with the overall design. Though quite thin, the camera key is relatively responsive, with a distinct half press.The X2 left side sports the battery cover release knob. The standard microUSB is located in the upper left part of the phone and the uncovered slot will be easily visible while you're on the phone. We feel that spoils the looks a bit and would rather have a cover on top of it.

The microSD card slot is accessible from the left side of the X2 but only after you remove the battery cover - much like it is with the XPERIA X1 actually.The bottom of the XPERIA X2 is free of any controls, but we quite like the mesh-like looks of the plastic surface here - kind of reminds of an electric shaver, but in the good, high-tech sense.

The 3.5mm audio jack on the top of X2 also doubles as a TV-out port. Here we also find the power key - tiny as on the previous X1.Turning the phone bottom-side up reveals the sleek aluminum back. The 8.1 megapixel autofocus camera with LED flash and the lanyard eyelet is to be found here. The two stereo loudspeakers are also here located on the opposite sides. Removing the battery cover of XPERIA X2 reveals the 1500mAh Li-Po battery - the same as the one used in X1. The official stand-by and talk time of the battery is almost the same compared to the old X1 battery data, and we guess we can expect the same 2 days of standby under moderate usage.The design and controls are quite comfortable; typing on the QWERTY keyboard is a user-friendly experience. Generally the Sony Ericsson XPERIA X2 feels nice when held in hand.

Saturday, 30 January 2010

Nokia N900 Review


Nokia N900 is the final product which opens up a new path for the Finnish smartphone producer. After Google, which launched its new open source operating system for mobile phones, Nokia raised the stakes a few months later with its own vision, which is called Maemo. Android OS, as well as Maemo are both based on the well-known Linux platform, but they are pretty much different because they are the results of two different working teams. Before getting into more in-depth information, do not overlook the fact that we will be reviewing an Internet tablet, with some limited phone capabilities.

So, be aware that some of the features that you'll probably be expecting from such a device might be missing. Also, bear in mind that Nokia might, or might not, add some new basic features or new complex ones in the future firmware updates, but do not rely on that. In the end, to quote one of the Nokia's officials: "N900 has become the high-end line-up of smartphones for Nokia and all other Maemo devices that will be launched will have specific high-end features". So, expect high prices for the next Maemo devices, but on the other hand, the Nseries prices might drop.

Nokia N900 has been announced in August 2009 and made available on the market in November same year. The device is only available in Black and can be acquired for about $700 USD.

Design

The first time I saw Nokia N900, I was afraid its too bulky and ugly for my tastes. Automatically, I have compared it in my mind with the new Android smartphones and saw the N900 losing on all aspects. Fortunately, things are not as it seems at first glance, and Nokia N900 is really a very nice and stylish device. Yes, the device is pocketsizable and yes, it's big and heavy (110.9x59.8x18mm and 181g including battery), but it looks much better than HTC Touch Pro or any other bulky Pocket PC. It feels nice to the touch thanks to the matte plastic on the back, which also helps users have a good grip over the device.The only drawback that I found is the shiny material that covers the front part of the device, which is a fingerprint magnet. Still, the rest of the device is looking very good and, for me at least, it seemed ergonomic enough to be able to handle it with ease. Once you get used to its look and to its buttons layout, everything should work smoothly. In fact, besides the QWERTY keyboard the device doesn't really have too many external buttons. If you keep the N900 in portrait mode, you'll be able to notice on the right side a volume key near the top, a small power on/off button at the middle and a dedicated camera key near the bottom. On top of the smartphone, there's a microUSB port, as well as one of the two stereo speakers. The other stereo speaker can be found on the bottom of the phone, together with a 3.5mm port jack and a small sliding key which locks/unlocks the touchscreen.There's also a plastic stylus placed on the bottom left corner of the device, but I haven't used it too much. Above the generous touchscreen, there's a secondary videocall camera, as well as a small ambient light sensor and the in-call speaker. The backside of the smartphone features a nice 5 megapixels camera, which is protected by a sliding cover. When opened, it will also reveal a dual LED flash and Carl Zeiss optics.The camera is surrounded by a thin plastic strip, which can help users watch movies in a more relaxed position without the need of keeping the phone in hand. When the device is slided, it will reveal a full QWERTY keyboard that features 38 small keys. While the layout is good, I still had the feeling that the buttons are too small and a little bit too crowded. Still, that doesn't makes a bad impression and texters will be happy to find that the keyboard is actually very nice to the touch and responsive enough to be able to text without mistakes. The backlighting of the keyboard is good and very nice, with a bluish light that shows all the keys.Overall, Nokia N900's finishes are exquisite and puts it in front of many other (ex)high-end Nokia devices, in terms of design and ergonomics. The rounded shapes of the device also recommend it as an easy-to-carry smartphone and really good-looking business tool.

