Dual sim mobiles get popularity but people demand coming up three sim mobiles standby. LePhone A-1 is a triple sim mobile phone.China made this mobile with genuine IMEI number and gorgeous features. Mobile companies work together with this phone. LePhone A-1 touch screen triple sim phone equiped with a feature of 3 sim (2 GMS and 1 CDMa) and standby also
Lephone A-1 stylish mobile with Bluetooth, 2.2 inch display, 2 megapixel camera , Mp3player, FM Radio, GPRS, Video sound recorder,Shake sensor. Lephone A1 triple sim cheap mobile supports microSD card expandable upto 8 GB
Lephone A-1 triple sim Features and Specifications:
Weight 81 g
500 group contacts
GPRS & WAP connectivity
MMS Transceiver
Lithium batteries (1020 mAh)
T-flash card supported
Digital 3D souround
Bluetooth A2DP
E-Book reader
Schedule power on / off
Multi language support
Mobile Concept is interesting today when mobile phone companies are in a competition to launched latest technology handsets. The future mobile will be the only one thing people can do everything. Distance calling with cheapest rate, e-mailing, internet surfing, entertainment, data sharing, official works everything would be done by using mobile phones.
Nokia 5228 Price:Nokia 5228 price in India, around Rs.6,000/-
Nokia 5228 is new lineup of Nokia that labeled as the cheaper smartphone of Nokia 5320. Nokia 5228 has cheap price just because the touchscreen phone does not bring 3G and GPS features.
It’s cheap because the price is only 139 Euro.The latest new Nokia 5228 mobile phone is now available in India.
Nokia 5228 Features & Specifications are:
Brand: Nokia
Model: 52
Type: Mobile phone
Display: 3.2-inch resistive touchscreens, 360 x 640 pixel resolution
Camera: 2-megapixel fixed focus camera with video recording
Accelerometer sensor for UI auto-rotate
OS: Symbian OS v9.4 (Series 60 rel. 5)
GPRS / EDGE
CPU:ARM 11 434 MHz processor
Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP
3.5mm audio jack
Memory Internal 70 MB storage, 128 MB RAM
Memory Card: Accept microSD card slot with up to 16GB expandable memory
7 hours of talk time
USB v2.0 microUSB
Battery: Standard battery, Li-Ion 1320 mAh (BL-5J)
Nokia’s hotly-anticipated N8 smartphone will be joining Vodafone’s handset line-up “soon”.
The N8 is Nokia’s serious attempt at battling it out against the iPhone and HTC’s high-end Android devices.
Boasting a 12-megapixel camera with top-range Xenon flash, the N8 will even shoot video in HD. If you’re nowhere near a computer, you can still edit photos with a bundled picture editing tool pack.The Nokia N8 is due to be officially released in July this year.
You’ll be able to watch web TV, or listen to your tunes through an MP3 player that Nokia says will pump out the music for up to 50 hours.
Being largely an entertainment device, the screen on the N8 has been ramped up a notch as a capacitive AMOLED touchscreen.
Vodafone has added the N8 to its Coming Soon page, allowing Nokia faithfuls to register their interest to keep tabs on availability updates.
The N8 is the first of Nokia’s handsets to sport the brand new Symbian 3 OS, which promises to be the most intuitive platform Nokia has produced to date.
LG has outed the Fathom (aka VS750) with little fanfare. Featuring a mercifully unadorned WinMo 6.5.3 (save for wallpaper, pictured above, designed by a certain Vera Wang), a 1GHz CPU, quad band GSM, and a handful of AC adapters for charging all over Europe and the UK, this is a device clearly meant to go global. But will it capture people's hearts and minds? Read on to find out.
This is not a light phone -- a quick, unscientific survey of what we happen to have in our desk here finds that even the G1 feels like a feather compared to it. Sure, we don't mind (we like a phone with some heft, after all) but you might balk at its, well, bulk. As far as the slider mechanism goes, it's solid, with the landscape QWERTY keyboard moving into place with a healthy click, revealing the twenty-six letters of the alphabet plus your full compliment of function keys as well as a d-pad.
