• 30Sep

    The Hub has died.

    Not that the world is going to come to an end because the Hub was pulled from retail shelves, but truthfully, I'm a bit disappointed.  Turns out, Verizon's "Hub" product - the one that was all set to revolutionize the home phone as we know it - was a flop.  I attribute it to three things: a lack of marketing, a lofty price, and reported issues with customer service.  Every time I went into the Verizon store, the Hub was all the way against the back wall, with no marketing whatsoever.  And at $200 with a monthly fee of $35, it wasn't cheap.  With the increasing trend of moving to wireless devices for all calling purposes, shelling out $200 for a device, regardless of how cool it was, was steep.  The Hub was also saddled with a notoriously poor reputation when it came to customer service (here, here, and here).

    A truly great idea, gone because of a few poor moves.  Could we see a new Hub debut at $49, with a strong marketing campaign?  Only time will tell.  Until then, it's back to boring landline service.

    Source: Zatz Not Funny



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  • 30Sep

    If you’re chomping at the bit, waiting for the Androidy goodness of Sholes (aka Tao) to make its way to Verizon, here’s a tasty treat to tide you over. Some leaked images have surfaced, courtesy of HowardForums. That’s exciting because it’s the first time the phone has been seen turned on and handled in a real-world setting.

    Sadly, there are no stills of the QWERTY keyboard or D-pad, but there are shots showing off Google Maps (in Sky view), an Apps screen, and the unlock screen, as well as the back of the battery. So without further delay, here’s your pretty (if slightly blurry) eye candy.













    Mere morsels, I know, but it’s not surprising considering how little is known of the device to date. Details have been scarce, with the industry chatter only yielding a few bits of info so far, including: 

    •The battery is rated at 1390mAh. (In conrast, that’s a little lower than the Cliq, which is 1420 mAh, but a little more than the MyTouch, at 1340 mAh.)
    •The metal heavy design (or is that heavy metal?) makes for a pretty slim and stunning form factor, but also a weighty device.
    •May come loaded with what will be the latest Android build, aka Eclair.


    There’s some difference of opinion on that last item. Some people are expecting Eclair, while others are pointing to Donut (1.6) instead. I’m sure more details will emerge as we get closer to launch (which is rumored to be as soon as next month), so stay tuned.

    [HowardForums via Mobile Crunch]


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  • 30Sep

    When dummy units arrive, the phone can't be too far behind.  That's the logic behind BGR's prediction that the Storm 2 will land on or around October 25th, thanks to a tipster providing a screen shot of Best Buy's internal inventory system.  Sounds about right to me - historically, devices typically launch shortly before or shortly after dummy devices arrive.  He goes on to say that the device will cost $599.99 full retail (at Best Buy locations). 

    Since Best Buy's "full retail" price is usually a bit higher than corporate stores, I wonder what the price will be at Verizon?  More importantly, who's picking one up as soon as it hits retail shelves?  If it's as improved as everyone says it is, I may give it a go myself.

    Source: BGR

    Update: Crackberry received a leaked screenshot as well, but theirs was of the actual unit inventory (Class 327) instead of the dummy unit inventory (Class 317, as seen above).  All signs still point to an October 25th release - great news for BlackBerry fans!

     

     


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  • 30Sep

    In typical RIM fashion, most CDMA BlackBerry devices have evolved from GSM counterparts - the BlackBerry Curve 8330, the BlackBerry 8830, the BlackBerry Pearl 8130, and the BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8230, just to name a few.

    Notoriously missing from the list is the Curve 8900 (Javelin), which hasn't had a CDMA partner until now.  Crackberry forums member Salmondrin leaked a picture of what is widely believed to be the "Atlas" (it's the one on the left, beside the upcoming Bold 9700).  After some confusion regarding the pictures, it's rumored that the device will be a CDMA unit with Wi-Fi, a trackpad, and the 8900's separated keyboard.  Don't confuse this with the "Essex," which will be the Wi-Fi version of the BlackBerry Tour.

