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HTC Introduces Its Third Android Phone

Jun 25th, 2009 | By Rosh PR | Category: Gadgets, Mobile, Mobile

Smartphone maker HTC is on a roll with the Android operating system. The company introduced its third Android-based device, called the HTC Hero, on Wednesday. It’s a touchscreen phone that will come with a newly designed user interface.

The phone has a 3.2-inch display, GPS, digital compass, a 5-megapixel auto focus camera and expandable MicroSD memory. The HTC Hero also features an anti-fingerprint coating on the screen for smudge resistance and a Teflon coating on the exterior.

HTC’s latest release adds momentum to Google’s Android operating system, which was introduced last year. The first Android phone to hit the market was the HTC-produced T-Mobile G1 phone in North America in October. Since then, HTC has also launched Magic, a touchscreen phone that eliminates the physical keyboard of the G1.

[Read more on wired]



Nokia 5800 XpressMusic gets new firmware update

Mar 31st, 2009 | By Rosh PR | Category: Gadgets, Mobile, Mobile, nokia, nokia

Today Nokia released new firmware update for the 5800 XpressMusic. Being quite a major release it brings improvements in a number of areas. According to Nokia it should improve the performance and the user interface as well as add some new applications.

The new firmware version brings in the Mobile Dictionary and Application Update Apps to the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic. The first one offers you voice playback and text-to-speech, supporting 38 languages.

As the name suggests Application Update manages the new updates for your installed apps, making them easy to keep up to date.

The 5800 XpressMusic new firmware revision also brings two new camera features. The first is the burst mode, which allows the primary camera to take multiple photos with a single key press. The second is enabling the secondary camera to take photos. Up until now it could only be used for video-calling.

[Read More]



Announcing Fennec 1.0 Beta 1, A Firefox mobile browser

Mar 22nd, 2009 | By Rosh PR | Category: General, Mobile, Mobile, Mozilla, Software, browser

Fennec 1.0 Beta 1 includes lots of great improvements, especially around performance. Starting with this beta, I’m able to use Fennec as the primary browser on my N810. We’ve done heavy optimizations to our frontend code and made a number of optimizations to the platform, resulting in greatly increasing zooming speed and making panning pretty smooth. We’ve also been able to improve startup performance by reducing a good bit of unnecessary work. We’ve enabled TraceMonkey bringing to mobile the huge JavaScript speed improvements the JIT has brought to Firefox 3.1 betas. A number of performance hotspots have been identified that we’ll continue to focus on until we ship final – in fact, we have fixed number of issues already for the next beta.

On the feature front, we’ve enabled plugins so you can now watch videos on your favorite sites, and we’ve got in our first pass at improved bookmark management and support for bookmark folders. A lot of time was spent on infrastructure that we could use to build the rest of our app with. You’re now able to scroll things like preferences and the new bookmarks list. One of our main focuses for the next milestone will be on polishing the user interface — areas like the extension manager will get a face lift and we’ll start working more on some of the usability issues people have reported.

Vision

Fennec will bring a true Web experience to mobile phones and other non-PC devices, yet take advantage of the specific opportunities for new and useful user experiences enabled by mobility and telephony. Fennec will do what users need out of the box, enabling access to their favorite content and rich internet applications. It will integrate smoothly with device features, including easy initiation of phone calls from Web pages, access to local search, maps and directions. It will solve basic usability challenges have generally prevented the mobile Web experience from being pleasant and enjoyable, even though people have a critical need for data when on the go.

Fennec will be the mobile Web browser that content and application developers can target to create great software for mobile phones, rather than the plethora of native platforms and programming languages required to reach people in a mobile environment today. Any developer with skills in HTML, CSS and JavaScript will be able to develop for mobile.



Cameras and Phones Kick off March

Mar 17th, 2009 | By Rosh PR | Category: Gadgets, Mobile, New Cameras, Photography

Green gadgets are definitely going to be a theme this year so watch out for similar prototypes and products as 2009 rolls on.