Moving in, the 3.2-inch WVGA display does the job admirably -- colors are, well, their proper color, sufficiently bright and bold, and it's only upon very close inspection that things start to get wiggy. Close reading on a very long train ride might give you a headache, but quickly jotting some emails you should be fine.
All in all, we have to say that LG is on the mark with its first Verizon smartphone (even if it's a rather boring mark). Of course, with the entire world (or at least a certain specialist segment that we cater to) counting down to Windows Phone 7, and with amazing things coming from the Android community every day, the whole WinMo thing feels a bit like a throwback. And at $150 (with $100 rebate and two year contract) we think the companies are hitting a little high. Still, this is a solid outing and a solid device -- let's hope that it's the first of many for the pair.
HTC Desire is a newly announced phone which is also known as HTC Bravo. it almost looks like the Google Nexus one phone and most of the hardware features are same. also this phone runs with Android OS, v2.1 Eclair version.
it has a 3.7 inch AMOLED capacitive touchscreen and it has 480 x 800 pixels resolution. also HTC Desire has a track ball. it supports multi-touch and has an Accelerometer sensor as well. this mobile phone has very good sound quality and it supports Dolby Mobile sound enhancement. like Google Nexus one, HTC Desire has a 1GHz processor and 512MB RAM. the internal memory of this phone is 576MB and it supports up to 32GB memory cards.
in connectivity side, HTC Desire has 7.2MBPS HSDPA speed and 2MBPS HSUPA speed. it also has bluetooth and wi-fi features. the main camera of this phone is 5MP and it supports HD D1 720x480 pixels resolution 30fps high quality video recording. HTC Desire has a good GPS receiver and a digital compass as well.
The Hitachi W42H is a CDMA 1x WIN terminal meant for Japan. Having a clamshell design (regular readers will note that most handsets bound for Japan have this design, seems the folks in the East prefer this to anything else). Owing to its clamshell design, the handset ejoys dual displays. The primary display is of 2.4 inches and has a resolution of 240 x 320 pixels (QVGA display). The sub-display on the other hand is smaller (96 x 64 pixels). Both of these are the standard displays being used in handsets of this generation. The W42H also allows its user an automatic focussing camera which has a resolution of 2 megapixels.
From Hitachi, it’s about its latest handset, the W42H CDMA cell phone. Powered by Windows Mobile OS, it boasts a Double Scene feature which allows users to switch from business mode to private mode. Other remarkable feature is the ability to quickly change the standby screen image, address book or ring-tone by pressing the ‘Asterisk(*) button’. Furthermore, the Remote Delete function makes it possible to access the phone from remote location, lock it, and delete all the data inside. Really handy especially when someone stole your phone.
The Hitachi W42H has a number of features including; a 2.1 megapixel camera, 6 Mobile Dictionaries for all the budding linguists, Infra-Red, PC Site Viewer, IC Recorder and 6 hours of play time for online music service. Our Japanese pals can also use the Osaifu-Keitai', e-money service and its navigational capabilities.
If your the type who carries sensitive data on the phone or a member of the secret service then via the 'Remote delete' function you can erase all the data from a remote location! Pretty cool ain't it? The handset also has an internal memory of 50MB and a dedicated music player. This one alas will only be available in Japan for now.
The E65 comes in two colour schemes. Mine was brown – Nokia calls it Mocca – and silver. The alternative is red and silver. The brown parts are made of a rubbery substance which makes the E65 easy to grip. I don’t like the leather-look stipple on the back, but that is just a matter of personal taste.It is the only one of the three that looks like a traditional mobile. It is a slider handset, and alongside the capable S60 operating system, it sports a couple of speciality turns for business users.On the software side we have Nokia's Team Suite. This is basically groups management software. You set up groups and can then send e-mails, texts and MMSs to the whole group at once, view Web pages that relate to them and initiate conference calls with them.This is a slider handset. I feel sliders should be very small when closed, and at 105mm tall and 49mm wide, the E65 is not that much smaller than a standard candybar phone. At 15.5mm it’s not that thin either, though its 115g of weight is acceptable.The conference calling bit is also covered by a hardware feature. One of the many buttons on the front of the casing is dedicated to conference calling.
