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Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Nokia N99

Nokia N99 Nseries phone picture surfaces for left, and for right -->
If the picture below are real, looks like Nokia took a page out of HTC book and created a phone with sliding-out QWERTY keyboard - Nokia N99:


Nothing official of course, it was submitted by e-mail to Mobile Diva Darla Mack, probably by an eager fan from Nokia labs
Nokia Nseries N99 multimedia computer supposedly will have:
9 way front joystick button, 16GB FLASH internal memory, up to 4GB mini SD slot, 16:9 3.2″ wide screen, GPS, MP3, DIVX XVID MPEG AVI video reading, WLAN WIFI, qwerty pad, 8MP camera, 3CCD 720 pixel wide 30fps video capture.
Now, if these specs would be true, I think Nokia N99 would be the first NSeries cellphone to truly justify the name of “multimedia computer”. But judging from the number (N99), it will be some time until this beauty comes out. We should see Nseries N97 yet.

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Samsung mobile





At Samsung Electronics’ Telecommunications Business, we recognise that protecting the environment is a significant issue. Our own sustained growth will only be possible if we fulfill our obligations and responsibilities for environmental protection. But recognising the issue is not enough. So we are making every effort to take the lead in making the 21st century a time of richness and environmental wealth. Our quality products and services are the foundation for us to reach this goal. All of our executives and employees are committed to implementing practices that improve our environmental performance. Our “Five Green Management Activities” are our guide - Greening of Management, Greening of Products, Greening of Processes, Greening of Workplaces, and Greening of Communities... Based on these activities, we have been improving global environmental and safety management, developing environmentally- conscious products, reducing environmental impacts through process improvement, making worksites safe and pleasant, and cooperating with local communities. We are committed to being an environmentally and socially responsible corporate citizen. On the environment side, we will stick to the Green Management principles, participating in activities to protect the environment so that it can be passed on to the next generation intact. And for social contributions, we will focus more on the spirit of sharing and cooperation to make our society a harmonious and caring one. Going forward, we will continue to improve all of our management processes, including green management, safety management and health management. Samsung’s growing environmental and social credentials are helping to establish its status as a world class company. Thank you.

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iphone 3g



Applications designed for iPhone are nothing short of amazing. That’s because they leverage the groundbreaking technology in iPhone — like the Multi-Touch interface, the accelerometer, GPS, real-time 3D graphics, and 3D positional audio. Just tap into the App Store and choose from thousands of applications ready to download now.

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Nokia 8280










N okia announced an exciting new mobile phone for its select CDMA markets outside the US. The 3G speed, music capability and elegant, dual-slide function of this device brings consumers high-speed, high tech combined with good looks






Nokia 8208 CDMA handset
With its uncomplicated functionality, the new Nokia 8208 gives consumers a range of features, while turning heads with its design. "We instinctively wanted to carry out a very modern look and feel in the design of our new cell phones, and to bring consumers a wide range of features," said Larry Paulson, Nokia Senior Vice President, CDMA Devices. "Consumers want devices that are beautiful to look at and reflect their individuality, but also have the functionality that keeps them connected to their world easily. The Nokia 8208 cell phone echoes our goal to broaden the Nokia handset portfolio of high tech, yet stylish phones in select global CDMA markets."




Nokia 8208 features
The sophisticated Nokia 8208 features a smooth, dual-slide form factor, and packs a dose of entertainment with its MP3 music player and 3 megapixel camera. The Nokia 8208 provides easy access to tunes through the phone's dedicated music buttons, where music can be played for up to 20 continuous hours. Moments in life are captured in crisp, clear digital photos with the 3.0 megapixel digital camera.



8208 Nokia mobile phone
For easy music storage, a 16GB external memory card slot holds up to approximately 4,000 songs in AAC+ and MP3 digital music formats. When reaching for contacts, use the Speaker-Independent Name Dialing mode for hands free dialing, or assign photos to favourite contacts to quickly see who's calling, or sending multi-media messages. With the super fast 3G connection, no more waiting around to get to the things you most like to use.


