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Unlocked Cell Phones: For better usability

Posted by Max On August - 14 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Unlocked Cell Phones: For better usability

Comprising unique characteristics and becoming highly preferable are the unlocked cell phones. Users craving for advanced technology are always in the pursuit of latest handsets and touch screen phones. In contrast, intelligent users seek for high usability and open possibilities to experience the services of different networks. Offering this facility are the unlocked cell phones being produced and introduced by almost every cell phone manufacturing brand in the global market.

With unlocked cell phones, users can freely opt for any phone carrier service. And today, all the handsets are based on the SIM cards, regardless of your mobile phone brand. At times, this turned out as an issue especially when people aren’t satisfied with their networks. On the contrary, there are some particular locations where the networks usually don’t have an access or go weak. In this regard, users can consider other network providers anytime and any day. This is the predominant benefit of unlocked cell phones which you certainly can’t even expect in a locked device.

Nowadays, captivating designs and contemporary technology in the handsets are grabbing customer’s attention. Touch screen phones are amongst those modish handsets for which customers are really craving. Certainly, you do have unlocked cell phones penetrating the market with touch screens as well, in which a proper blend of advancement and chic can be witnessed.

In addition, due to the rising competition, network providers often comes up with excellent offers and schemes which users usually don’t overlook. People with unlocked cell phones can only enjoy the upcoming benefits whereas the locked devices never allow you to switch over. While using the unlocked cell phones, you can always opt for a better option without compromising on your convenience and can always avail the hottest offer of the season.

Once you invest in an unlocked cell phone, you own full liberty to use any network connection which you feel is suitable for your needs. There are certainly no limitations which you have to stumble upon while putting an unlocked gadget into use.

Users at present are completely contented with what they have on hand in the form of unlocked cell phones and connoisseurs do believe that there isn’t any improved technology as yet retaining an edge over the unlocked cell phones. That is the reason why unlocked communication gadgets are primarily being used by the generation next and those who are technology enthusiasts and love to experience the hottest stuffs penetrating the market.

Gottouchphones.com offers the latest unlocked cell phones , touch screen phone and phone accessories online at affordable prices. Discount unlocked cellular phones and accessories at got touch phones. Visit here http://www.gottouchphones.com

I am global cell phones

Posted by Max On August - 13 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

I am global cell phones

global-cell-phones.com is one of the biggest mobile phone supplier in China.
Global Cell Phone is founded in 2003, up to now, we have clients allover the world, including America, Italy, England, Romania, Russia, Estonia, Brazil, Venezuela, Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, totally more than 30 countries. Global Cell Phones now applies totally 6 high-speed servers to offer the best service for all Global Cell Phones clients and provide them the latest mobile information.

With the hard-working of the talents of the Global Cell Phones, now it become one of top suppliers of mobile phone in China, and now it’s planning promoting all the electronic goods ,as Global Cell Phones is developing fast.It has very good business relationship with most of the mobile producers in China which can provide much cheaper price.

Presently, there are more and more traders joined Global Cell Phones, getting goods for their clients directly.

Buy china cheap electronics, china mobile phones, cheap mobile phones, China Cheap Phones, MP3 MP4 MP5 Player, Car Electronics, Laptop&Micro PC  from global-cell-phones.com at lowest price

Please Note: All china mobile phones on our website are not the official Iphone or any other brandy mobile phones. They are China mobile Phone versions which look quite similiar to the Iphone or any other brandy mobile phones , which have different functions and support different frenquency,as well enjoy 1 year warranty.
1. All China Mobile Phones has gone through strict quality control and testing to ensure that it is in good condition before ship out.
2. China Mobile Phone Models might differ due to different manufacturers, but the layout and function is similar.
3. Specification and Models are subject to change without prior notification.
4. Actual Megapixel may not be the same from stated.

