Aug 13


BTM-318 is the ultimate Bluetooth headset that combines communication and entertainment all-in-one. BTM-318 plays FM radio and stereo music from your A2DP supporting cellphone’s music player, supporting auto-switch back following a phone conversation. It can auto-switch back following a phone conversation. It can auto search FM radio atation with 12 memories. BTM-318 is powered by the original CSR chipset, in that sound and compatibility are guaranteed.

Price US$64.00 from brando

Specifications:
Bluetooth specification v2.0, latest CSR chipset
Support Bluetooth Headset & Handsfree profiles LD display for easy setting of FM Radio
Manual and auto-searching radio station function
Support A2DP Stereo Profile
Support AVRCP audio & video remote control profile
Auto-switch back to MP3 or FM following conversation
Flashing LED call alert
Rechargeable Li-Polymer Battery
MP3 play time: Up to 8 hours
FM Play Time: Up to 12 hours
Talk Time: Up to 10 hours
15 meters operation range
Standby Time: Up to 200 hours
Charging time: Around 3 hours
Weight: 23g
220-240V AC adapter (UK Type)

Package:
A BTM-318 Bluetooth Headset
A Battery charger
A stereo earphone
A user manual and wrrantly card
Optional: Single earphone and two pairs of ear caps

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Aug 13


iDock for iPhone & iPhone 3G with video output.

Price US$25.00 from brando

Features:
Audio 3.5mm jack
S-Video port
APPLE port

Package Content:
One Docking Station
RCA Cable
USB 2.0 Charger & Hotsync Cable

Hotsync and chage function compatible for:

iPhone
iPhone 3G
iPod 1G/2G
iPod 3G
iPod 4G
iPod mini
iPod Photo
iPod Video
iPod Touch
iPod Classic
iPod Nano 1G
iPod Nano 2G
iPod Nano 3Gv
Video Output Support : iPhone / iPhone 3G

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Aug 13


Resource Boy Genius Report published information about the forthcoming Motorola Communicator code-named Atila. By design, he recalls Alexander, also has not yet announced slider company’s sliding QWERTY-keyboard. Only, unlike Alexander, a keyboard Atila not, it besklaviaturny monoblock with touch screen. When the device will be released until it is reported. It is not known and also the extent to which reliable data provided by the source.

Specifications Motorola Atila:
Networks GSM / GPRS / EDGE (4 range), UMTS / HSDPA / HSUPA (850/1900/2100 MHz), 7.2 Mbps HSDPA, 1,8 Mbps HSUPA
The operating system Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional
Chipset Qualcomm 7201A
2.8-inch display with a resolution of QVGA
Wireless Wi-Fi b / g
The battery capacity 1130 mAh

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Aug 13


Gsmarena have posted their review of the iPhone 3G. Here are the key features, main disadvantages and final conclusion.

Key features:
3.5″ 16M-color TFT display with a resolution of 480 x 320 pixels
Quad-band GSM support
Tri-band UMTS support with HSDPA
Built-in GPS receiver
Wi-Fi
8 to 16GB of onboard storage
Accelerometer, proximity sensor and ambient light sensor
2 megapixel camera
Silky smooth user interface with multi-touch user support
Unsurpassed web surfing experience
Push email with MS Exchange support
AppStore access for direct application download and installation
Redone rear
TV-out port

Main disadvantages:
No video calls over the 3G network
The handset wobbles on even hard surfaces
There are a number of messaging downers
Camera has no auto focus, nor video recording… nor any settings at all
Safari browser doesn’t support Flash and Java, doesn’t have a download manager
Bluetooth support limited to headset use only (no A2DP or file transfers)
No office document editor
No copy/paste functionality
You cannot sync Notes and TO-DOs
No memory card slot (but knowing Apple there will never be one)

We’ve had our fair share of the first-gen iPhone but, honestly, we weren’t caught in the excitement last year until we saw it live. It was only after it arrived in our office that we really appreciated its sleek design and groundbreaking user interface.

Now a year later, the excitement grew on us weeks before we even had a chance to play with the iPhone 3G. And once it arrived, the enthusiasm gradually fades away. What’s the point in your new device looking just like your old device? What’s the point of having a GPS receiver when there is no navigation software for it? Yeah, we heard rumors of various companies prepping some real GPS navigation software, but we’ve been hearing the same rumors for the copy/paste functionality for over a year now.

“Half the price”, as the campaign motto goes, is not quite true either. A contract-free iPhone 3G is gonna cost you more than the iPhone 1G bought from US Apple store, imported and then (h)activated and unlocked the rogue way.

OK, there’s the 3G with HSDPA. Now HSDPA is way faster than EDGE we agree, and as far as we are concerned, that’s the only selling point of the iPhone 3G.

But there’s the math - adding 3G to the iPhone will cost the price of a new 3G-enabled handset altogether. The price of one is basically the difference between your second-hand iPhone 1G and a spanking new unlocked iPhone 3G.

Now, don’t get us wrong - don’t let our upgrader’s point of view get in your way. We were impressed by the iPhone 1G and now it’s even better. If you’ve never had one and the iPhone 3G is offered in your country - now that Apple’s creation is finally on par with most other modern handsets specs-wise - it seems the right time to get yourself geared up.

The Apple iPhone, be it 1G or 3G, still has the most impressive full touch user interface to-date, and with the concept of AppStore, it have just gotten better. The iPhone 3G is evidently more evolution than revolution, but it still packs quite a punch. And there’s some unique features that you can hardly get in any other high-end gadgets.

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Aug 13


Gsmarena have posted their review of the Nokia 5320. Here are the key features, main disadvantages and final conclusion.

Key features:
2″ 262K-color display of QVGA resolution
Symbian 9.3 OS with S60 3.2 UI
ARM 11 369 MHz CPU and 128MB of RAM
140 MB of user memory
microSD slot with support for up to 8GB, 512MB or 1GB card in the retail package
3G with HSDPA support
Bluetooth and USB v2.0
2 megapixel fixed-focus camera
3.5 mm standard audio jack
Stereo FM radio with RDS
Dedicated music controls
Music-centric Active Standby plug-in
Very good loudspeaker performance
Compact body and light weight
Cool handsfree set in the retail package

Main disadvantages:
Mediocre camera
QVGA at 15fps video recording max
Poor battery life
Smallish display
No Wi-Fi
N-gage gaming support is still in the works
Audio quality is good but not great

We’re talking XpressMusic, so we just have to say it: the 5320 makes a notable step up in audio quality. Still not the best in business, but it’s way to go. The distinct youthful appeal is both a blessing and a curse, as it may put off those who favor smartphone power over music skill. There’s some questionable design decisions too. They got rid of the swivel and, however subjective, possibly lost some of the charisma. Plus, the 5320 is definitely low key even compared to the way more modest 5310.

The 15-months-old 5700 was well due for an upgrade, so a youthful music-centered Symbian phone has its reasons to hope for a success. The improved sound quality, FP2, the doubled RAM and the more compact size sound right but the 5700 has stereo speakers, and a better display and keypad.

The lack of Wi-Fi however is still a downer and so is the smallish display. We do agree that there aren’t many Symbians in this price range to feature Wi-Fi but that doesn’t make the 5320 any less exposed to pressure.

The 5320 stays faithful to the XpressMusic-on-Symbian concept and makes it hard to decide whether smartphone strength or the music heart give it the extra edge. It sounds like we grew older overnight, but this time the young targeting somehow just couldn’t have been more distinct. With that in mind, Nokia 5320 was just released and even a small price drop in the coming weeks may do wonders for it.

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