Blog Directory Whats HOT n NEW: July 2007
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Wednesday, July 25, 2007

HTC


HTC has launched the innovative Touch, a half-inch-thick touchscreen phone that responds to the swipe of a finger. The device, powered by Windows Mobile 6, isn't scheduled to be released stateside until the fourth quarter of this year, but since you can order it now from sites like MobilePlanet (for a sky-high $594), we decided to test a European model to find out if HTC's TouchFLO technology lives up to the hype.

With a look that better resembles a super-skinny PDA than a traditional mobile phone, the 3.9 x 2.2 x 0.5-inch HTC Touch, which is slightly smaller than the 4.5 x 2.4 x 0.5-inch iPhone, weighs just four ounces and can be tucked into a shirt or jacket pocket without adding unneeded bulk. The soft, black rubberized body (also available in Wasabi Green), partnered with the device's contoured edges, made for a solid, comfortable grip. The phone doesn't have many buttons--just a five-way navigator and a Send and End button for calls--so the large, bright, 2.8-inch LCD takes up most of the surface area. The left side houses a sliding volume control and the right side has a small camera button and a narrow piece of silver plastic you can peel back to insert a SIM card and microSD card.

While the forthcoming iPhone relies strictly on finger input, HTC presents users with the option of using a digit or one of the two included styli. While both input methods offer excellent navigation, it's not until you ditch the stylus for a finger that you'll get the full Touch experience. Swiping a thumb upward from the HTC logo to the top of the display reveals a screen that grants you access to music, photo, and video content. Here you can listen to songs, view slideshows, or watch video clips saved to the handset or to the included 1GB microSD Card. You can't zoom in on maps and pictures, as you can with Apple's Multi-touch technology, but otherwise we like HTC's implementation.

A swipe from the left or right (which rotates the screen using a cool 3D effect) lets you quickly jump into your contacts and applications. The screen flip is silky smooth, but the swiping motion may require a small mental adjustment: the Touch requires its users to apply a firm amount of pressure when executing the motion, which may feel odd to those accustomed to treating their screens delicately. Navigating with your finger feels much more natural than using a stylus, and depending on how fast you swipe, you can whiz through contacts and messages or methodically scroll through them.

The new HTC-designed homescreen sits on top of Windows Mobile 6 and provides one-touch access to weather forecasts, appointments, and other essential data. When you need to respond to an e-mail or enter a Web address, you can pull up a virtual keyboard by tapping an icon. This is most definitely not a messaging device, as you'll need the stylus to peck out e-mails, but the Touch gets the job done.

A triband (900/1800/1900-MHz) unlocked phone, the Touch uses a GPRS/EDGE connection for surfing the Web when you're out of hotspot range, which made visiting image-heavy sites like CNN.com a patience test. It took just over three minutes to load the page completely, although we could start reading text within the first 30 seconds. Fortunately, an 802.11b/g Wi-Fi radio is built into the handset, which cut CNN.com's load time to 58 seconds.

The Touch also supports stereo Bluetooth for jamming to your favorite MP3, AAC, and WMA files, but it took several pairing attempts with a variety of headsets before we were able to listen to Aerosmith and RUN-DMC's "Walk This Way" through the iLuv i202. The two-megapixel camera delivered adequate still-image and video quality, and we easily navigated the camera's various settings, which include white balance, resolution, and up to 10X zoom, depending on the photo size. Our only gripe is the lack of flash.

Since the Touch is powered by the Professional Edition of Windows Mobile 6, it supports not only Direct Push e-mail but also the full version of Office Mobile. That means you can view and edit Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files. The 201-MHz OMAP 850 proved to be a bit sluggish; opening a program or navigating drop-down menus sometimes caused the Touch to hang. On the plus side, we experienced good call quality with our Cingular SIM card, despite a few dropped calls (yes, using Cingular). Voices were clear and loud, and people on the other end of our calls didn't have any complaints. The Touch is rated to deliver up to 5 hours of talk time and up to 8.3 days of standby.