Download ringtone for tmobile

Posted by Max On August - 13 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Download ringtone for tmobile

Ringtone makes you alert of the incoming calls and messages in your mobile phone. This is very necessary while there are many mobile phone users in a room. Ringtone has become an important accessory of any mobile phone because it provides quality sound and pleasure to listeners. It has now overtaken the music industry and people like to have each hit sound track as their mobile ringtone.

As there is increased demand for these ringtones people want to get them easily at fewer rates. This has paved way for various websites that provide with cell phone ringtones download services. You can download ringtone for tmobile or any other cell phone service carrier online. For this you need to have compatible software in your mobile phone. Once you download these ringtones, you can easily customize them.

Previously, there used to be a dull beep tone for incoming mobile phone call, then came monotones which used to have better quality sound, and then with the advent of polyphonic tones, truetones and voice tones there was a whole lot of things in store to be used as ringtones.

Today there are polyphonic ringtones, voice tones that could be customized with the voice of your family or dear ones. At the same time, the true tones also resemble voices of different artists, animals and many other that easily attracts ones attention. As such, ringtone defines your personality as a person.

But while you choose a ringtone for your mobile you need to follow some common rules of courtesy. If you like to have any specific kind of ringtone, you should take care of the environment because at some places, it is necessary that you keep the volume of your ringtone low. You should use silent and vibrant phone ringers while you in a meeting or discussion. You can also customize your mobile phone with environment friendly ringtones.

For more information visit our website http://www.t-mobile-ringtone.info

Olivia Andrews,writer of http://www.t-mobile-ringtone.info is a freelance journalist and has written many reviews on subjects such as finance, education, entertainment, music, apparels and mobile phones.

Verizon FiOS – Enjoy Your Online Ent.

Posted by Max On August - 11 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Verizon FiOS – Enjoy Your Online Entertainment

Of course you use the Internet for business and take advantage of the availability of news and other important information. But everyone needs to take a break and have some fun occasionally, even you. With the online entertainment options available from Verizon FiOS, you’ll find something for everyone in your home to enjoy.

If you’re a gamer or have a gamer in your household, Verizon FiOS is a great way to feed your habit. With the Verizon Arcade, you’ll have access to the hottest games on demand from Verizon. You’ll also get the latest game reviews to keep you up to date on what’s coming, and gaming industry news so you’ll never be out of the loop. And if you’re not a gamer now, you may find yourself drawn to gaming after you see what’s available from Verizon FiOS.

Games are only the beginning of the entertainment features from Verizon FiOS. Movie buffs will love the reviews and trailers available on Verizon, and the exclusive interviews with stars and directors. With Verizon Fios, you’ll have all the information you need about your favorite stars, directors and movies.

And if you love music, you’re going to absolutely love Verizon FiOS. Log on for great music videos from your favorite artists, as well as an extensive selection of music reviews. Find new music or find out what the critics are saying about the newest releases. And while you’re checking out music, take a listen to features mixes exclusively from Verizon.

Verizon FiOS’s entertainment content is only one reason you should switch to this new service, of course. With Verizon FiOS, you get fiber-optic Internet connection all the way into your home. Cable Internet offers fiber-optic only to the curb; only Verizon brings it all the way to your computer. This means you get much faster Internet access.

Because Verizon FiOS’s signal travels exclusively on fiber-optic lines, you’ll also have much more reliable Internet access, so whether you’re using the Internet for work or fun, you can count on Verizon to get you online and keep you online. You’ll appreciate this if your Internet provider is prone to outages; Verizon is simply more reliable.

Verizon FiOS is also cheaper than cable or DSL, with monthly rates starting at only .99. You’ll no doubt agree that paying less money for faster, more reliable service just makes sense. Given a choice, who wouldn’t want to get more for less?