Display and Camera


Nokia N900 features a large 3.5-inch TFT resistive touchscreen, which supports 16 million colors and 800x480 pixels resolution. It also includes features like proximity sensor for auto turn-off and accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate. Perfectly visible in the sunlight, the display is also surprisingly responsive for a resistive touchscreen. In fact, first time I used the device, I tought that Nokia finally made its first capacitive touchscreen, but is seems that I was mistaken. The display is still resistive, but very well crafted, so you will barely feel the difference when it comes to responsiveness. Of course, you won't be able to take advantage of features like multi-touch, but I'd say this is a pretty good display. It is also well-protected against scratches, which is a big advantage as the device doesn't feature a leather case or something close to that.Of course, you could buy one, but the fact remains that you won't have any troubles with scratches unless you are fool enough to keep it in the same pocket with your keys, which I doubt it, as the device is pretty big to not fit in the pocket with anything else. Moreover, Nokia N900 includes a dedicated PowerVR SGX graphics CPU with OpenGL ES 2.0 support that enhances multimedia experience, which implies running games or movies on the screen. I only noticed a small drawback and that is the fact that you won't be able to use the phone in portrait mode unless you set the device to turn to dial mode as soon as you unlock the screen. Otherwise, you will be stuck to the landscape view. Further, the transgression to portrait mode doesn't function well enough, and you might end up clicking on the Phone icon on one of the additional homescreens.N900 also includes a 5-megapixels camera, but this is not just a usual camera. Nokia has put in some effort into this and managed to embed a nice camera with autofocus, dual LED flash and Carl Zeiss optics. You can take snapshots either in 5-megapixel high resolution or use the more unsual, but very cool 3.5-megapixel wide resolution. I had some doubts before actually using the camera to take pictures, knowing the level of technology that Nokia usually puts into its smartphones. Enough said, these doubts fade away once I started to take some snapshots. I was amazed by the accuracy of the camera, especially when using the 3.5-megapixel wide resolution.The pictures are simply excellent, even when you don't benefit from the best light. The night pictures are also pretty decent, but you will need to be somewhat close to the subject that you intend to capture as the dual LED flash has its limit. The interface of the camera is pretty standard for such a camera and easy to use. Users will be able to change resolution, White balance, ISO sensitivity and Exposure. Camera mode can be set on Automatic (default) or you can choose one of these options: Macro, Landscape, Portrait, Action.Camera also includes the geo-tagging feature video light. For those of you that are interested in video capturing, I'll have to say that Nokia N900 excels to that too. It can record clips in WVGA(848 x 480)@25fps, which is pretty nice. Check out the samples below to get an idea of what this high-end device can do with its camera.

