Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Nokia E7

It is made for those peoples who use Internet alot.
and can't live without it.

It is touch Screen display with Qwerty keypad.
so you can enjoy both.

its Security level is also very impressive.

You can Email from it.
You can aces to your work and private email accounts
Work on PDF files and use Secure Internet connection

One great thing it is its camera which is 8 MP  which Quite no very Very Impressive.

you can watch TV on it, On demand web TV.

Features

Camera: 8MP
  • 8 megapixel camera


  • Fullscreen 16:9 viewfinder with easy-to-use touchscreen parameters


  • Dual LED flash


  • Face recognition software


  • Still images file format: JPEG/EXIF


  • Zoom up to 2x (digital) for still images


  • Zoom up to 3x (digital) for video


  • Secondary camera for video calls (VGA, 640 x 480 pixels)



  • Dimensions:
  • Size:123.7 x 62.4 x 13.6 mm



  • Volume: 97.8 cc



  • Weight (with battery): 176 g

    Full slide-out keyboard

    Memory: 16 GB Internal and supports micro SD Card


    Connectivity: Bluetooth version 3.0, HDMI, High-Speed USB 2.0 (micro USB connector) ,Micro USB connector and charging  ,Standard 3.5 mm AV connector

    Software & applications:
  • Symbian^3 OS for Nokia


  • Java MIDP 2.1


  • Qt 4.6.2, Web Runtime 7.2


  • HTML 4.1


  • Software updates Over the Air (FOTA) and Over the internet (FOTI)


  • Flash Lite 4.0


  • OMA DM 1.2, OMA Client provisioning 1.1


  • Internet: Web browsing with touch control

    Data network: 
  • GPRS/EDGE class B, multislot class 33


  • HSDPA Cat9, maximum speed up to 10.2 Mbps, HSUPA Cat5 2.0 Mbps


  • WLAN IEEE 802.11 b/g/n


  • Capability to serve as data modem


  • Support for MS Outlook synchronisation of contacts, calendar and notes


  • Radio: Stereo FM radio

    Gaming:  Use the touch UI to play games with side keys also be used to control game functions, Dedicated graphics processor with OpenGL 2.0 enables 3D graphics

    Email And Messaging:
  • Easy-to-use email client with attachment support for e.g. images, videos, music and documents .doc, .xls, .ppt, .pdf, .zip


  • HTML support for email


  • Full screen email viewer with HTML support


  • Unified email client for multiple protocols: Yahoo!® Mail, Gmail™, Windows Live™, Hotmail and other popular POP/IMAP services, Mail for Exchange


  • Editing of key office documents


  • Email widget for home screen


  • Chat instant messaging support: OVI Chat, Yahoo, AIM, Windows Live, Gtalk, MySpace*


  • Unified MMS/SMS editor


  • Conversational view for SMS


  • Push email and expanded portal support available through Nokia Messaging for Email and Instant Messaging

  • Nokia C7



    Its is Full touch glass display

    When its come to entertainment it is far good.

    Ane thing which is quite interesting and i also want to mention is it contain 16.7 million colours


    FEATURES

    Camera:
  • HD quality 720p resolution


  • Shoot 16:9 videos in HD


  • Video capture in 720p 25 fps with codecs H.264, MPEG-4


  • Settings for scene, video light, white balance, colour tone


  • Secondary camera VGA for video calls




  • 8 megapixel camera


  • Fullscreen 16:9 viewfinder with easy on-screen touch controls


  • 3rd generation dual LED flash


  • Face recognition software


  • Full focus


  • Focal length: 4.3 mm


  • F number/aperture: F2.8


  • Zoom up to 2x (digital) for still images


  • Zoom up to 3x (digital) for video


  • Secondary camera for video calls (VGA, 640 x 480 pixels)


  • VIDEO CAMERA



  • Dimensions:
  • Size:117.3 x 56.8 x 10.5 mm



  • Volume: 64 cc


  • Weight (with battery): 130 g

    Full slide-out keyboard

    Memory:
  • Internal memory: 8 GB


  • MicroSD memory card support up to 32 GB (max total 40 GB)




  • Connectivity:

  • Bluetooth 3.0



  • 2mm Charging connector


  • Micro USB connector and charging


  • High-Speed USB 2.0 (micro USB connector)


  • USB On-the-Go


  • 3.5 mm AV connector


  • FM Radio


  • FM Transmitter



  • Software & applications:

  • Symbian^3 OS for Nokia


  • Java MIDP 2.1


  • Qt 4.6.2, Web Runtime 7.2


  • HTML 4.1


  • Software updates Over the Air (FOTA) and Over the internet (FOTI)


  • Flash Lite 4.0


  • OMA DM 1.2, OMA Client provisioning 1.1




  • Internet:

  • Full web browsing of real web pages


  • Web browsing with touch control


  • Supported markup languages: HTML, XHTML MP, WML, CSS


  • Supported protocols: HTTP v1.1, WAP


  • TCP/IP support


  • Visual history, HTML and JavaScript support


  • Flash Lite 4 will support a majority of Flash Player 10.1 content


  • Nokia Mobile Search


  • RSS reader


  • Support for streaming video


  • Unified home screen access to Facebook and Twitter through Ovi by Nokia Social client


  • Social networking profiles visible in phone contacts


  • Upload and view photos and video and see locations via Ovi by Nokia Social client


  • Social networking events visible in phone calendar



  • Data network: 
  • GPRS/EDGE class B, multislot class 33


  • HSDPA Cat9, maximum speed up to 10.2 Mbps, HSUPA Cat5 2.0 Mbps


  • WLAN IEEE802.11 b/g/n


  • TCP/IP support


  • Capability to serve as data modem


  • Support for MS Outlook synchronisation of contacts, calendar and notes


  • Radio: Stereo FM radio (87.5-108 MHz/76-90 MHz)

    Gaming
  • Use the touch interface to play games


  • Dedicated graphics processor with OpenGL 2.0 enables 3D graphics


  • Java games


  • Use the accelerometer to play games



  • Email And Messaging:
  • Easy-to-use email client with attachment support for images, videos, music and documents .doc/ .docx, .xls/ .xlsx, .ppt/ .pptx, .pdf, .zip


  • HTML support for email


  • Unified email client for multiple protocols: Yahoo!® Mail, Gmail™, Windows Live™, Hotmail and other popular POP/IMAP services, Mail for Exchange, IBM Lotus traveler


  • Email web widget for home screen


  • Unified MMS/SMS editor


  • Conversational view for SMS


  • Push email and expanded portal support available through Nokia Messaging for email and instant messaging

  • Apple Iphone 4GB

    With Aplpe Iphone  Your finger does almost all the navigation, because the iPhone has only four hardware buttons. Once you power it up, sliding your finger across the screen unlocks the phone. Pinching, a two-finger movement, zooms the part of the screen framed by the pinch. Flick or drag your finger to scroll through menus or Web pages. The screen will autorotate content between landscape and portrait mode, depending on which application you're using

    For any feature that requires text input, the iPhone displays an on-screen keyboard that you can toggle between QWERTY text keys and numbers/symbols. It's still no match for the hardware keyboard you get on a BlackBerry or Treo, but it certainly beats any standard cell phone keypad.

    Display

    Diagonal Display Size
    3.5 inches
    Display Resolution
    352 x 416 pixels
    Display Type
    Color

    Form Factor

    Form Factor
    Candy bar 

    Operating System

    OS Supported
    Proprietary

    Processor

    Processor
    ARM
    Processor Speed
    620 MHz

    Camera

    MegaPixels
    2 MP
    Flash
    No
    Video Calling
    No

    GPS

    GPS
    No

    Battery

    Battery Type
    Lithium ion 
    Vendor Rated Talk Time
    8 hours
    Vendor Rated Standby Time
    250 hours

    Dimensions

    Dimensions
    4.5/2.4/0.46 inches
    Weight
    4.8 oz.

    Media

    Formats Supported
    • AAC
    • AIFF
    • Apple Lossless
    • MP3 VBR
    • Protected AAC
    • WAV

    Sync

    Sync Options Supported
    • Bluetooth
    • USB

    Mail

    Exchange Support
    Yes

    Nokia N97 Mini




     Hello everyone,

    Get ready to know about Nokia N97

    The sleek Nokia N97 mini integrates the web into your life and seamlessly connects you to your friends and favourite online services.

    Features

    It is great touch Screen phone with full touch Screen and Slide out Keypad
    Its internal memory is quite great which is 8GB
    and its camera is 5 MP

    Camera: 5MP

  • 5 megapixel camera (2584 x 1938 pixels) with Carl Zeiss optics


  • Still image formats: JPEG, EXIF


  • Autofocus and dual LED flash


  • Zoom up to 4x (digital)



  • Secondary camera for video calls (VGA, 640 x 480 pixels)


  • Video capture in MPEG-4 up to VGA at 30 fps
    Dimensions: 


  • Side slide with tilting screen


  • Dimensions: 113 x 52.5 x 14.2 mm


  • Volume: 75 cc


  • Additional size and shape information: Sliding tilt mechanism





  • Weight (with battery): 138 g

    Full slide-out keyboard

    Memory: 8GB Internal and support up to 16GB micro SD Card

    Power: 420 Mins talk time, Video call time 120 min

    Connectivity: Bluetooth version 2.0, TV out, Support for local and remote SyncML, High-Speed USB 2.0, 3.5 mm AV connector