There is no thumbgrip for sliding the phone open, which means that you are forced either to put a thumb mark on the screen or press the edge of the large central select button of the navigation pad. Neither is a perfect solution.A very important aspect of the Nokia E65 is built-in Wi-Fi. This is increasingly common on handsets and smartphones, and in Nokia's E series handsets it is a staple. But this time around there is a twist. You can get the phone to search for networks in the vicinity at regular intervals and report its findings on the main screen. Or you can manually search for networks by selecting an option on the screen. Once you've found a network and are connected, Voice over IP calls and Web browsing are a couple of button presses away.The E65 comes with PC connectivity software and a USB cable, and battery life checked in at around 10 hours of non-stop MP3 music with the screen forced to stay on. It doesn't last as long when the Wi-Fi is active, though.This all adds up to a phone which is pretty nifty, but there are a couple of let-downs.
Features: Conference calling, voice recording, notepad, integrated handsfree speaker, talking ringtones, and Nokia Team Suite,SMS, MMS with distribution lists, instant messages, and email,One Touch keys for conference calls, mute/unmute, and contacts,Quad-band coverage on up to five continents,802.11b/g integrated Wi-fi, Symbian S60 3rd edition,2.0 megapixel camera, with video recording (CIF) at up to 30 fps MPEG-4,Available in Mocca Brown, Red, lavender pink and perrywinkle blue.
Operating frequency:Quad-band: EGSM 850/900/1800/1900,W-CDMA 2100,Voice over IP (VoIP) calls via integrated WLAN (IEEE 802.11g and 802.11b standards).
Size:Volume: 74 cc,Weight: 115 g,Dimensions: 105 x 49 x 15.5 mm.
Display:Active-matrix QVGA color display (240 x 320 pixels) with color support for up to 16 million colors,Display contrast and brightness control,Display size 2,2in (5,6 cm).
User interface:S60 3rd Edition, built on the Symbian operating system,One Touch keys for mute/unmute, contacts, and conference calling,Five-way Nokia NaviTM key with two customizable soft keys, power key that can be used as profile key, and My Own key,S60 edit key located on the side of the device,Volume keys on the side of the device.
Imaging:Photograph of Villa Park taken by the Nokia E65.Take snapshots with the 2 megapixel camera (no built-in flash).
Messaging:Read email with attachments: supports POP/IMAP, SMTP, and IMAP4 with idle protocols,Instant messaging client (OMA IMPS 1.2),Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS, ver. 1.2) for text, voice clips, video clips, and still images,SMS and MMS with distribution lists,Predictive text input T9.
Multimedia:Video and audio streaming (3GPP & Real Media),Music player (MP3/AAC) and media player,Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) digital rights management (DRM) 1.0 with forward lock.
Memory functions:Up to 65 MB user memory,MicroSD memory card support (up to 2GB maximum size).
Applications:Java?MIDP 2.0-based games and applications,Attachment viewers for documents, spreadsheets, and presentations.
Connectivity:Dual Transfer Mode (MSC 9),Bluetooth 1.2 wireless technology,Pop-Port connector,IrDA with transfer rate up to 115 kbit/s,WiFi
Browsing:HTML Nokia browser,XHTMtack).
Data transfer:EGPRS multi-slot class 32 for 5 + 3 (receive + transmit) timeslots (up to 6 timeslots total for maximum download speeds of up to 296 kbit/s),Multi-slot class 32 is also supported with GPRS for a maximum downlink rate of 67 kbit/s,Remote and local (peer-to-peer) synchronization of calendar, contacts, notes and to-do list via Bluetooth technology, IR, or USB connectivity cable.
The Nokia E65 smart phone boasts a beautiful and compact slider design, and features a 2-megapixel camera, e-mail, and productivity apps. It also offers good call quality and solid talk time battery life, and has Bluetooth and Wi-Fi.
But the E65 doesn't support document editing out of the box, and the lack of a full QWERTY keyboard makes it less than ideal for e-mail. It's occasionally slow, and there's no flash for the camera. The front and side navigation controls are also small and hard to use. There's no support for U.S. 3G networks.