With your one-year contract, Verizon FiOS installation is free. A professional Verizon installation technician will come to your home at your convenience, install the wiring and software in your computer, get you on the Internet, install any necessary wall jacks and port your phone service to Verizon FiOS if necessary, and make sure everything is working correctly. You’ll get a welcome kit with answers to all your questions about Verizon FiOS, and you’ll be ready to go before the tech leaves your home.

With a vast array of entertainment content, faster access, better service and free installation, Verizon FiOS is the obvious choice for home Internet access.

Russell Blanc manages an online resource about broadband and Verizon Fios.

Pranksters visit the private home of Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg, to deliver a personal message from Verizon customers. For the full story: www.zug.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Find More Verizon Articles

Apple’s secret to selling.

Posted by Max On January - 23 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Flash an exotic prototype, then—Presto!—get people to buy your more boring stuff. That kind of thinking still rules at most electronics companies. Apple under Steve Jobs only shows off actual products. The difference? Apple’s arcane secret to success.

A specter harrows the consumer electronics industry: malaise. Like washed-up Catskill magicians unable to let go of old routines while a brash upstart steals their audience, nearly every maker of consumer electronics in the world clings to a quaint song-and-dance about prototypes.

“Here is your possible future,” they bark, flourishing the latest conceptual product from the lab. “Now watch us make it disappear!”

Apple’s chief magician knows better, pulling solid objects out of the aether; products you can actually buy.

If this sounds like a minor complaint about most of the industry’s lack of imagination in marketing, you’re misunderstanding the whole act. The fact that Apple does not reveal prototypes but shipping products is the fundamental difference between their entire business strategy and that of the rest of the industry. It evokes a feeling of trust between Apple and consumers—that when Apple actually reveals a product, it’s something that they’re confident enough to support for years to come.

For the better part of the last century—starting arbitrarily with the 1934 Chicago World’s Fair and its stark, Randian slogan: “Science Finds, Industry Applies, Man Conforms”—the producers of consumer goods have stuck to a basic formula: Show off a prototype; gauge public response; then release a commercial product that is less ambitious, if released at all.

It worked in part because it told a compelling story. “Here is what the future looks like; and here’s an intermediate step towards that future that you can buy today.” Electronics’ sister industries followed the same tack. Car shows were populated with prismatic concept cars hewn with non-Euclidean angles rotating on raised daises. Videogame tech demos showed graphics too impossible to believe, but entrancing enough to betray our better judgment.

But in Jobs’ encore performance, Apple has changed the routine.

Outwardly Apple’s showmanship is competent, workmanlike. Jobs-as-performer wears an understated uniform that does not distract from the act. His humor, when it exists, is subtle. The closest an Apple keynote gets to pomp are pie charts that look like wooden logs.

Yet when Jobs reveals the company’s next product, there’s a critical difference: It exists. When possible, it is available for retail purchase the same day. There are few maybes or eventuallys tempering the presentation: “Here is the tiny miracle we’ve created. We want to sell it to you today.”

As a counter-example, let me pick on Lenovo for a moment: At CES this year, they showed off the Ideapad U1 prototype, a netbook with a screen that could be decoupled from the keyboard to operate as a multitouch tablet. Clever idea, seemingly well considered and brain-bendingly not available for purchase today.

Do you see the story that Lenovo is spoiling for themselves? First, they’ve deprecated the imagined utility of every other laptop they sell without the flashy removable tablet screen. Yet they’ve also whispered a nervous apology to potential customers: “We could make something this cool, but we’re not so confident in our plans to fully commit to them. Maybe you could tell us if you think you’d like this trick?”

Lenovo might make the U1. They might sell a few units. But simply by revealing it before it was a living, breathing SKU on retail shelves, they’ve relegated it to a quirky sideshow.

See also: The Chevy Volt, announced so long ago that GM has gone through a bankruptcy and shotgun CEO transition without actually being available for sale. Bet those will be flying off the lots.