Menu and Software

Maemo 5 is the first open source operating system coming from Nokia, and a new one coming from the Finnish giant for a long time. As its base stays in the Linux OS, you will probably notice lots of similitudes with Google's Android, which has about the same roots. First of all, Nokia N900 runs Maemo 5, version 1.2009.42-11, which will probably receive upgrades in the future. Anyway, the main thing that I noticed is the "lack" of freezes or errors. I haven't gotten any of the usual lock-ups that Symbian smartphones have from time to time and that made me really happy.Secondly, I noticed that the device runs pretty smooth without slacking at all, even when more applications are running in the background. Yes, you can run multiple apps and can go back to whichever app you were running previously, as long as it has been alt-tabbed in the background. The operating system keeps them resident in memory and you can go back to it from the homescreen.Basically, it works like a task manager with all the minimized apps showing on the homescreen like small windows, which can be easily clicked. Just like the first Android version, Maemo 5 features 4 different homescreens, which can be browsed by swiping your finger to the left or to the right of the screen. These can be customized with new shortcuts, widgets, bookmarks and many more. By default the homescreens contain: Calendar, contacts, phone, email; Ovi Store and Maemo store; Weather widget; Twitter, Facebook and Google widgets, as well as shortcuts to Ovi account, Ovi maps, Gallery, Ovi gallery and Email. To each and everyone of these homescreens can be added more shortcuts, contacts, widgets or they can be emptied.The interface is even simpler than Symbian's, but it can also become more complex if you are into the homescreen customization. Clicking the upper left corner icon will get you into the main menu of the device, which presents you with 15 icons, simetrically arranged: Web, Media player, Calendar, Photos, Contacts, Phone, Maps, Camera, E-mail, Conversations, Clock, Calculator, Store, Settings and More ...Clicking the latter will open up the second window of the main menu, which contains even more functions and apps: Notes, PDF Reader, File manager, RSS, Sketch, App manager, Backup, Get started (demo movie), X Terminal, Amazon, AP News, Facebook, ForecaWeather, Documents To Go, and some games (Blocks, Chess, Mahjong and Marbles). As the device doesn't really feature a Back key, you can click either on top or at the bottom of every menu to go back one step (click on empty space and not on any of the icons). Another interesting feature that I found is the fact that you can quickly access Profiles, Clock & Alarms, Bluetooth and Internet connection by clicking clock or the battery icon that appears on top left of any of the homescreens.Nokia N900 is not a phone, but an Internet tablet and that really shows when it comes to phone features. It's even funny as you won't have access to a dialer pad unless you make a shortcut on one of the homescreens that will get you into the phone functions of the device. There's also another option that enables users to get right into dialer pad or call history, as soon as they unlock the touchscreen and keep the device in portrait mode, but that doesn't always responds, so you will need to click on the shortcut from time to time.Anyway, the place where Nokia N900 really excels is the web browsing experience. There is simply no other device that can reach to this level of accuracy in redering web pages, as well as speed of loading. Moreover, the Mozilla-based browser features Adobe Flash 9.4 and not the "weakly" Flash Lite, which is common to most high-end devices as of lately. If you usually visit webpages rich in Flash content, this is the right device for you.Zooming in and out can be easily done by double tapping on the spot you want to zoom or by simply making a spiral gesture on the screen. I personally recommend the first option as it works flawless and is very fast. The panning and adjustings of the pages are excellent, which makes N900 the best Internet tablet there is on the market at the moment.Unfortunately, Nokia N900 is not compatible with any Symbian or Java applications, but I think the Maemo store has some good third-party apps if you want more customization for your device.

Communication

Nokia N900 features all the possible connectivity techs that are available: HSDPA (10 Mbps) and HSUPA (2 Mbps), GPRS and EDGE class 32 High-Speed Circuit-Switched Data (57.6 kbps) and Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g, DLNA, Bluetooth 2.1 with A2DP support, microUSB 2.0 and Infrared.When connecting the USB cable, you'll be able to choose among two modes: PC Suite, Mass storage. Both are intuitive and easy to use, so there's nothing more to add here. The process of synching is very fast, browsing and transfers are made very quickly between phone and PC and the device is also charghing when is synched with the PC.

