An observant fella over at Howardforums noticed the HTC Kaiser (a.k.a. TyTN II, HTC P4550) is listed in a select box for game purchases on the Rogers Wireless site. While this could simply be a typo on some web developer’s part, we dare to dream that it is a slip up and that the TyTN II is in fact coming to a Rogers store near you. Of course, the TyTN is only a few months old up in Canada, but heck, we’re positive the Canadian Windows Mobile users will celebrate its arrival and enjoy its warm glow through the cold winter months to come.[Via FidoFan]
Archive for the 'GPRS' Category
Welp, ’tis done friends, but we’re going to have to wait a week for all the gory details to be released. Geohot and his crew of trusty fiddlers have apparently found a solution for sorting the iPhone for worldwide consumption by hardware unlocking the beast. We’ve seen a video, and know he’s been well involved with iPhone shenanigans since day one, but until we see it in our hand color us excited but not sold — though we’re stoked that they report a software based version may be on the horizon. But in the unhappy event that it ends up being hardware unlock only, you can use this week to brush up on your soldering skills. We’re gonna be all over this in the coming days so know that the minute we know more, you will too. Peep the vid after the break.
Ooh, how do you like them apples, LG? Just days after word of its SH150 for Korea’s 7.2Mbps HSDPA trials spread across the lands, Samsung fires this little gem in return. The so-called “UFO” (don’t ask us) SCH-W300 features a 2 megapixel camera (plus the obligatory front-facing piece for video calls), QVGA display, Bluetooth, and microSD expansion in a 12.9mm thich shell — not particularly impressive by 2007 standards, until you hear about that magical 7.2Mbps downstream radio packed somewhere in there. Look for it alongside its crosstown rival’s SH150 for just a little more dinero, 600,000 won (about $632).
Take a moment to welcome the new Nokia 6555. This 3G (WCDMA of unspecified band) clamshell goes quadband GSM with microSD expansion (30MB on-boad) and 240 x 320 QVGA display touting 16 million colors. If thin is your thing and 3G Nokia your game then this is about as good as it gets. Available next month for about 200 pre-tax and pre-subsidy. Unfortunately, Nokia doesn’t say where, but its forward-facing profile certainly matches up nicely with Nokia’s FCC approved RM-276 handset operating in the 850 and 1900MHz bands (read: AT&T).
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It’s out. LG’s newest heartthrob — the KU990 — is official and on the way to the UK (likely with Vodafone) this fall. The German IFA show at the end of the month will mark its coming out party seeing the KU990 dressed up in a 5.1 megapixel shooter with Schneider-Kreuznach lens, image stabilization (likely digital), auto focus, 120fps video, and ISO 800 sensitivity. Sure, the camera is nice and all, but this pup is packing a 3-inch, 240 x 400 touchscreen riding on 3G HSDPA data. Hoozah! With a European launch imminent (Sorry, no Stateside details), the wait for the iPhone is suddenly less of a burden, eh?
[Via Akihabara News]
For the brave souls willing to sign away the next three years of their life to a carrier, Fido’s rendition of Nokia’s 5200 slider seems like a pretty darned good deal. $25 Canadian (about $23) nets you the music-centric handset, featuring a VGA cam, Class 10 EDGE, Bluetooth, and microSD expansion with Nokia’s ubiquitous but solid Series 40 backing up the whole package. Fido sweetens the deal by throwing in a 1GB card, too. Looking pretty good in black, ain’t it?
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
We’re speechless. In fact, we think we might cry — but rest assured, they’re tears of joy. Rumors of a Nokia N95 packing American HSDPA have been spreading like wildfire as of late, and we’re ecstatic to see that they were totally true. Though this sucker gets down with the 850 and 1900MHz bands, it doesn’t get in on the 1700MHz action, suggesting that if the T-Mobile rumor is still true, this ain’t it. Though arguably not quite as attractive as the decidedly non-US 8GB N95 in black that we saw this morning, this phone’s innards are pretty much the most beautiful thing we’ve seen all day. Nokia, we turn the floor over to you to answer questions about pricing and availability.
[Via Wirelessinfo.com]
Welcome to 2005, T-Mobile! No, seriously, this is great news — following news of Samsung’s t639 with AWS band coverage, Nokia looks poised to contribute its own midrange handset to T-Mobile’s upcoming HSDPA service on the 1700MHz band. The 6263 is likely an Americanized version of the 6267, a fairly pedestrian flip bearing a 2 megapixel cam, Bluetooth, and a microSD slot. That means there’s still plenty of room up top for companies like Nokia to contribute a few smartphones to the cause, but for now, we’ll take what we can get with a smile on our face.
[Via Phone Scoop]
Yep, it’s real. Besides the black case and the plethora of onboard storage, the phone seems largely true to the original, which means the search continues for HSDPA 850 / 1900. Looks hot, doesn’t it? No word on whether it’ll pick up “Music Edition” branding for launch.
[Via WirelessInfo.com]