Sony CyberShot HX-1

Sony brought us a refreshing new digital camera, the DSC-HX1, as part of its PMA line-up. Refreshing because it has ditched the megapixel race — where camera makers pitched higher and higher resolution image sensors as the main feature — in favor of some potentially more useful functions, such as the ability to stich pictures together to make panorama shots or improve images taken in low light. The latter twilight mode takes six images and combines them to create a single optimized image with lower noise levels while the former shoots a burst sequence while you swing the camera horizontally or vertically to create an extra-wide, high resolution image. The camera has a 9.1 megapixel image sensor and 20X optical zoom. It will launch in the U.S. in April for US$500 and follow in Europe in May.

Panasonic portable Blu-ray Disc player

Panasonic’s portable DMP-BV100 Blu-ray Disc player, which we saw as a prototype at January’s CES, makes its retail debut in Japan in March. The 1.7kg player has an 8.9-inch display and will handle Blu-ray, DVD and CD playback. The screen has a 1,024 pixel by 600 pixel resolution, which is less than high-def quality but on a screen this size it probably won’t make too much of a difference. Playback time is given as 2.5 hours, so you should be able to watch almost any movie on a single charge. For good measure it also includes a tuner for Japan’s mobile digital TV service. It hits shelves in Japan on March 15 and will cost around ¥90,000 (US$910). Launch details for other markets have not been announced.

HTC Touch Diamond2

HTC’s iPhone-attacking Touch Diamond is getting a refresh with a larger screen — it’s now a 3.2-incher — and a 5-megapixel camera. That new screen offers two noticeable benefits right away. The touch function works much better than on the older model and HTC’s 480×800 wide-screen VGA resolution, the same as on many laptop PCs, is stunning. An unusual feature on the camera, for cell-phones at least, is a mechanical auto-focus, which means you can snap pictures much faster. It’s based on Windows Mobile 6.1 and comes with HTC’s TouchFLO 3D user interface. The device will be available in Europe and Asia early in the second quarter of this year, with North America to be included later in 2009. Pricing has not been announced.

JVC Everio GZ-X900

The Everio GZ-X900 is the latest addition to JVC’s range of compact, flash memory-based camcorders. Equipped with a 9 megapixel image sensor it shoots video in the AVCHD format at high-def 1080i quality. That translates to 2 hours and 40 minutes of video on a 32GB SD memory card when using the highest quality recording mode. Recording time can be extended to almost 15 hours using EP mode but the recording rate is about a fifth that of the top quality mode. This new model is pocket size, at 37mm by 66mm by 124mm, and weighs just 298 grams. It includes a slow-motion shooting mode that records 2.4 seconds of video over 24 seconds and can fire six full resolution still images per second. Pricing and launch date have not yet been announced.

Sony touchscreen OLED Walkman

We’ve got specifications on Sony’s touchscreen OLED Walkman that it showed off at CES but still no launch date. The device has a 3-inch display that, like other OLEDs, is sure to look crisp and bright. The use of a touchscreen means most buttons are gone from the small device but a few, such as the basic start, pause and volume controls remain. It also means the display takes up most of the front panel of the device, which is just under 10 centimeters tall, 5 cm wide and 1 cm thick. It will play popular formats including MP3, Windows Media and MPEG4 AVC/H.264 and there’s also a podcast player and it will run YouTube video, both of which are loaded into the player via a computer. The screen has 432 pixel by 240 pixel resolution, which is widescreen QVGA resolution. Exact launch dates haven’t been announced but via Amazon U.K. we know the device will launch in two configurations, 16GB and 32GB, in Great Britain for £214 and £283 (US$295 and $390) with shipping in “one to two months.”