Some of Apple’s peers understand the need to manage expectations. Have you ever seen RIM show off a BlackBerry prototype? What about Nintendo? They don’t pull a Microsoft-like move of showing very early-stage products to reporters and potential customers. They simply pull out a Wii or a DS and say, “This is it. Give it a try.”

Everybody loves a prototype. Engineers get a chance to strut their stuff. If you’ve got a 40-inch OLED TV in a lab somewhere, bring it to your trade show. Executives take pride in their company’s technical prowess. Marketers get an excuse to throw an even fancier party. And customers and press get idyll fodder for a daydream.

None of those things equal units sold. None of those things turn a customer into an ardent fan.

That an industry exists around rumors and leaks for unreleased products may be useful to Apple, but it is a side-effect of their product strategy, not the basis of their marketing. Consider that when Apple finally does release a product, the marketing tends to showcase the device itself in clear, comprehensible ways. Apple isn’t shy to make claims about the grandiose, epiphanal nature of its products because—whether they pull it off or not—they have built a culture in which every product they make is designed to be world class.

Instead of prototypes, Apple makes patents. Although I’m certain Apple would keep these patents behind the curtain if they legally could, their existence proves something amazingly pedestrian: Behind the scenes, Apple is essentially the same sort of company as every other electronics star in the world.

They’re developing prototypes. They’re trying new tricks, seeing what works. They know experimentation is the lifeblood of innovation.

But like the consummate showmen they are, they temper the wooly process of building the future with something missing from nearly every other technology company: restraint. Apple may come off at times as a bit soulless, but at least they’ve got class. And when that class allows them to sell more products that make happier customers, I’ll take class over flash every time.

That the Consumer Electronics Show is held in Vegas is no accident. It’s a derelict spectacle meant to cater to mid-level buyers, gilt with the threadbare trappings of Innovation and Progress, but sending most of its audience home with nothing but a hangover and a t-shirt.

When Apple pulls a tablet out of its hat next week, it’s likely that we won’t be able to purchase it for a couple of months, but rest assured that’s only because of regulatory pitfalls. And besides, there will be no doubt that when Jobs shows us his vision of the future, Apple will be doing everything they can do to get them into our hands.

That’s the trick of it. Consumer audiences have grown wary of nearly a century of predictable sleight-of-hand. We’ve seen too many companies promise us the future, then fail to deliver it.

I believe that there are dozens of companies out there with the talent to pull the future toward us along some retail tesseract. But until they conquer their stage fright, leave aside the vaudevillian antics that savvy, jaded audiences no longer find compelling, and embrace a more honest and practical sort of conjuration, Apple will continue to be the defining technology performance of our age.

Samsung Behold II: T-Mobile

Posted by Max On November - 15 - 2009 5 COMMENTS
Hey, look! Someone forked Android again. The Samsung Behold II, going on sale next week at T-Mobile for $229.99, will be T-Mobile’s most powerful Google Android phone when it goes on the market. But this Android phone doesn’t look or work like other Android phones, and that may be a minus.

samsung-behold-2-1There’s nothing wrong with dressing up Android. HTC did it brilliantly with the Hero and Droid Eris. But Samsung slapped their TouchWiz interface on here, which feels awkward at times.

The Behold II has solid, good-looking hardware. Like so many other phones nowadays, it’s a slab with a big touch screen and a bunch of buttons at the bottom. There’s a four-way cursor rocker instead of a trackball or optical mouse. The screen is a super-bright AMOLED panel with great color. On the plastic back, there’s a stylized map of the world.

One of the physical buttons activates the Behold II’s weirdest UI touch, the “cube.” The cube is an entirely pointless 3D graphic that lets you go to YouTube, the Amazon MP3 store, the music player, the video player, the Web browser or the picture gallery. If you shake the phone, the cube spins until it picks a random selection. It looks like somebody’s demo of their 3D graphics acceleration technology. It’s entirely silly.