Believe it or not, Sony Ericsson’s P1i has one of the richest, most storied family trees in the smartphone world. Technically, it could be said that the phone can trace its roots all the way back to Psion’s EPOC-based organizers, but more practically, the P1i is a direct descendent of the R380, the first Symbian-powered phone and a device that made more than a few jaws drop with its versatile design and expansive touchscreen. What’s our point? Simply that this brushed metal-clad beast has some work to do to live up to its ancestry, lest a few P800s start rolling in their graves — and with WiFi, a 3.2 megapixel cam, and UIQ 3, it seems equipped for the job. Read on for our quick take!
Thanks to the good folks at Wireless Imports for the hookup!
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The P1i affords an ever so slightly more luxurious unboxing experience than your average free-on-contract flip thanks to a larger box with side-by-side compartments up top, one for documentation and another proudly displaying your purchase. An included dock and black pouch are nice touches, but the real prize is the handset itself: in a word, it looks fantastic. Typically businesslike for a Sony Ericsson not in the Walkman series with soft-touch plastic, metal, and chrome bits in all the right places; needless to say, this is a phone we wouldn’t mind being seeing on our face in any social environment.

Oopsie! No kidding, this is literally the first thing we saw after the phone completed its initial power-up. A bad sign of things to come?

For anyone that hasn’t used one of Sony Ericsson’s unique rocker QWERTY keypads before (like on the M600), busting out text will likely be a challenge at first; our first n00b attempt at using it was a miserable failure. Strangely, we had trouble finding keys (despite the fact that it’s a standard QWERTY layout), and we briefly resorted to a hunt-and-peck mode that left us slower than numeric multitap. We eventually caught on, but by no means do we prefer it to a traditional keypad with one key per letter. By putting each letter at the outside of a cupped key, we see what Sony Ericsson was trying to do — prevent fat-fingered folks like ourselves from pressing the wrong letter — but in practice, our typing speeds were slowed enough to effectively wipe out any reduction in our error rate.

Fortunately, the keypad is just one of several ways to get text entered. There’s a traditional on-screen keyboard in the mix (one key per letter, imagine that!) and handwriting recognition that we found serviceable for basic tasks.
Symbian has two fantastic ambassadors in the form of S60 and UIQ, and we’re always excited to see a handset try to take the world’s most abundant smartphone platform to the next level. The P1i comes out swinging with UIQ 3, and it looks great on the handset’s 2.6 inch QVGA display. With the exception of the lone out of memory message on initial startup, we also found it to be utterly error- and crash-free. We found ourselves occasionally getting just a tad impatient waiting for programs to load — and by “programs” we also mean simple things like Control Panel — but we’re well aware of the performance / battery life tradeoff arguments that take place in closed-door R&D meetings deep within the annals of phone manufacturer headquarters worldwide, so we get it.
Despite the lack of GSM 850, we found signal strength to be excellent everywhere we tested. UMTS would’ve been nice, but we gave up on that dream ages ago. Call quality was superb, and the speakerphone had among the best volume and quality of any we’ve tested in recent memory. It’s actually (gasp!) usable!

As high as we were on the P1i’s strengths, its weaknesses are enough to pigeonhole it to two very specific demographics: neglected American Sony Ericsson fanatics and European businessfolk. The former category is pretty self explanatory, but why the latter? The P1i inexplicably leaves out a few key features that would elevate it from “workhorse” to “superphone” status: a 3.5mm headphone jack, HSDPA, and a quadband GSM radio (oh, and make that HSDPA tri-band while you’re at it, will ya?) all come immediately to mind, and without those, we can’t see this flagship appealing to the masses.
Maybe the P2i will be our dream come true — and rest assured, we’ll be crossing our fingers for a “P2a” variant this time, too.