MSI X-Slim laptops

Micro-Star International is beefing-up its X-Slim laptop line with new X340 machines that feature a more powerful processor than previous models. The X340 Pro laptop is based on Intel’s new 1.4GHz ultra-low voltage Core 2 Solo processor, which should make it more suited to multimedia applications than its predecessor. A second new laptop, the X340, has a 1.3GHz chip. Both have a 13-inch wide-screen display with 1,366 pixel by 768 pixel (WXGA) resolution. Other features include HDMI and monitor ports, Ethernet, 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and optional WiMax modules. The X-Slim laptops typically turn heads because they’re about the same size and thickness as Apple’s MacBook Air but run Windows. Even with the upgrade, the Apple machines still pack more powerful processors. Launch dates for the X340 have not yet been fixed. It is expected to retail for between US$700 and $1,000.

Sharp Aquos Blu-ray recorders

Sharp’s latest Blu-ray Disc recorders feature more space for storing programs and higher compression to further increase the video you can squeeze inside each model. The top-of-the-range BD-HDW40 has an impressive 1TB of hard-disk space in addition to dual digital tuners. Using MPEG4 AVC/H.264 compression the machine can cram 30 hours of HDTV onto a dual-layer Blu-ray Disc, which is about seven times that of the basic Blu-ray recording length when using standard MPEG2 compression. For users this all adds up to more record-and-delete temporary recording space on the hard disk and the ability to archive more content to a single disc so you can buy less blank media. It’s out in Japan on March 27 and will cost around ¥210,000 (US$2,123). It’s unlikely to be launched overseas.

[Read More]



Firmware update available for Android developer phone

Mar 10th, 2009 | By Premnath Sah | Category: Gadgets, Mobile, Mobile, Operating System, Software, android

Android Dev Phone 1 (ADP1), unlocked version of T-Mobile G1 has got latest firmware update.

get you copy from here and here



HTC Magic : A new Android Phone

Mar 3rd, 2009 | By Rosh PR | Category: Gadgets, Mobile, Mobile, Technology, android


The HTC Magic is an Android™-powered mobile designed to turn heads with its chic design, and command attention with its advanced list of capabilities. Ready to always keep you in the know… it provides the Google suite of services like Mail, Search and Maps geared up for use in the palm of your hand. Further enhanced with video capture and support for tunes via Bluetooth wireless headsets, the HTC Magic is a true entertainment and media powerhouse.

Specification

Processor Qualcomm® MSM7201a™, 528 MHz
Operating System Android
Memory ROM: 512 MB
RAM: 192 MB
Dimensions 113 x 55 x 13.65 mm ( 4.45 x 2.17 x 0.54 inches)
Weight 118.5 grams ( 4.18 ounces) with battery
Display 3.2-inch TFT-LCD flat touch-sensitive screen with 320×480 HVGA resolution
Network HSDPA/WCDMA:
  • 900/2100 MHz
  • Up to 2 Mbps up-link and 7.2 Mbps down-link speeds

Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE:

  • 850/900/1800/1900 MHz

(Band frequency and data speed are operator dependent.)

Device Control Trackball with Enter button
GPS Internal GPS antenna
Connectivity Bluetooth® 2.0 with Enhanced Data Rate
Wi-Fi®: IEEE 802.11 b/g
HTC ExtUSB™ (11-pin mini-USB 2.0 and audio jack in one)
Camera 3.2 megapixel color camera with auto focus
Audio supported formats AAC, AAC+, AMR-NB, MP3, WMA, WAV, AAC-LC, MIDI, OGG
Video supported formats MP4, 3GP
Battery Rechargeable Lithium-ion battery
Capacity: 1340 mAh
Talk time:
  • Up to 400 minutes for WCDMA
  • Up to 450 minutes for GSM

Standby time:

  • Up to 660 hours for WCDMA
  • Up to 420 hours for GSM

(The above are subject to network and phone usage.)

Expansion Slot microSD™ memory card (SD 2.0 compatible)
AC Adapter Voltage range/frequency: 100 ~ 240V AC, 47/63 Hz
DC output: 5V and 1A
Special Features G-sensor
Digital Compass

Note: Specifications are subject to change without prior notice.