    Software & applications: S60 5th edition, Symbian OS version 9.4, Voice commands, FOTA (Firmware update Over The Air), Automatic UI rotation, Software updates

    Internet: Web browsing with touch control, Integrated GPS, A-GPS receivers, Compass and accelerometer for correct orientation of display, Ovi Maps, Ovi Maps loader application via PC

    Radio: Stereo FM radio (87.5-108 MHz/76-90 MHz), RDS

    Gaming:  Use the touch UI to play games with side keys also be used to control game functions

    Data Network:


  • CSD


  • HSCSD, maximum speed 43.2 kbps


  • GPRS class A, multislot class 32, maximum speed 107/64.2 kbps (DL/UL)


  • WCDMA, maximum speed up to 3.6 Mbps


  • HSDPA, maximum speed up to 3.6 Mbps


  • WLAN IEEE 802.11b/g, maximum speed up to 11Mbps/54MBps


  • TCP/IP support


  • Capability to serve as data modem


  • Support for MS Outlook synchronisation of contacts, calendar and notes




  • Video clip length: up to 90 minutes


  • Video file format: .mp4 (default), .3gp (for MMS)


  • Settings for scene, video light, white balance, colour tone


  • Secondary camera

  • Samsung S8500

    Enter a new platform. With a boom. With a bang. A Bada kind of bang. Another of the big guns wants to play by their own rules. Samsung’s second spot in global market share was hard fought but it will be a while before they as much as wish the same for the Bada. They’ve been a consistent innovator over the last couple of years but getting baby Bada up and running must be quite a challenge.

    The Samsung S8500 Wave is Bada’s carrier vessel and it certainly looks interesting. It seems to have the right thing to make it newsworthy: slim profile and an absolutely gorgeous screen. But is it enough to make it a success?


    Over the past years new touchscreen platforms have been spreading like wildfire but not all of them have managed to catch on as well as their developers must have been hoping. Android fares well but still hasn’t quite overcome its growing pains, while the well settled Symbian platform is still coming to terms with touchscreen.


    Samsung S8500 Wave at a glance
    • General:GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz, UMTS 1900/2100 MHz, EDGE class 10, HSDPA 7.2 Mbps and HSUPA 2 Mbps
    • Form factor:Touchscreen bar
    • Dimensions:10.9 mm thin
    • Display:3.3" 16M-color Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen with 16:9 aspect ratio and 480 x 800 pixels resolution, scratch-resistant glass surface
    • Platform: Bada OS
    • CPU: 1 GHz processor
    • Memory: 2GB internal memory, microSD card slot
    • Camera: 5-megapixels auto-focus camera, 720p video recording
    • Connectivity: Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 3.0 with A2DP, standard microUSB port, GPS receiver with A-GPS, 3.5mm audio jack
    • Misc: Accelerometer for screen auto rotate, proximity sensor for screen auto-turn-off, ambient light sensor, FM radio with RDS, DivX/XviD support
    • Battery: 1500 mAh battery
    The S8500 Wave is among the best spec’d Samsung phones we’ve seen and it seems every aspect of the overall performance will have to pull its weight. Samsung are keen to focus attention on the young Bada OS, and that might as well bear future fruit. However, if the young platform fails to perform as expected, its shortcomings will be harder to forgive.

    In the geeks' world 720p video recording and 1 GHz CPU are probably the best remedies for a few usability issues. However they rise the cost of the device and that in turn prevents some people from purchasing it. And in a market where smartphones come in all tastes and flavors you really want to get you device in as many pockets as possible.

    But let’s not get ahead of ourselves and make hasty conclusions. We’ll hopefully know more about how Samsung will pitch the first Bada phone to the users so let’s waste no more time. Join us after the jump for the hardware inspection.

    Sony Ericson Viaz


    Introduction
    Sony Ericsson is an alliance of two tech giants and with phones like the Vivaz it shows. It’s a gadget all the way, one that will galvanize geeks and charm the regular user.
    A whole bunch of point-and-shoot cameras today boast 720p video recording, but are they not an endangered species feeling enormous pressure on both sides? For one, there are compact video recording DSLRs pushing down with competitive price tags, and then cameraphones are eating into compact camera territory with comparable still image resolution and video capture.



    Eight megapixel still images and 720p video with continuous auto focus make the Sony Ericsson Vivaz a predator of point-and-shoot cameras. The Vivaz is not just a cameraphone though, it’s a smartphone as well – a tricked out Symbian running on a 720MHz CPU with a 3.2” nHD display to show it all off. That’s all in a package more compact than any combination of a stand-alone camera and a phone you can think of.