You can ignore the Cube, but you can’t ignore all the other things Samsung has done to Android. Samsung dropped a bunch of buttons and menus on here to make the Behold II work and act like their other TouchWiz non-smartphones, devices like the Samsung Rogue and Highlight. That means a “quick list” button that pops up a very non-smartphone-looking menu grid. The standard Android apps drawer pops out of the side of the screen.

Here’s what Samsung decided to add: A new, much better camera app. A new camcorder app. A new music player , with a CoverFlow-like thing going on. A new and pointlessly ugly SMS app. New Exchange e-mail, but everybody does that with Android 1.5. New and uglier on-screen keyboard. New memo pad app, photo gallery, dialer, call log, video player. I could go on.

I’m not saying the changes here are all bad, but there sure are a lot of them, and they’re not as obviously positive as HTC’s changes were. Some UI elements and images seem rougher and less-finished even than the stock Android seen on the Samsung Moment for Sprint. For instance, I can’t figure out why they changed the dialer, and the stock Android dialer is nicer. The camera app, on the other hand, looks more like other Samsung cameraphones, and has lots of options.

Want to judge for yourself? Check out our slideshow which includes a UI comparison between the Behold II and Samsung Moment.

Beyond the new UI, the Behold II has a 5-megapixel camera and a pretty standard Qualcomm 528-MHz ARM11 processor, the same one that’s in the G1 and the MyTouch 3G . I’m not expecting any big performance surprises from this phone. But given that the G1 and MyTouch 3G are both a big step behind Sprint’s and Verizon’s Android phones in power, the Behold may be the leading Android choice for T-Mobile. We’ll see.

We’ll have a full review of the Behold II soon.

Palm Pixi: Now Available @ Sprint

Posted by Max On November - 15 - 2009 1 COMMENT

Sprint is now offering the Palm Pixi, a low-cost webOS-powered smartphone that is the successor to Palm’s Centro line. Like those earlier models, it has an easily pocketable design with a touchscreen, keyboard, and an afforable price.The Pixi is available now in Sprint stores and Sprint.com, where it is selling for $100 with a two-year service contract and $100 mail-in rebate.

It’s also available from other retailers, some of whom are offering lower prices. For example, new Sprint customers can get this model from Amazon.com or LetsTalk.com for $50.

An Overview of the Palm Pixi

palm_pixiThe Pixi can be thought of as the successor to Palm’s popular Centro series. Like those earlier consumer-friendly models, it has an easily pocketable design with a touchscreen, keyboard, and an affordable price.

This device has a tablet shape, with a 2.6-inch, 320-by-400-pixel, capacitive touchscreen. This display is smaller and has a lower resolution screen than its predecessor, the Palm Pre, but the Pixi itself is smaller and lighter, and sells for a lower price.

As mentioned earlier, this smartphone runs Palm’s webOS, a multi-tasking operating system able to wirelessly synchronize a wide variety of data with online services like Google, Facebook, Yahoo, and Microsoft Exchange.

It comes with a highly-capable web browser, email software, and multimedia player. Additional third-party applications are also available.

Sprint’s version of the Pixi includes the 3G mobile broadband standard EV-DO. It also has a GPS receiver and Bluetooth, but not Wi-Fi.

Dell’s Global Mini 3

Posted by Max On November - 14 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

dell_mini_3Dell is launching its Android-based Mini 3 smartphone in China and Brazil. The global strategy seems questionable at face value, but contains a flash of genius as well. Tony Bradley

Dell unveiled the Android-based Mini 3 smartphone today and announced that it will be available soon in China and Brazil. Venturing away from the familiar server and desktop foundation that Dell is built on may seem risky, but there is a method to Dell’s madness that may just pay off.

The Dell Mini 3 may not impress on paper, but if it can capture the China market Dell will emerge victorious.Ever since rumors began to circulate earlier this year that Dell was planning a move into smartphones there have been naysayers. The market is crowded. Competition is rough. Dell is already losing ground in its core business. If your device isn’t from Apple and doesn’t say ‘iPhone’ it can’t succeed in the smartphone market.