    As I wrote in the first paragraph of my Tour review, RIM has historically shoved CDMA in the trunk when it comes to new devices, giving GSM the limelight instead.  Should this information be correct, it's nice to know that they're giving some love to CDMA users.

    Source: Crackberry


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  • 30Sep



    After weeks of sitting at the $350 mark (and that's after a $100 mail-in rebate, meaning you'll have to shell out an obscene $450 out the door), Sprint has finally come down off of the high horse and decided to compete with Verizon's $199 pricing (again, after a $150 mail-in rebate).  Honestly, with the BlackBerry Tour, Palm Pre, and HTC Hero all priced at or around $199 after rebate, they couldn't afford not to.  The $199 pricing begins on October 1st, but for those of you that paid $350 (and are probably getting upset as you're reading this), reports are coming in that eCare is offering $100 bill credits to offset the price change.

    With T-Mobile as the sole carrier selling the Touch Pro2 at $350, will they bow to pressure and lower their pricing as well?  Until that day comes, a user on our website claims that T-Mobile will match Verizon's (and soon, Sprint's) pricing if you bring an advertisement into a retail store:



    Has anyone had success with this?  Hit the comments section and let us know!

    Source: BGR


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  • 30Sep

    Nokia N900 + SNES Emulator + Wiimote + TV OUT = RetroTastic!

    via EngadgetMobile


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  • 30Sep

    The thing about cell phone reviews is that they're usually written after no more than a week or two of using a particular device. Anyone who's ever owned a cell phone (or any daily use gadget) knows that the longer you stay with a cellie the more you get to know its ins and outs, strengths and weaknesses, and particular quirks. As such, a "professional review" written after only a week or so of testing simply can't tell you what six months' worth of talking, texting, and tweeting on a handset can.

    But you don't want to wait six months to read my review of Sprint's Hero, so here goes: After a whopping five days with my review unit (my second unit, actually - the first arrived the day before with an utterly destroyed display), I have no trouble proclaiming Hero the best Android phone to ever be released anywhere. I'll also tell you that having spent all of two hours playing with the Motorola CLIQ at a press event a few weeks back, that title could well be up for grabs whenever T-Mobile and Moto see fit to start sending CLIQ loaners out to us media types.

    What makes Hero so great? Multitouch. Yeah, the Sense UI is cool. Yeah, the five megapixel camera is a nice upgrade from the 3MP shooter found on the G1s and myTouch 3Gs of the world. Yeah, we finally have an Android phone with a standard headphone jack. But it's really the multitouch display that makes Hero heroic.

    Okay, HTC's customized virtual QWERTY board helps, too.



    Before I go any further, a few nuts and bolts: Call quality was very good in my testing in the East Bay near San Francisco, CA. Signal strength was generally strong, data transfers over EV-DO were speedy, and WiFI worked well. Battery life was fine but not great; I never ran the thing all the way down in a single day of heavy (but realistic) use, but I did get the low battery warning a few times. Now, then …

    Most people who bother to own a smartphone are going to type on it. You'll type in Web URLs, you'll type out SMS and Email messages, and you'll type all sorts of other stuff, too. Typing on a touchscreen isn't, for me, as efficient as typing on a hard QWERTY board - hence my mention of the forthcoming CLIQ - but quality hardware and software can make virtual QWERTYs pretty darn usable. Love it or hate it, Apple's iPhone has a pretty nice soft QWERTY. What makes it so good? The multitouch display - it's responsive, accurate, and can handle rapid fire two-thumbed typing in landscape orientation.

    HTC's Hero runs a close second to iPhone in the race for the best soft QWERTY ever. Hero's software is actually better than iPhone's, as the autocomplete/spellcheck system is more flexible and there's an easily customizable user dictionary, too. HTC also made good use of Android's "long press" command to give one-touch access to punctuation marks, numbers, and symbols from the QWERTY board. The keyboard works in both landscape and portrait modes, and optional haptic feedback provides a nice little buzz of vibration with each key press - so you'll know you actually pressed a key.