While we would've liked to see a snappier processor under the hood, the HTC Touch delivers on its promise of an innovative interface. The TouchFLO navigation is far from a gimmick; it's an extremely useful technology that's smooth and effortless to use. Although it's difficult to say how well the Touch will stack up against the iPhone--given that we haven't tested the latter and that we don't yet know what the subsidized price of the Touch will be--it has the makings of being a formidable low-cost iPhone competitor. Power users and messaging addicts should look elsewhere, but the Touch is the perfect little phone for people who want on-the-go Outlook and multimedia access with a little flash.

Monday, July 23, 2007

SONY Portable Reader System


The Portable Reader offers a new and convenient digital reading experience. It boasts an amazing screen with technology that rivals text on paper. Weighing less than 9 ounces and at only 1/2" thin, it's more compact than many paperbacks. Plus, it comes with a soft, black cover and software that seamlessly allows you to search and browse thousands of electronic book titles from the Connect™ eBookstore and then easily transfer from your PC to your Sony Reader with built-in memory and multi-format support, you can take many of your favorite titles and documents with you. So compact and convenient, you'll want to take it everywhere.


Impressive, paper-like display
The Sony® Reader provides a new way to experience reading. It boasts an impressive 6 inch display1, utilizing breakthrough E Ink® technology that’s almost paper-like. In addition, the text can be magnified for sight-impaired readers. Daylight readable, high contrast, high resolution, near 180º viewing angle

Ultra portable
The Sony® Reader offers a unique, on-the-go reading experience. With a very compact and lightweight design, you can take it almost anywhere. More compact than many paperbacks, it weighs 9 ounces6 (without cover) and is ½” thin8. You can easily hold it in one hand while sipping coffee with the other. And with its rechargeable battery, you can turn up to 7,500 continuous pages on a single charge. 2 Reduce multiple, large hardcover books into a compact package for people on-the-go.

Content Storage Capability
The Sony® Reader offers a unique, on-the-go reading experience. With a very compact and light design you can take it almost anywhere. And with 64MB of internal memory9, and a slot for optional removable memory cards you can take many titles, user-selected Web content, or other supported documents for reading on the go. Will hold up to 80 electronic books in internal memory and hundreds more with Memory Stick® media or SD memory card4 (sold separately).

Multiple eBook titles available
The Sony® Reader will allow you to search, browse and discover thousands of popular electronic book titles from the CONNECT™ eBook online store. You can then purchase and download these titles to your PC and easily transfer to your Sony® Reader3.

More Than eBooks
The Sony Reader isn’t just about reading electronic books. Using the included CONNECT™ Reader PC Software, you can easily transfer Adobe® PDF documents, BBeB Book, and other text file formats to the Reader5. Also, search, browse and download user-selected RSS Web content from the CONNECT™ Store to the PC and easily transfer to the Sony® Reader3. Take along Web newsfeeds, blogs and more to read5.

Exceptional Battery life
The Sony® Reader is extremely energy efficient. Its rechargeable internal battery can power you through up to 7,500 continues page turns2, so you are ready for the long haul. The battery can be recharged in as little as 4 hours with the included AC adapter and even can recharge from your PCs USB port if you choose.
Model Number: PRS-500

Sunday, July 22, 2007

HP Pavilion dv9500t series


Offering the latest in multitasking and multimedia, the dv9500t is a desktop-replacement-level entertainment powerhouse. It's also packed with innovative optional features, including a fingerprint reader, and it sports our cool new "Radiance" finish.

Windows Vista for smooth operations
The power of two
The dv9500t features the powerful Intel Core Duo and 64-bit New Core 2 Duo processors. With two execution cores on a single chip, it can run multiple multimedia applications in parallel without slowing the system. This model also supports dual hard drives with up to 240GB of storage (120GB x 2) for accommodating all your digital treasures.

Elegant and functional
The dv9500t features our new notebook finish: a high-gloss, black resin with an inlaid "Radiance" pattern. It has a full-sized keyboard with separate numeric keypad; you control the volume and launch buttons by tapping or swiping your finger across a strip on the keyboard.

Fingerprint security (optional)
Goodbye multiple passwords. Simply swipe your finger across the integrated reader (optional) on the side of the panel to log on to your dv9500t and to password-protected Web sites and documents.

Equipped for video chats
Stay in touch with friends and family using the optional integrated low-light VGA webcam and two omni-directional microphones, which also support VOIP applications.