The E65 is brilliantly built and has specifications that blow most other slider phones away. It is unfortunate that the keypad sometimes fails to register key presses. Otherwise, the E65 would have been perfect. All the connectivity options, push email capabilities, and a great browser in a small and slim good looking slider makes the entire package too sweet to resist. This is one phone that I have no hesitation in giving a Highly Recommended rating. If slider phones are your thing, you can't go wrong with the E65. You will just have to get used to its keypad, but this is a minor annoyance when compared to all its positives.
The E61 runs Nokia's S60 3rd Edition on Symbian OS 9.1 and comes with full PIM applications, email client, a superb web browser and applications to read, edit and create MS Office documents. Not only that, it looks really, really good and measures only .55" thin. In the US, the Nokia E61 is offered by CompUSA, Tiger Direct, some independent T-Mobile dealers (such as Skylight Wireless in the Dallas Metroplex area who supplied our review unit) and importers. Importers generally sell it for a truly affordable $350 unlocked with no contract while CompUSA sells it for considerably more. The E61 is a quad band world phone with EDGE and Euro-3G (not compatible with US 3G). You can use the phone with any GSM provider, which means Cingular and T-Mobile in the US. Since the E61 is a business phone, it does not have a camera. The E61 is available in several localized versions for different countries and languages. All have full support for English but the QWERTY keyboard on the Middle Eastern one is bilingual with both English and Arabic in the case of our Middle Eastern review unit (which came with both English and Arabic manuals). The Spanish version adds a few non-English characters (this is the one that's generally cheapest and easiest to find on eBay as of this writing). So if you're buying sight unseen, check with the seller to see which version they're selling. Cingular is rumored to release the Nokia E62 later this year, which is the same as the E61 but it deletes WiFi and 3G. Design and Ergonomics : Though very slim, the E61 is wide to accommodate the thumb keyboard and tall to fit the large display above that keyboard. It dwarfs several of the Nokia NSeries S60 phones such as the N80, but fits in nicely with the Palm Treo 700p / 700w, T-Mobile MDA (Cingular 8125), BlackBerry 8700g and other keyboarded smartphones and PDA phones. The phone is finished in silver and the casing is made of metal which makes for a sturdy device. Score one for the E61: none of its direct competitors feature a metal casing. It's thinnest at the keyboard end and gets a bit wider in the display area, with a gentle slope marking the transition.
The power button is located on the upper right face and it's so small that you'll likely never accidentally press it. The blue LED that indicates new email is at the upper left. Unlike Nseries Nokia phones, there is no LED that flashes when the phone is asleep. As you'd expect, the earpiece is dead center above the display while the loudspeaker (for speakerphone, ringers and alarms) is on the phone's left edge. The IR port is located somewhat oddly on the bottom edge next to the Pop-Port connector and the volume up/down and voice recorder keys are located up on the upper left side. The volume controls fall perfectly under your index finger when holding the phone to the ear with the right hand. The voice recorder button, though not raised, is too easily pressed when pulling the phone out of a pocket.
Features : It's pretty clear which route Nokia's designers chose to take when deciding which technologies to implement on the E61. It basically chucked them all in. The end result is a phone with (deep breath) support for GSM 850/900/1800/1900, 3G, WiFi, Bluetooth, Infrared, VoIP, Push To Talk, and Mini SD storage cards. On the software side, you can add to that list support for Symbian OS 9.1 compatible applications, Microsoft Word, Excel and Powerpoint documents, as well as Zip files and PDF files via Adobe reader. The E61's screen can be sent out to compatible projectors via the E61's screen export package, making it a potential replacement for some ultraportable notebooks, depending on your usage patterns. Naturally as a competitor in the BlackBerry space, the E61 has full support for POP3, IMAP, SMTP and Microsoft Exchange Server email. In an odd, and decidedly non-corporate way, it also supports instant messaging clients from Yahoo and AOL, MP3 and AAC music playback and RealPlayer video support. Just don't let the IT department know about those features and you should be fine.
One feature that's normally de rigeur with 3G phones that the E61 omits is any kind of camera, so if your business life also includes the odd video call, this isn't the phone for you. The flipside of this is presumably that it'll be easier to convince your IT department to buy one if it doesn't look like a consumer phone in any way whatsoever.