    The only multitouch-enabled Android phone currently on the U.S. market, Hero has a leg up on T-Mobile's G1 and myTouch 3G when it comes to typing. Two-thumbed typing on a single-touch display is an exercise in restraint, as the displays simply can't keep up with a facile user's thumbs (or, I suppose, fingers). Hero handled my thumbs with relative ease, and for that alone I'd recommend it over those other Android devices. Hero's display is smaller than iPhone's, and some may find landscape mode to yield a slightly cramped typing experience. But five minutes with Hero will make an iPhone user wonder just what Apple has against user dictionaries. Smartphones should be able to learn whatever words their owners want them to learn, without the need for silly workarounds.



    I've written and videoed at length about Hero's many features, including the HTC-built "Sense UI," which takes the place of many of Android's core smartphone features. Sense's many hooks and widgets center around keeping you abreast of what your contacts are up to, whether it's a phone call, Email, Facebook update or new photo posted to Flickr. Android has fast built a reputation for embracing user customization via homescreen widgets, and HTC has upped the ante by building some very cool widgets of their own but also rewriting core apps like the "People" contacts manager to connect more of your Android experience directly to The Cloud (Google services, social networks, and so on).

    Hero also trumps other Android phones with a few additions like Flash Lite support in the Web browser, more extensive MS Exchange support, and an HTC-made Mail app that I much prefer to the stock Android program.



    Sprint added a few goodies of their own to Hero, including Sprint TV and widgets for NFL and NASCAR coverage. These are nice little bonuses, particularly if you're a football and/or racing fan. The NFL widget is actually quite well done, and that's coming from a diehard basketball fan. Sprint also redesigned Hero's exterior, much to the chagrin of some hardcore fans of the original phone's trademark chin. Me, I've got no problem with Sprint's makeover. The phone looks rounder where the original was angular, and a bit more metallic what with its gun metal grey backplate, chrome accent strip, and the brushed metal look of the front panel buttons. Yes, the buttons are actual buttons and not touch-sensitive controls - two of them are raised while the other four are hidden beneath that brushed metal overlay. Press down where you see a label and you'll feel an actual button clicking beneath the one-piece exterior panel.

    Much has been made in the blogosphere about the original Hero's "lag" problem, and whether or not the Sprint version would suffer from a similar slowness. The answer is No and Yes. No, I'm not having issues with "lag" on Sprint's Hero (nor did I have them when I tried an original Hero that'd been updated with the latest firmware). But yes, I do run into some slowness from time to time in using the device. But that's relative.

    Does using Hero get frustrating because of slowness? No, not really. Is Hero slower than G1 or myTouch 3G? Nope, not really. If I spend an hour Web surfing and Emailing on an iPhone 3GS, an hour performing those tasks on a Palm Pre, and then a third hour doing all again on Sprint's Hero, will I notice a speed difference between the devices? Yeah. Yeah, I will … In fact, I did.

    Hero, iPhone 3GS, and Pre are all multitouch devices. Pinching, zooming, flicking and tapping work well on all three phones. But they work better on iPhone 3GS and Pre than they do on Hero. Zooming in and out of Web pages and photos, in particular, is a smoother experience on the Apple and Palm phones than it is on this HTC. It all works on Hero, don't get me wrong. It's just not quite as smooth and speedy.

    That said, I think Hero is my new favorite phone offered by Sprint. Palm Pre's software is smoother and prettier than Hero's, but Hero's hardware is nicer. Hero feels solid in my hand where Pre is kind of plastic and wobbly, and I'd actually rather type on Hero's touchscreen than Pre's hard keyboard - Palm's buttons are just too tiny for my thumbs. Beyond that, Android's building up a head of steam with several thousand apps in the Market and a handful of new devices slated to ship before year's end, while Palm's WebOS is still ramping up to speed when it comes to apps, carriers, and devices both in the U.S. and globally. That's not to say WebOS doesn't have a bright future (I hope it does), but that you can do a bit more with an Android OS device in the near-term.