Luxurious digital entertainment
An Nvidia GeForce 8600M GS graphics card with 256MB of dedicated video memory will bring you first-rate games and multimedia. The 17" WXGA high-definition widescreen with BrightView is standard; for higher resolution choose WSXGA+, or go for home theater viewing with the Ultra BrightView. You'll get high-quality sound from integrated Altec Lansing stereo speakers, and you get two stereo headphone jacks (one of which is S/PDIF capable).

Ideal for music, photos, and videos
The dv9500t features our latest version of QuickPlay, 3.2, which launches DVDs, music, and photos at the touch of a button. An included remote tucks away in the ExpressCard slot and lets you control QuickPlay from up to 10 feet away. Transfer photos from your digital camera to the dv9500t via the 5-in-1 digital media card reader, then use the Photosmart Premier software for photo editing, printing, organizing, sharing, and storing. You can turn pictures into movies, edit video, and create CDs and DVDs. Added bonus: burn your own, silkscreen-quality labels on your discs when you can choose the LightScribe option on the SuperMulti DVD+/RW/R drive.

Plentiful connections
The HP xb3000 Notebook Expansion Base (sold separately) connects your dv9500t to peripherals, including a monitor if you want a desktop experience. You get an integrated 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet (RJ-45), four USB 2.0 (without fingerprint reader), a 5-in-1 digital media card reader, an ExpressCard/54, an RJ-11, an IEEE 1394 FireWire, an S-Video, and a Consumer IR. Intel Pro/Wireless 4965AGN WLAN with Bluetooth is optional.

Friday, July 20, 2007

THE APPLE IPHONE


Capping literally years of speculation on perhaps the most intensely followed unconfirmed product in Apple's history -- and that's saying a lot -- the iPhone has been announced today. Yeah, we said it: "iPhone," the name the entire free world had all but unanimously christened it from the time it'd been nothing more than a twinkle in Stevie J's eye (comments, Cisco?). Sweet, glorious specs of the 11.6 millimeter device (that's frickin' thin, by the way) include a 3.5-inch 480 x 320 touchscreen display with multi-touch support and a proximity sensor to turn off the screen when it's close to your face, 2 megapixel cam, 4GB or 8 GB of storage, Bluetooth 2.0 with EDR and A2DP, WiFi that automatically engages when in range, and quad-band GSM radio with EDGE. Perhaps most amazingly, though, it somehow runs OS X with support for Widgets, Google Maps, and Safari, and iTunes (of course) with CoverFlow out of the gate. A partnership with Yahoo will allow all iPhone customers to hook up with free push IMAP email. Apple quotes 5 hours of battery life for talk or video, with a full 16 hours in music mode -- no word on standby time yet. In a twisted way, this is one rumor mill we're almost sad to see grind to a halt; after all, when is the next time we're going to have an opportunity to run this picture? The 4GB iPhone will go out the door in the US as a Cingular exclusive for $499 on a two-year contract, 8GB for $599. Ships Stateside in June, Europe in fourth quarter, Asia in 2008.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

GAGETS

Pod

iPod
Manufacturer Apple Inc.
Type Portable media player
First available First iPod available in 2001.
Online service iTunes Store
Units sold Over 100 million units worldwide, as of April 2007[1]

iPod is a brand of portable media players designed and marketed by Apple and launched in October 2001. Devices in the iPod range are primarily digital audio players, designed around a central click wheel — with the exception of the iPod shuffle, which uses buttons because of its size. As of October 2005, the line-up consists of the video-capable fifth generation iPod, the smaller iPod nano, and the display-less iPod shuffle. The iPod line used to contain the iPod mini, until being discontinued for the introduction of the iPod nano. The full-sized model stores media on an internal hard drive, while the iPod nano and iPod shuffle use flash memory due to their smaller size. Like many digital music players, iPods can also serve as external data storage devices.

Apple's iTunes software is used to transfer music to the devices. As a free jukebox application, iTunes stores an entire music library on the user's computer and can play, burn, and rip music from a CD. It can also transfer photos, videos, games, and calendars to the models that support them. Apple focused its development on the iPod's unique user interface and its ease of use, rather than on technical capability. As of April 2007, the iPod had sold over 100 million units worldwide,[1] making it the best-selling