Performance : Where the E61 impressed us the most was in the breadth of its scope, especially given the inbuilt support for WiFi. The inclusion of WiFi makes it a true option for work within the office and outside of it, as it's capable of using whatever data connection is to hand for incoming messages and other data transmissions. The mobile carriers may not be happy with this -- data rates over 3G and GPRS are typically very high -- but it's a good argument in the E61's favour that you'll be able to use wireless services for data transmission when you're in a compatible hotspot or in the office. The same also holds true for voice calls, where you can use VoIP clients for calling purposes. Naturally, it's a good idea to make sure you are connected properly to your WiFi connection before initiating a VoIP call, otherwise you'll find your VoIP savings evaporate when your carrier charges you data rates for your call.
The one caveat we'd attach to the E61 is that a lot of its menu choices aren't as clear as they could otherwise be, and you'll sometimes find yourself trekking through multiple screens to achieve a desired result. As an example, you can scan for nearby wireless access points in the phone's connection manager, but only connect to insecure points that way -- if you need to classify wireless security settings for an access point, that's in an entirely different menu and sub-menu structure.
High style, a QWERTY keyboard, WiFi and durability have finally converged, thanks to the Nokia E61. The phone is stunning looking and happily it works just as well as it looks. It beats the BlackBerry on expansion, style, durability and multimedia features, though its keyboard isn't quite as good. While Palm OS is getting long in the tooth, Symbian OS 9 and S60 3rd Edition are much fresher and more powerful (faster networking, multitasking and more). And it competes strongly against Windows Mobile devices, being more responsive and perhaps a bit more secure.
AT&T Inc. has launched the company's integrated suite of U-verse services in Wichita, a frontal attack on its cable competitors.
The company on Monday made its U-verse TV service commercially available to 5,000 homes in San Antonio.
U-verse, which includes television, high-speed Internet and telephone services, is highlighted by the nation's only Internet-based television service.
Until this week, AT&T's TV service was available to only a handful of consumers in that city, the first of many on the list of U-verse prospects. AT&T expects to offer the service to a total of 15 to 20 markets by the end of the year. The company has said it plans to spend $4.6 billion through 2008 to bring television and high-speed Internet services to almost 19 million homes.
At least initially, AT&T's service, which is based on Internet Protocol technology, will be very similar to what is already offered by cable companies. The starting price for packages is $69 a month and goes up to $124, depending on Internet speeds and whether the customer opts for premium-channel packages.
It's available in pockets of the greater Wichita area where fiber-optic cable has already been placed, said Kris Ryan, AT&T's general manager for Kansas and Missouri.
AT&T is offering three months of free U-Verse service to customers as part of its promotional push. It's also marking down its installation fee to $20 from $95.
This offering is on par with those of its cable rivals. But AT&T claims that it offers customers more for their money, including fast channel changing, video-on-demand, three set-top boxes, a digital video recorder, a picture-in-picture feature that allows viewers to surf channels without switching channels and an interactive program guide.
That network will continue to expand into areas where AT&T is the primary telephone service provider, Ryan said.
"In the last 10 years, things have changed. Cable is selling telephone service... and it's not perfect. Telephone is selling cable service, and it's not perfect. Both are into new areas, and they're learning and fixing things as they go."
"I've generally heard good things about U-verse," he said. "Thing is, we're in the first inning of a nine-inning game.
Chelsey Ilten, an AT&T spokeswoman, said in an e-mail that the company intends a problem-free rollout in Wichita.
The bugs are the price consumers pay today as the industry evolves into a "customer-friendly market," Kagan said, with more options and lower prices.
"Our customers expect the very best, and we work each and every day to make sure we're meeting and exceeding their expectations, and that includes a great experience on day one of our launch in Wichita," she said.
"The early (subscribers) should be ready for things that don't work," he said. "It will get better."
AT&T launches TV service on new phones, rivaling Verizon NEW YORK - AT&T Inc. is launching its new video service for cell phones Sunday on two phones, and will charge $15 per month for 10 channels. AT&T Mobile TV is almost identical to Verizon Wireless' V Cast Mobile TV, and is operated by the same company, Qualcomm Inc. AT&T will have two exclusive channels on the service, it said Thursday.
AT&T already has a mobile video service called CV, which is based on different technology. It works like Internet video, providing short clips on demand.