Nokia 8208 review info & availability
The Nokia 8208 mobile phone is expected to launch in select CDMA markets, in the first quarter of 2009. As soon as we receive a Nokia 8208 test sample, we will publish a photo gallery with high resolution pictures, followed by an extended Nokia 8208 review. For full technical specifications follow this link

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Nokia mobile photo devices

C onnected multimedia cameras provide a unique ability to spontaneously capture and share your experiences wherever, whenever. Whether you’re hanging out with friends, at a concert, visiting somewhere amazing on holiday or simply looking for inspiration in your working life, your camera phone allows you to capture the moment and instantly share it. Full size, uncompressed photos can be shared directly from the handset or stored to edit and print later. In 2006, Nokia sold approximately 140 million connected cameras, and Nokia’s substantial share of this market makes it the world’s largest manufacturer of digital camera devices. As mobile photography functionality develops at a rapid pace.



Nokia camera phones - Carl Zeiss optics
Whatever your photography needs or wants may be, there is a Nokia camera phone for you. But camera phones are not simply about capturing a moment. All Nokia camera devices offer a range of options to also view, edit, share, upload, store and print the photographs you take. Nokia has an extensive range of megapixel camera devices which allow you to take print-quality photographs. In addition to Carl Zeiss optics on the Nokia N73, Nokia N90, Nokia N93, Nokia N93i and the 5 megapixel Nokia N95, the Nokia Nseries portfolio features a range of different settings to capture the best quality image.
Nokia camera phones - Optical zoom and autofocus
Zoom - get a little closer to the target. The Nokia N93 and Nokia N93i feature 3x continuous optical zoom and all other Nokia Nseries devices feature 20x digital zoom.
Autofocus - the high-performance autofocus feature on the Nokia N73, Nokia N90, Nokia N93, Nokia N93i and Nokia N95 makes taking beautiful, sharp photographs simple. Pressing the shutter key halfway focuses in on the target, after which pressing the key all the way captures the image. Furthermore, the advanced autofocus on the Nokia N73 renders crisper detail in the photographs thanks to reduced movement distortion.
Macro mode - allows you to get sharp pictures even within very short distances. With a normal focus range, this is not possible.
Active camera toolbar - provides intuitive and fast control of key camera functions on the Nokia N73, Nokia N93, Nokia N93i and Nokia N95.
Flash - take pictures in even the darkest locations with a built-in LED flash featuring on Nokia N70, Nokia N71, Nokia N72, Nokia N73, Nokia N80, Nokia N90, Nokia N92, Nokia N93, Nokia N93i and Nokia N95.
Sequence mode - when selected, the camera will take 6 images in two seconds with one press of the capture key.
Nokia smartphone - Large format displays
See your photographs in up to millions of colors with Nokia's high-resolution screen displays. The Nokia N95, for example, features a large 2.6" QVGA display (240 x 320 pixels) with millions of colors and a wide viewing angle. The Nokia N80, on the other hand, features a high definition display (352 x 416 pixels) which incorporates 90% more pixels than QVGA displays commonly found on smartphones and PDAs.

Nokia camera phones - Photo editing
With in-built photo editing capabilities on most Nokia camera phones, you can make sure your photos are exactly the way you like them. You can crop images, make them lighter or brighter, frame them or even add text and different effects.

Nokia mobile phones - Photo and Video Sharing
Share your photos and videos with family, friends and colleagues quickly and easily via blogging, email or Bluetooth wireless technology while retaining full image quality. Depending on network operator or service provider, Nokia Nseries users can also make video calls or share images and video clips via video sharing. Or impress your friends by showing a slideshow directly on your TV with the Nokia N93, Nokia N93i or Nokia N95, complete with your own soundtrack. If you want to upload your uncompressed, full-size images and share them online, you might like a site like flickr.com. Flickr is a community-driven online photo-sharing site that easily allows you to share your photos with friends, family, and the world. Once uploaded, your photos can be sent to your blog, edited, organized, tagged, shared and much more. Alternatively you can quickly and easily create your own blog using Vox, a blogging service from Six Apart. Here you can either import your images from your Flickr account or you can upload both video and still images directly from your Nokia Nseries multimedia computer. Like Flickr, Vox has been integrated into selected Nokia Nseries devices which makes uploading your photos or videos quick and easy.

Nokia N73 mobile phone - MiniSD flash memory card
All new photos and video clips on Nokia photography devices can be either manually or automatically transferred to a compatible PC for management and organization. Furthermore, for example with the Nokia N73's 40 MB internal memory and a separately available 2 GB miniSD card, you can store up to 2400 high-resolution (2048 x 1536 pixels) photographs.