Dell has tried to expand its portfolio of hardware over the years, distributing printers, cameras, PDA’s, televisions, and other Dell-branded peripherals. Those efforts have been met with mixed success, and even the best of them has been received moderately at best. The message to Dell for the most part has been ‘don’t quit your day job.’

The move by Dell into smartphones is not a desperate hail-mary, though, but a calculated strategy. A mobile phone is no longer just a mobile phone, it is a mobile computing device. The Mini 3 is not so much a branch into a new direction as it is a natural evolution of Dell’s core market.

The flip side this evolution is Nokia. Nokia has built its reputation as a provider of mobile devices. However, it too sees the writing on the wall in terms of the future of mobile computing which is why it has developed the Booklet 3G netbook. Dell and Nokia are coming at the problem from two different sides and meeting somewhere in the middle.

Why China then? If Dell wants to get into the smartphone market, why not launch the Mini 3 in the United States? With devices like the Motorola Droid, HTC Droid Eris, and Samsung Behold II the Android platform is taking the industry by storm and Dell could ride that wave of Android popularity.

Perhaps the better question to ask though is “why not China?” In the United States the total mobile phone market is around 270 million and Dell would have to engage in an exclusive distribution arrangement that would limit the market to less than 90 million.

Verizon and AT&T may dominate the mobile provider market in the United States, but from a global perspective they are the big fish in a small pond. China Mobile alone has a subscriber base nearly double the entire United States market. América Móvil, the parent of the provider Dell will be distributed through in Brazil, has more subscribers than Verizon and AT&T combined.

Some, like my PC World peer Jared Newman, have suggested that perhaps Dell is avoiding the United States market because the Mini 3 is underwhelming and Dell knows it would flop. The Mini 3 may not compare well on paper with other whiz bang smartphones in the United States, like the iPhone or the Droid, but Asia uses its mobile devices differently. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but the iPhone hasn’t exactly been flying off the shelves since it launched in China.

As much as we like our gadgets, users in Europe and Asia are actually more demanding when it comes to mobile devices. Users in China expect to be able to order food from vending machines and pay for parking from their mobile phones.

It does seem risky for Dell, a brand established on servers and desktops, to dive into a highly competitive market like smartphones. At face value it may seem questionable to avoid launching in the United States. But, if Dell can carve a niche for the Mini 3 in a market like China it doesn’t need to try to be the next iPhone killer in the United States.

Dell’s Mini 3 strategy seems a little crazy. But, if it works Dell will be crazy like a fox and laughing all the way to the bank.

Apple Readies ‘World Mode’ iPhone

Posted by Max On November - 7 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

A new report from OTR Global says Apple plans to release a UMTS/CDMA hybrid iPhone in the third quarter of 2010. If true, the new iPhone will play nice with Verizon’s network and spell an end to AT&T’s exclusivity contract in the U.S. — which is already slated to end sometime next year.

The report also notes the new phone has a 2.8-inch screen and smaller body, which is consistent with photos that surfaced on iLounge last June. The device would be manufactured by Taiwan-based Asustek subsidiary Pegatron.

A “worldmode” iPhone would be a colossal win for Apple. The device could support any major carrier worldwide. Apple wouldn’t need to sell different versions of the iPhone to support different networks, and would most likely see a huge increase in sales.

This news could be bad for AT&T, which has been snubbed by Apple and users alike for poor coverage, dropped calls, delayed MMS support, and lack of tethering.

The OTR report says Verizon and Apple have already reached an agreement to sell the new iPhone next year, despite Verizon’s recent advertising attacks on the iPhone.

Of course, switching to Verizon might solve some issues with poor coverage and dropped calls, but users might have to fork out an additional $30 a month for a 5GB monthly “unlimited” tethering plan and $15 a month for exchange service.

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