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In less than twenty years, mobile telephones have gone from being rare and expensive pieces of equipment used by businesses to a pervasive low-cost personal item. Also, these are often packed with features that offer users far more than just the capability to text message and make voice calls. These may include internet browsing, music (MP3) playback, email, watch/alarm, built-in cameras, games, radio, Push to talk and Personal Information Management.
This page is dedicated in providing you reviews and information on top cellphone models. |
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| Compare Top 5 Cellular Phones |
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The Nokia N90 is targeted at high-technology enthusiasts who value the ultimate in connected mobile photography. Facilitated by its two screens, the Nokia N90 features two ergonomic modes for instant photo and video capture. Simply twist the unique rotating camera barrel, and automatically the 2 megapixel camera is ready to shoot high quality photos, in a snap. |
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Samsung's first PDA phone with EV-DO high-speed data, first with a QWERTY mini-keyboard, and first with built-in wi-fi. This Windows Mobile Pocket PC phone also sports a 520 MHz processor, 128 MB of memory, and an SDIO card slot. Other features include Bluetooth, infrared, 3D stereo speakers, and speaker-independent voice dialing. |
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Audiovox SMT5600
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Released for Cingular / AT&T Wireless, the Audiovox SMT5600 allows consumers access to productive Microsoft Office and Outlook features.With the latest in personal information management (PIM) functionality, such as over-the-air access to Outlook Calendar, Inbox, and Contacts, users can easily transfer their most important information to their smartphone, as well as receiving access to corporate e-mail through Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 and third-party middleware providers. |
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The Nokia 6820 is a compact phone that doubles as a sleek IM and e-mail machine. With its EDGE and Bluetooth support, it's business-ready. |
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Sony Ericsson K750i
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The K750i makes an ideal work tool for businesses. Each function has been developed with a view to saving time, energy and money. The camera is just one of many important tools in commercial life. By using the K750i to full capacity, you’ll soon notice how much more you get done every day and how much easier it is to stay up to speed on what’s happening in the world around you. Open the activity menu for a quick overview of new messages, missed calls and other events. With the activity menu, you can also create your own shortcuts and bookmarks with ease. Of course, you can also transfer music, images and Video in the same way. Works with PC or Macintosh computer. |
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Gigabyte Enters Cellphone Market |
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Gigabyte, known for their motherboards and other computer hardware, plans on entering the cell phone market with new high-end products. |
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Verizon gets aggressive on mobile broadband |
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Verizon Wireless is turning up the heat on the nascent wireless broadband market as it expands into new cities and slashes prices 25 percent. |
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Super Cell Phones : What to expect from your wireless phones |
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Colour screens, MP3 players, Internet access, text-messaging, voice activation, games, photo caller ID, personal organizers, e-mail…you name it, cell phones seem to have it these days. We’ve come a long way from the early days of cellular communication, when cell phones could barely pick up a signal. |
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Mobile Phones Could Make Your PC Obsolete |
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One hundred nineteen hours, 41 minutes and 16 seconds. That's the amount of time Adam Rappoport, a high-school senior in Philadelphia, has spent talking into his silver Verizon LG phone since he got it as a gift last Chanukah. That's not even the full extent of his habit. He also spends countless additional hours using his phone's Internet connection to check sports scores, download new ringtones (at a buck apiece) and send short messages to his friends' phones, even in the middle of class. "I know the touch-tone pad on the phone better than I know a keyboard," he says. "I'm a phone guy." |
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PalmOne Treo 650 Review |
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Palm OS has been drawing back under the pressure of Windows Mobile in the world of traditional handhelds. The powerful marketing machine of Microsoft reinforced with constant OS improvements and aggressive pricing just gives no chance for PalmSource to win in this market segment. But that's no reason to give up and quit this business. It's better to create a new segment and snap off a significant piece of a pie.