Nokia Nseries cellphones - Image printing
With most Nokia Nseries devices you can print images using three methods:
PictBridge - where the handset is connected directly to a compatible printer with a USB cable
Bluetooth - where you can send photos wirelessly to compatible printers
Memory card - simply insert your memory card into a compatible printer or photo kiosk
Nokia and Adobe - Photoshop Album Starter Edition
Nokia and Adobe Systems Incorporated teamed up to respond to the growing demand to store and organize content captured with mobile multimedia devices. As a result of the collaboration, users of Nokia imaging devices will be able to better manage the images and videos taken with their camera phone, and edit them on a computer. Thanks to the cooperation, Adobe Photoshop Album Starter Edition has been made available free of charge to the standard sales pack of Nokia's imaging-optimized devices, while Adobe Premiere
Elements 3.0 comes bundled with the Nokia N93i.

Nokia and HP - Bluetooth and Pictbridge printing
Since February 2003, Nokia and HP have collaborated to provide easy connectivity between printers and mobile devices. HP's expertise in printing technology has played a significant role in making the printing experience effortless in numerous Nokia imaging devices. Consumers can turn their favorite photos into prints with a few clicks of a button using Bluetooth- or PictBridge-enabled printers. Alternatively, printing is possible by inserting the MMC card into compatible printers. These printing capabilities extend beyond photos to other types of content, including multimedia message service (MMS) messages, email, text messages, notepad files, contacts and calendar items.

Nokia and Carl Zeiss - High end digital cameras
Nokia and Carl Zeiss, the world's leading optics company, joined forces to set a new quality standard for mobile imaging by incorporating Carl Zeiss optics in Nokia's highest-end camera phones. The expertise of Carl Zeiss is used to develop superior lens modules for Nokia devices. As a result of this collaboration, consumers will be able to capture, share, store and print better quality images with Nokia's flagship imaging devices. The first device including Carl Zeiss optics was the Nokia N90 and the latest devices are the Nokia N73, Nokia N93, Nokia N93i and Nokia N95.

Nokia and Flickr - Photo sharing community
Nokia and Flickr are making it easy for mobile photographers to upload and add comments to photos to their online Flickr accounts directly from their Nokia Nseries multimedia computers - without the need to download or install any additional applications. Consumers can upload their full size photos to Flickr directly from the camera or image Gallery application on their Nokia Nseries device, either one at a time or in groups of six. Another supported feature is the ability to add comments to the photos that are uploaded from the Nokia Nseries device. The Nokia N95, Nokia N93i, Nokia N93, Nokia N73 and Nokia N72 are the first Nokia Nseries devices to support Flickr.

Nokia and Vox - Video sharing community
Nokia and Vox are cooperating to make it even easier to upload and share video and photo content on the Web. Vox is a service from blog pioneers Six Apart and is designed to make it as simple as possible to create and maintain a blog. Starting with the Nokia N93i, Nokia Nseries users will be able to upload original size video and photo content, and update their Vox blogs directly from their multimedia computers. Existing users of Nokia Nseries multimedia computers can download the Vox settings file from the Vox website for the following models: Nokia N70 Music Edition, N72, N73, N73 Music Edition, N80 Internet Edition, N93 and N95.

