22 February 2010

HTC Desire Review !

20 February 2010

Mobile World Congress 2010 round up!

Annual communications occasion, the mobile World Congress (MWV 2010) has slowly pulled the big screen this year. The awards also were the property of their master. Apple CEO Steve Jobs was named Person of the Year Award, won the high award for best service delivery platform and the most talked about, the best mobile terminal (equipment) award, the Hero was HTC phone-wise.


HTC Desire, the phone we first met as the Bravo. On first inspection, save for some subtle differences, the Desire appeared to be a very similar proposition to the HTC manufactured Google Nexus One. This phone design is a marked improvement on the Nexus One with physical keys and an optical track pad replacing touch sensitive keys and a track ball making for a more responsive means of navigation. The touchscreen, a 3.7 inch AMOLED monster, looks amazing but is even better to use.


Unquestionably a stunning phone on the outside, the Desire follows a similar trend on the inside with the latest iteration of Google’s Android operating system. The Desire also has the processing muscle to ensure apps, menus and web pages loaded quickly and smoothly thanks to the 1GHz processor on board. Expected in late March, HTC easily unveiled an early contender for phone of the year at this year’s MWC.

Reference: http://blog.mobiles.co.uk/mobile-news/mobile-world-congress-2010-round-up/

15 February 2010

LD GD880 Mini coming soon!!!


Mobile World Congress, the Olympics of Telecom, begins this week in Barcelona. In this Congress, the LG's company from South Korea reported on two new types of phones, GD 880 Mini and GT 350. The GD 880 Mini, LG called 'the smallest, thinnest' phone, it coming in at just 11mm thick and weighing 92g, the mini boasts a 3.2 inch touchscreen display, which offers very sharp results. An accelerometer is also built in, allowing the screen to rotate to match how the phone is being held in your hand.

The GD 880 Mini also employs a rather impressive 5.0 megapixel camera, considering the phones size, and it also has auto-focus too, so no need to worry if you don't have the steadiest of hands, and also face detection which is ideal for taking portrait photos. With superb quality photos being produced you will want to do more than just keep them stored on your GD 880, so why not share with your friends by email, or even upload them online and share over blogs.

There is no hanging around when it comes to browsing the web either. Built in HSDPA allows for much faster speeds, meaning that you don't have to waste time for web pages to load up. GPS has also been thrown in, helping you find your current position, plan different journeys and overall just work as a general Sat Nav device.


As well as having the full package of specs, the GD 880 Mini is designed to fit into your life. Whether it be in your pocket or your hangbag, you don't have to worry about the Mini being too bulky or irritating. The GD 880 even has textured side panels which LG say are 'reassuringly solid to touch'.

12 February 2010

Nokia N97 Mini vs Nokia N97: Video

10 February 2010

N97 Mini Review


As you might have guessed from its name, the Nokia N97 Mini is a smaller version of the N97. It is one of the leading smartphones that the world of technology is enjoying these days.

Nokia has cropped the N97’s screen from 89mm (3.5 inches) to 81mm (3.2 inches) to fit the Mini. The 3.2 inches display of N97 Mini has a slide-out full QWERTY keyboard. The dimensions of this cell phone include 113 by 52.5 by 14.2mm and weighs 138g. The display supports 16.7 million colours at 640 x 360 pixels resolution. It doesn't have the pixel count of the very best touchscreens on the market, but it looks good enough on this showing for multimedia playback and browsing.

The N97 Mini is based on Symbian S60's Fifth Edition and crams lots of functions onto its homepage, including an active Facebook widget which displays your latest updates. The Nokia N97 mini also works seamlessly with everything the Ovi Store has to offer, meaning that all the new apps, widgets, ringtones and other bits and bobs are available to you at the touch of a button.

Despite a slightly smaller screen and less memory, I think the appearance of the Nokia N97 mini make it a more desirable phone than the N97. It packs in almost all of the N97's powerful smart-phone features.


01 February 2010

N97 Review


When the Nokia N97 mobile phone was announced as the latest N-Series model in early December 2008, people started showing a lot of interest in this phone. It is apparently not just a regular old mobile phone but a "mobile computer" as well. This handset is a Nokia’s flagship, it introduces leading technology – including multiple sensors, memory, processing power and connection speeds - for people to create a personal Internet and share their 'social location’.

At that time, the Nokia N97 is the world’s most advanced mobile computer, which will transform the way people connect to the Internet and to each other. It is designed for Internet-savvy consumers; the TFT capacitive touchscreen is of 3.5 inches in size with 640 x 360 pixels resolution and offers 16.7 million colors. It is a well spaced out full QWERTY keypad at its sliding position giving it a computer look.


Talking of the camera, it comes with a high power 5.0 mega pixel camera which has been made even more surprising by incorporating attributes like auto focus, Dual LED Flash, 14 x Digital Zoom and other video features as well. Talking of the memory, it comes with a staggering 32GB of internal memory, and can store approximately 8,000 full length MP3 music tracks over 12,000 pictures or over 40 hours of video. And, the MicroSD memory card slot give the potential to carry over 16GB for music, media, files and more in hand. It can supports up to 48GB of storage in total.

This phone is a true mobile computer with full access to Internet. The inbuilt GPS navigation system is just beyond comparison as it uses Ovi Maps along with its A-GPS support to give you accurate data of places and routes, and digital compass makes the process even more prefects. The phone is fully Internet-enabled and allows for full web browsing of all types of different websites.