    So Hero's the belle of Sprint's ball, at least for now. But what about that Motorola Android phone I mentioned at the outset? The big deal with Cliq is the slide-out QWERTY board and the fact that Motorola's "Blur" interface is a collection of widgets that can be turned off and on as you please. HTC's Sense is more than skin deep, and can't be turned off. So if Hero's slight sluggishness is an issue for you, you might want to wait to see how Cliq (and the rumored Motorola "Tao" for Verizon) perform once they start shipping.

    Enough with the futurespeak. Hero is here, now, and it's the best thing Android's got going for it. Multitouch is great, Sense is cool, and the whole package is quite a nice one. Hard to beat Sprint's pricing for voice and data plans, too. Winner winner, chicken dinner (I haven't said that in awhile), nice job HTC and Sprint.


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  • 30Sep

    The thing about cell phone reviews is that they're usually written after no more than a week or two of using a particular device. Anyone who's ever owned a cell phone (or any daily use gadget) knows that the longer you stay with a cellie the more you get to know its ins and outs, strengths and weaknesses, and particular quirks. As such, a "professional review" written after only a week or so of testing simply can't tell you what six months' worth of talking, texting, and tweeting on a handset can.

    But you don't want to wait six months to read my review of Sprint's Hero, so here goes: After a whopping five days with my review unit (my second unit, actually - the first arrived the day before with an utterly destroyed display), I have no trouble proclaiming Hero the best Android phone to ever be released anywhere. I'll also tell you that having spent all of two hours playing with the Motorola CLIQ at a press event a few weeks back, that title could well be up for grabs whenever T-Mobile and Moto see fit to start sending CLIQ loaners out to us media types.

    What makes Hero so great? Multitouch. Yeah, the Sense UI is cool. Yeah, the five megapixel camera is a nice upgrade from the 3MP shooter found on the G1s and myTouch 3Gs of the world. Yeah, we finally have an Android phone with a standard headphone jack. But it's really the multitouch display that makes Hero heroic.

    Okay, HTC's customized virtual QWERTY board helps, too.



    Before I go any further, a few nuts and bolts: Call quality was very good in my testing in the East Bay near San Francisco, CA. Signal strength was generally strong, data transfers over EV-DO were speedy, and WiFI worked well. Battery life was fine but not great; I never ran the thing all the way down in a single day of heavy (but realistic) use, but I did get the low battery warning a few times. Now, then …

    Most people who bother to own a smartphone are going to type on it. You'll type in Web URLs, you'll type out SMS and Email messages, and you'll type all sorts of other stuff, too. Typing on a touchscreen isn't, for me, as efficient as typing on a hard QWERTY board - hence my mention of the forthcoming CLIQ - but quality hardware and software can make virtual QWERTYs pretty darn usable. Love it or hate it, Apple's iPhone has a pretty nice soft QWERTY. What makes it so good? The multitouch display - it's responsive, accurate, and can handle rapid fire two-thumbed typing in landscape orientation.

    HTC's Hero runs a close second to iPhone in the race for the best soft QWERTY ever. Hero's software is actually better than iPhone's, as the autocomplete/spellcheck system is more flexible and there's an easily customizable user dictionary, too. HTC also made good use of Android's "long press" command to give one-touch access to punctuation marks, numbers, and symbols from the QWERTY board. The keyboard works in both landscape and portrait modes, and optional haptic feedback provides a nice little buzz of vibration with each key press - so you'll know you actually pressed a key.