    High-end smartphones have a long history of trading compact size for cramming in one feature more than the competition. The Sony Ericsson Vivaz strikes a perfect balance between being compact and feature-full – great news for anyone who doesn’t appreciate the recent craze of smartphones the size of a table… umm… tablet.

    Key features
    • 3.2" 16M-color resistive touchscreen of 640 x 360 pixel resolution
    • 8 megapixel autofocus camera with LED flash, face and smile detection, geotagging and touch focus
    • HD 720p video recording @ 24fps with continuous auto focus
    • Symbian OS 9.4 S60 5th, topped with a custom-brewed homescreen and media menu
    • 720 MHz CPU, PowerVR SGX dedicated graphics accelerator
    • Quad-band GSM support
    • 3G with HSDPA 10.2Mbps and HSUPA 2Mbps support
    • Wi-Fi and GPS with A-GPS
    • microSD card slot (up to 16GB, 8GB card in the box)
    • Built-in accelerometer
    • Turn-to-mute
    • TV out
    • Stereo FM Radio
    • microUSB and stereo Bluetooth v2.0
    • Web browser has full Flash support
    • Preinstalled Wisepilot navigation software
    • Office document viewer
    • Decent audio quality
    Main disadvantages
    • No camera lens protection
    • No auto mode for the flash/video light
    • LED flash not powerful enough
    • The S60 5th edition UI isn't to the best in class standards
    • No proximity sensor sensor to lock the screen during a call
    • No DivX or XviD support out-of-the-box
    • No smart or voice dialing
    • No office document editing (without a paid upgrade)
    • No stereo speakers
    • No digital compass (magnetometer)
    • Videocalling uses only the main camera (no secondary one)
    The feature list leaves very little to complain about, so is it time retire your old compact camera and make the jump the Vivaz? That’s what we’ll try to find out. As for its performance as a smartphone the list of key features suggests smooth sailing most of the way.

    Samsung B5310



    Introduction
    The S3650 Corby was just the beginning of a lineup that appears to have no visible end. There is a Corby for the touchscreen addicts, a Corby for the music buffs, Corby for the heavy texters, Corby for the young, and one for their parents. That’s pretty much everyone, don’t you think? We guess there should even be a Corby for the bored-with-the-Corby.

    The founding member of the Corby wasn’t announced so long ago, but so much has been changed. Well, if you put the S3650 Corby and the recently announced B5310 CorbyPRO side by side you'll notice one thing that hasn't changed at all: design. But on the inside they are very different, indeed.

    The Samsung CorbyPRO is meant for a different range of users altogether. It combines great texting and the intuitive touchscreen control tops that up with a nice connectivity package (such as HSDPA, Wi-Fi, GPS and a 3.5mm audio jack) and all that is delivered at a bargain price.

    Key features
              Quad-band GSM/EDGE
    • Dual-band UMTS support with HSDPA
    • 2.8" resistive TFT touchscreen of QVGA resolution
    • Four-row side-slide QWERTY keyboard
    • 150 MB onboard storage, microSD card slot (up to 16GB)
    • 3.15 megapixel fixed-focus camera with smile detection, QVGA video @ 15fps
    • FM radio with RDS
    • Find Music recognition service
    • TouchWiz and Cartoon UI
    • Social networking integration with direct file uploads
    • GPS with A-GPS support
    • Wi-Fi and GPS
    • 3.5mm audio jack
    • Accelerometer sensor for screen auto rotation
    • Office document viewer
    • Excellent web browser
    • Push email
    • Smart unlock
    • Replaceable rear covers (Fashion Jackets)

    Main disadvantages
    • Disappointing sunlight legibility
    • The camera has no autofocus or flash
    • Video recording maxes out at QVGA@15fps
    • All preinstalled games are trial versions only
    • Google Maps is the only GPS navigation app
    • microSD slot is under the battery cover
    The original Corby was all about design, about touchscreen, about budget. The CorbyPRO, on the other hand, has managed to keep all that but goes much further by adding some killer features that are well above the S3650 league.

    For instance, now you get UMTS support with HSDPA which will dramatically boost web browsing. But the really big news here is Wi-Fi support. It is a great addition to the comfy QWERTY keyboard and the numerous social networking services that the phone gives you access to.

    Strangely, the latest of the Corbies also has an integrated GPS receiver. You can use it for image geotagging as well as for navigation. Unfortunately, if you decide to use your CorbyPRO into a GPS nav device you'll have to solely rely on the preloaded Google Maps app or on a third-party Java alternative.

    And when it comes to the Corby basics, we shouldn't forget to mention the 2.8" touchscreen. Well, it turned out to be resistive this time around but that isn't necessarily a bad thing. The colorful UI is also aboard and, unfortunately, so is the fixed-focus camera (3-megapixel this time).