Qualcomm's MediaFLO service is more like regular TV broadcasts, constantly streaming shows on airwaves that run alongside regular cell-phone spectrum. Judging by V Cast Mobile TV, which is available on four phones, the quality is much higher than on-demand cell-phone clips.
The service will launch in 58 markets including Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and Seattle. There will even be parental control features offered, to restrict access to content that would be inappropriate for younger viewers.
Today the Nokia E66 officially joined the ranks of the business-oriented Eseries device from the Finnish manufacturer. This slender slider offers dedicated shortcut keys to contacts, calendar, and messaging, and also features a new dual home screen, with both business and personal views.
The Nokia E66 measures in at 107mm x 49mm x 13mm (4.2" x 1.9" x 0.5") and sports a 3.2 megapixel camera with autofocus and video recording. A microSD card slot offers plenty of extra storage, as well. The Nokia E66 also includes built-in A-GPS and comes with Nokia Maps preloaded for out of the box navigation.
The Nokia E66 offers quad-band GSM/EDGE (850/900/1800/1900MHz) support and will be available in three different dual-band UMTS/HSDPA variants (850/1900MHz, 900/2100MHz, and 850/2100MHz). WiFi support offers a zippy data as a backup when there is no 3G service available.
The Nokia E66 mobile phone will make a lasting impression with the sophisticated slide-to-open design combined with an array of features. With Wi-Fi connectivity you stay up-to-date all the time by reading and responding to your emails while on the move.
Personalise your business and home screen modes to quickly switch from work to play. Use the built-in secure VPN connection to use your company intranet on the go. You’ll be amused for hours with the 3.2-megapixel camera, Nokia Maps, MP3 Player and the built-in FM Radio.
Nokia E66 offers advanced multimedia functions :
With this Nokia Eseries device, people can get reliable real-time access to their email, calendar, contacts and tasks, as well as download attachments like Word, Excel, Powerpoint or PDF files directly to their devices. The Nokia E66 supports email accounts from more than a thousand internet service providers (ISPs) around the world, as well as Gmail, Yahoo! mail and Hotmail. Additionally, the Nokia E66 supports the Nokia Intellisync Wireless Email solution as well as third party email solutions like System Seven and Visto Mobile.
Nokia E66 offers style & user friendliness :
"The Nokia E66 has been designed for people who lead a mobile lifestyle and want quick and easy access to their personal and work email. With this new E-series device, we have responded to consumer feedback by making calendar and contacts available at the touch of a button," said Søren Petersen, Senior Vice President, Devices, Nokia. Stainless steel was chosen as the core material for the E66, giving it additional strength and a touch of class. Furthermore, the Nokia E66 offers all the latest multimedia features that people desire."
Nokia E66 slider with stainless steel accents :
The Nokia E66 offers a premium look and feel with its stainless steel accents and smooth sliding design. Sharing the same key features as the also newly announced Nokia E71, including an enhanced calendar, contacts and customizable home screen modes, the Nokia E66 offers unique additions, like an orientation sensor that automatically optimizes itself for full screen viewing or silences the ringer when the device is turned over.
Extensive lineup Nokia cell phones :
"With mobile email penetration and access to wireless applications growing at a rapid rate, Nokia is well positioned with its extensive lineup of market leading handsets to address the needs of consumers, high-end users and mobile professionals alike," said Andrew Brown, Director, Wireless Enterprise Strategies Global Wireless Practice, Strategy Analytics.
Ovi support by Nokia E66 :
This includes fast and seamless browsing with HSDPA, wireless LAN and 3G connectivity, Assisted GPS (A-GPS) and Nokia Maps for navigation, a music player with support for up to 8 GB expandable memory and a 3.2 megapixel autofocus camera.
Nokia E66 for businesses :
In addition to serving entrepreneurs and smaller businesses, the Nokia E66 also comes fully equipped with a robust suite of enterprise grade features, including a built-in encryption functionality for both the device memory and for the memory card. The Nokia E66 also includes integrated mobile VPN support that gives mobile professionals access to their company intranet, and device lock and wipe to protect corporate information.