    The only multitouch-enabled Android phone currently on the U.S. market, Hero has a leg up on T-Mobile's G1 and myTouch 3G when it comes to typing. Two-thumbed typing on a single-touch display is an exercise in restraint, as the displays simply can't keep up with a facile user's thumbs (or, I suppose, fingers). Hero handled my thumbs with relative ease, and for that alone I'd recommend it over those other Android devices. Hero's display is smaller than iPhone's, and some may find landscape mode to yield a slightly cramped typing experience. But five minutes with Hero will make an iPhone user wonder just what Apple has against user dictionaries. Smartphones should be able to learn whatever words their owners want them to learn, without the need for silly workarounds.



    I've written and videoed at length about Hero's many features, including the HTC-built "Sense UI," which takes the place of many of Android's core smartphone features. Sense's many hooks and widgets center around keeping you abreast of what your contacts are up to, whether it's a phone call, Email, Facebook update or new photo posted to Flickr. Android has fast built a reputation for embracing user customization via homescreen widgets, and HTC has upped the ante by building some very cool widgets of their own but also rewriting core apps like the "People" contacts manager to connect more of your Android experience directly to The Cloud (Google services, social networks, and so on).

    Hero also trumps other Android phones with a few additions like Flash Lite support in the Web browser, more extensive MS Exchange support, and an HTC-made Mail app that I much prefer to the stock Android program.



    Sprint added a few goodies of their own to Hero, including Sprint TV and widgets for NFL and NASCAR coverage. These are nice little bonuses, particularly if you're a football and/or racing fan. The NFL widget is actually quite well done, and that's coming from a diehard basketball fan. Sprint also redesigned Hero's exterior, much to the chagrin of some hardcore fans of the original phone's trademark chin. Me, I've got no problem with Sprint's makeover. The phone looks rounder where the original was angular, and a bit more metallic what with its gun metal grey backplate, chrome accent strip, and the brushed metal look of the front panel buttons. Yes, the buttons are actual buttons and not touch-sensitive controls - two of them are raised while the other four are hidden beneath that brushed metal overlay. Press down where you see a label and you'll feel an actual button clicking beneath the one-piece exterior panel.

    Much has been made in the blogosphere about the original Hero's "lag" problem, and whether or not the Sprint version would suffer from a similar slowness. The answer is No and Yes. No, I'm not having issues with "lag" on Sprint's Hero (nor did I have them when I tried an original Hero that'd been updated with the latest firmware). But yes, I do run into some slowness from time to time in using the device. But that's relative.

    Does using Hero get frustrating because of slowness? No, not really. Is Hero slower than G1 or myTouch 3G? Nope, not really. If I spend an hour Web surfing and Emailing on an iPhone 3GS, an hour performing those tasks on a Palm Pre, and then a third hour doing all again on Sprint's Hero, will I notice a speed difference between the devices? Yeah. Yeah, I will … In fact, I did.

    Hero, iPhone 3GS, and Pre are all multitouch devices. Pinching, zooming, flicking and tapping work well on all three phones. But they work better on iPhone 3GS and Pre than they do on Hero. Zooming in and out of Web pages and photos, in particular, is a smoother experience on the Apple and Palm phones than it is on this HTC. It all works on Hero, don't get me wrong. It's just not quite as smooth and speedy.

    That said, I think Hero is my new favorite phone offered by Sprint. Palm Pre's software is smoother and prettier than Hero's, but Hero's hardware is nicer. Hero feels solid in my hand where Pre is kind of plastic and wobbly, and I'd actually rather type on Hero's touchscreen than Pre's hard keyboard - Palm's buttons are just too tiny for my thumbs. Beyond that, Android's building up a head of steam with several thousand apps in the Market and a handful of new devices slated to ship before year's end, while Palm's WebOS is still ramping up to speed when it comes to apps, carriers, and devices both in the U.S. and globally. That's not to say WebOS doesn't have a bright future (I hope it does), but that you can do a bit more with an Android OS device in the near-term.