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New Nokia Mobile phone E61




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History Of Mobile Phones

In 1908, U.S. Patent 887,357 for a wireless telephone was issued in to Nathan B. Stubblefield of Murray, Kentucky. He applied this patent to "cave radio" telephones and not directly to cellular telephony as the term is currently understood.[2] Cells for mobile phone base stations were invented in 1947 by Bell Labs engineers at AT&T and further developed by Bell Labs during the 1960s. Radiophones have a long and varied history going back to Reginald Fessenden's invention and shore-to-ship demonstration of radio telephony, through the Second World War with military use of radio telephony links and civil services in the 1950s, while hand-held cellular radio devices have been available since 1973. A patent for the first wireless phone as we know today was issued in US Patent Number 3,449,750 to George Sweigert of Euclid, Ohio on June 10, 1969.
In 1945, the zero generation (0G) of mobile telephones was introduced. 0G mobile phones, such as Mobile Telephone Service, were not cellular, and so did not feature "handover" from one base station to the next and reuse of radio frequency channels.[citation needed] Like other technologies of the time, it involved a single, powerful base station covering a wide area, and each telephone would effectively monopolize a channel over that whole area while in use. The concepts of frequency reuse and handoff as well as a number of other concepts that formed the basis of modern cell phone technology are first described in U.S. Patent 4,152,647 , issued May 1, 1979 to Charles A. Gladden and Martin H. Parelman, both of Las Vegas, Nevada and assigned by them to the United States Government.
This is the first embodiment of all the concepts that formed the basis of the next major step in mobile telephony, the Analog cellular telephone. Concepts covered in this patent (cited in at least 34 other patents) also were later extended to several satellite communication systems. Later updating of the cellular system to a digital system credits this patent.
Martin Cooper, a Motorola researcher and executive is widely considered to be the inventor of the first practical mobile phone for handheld use in a non-vehicle setting. Cooper is the inventor named on "Radio telephone system" filed on October 17, 1973 with the US Patent Office and later issued as US Patent 3,906,166.[3] Using a modern, if somewhat heavy portable handset, Cooper made the first call on a handheld mobile phone on April 3, 1973 to a rival, Dr. Joel S. Engel of Bell Labs.[4]
The first commercial citywide cellular network was launched in Japan by NTT in 1979. Fully automatic cellular networks were first introduced in the early to mid 1980s (the 1G generation). The Nordic Mobile Telephone (NMT) system went online in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden in 1981.[5]
In 1983, Motorola DynaTAC was the first approved mobile phone by FCC in the United States. In 1984, Bell Labs developed modern commercial cellular technology (based, to a large extent, on the Gladden, Parelman Patent), which employed multiple, centrally controlled base stations (cell sites), each providing service to a small area (a cell). The cell sites would be set up such that cells partially overlapped. In a cellular system, a signal between a base station (cell site) and a terminal (phone) only need be strong enough to reach between the two, so the same channel can be used simultaneously for separate conversations in different cells.
Cellular systems required several leaps of technology, including handover, which allowed a conversation to continue as a mobile phone traveled from cell to cell. This system included variable transmission power in both the base stations and the telephones (controlled by the base stations), which allowed range and cell size to vary. As the system expanded and neared capacity, the ability to reduce transmission power allowed new cells to be added, resulting in more, smaller cells and thus more capacity. The evidence of this growth can still be seen in the many older, tall cell site towers with no antennae on the upper parts of their towers. These sites originally created large cells, and so had their antennae mounted atop high towers; the towers were designed so that as the system expanded—and cell sizes shrank—the antennae could be lowered on their original masts to reduce range.
The first "modern" network technology on digital 2G (second generation) cellular technology was launched by Radiolinja (now part of Elisa Group) in 1991 in Finland on the GSM standard which also marked the introduction of competition in mobile telecoms when Radiolinja challenged incumbent Telecom Finland (now part of TeliaSonera) who ran a 1G NMT network.
The first data services appeared on mobile phones starting with person-to-person SMS text messaging in Finland in 1993. First trial payments using a mobile phone to pay for a Coca Cola vending machine were set in Finland in 1998. The first commercial payments were mobile parking trialled in Sweden but first commercially launched in Norway in 1999. The first commercial payment system to mimick banks and credit cards was launched in the Philippines in 1999 simultaneously by mobile operators Globe and Smart. The first content sold to mobile phones was the ringing tone, first launched in 1998 in Finland. The first full internet service on mobile phones was i-Mode introduced by NTT DoCoMo in Japan in 1999.
In 2001 the first commercial launch of 3G (Third Generation) was again in Japan by NTT DoCoMo on the WCDMA standard.[6]
Until the early 1990s, most mobile phones were too large to be carried in a jacket pocket, so they were typically installed in vehicles as car phones. With the miniaturization of digital components and the development of more sophisticated batteries, mobile phones have become smaller and lighter.
With its use by Nokia as the default ringtone, The Gran Vals by Francisco Tarrega has become arguably the most recognised tune in the world.

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Mobile Phone


A mobile phone (also known as a handphone,[1] wireless phone, cell phone, cellular phone, cellular telephone or cell telephone) is a long-range, electronic device used for mobile voice or data communication over a network of specialized base stations known as cell sites. In addition to the standard voice function of a mobile phone, telephone, current mobile phones may support many additional services, and accessories, such as SMS for text messaging, email, packet switching for access to the Internet, gaming, Bluetooth, infrared, camera with video recorder and MMS for sending and receiving photos and video, MP3 player, radio and GPS. Most current mobile phones connect to a cellular network of base stations (cell sites), which is in turn interconnected to the public switched telephone network (PSTN) (the exception is satellite phones).

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