Price & Shop :
Nokia E66 (Grey/Silver) NokiaE66 and integrated GPS (AGPS) and Nokia Maps software Package Contents - NokiaE66 - Battery (BL-4U) - Stereo Headset (HS-47).
Nokia E66 (Grey) NokiaE66 is eligible for Express Shipping. NokiaE66 support the Nokia Intellisync Wireless Email solution as well as third party email solutions like.
Nokia E66 Eseries Mobile Phone - Current Available Colour Built-in handsfree Size: Dimensions: 107.5 x 49.5 x 13.6 mmNetwork:Quadband GSM 850/900/1800/1900Content : NokiaE66 Phone Battery Charger User Manual.
NOKIA E66 3.15 MP CAMERA QUAD GSM WORLD CELL PHONE NEW UNLOCKED NOKIAE66 QUAD-BAND FM RADIO 3.15MP CAMERA CELL PHONE BRAND NEW. 7 h 30 m PACKAGE CONTENTS: NOKIAE66 QUAD BAND UNLOCKED CELL Phone Headset.
It's really a very well constructed piece of kit and feels solid and sturdy without being brick-like – sort of like a heavyweight boxer in a well tailored suit, the muscles are hidden, but you know they're there.
The top of the slide is mirrored chrome-effect metal while much of the rest of it is a textured plastic and it has a gently ribbed metal back that feels very classy. In fact, everything about the casing screams quality.
The large-ish 2.4in QVGA screen (larger than the E65's) boasts 16 million colours and whether or not it's possible to actually see all of them, it's a beautifully sharp and crisp display that can be seen even in bright sunlight. Usefully, there's a light sensor present which will adjust the screen's brightness depending on how much you need, so saving your battery life.
CECT A8+ - Shake And Tilt Touchscreen Mobile Phone With Bluetooth, Two Sims And iPhone Technology A8+ attracts my attention by its 16:9 wide-screen, 16 million color, 3.0 square-inch WQVGA (240 * 400) LCD and the same dreamy general concise fuselage. 16:9 wide-screen makes people, who like operating with single-hand, more convinent. Only the width of 50mm, thin fuselage of 10mm, Bluetooth stereo music playing, changing screen as shaking, changing music as shaking, strong subwoofer, flat touch, single standby with dual cards, e-book etc.
CECT A8+ has "Shake Sensor" playlist function - Don't like scolling down your playlist tapping buttons? Just shake the phone and Seamlessly Shuffle through your playlist with just a "flick" of the phone. Boasting a 3.2" screen, just "tilt" phone sideways and screen turns 16:9 wide! Works also in the US.
If you've seen photos or video of the iPhone clones, you know they are not just a passing fancy. They are here to stay because they are beating the iPhone at its own game. Not only do they convincingly copy what consumers like about the iPhone, they have improved upon what consumers don't like about the iPhone. This is why Popular Science called CECT's line of iPhone clones "the real deal."
The CECT A8+ is the latest touchscreen phone to improve upon the iClones. Let me explain. The original CECT iPhones were far superior to Apple's iPhone because they:
1. allowed you to use your own carrier without being chained to AT&T. All of the phones come unlocked and many have the slide unlock feature;
2. adding a removable battery so that you aren't dependent on the manufacturer every time the battery dies;
3. making the phones dual sim. Arguably, dual sim is going to be commonplace in the future. Who wants to have to carry around two cell phones? With a dual sim phone, you can have one number for work and one number for home, without ever needing to turn off the phone to change sims; and
4. by adding three additional speakers and a webcam.
Recently, CECT has improved upon themselves by adding shake and tilt features to the A8+. The best thing about the A8 is that you can shake the phone to change the media, meaning if you want to fast forward a song or video or change a photo or wallpaper, you only need to shake the phone to advance. You don't even have to look down or scroll. Additionally, you can tilt the phone to change it from portrait to landscape mode, which is very useful when watching video.
The A8 is currently between $100 and $150, depending on where you get it. That's a great price considering you are getting many more features than the iPhone at a fraction of the iPhone's price without the expensive contract.
Visit the CECT A8+ Product Review Website by clicking here to see video demonstrations, close up photos, unique features, and comparison buyer information about the iPhone. Rae Edwards is an internet technology research and writer.