The built-in GPS receiver supports A-GPS function and works flawlessly together with the newly renamed Ovi Maps.In terms of messaging, the device offers standard SMS messaging solutions, accepting all available message types, but lacks MMS support. The message client works with POP3, SMTP, and IMAP4 protocols, and supports more than one e-mail account. Additionally, it can download headers and supports attachments. Nokia N900 also benefits from Skype and GoogleTalk VoIP integration, which might come in handy whenever you have it available as it cuts short the bills.N900 is quad-band GSM (850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900) compatible, but also supports HSDPA 900 /1700 / 2100 GSM networks. I didn't have any problems with the GSM signal and the sound at both ends was excellent. Video-calls are also not available for Nokia N900.


Processor and Memory

Nokia N900 is powered by a single TI OMAP 3430 ARM Cortex-A8 family processor running at speeds of up to 600 Mhz. Further, the device also benefits from a dedicated graphics processor PowerVR SGX with OpenGL ES 2.0 support for better graphics rendering. Suffice it to say that I haven't encountered any lags or freezes, while the movies that I watched and the games I played really worked flawlessly.The smartphone embeds 32 GB user free internal storage memory, 256 MB SDRAM memory and 768 MB NAND Memory. If that storage space is not enough for you (which I doubt), you will be able to add up to 16GB through the hot-swappable microSD slot card. The latter can be found after removing the back hood of the device.

Multimedia

Even though it has been tagged as an Internet Tablet, Nokia N900 includes decent multimedia features. The included music player supports audio formats such as: AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, M4A, MP3, WAV and WMA. Sound is impressive, but doesn't reach any of Sony Ericsson's Walkman series standards. Another drawback might be the fact that it lacks any Equalizer options, so you will be stuck with the raw sound of the song.Thanks to the 3.5mm jack port users will be able to plug-in their own headphone, if they're not satissfied by the earphones in the sales package (WH-205), which by the way sound pretty nice.Nokia N900 also features an Internet radio and and FM Transmitter. Stereo FM Radio is only available via third party software. The thing that amazed me is the quality of the movie playback. The video player included uses its 3.5-inch screen at its full potential and can now read DivX and Xvid files, besides 3GPP formats (H.263), AVI, Flash Video, H.264/AVC, MPEG-4, WMV. Even if it's only for the movie playback, I could say that this device is worth a try even for those that aren't looking for a business phone.

Battery

The 1320 mAh Li-Ion (BL-5J) battery has an officially stated life expectancy of about 9 hours in talk time mode (5 hours for 3G). Also, Nokia didn't state any standby time as it thinks that the device will always be online and have an active connection. Basically, it has been designed to last about 1-day of continous usage. While I wasn't able to achieve the 5-hour talk time promised, our test unit made it for about 2 days with medium use. Unfortunately, I found the battery autonomy a little bit poor, even though I have expected it. Maybe one of the future firmwares will improve these numbers.

Impressions

I found the N900 one of the best Internet tablets on the market, even though there are only a few. Moreover, adding phone functions and a new operating system was very good idea, as it now stands for an excellent business phone also. Stuffed with lots of Web-browsing abilities, multimedia features, a user-friendly interface and a pretty decent camera, Nokia N900 really worths to be put into Nokia's new high-end class series.


The Good

Maemo operating system is really a hit, even though not that complex and developed as Android, it really shows potential. Add to that the excellent Web-browsing capabilities, HSDPA connectivity, excellent touchscreen, as well as decent camera and you got yourself a really good smartphone. The QWERTY keyboard is also a nice addition to the features of the phone, as well as the Wi-Fi connectivity.


The Bad

I think the only drawback of the phone is the low life autonomy of the battery, and the high price as well, which could be a setback for those that have a limited budget. Also, limited number of third-party software is an important disadvantage, if we are to compare it with Android.


Sales Package

Nokia N900 Internet Tablet
Nokia Battery 1320 mAh (BL-5J)
Nokia High Efficiency Charger (AC-10)
Nokia Stereo Headset (WH-205)
Video out cable (CA-75U)
Nokia charger adaptor (CA-146C)
Cleaning cloth