    So Hero's the belle of Sprint's ball, at least for now. But what about that Motorola Android phone I mentioned at the outset? The big deal with Cliq is the slide-out QWERTY board and the fact that Motorola's "Blur" interface is a collection of widgets that can be turned off and on as you please. HTC's Sense is more than skin deep, and can't be turned off. So if Hero's slight sluggishness is an issue for you, you might want to wait to see how Cliq (and the rumored Motorola "Tao" for Verizon) perform once they start shipping.

    Enough with the futurespeak. Hero is here, now, and it's the best thing Android's got going for it. Multitouch is great, Sense is cool, and the whole package is quite a nice one. Hard to beat Sprint's pricing for voice and data plans, too. Winner winner, chicken dinner (I haven't said that in awhile), nice job HTC and Sprint.


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  • 30Sep

     

    LG GD510

    This is the LG GD510, a new touchscreen phone which we don’t recall having seen before, but are really impressed with the sleek, minimalist casing.  The Pop, as it’s also known,will sit alongside the Cookie and the more recent GW520 in LG’s range as another affordable touchscreen mobile phone, a product the manufacturer are getting very good at creating.

    The 3″ WQVGA touchscreen dominates the front panel, with LG making a point in their press release of telling us that the surrounding bezel measures just 4.8mm, with only a single button for company.  This button glows green when you have an incoming call, red for when it’s ready to end your call and will also offer various other colour-based alerts.  The GD510 comes with 8GB of internal memory, a rear-mounted 3 megapixel camera for stills and video, along with a music and video player too.

    LG GD510 Solar PanelNo mention of whether the GD510 is a 3G phone, or whether any high-end features will find their way onboard - GPS or Wi-Fi for example - however, it would be good to see one of the above in order for it to improve on the old KP500 Cookie.  Currently, the only unique feature hasn’t been discussed, only pictured, and that is of an optional battery cover with a built-in solar panel!  We’ll have to wait and see whether it will be included in the pack or not.

    The GD510 Pop is out in Europe during October, with other markets joining over the coming months.

    Post from Dial-a-Phone, UK's no. 1 for Mobile Phones.

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  • 30Sep

    Mobile Phone TowerImagine that you want to head out to the countryside to enjoy a relaxing weekend away from your high-tech world. You’re taking your cell phone with you but it’s just for emergencies; you’re planning to keep it turned off unless you really need it. As you drive along the countryside, you gaze through your car’s window to look at the beautiful view developing in front of your eyes. But wait? Take a second look at that view. It’s no longer filled with only grassy hills and beautiful mountains; it’s filled with many different types of high-tech structures like mobile phone masts and towers. The landscape that you’re looking at today is a whole lot different than the landscape that you knew when you were a kid.

    Opposition to the Development of Mobile Masts and Cell Phone Towers

    There are a lot of people who don’t want to see the landscape change before their very eyes. They consider cell phone towers and mobile masts to be an ugly eyesore. These people are strongly opposed to the installation of more mobile phone towers especially if those towers are being placed in the areas where they live. Let’s face it; there are a lot of people who just don’t like change. They’ll stand in the way of it for as long as they can. And many of those people are fighting the changes that are taking place across our landscape by voicing strong opposition to the installation of new mobile phone towers.

    This Opposition Seems to be Global

    This type of resistance to the installation and development of new mobile phone towers is happening in many different parts of the globe. Small towns in the United States are particularly well-known for fighting the installation of cell phone towers in their areas. They’ll claim that the area is historic and the history is damaged by the installation of a new cell phone tower. They’ll claim that the cell phone tower is too close to a school or playground and that the jury’s still out on how much radiation these mobile masts emit so they don’t want the tower put there. Ofthen their complaints will win and the mobile phone carrier will have to look elsewhere for a place to install a cell phone tower. Similar complaints have come from both rural and urban areas in New Zealand, Britain and various other parts of Europe. All around the world there are people fighting the visible changes to the landscape that mass construction of cell phone towers is causing. (more…)

    Post from Dial-a-Phone, UK's no. 1 for Mobile Phones.

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