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Whiz-Bang Cell Phones |
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The compact A630 packs a small but usable QWERTY keyboard into a clamshell design about the size of a typical bar of soap (1.9 inches wide, 3.7 inches high, and 0.93 inches thick). On the front of the phone is a monochrome screen, an up/down navigation key, a dial pad, and a small camera lens. On the side, there's a volume control that doubles as a ringer control with Silent, Vibrate, and Ring Style options. Next to the volume control is a button that powers on the embedded 640-by-480 camera and functions as the shutter button as well. |
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Samsung i730 review |
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Computer consultant and MobileTracker confidant Ned S. Levi recently took the Samsung i730 for a test drive and has written a full review of the handset. The i730 is currently shipping from Verizon Wireless in the US. Feature wise the i730 is currently the most technically advanced phone in the country--WiFi, EV-DO, Bluetooth, Windows Mobile and more... |
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Hands on with Cingular’s version of the Audiovox SMT 5600 |
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Reader Jesse King got his hands on the new Cingular version of the Audiovox SMT 5600, and was kind enough to send us a few pics of his new baby. Not surprisingly, it looks almost exactly like the old AT&T Wireless version of the SMT 5600, even down to the lack of carrier branding on the phone itself (even though the handset depicted on the SMT 5600’s box does sport a Cingular logo on its casing). Not that we mind a phone coming with less branding on it or anything… |
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Nokia 6820 Review |
Building on the success of its predecessor, the Nokia 6800, the Nokia 6820 offers a slimmer, more attractive design and useful new features, such as an integrated camera and video-recording capabilities. Still, the main attraction of this AT&T Wireless handset is the built-in QWERTY keyboard, which is sure to please text-messaging junkies and e-mail fanatics. |
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I travel a lot, are there phones that work worldwide? |
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Yes, but only GSM and satellite technology phones do. Of course, the cheapest solution is GSM, which is the most popular worldwide standard. A certain number of GSM phones are compatible with all 3 GSM frequencies: Europe's 900 and 1800 bands and North-America's 1900 band. It means that using such a phone, you can roam worldwide and seamlessly. Of course, the rates may be significantly higher when using the phone in another country so inquire about rates before buying a phone and plan.
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Can I read my email on my mobile phone? |
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Smartphones (advanced mobile phones with lots of features) allow you to access e-mail from your POP account via their own dedicated email application.
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What is WAP and why is such a fuss made about it? |
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It is a protocol that allows wireless devices (notably mobile phones) to be able to access information easily and quickly. As handsets evolve and prices recede, it will probably make the dream of "Information Anywhere, Any Time" a reality. |
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What is a Web-enabled mobile phone? |
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A Web-enabled mobile phone is a phone that has a built-in mini Web browser and the capability of connecting to the wireless Web in order to send and receive data. |
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Packet8 is an affordable and easy-to-use broadband telephone and videophone service. Designed with both residential and business customers in mind, Packet8 allows anyone with broadband (high-speed) Internet access to use their regular phone to make UNLIMITED calls to anywhere in the U.S. and Canada for as little as $19.95 per month. Packet8 subscribers with videophones can make video calls for as little as $19.95 per month. All Packet8 subscribers get world wide UNLIMITED calling to other Packet8 subscribers at no extra charge. Calls to non-Packet8 international numbers (outside the U.S. and Canada) are charged at a very low per minute rate. |
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Vonage’s wealth of features, extensive coverage, and strong support combine to make it a good Internet phone selection. Its monthly rate plans, $14.99 or $24.99 for residential customers and $39.99 or $49.99 for businesses, are a bit higher than those of competitors, such as Packet8, but Vonage's phone features are more numerous, and the company offers useful services, such as transferring your existing phone number to your Vonage account. With its easy setup, nontechies ditching their traditional phone can quickly get up and running, and Vonage's easily activated and inexpensive fax capabilities will appeal to businesses. |
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OPEX Internet Voice provides access to the most exciting and robust communications platform since the telephone was invented. Combine your current high-speed DSL or Cable broadband Internet access with OPEX's unlimited local and long distance service for unprecedented cost savings! There is a slightly higher start-up cost for this VoIP, but there are no agreements or early termination fees. Service is strictly month-to-month. |
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New to this increasingly crowded space is Lingo, which comes close to knocking off the competition. Lingo offers the lowest monthly unlimited-minutes plan of all the VoIP packages we've seen at $19.95, which includes not only the United States and Canada, but also numerous countries in Western Europe. Likewise, its plans come equipped with a lengthy list of features: all plans include 911 emergency calling, and business plans include fax capabilities. Unfortunately, Lingo's call quality was inconsistent, with more interference than we've experienced with other VoIP services. |
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If you've been harboring any doubt about the viability of VoIP services, you can put them to rest. AT&T, once the center of the telephone universe in the United States, rolled out its own VoIP service, CallVantage, last year, and it has since added to and improved the service. The company launched CallVantage with a lone calling plan but now offers three plans that range in price from $19.99 to $49.99 per month. At $29.99 per month, its unlimited-minutes plan is pricier than those of competitors such as Lingo and Packet8. You also have a host of features at your disposal, including virtual numbers, conference calling, call filtering, and call forwarding. In addition to a standard telephone adapter that requires a connection to a broadband router, you can choose to combine those two devices with a VoIP-enabled Linksys wireless router. |
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