Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1

Big things are happening in Barcelona. At this year’s Mobile World Congress, there have been a lot of interesting announcements in mobile tech. There’s been heavy talk about Google’s Android, but my favorite piece of news comes from a phone maker that hasn’t made a whole lot of noise as of late. Sony Ericsson’s XPERIA X1 is a serious phone for serious users. It puts other phones to shame with wi-fi, GPS, MicroSD, quad-band GSM radios and quad-band UMTS/HSDPA/HSUPA. SE’s packed all that under a 3-inch, VGA resolution touchscreen and a curved-sliding form factor hiding a full thumbpad. The result? It looks fun and functional, but its stainless steel body screams professional-quality. A 3.2 megapixel camera, front camera for video calling and the usual smattering of bluetooth, speakerphone and other amenities round out the device. The payoff, however, is in the UI.


Continue reading I Want One III: Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1

Filed under: PhonesRoy @ 1:23 pm
 

Starbucks announced a new partnership with AT&T this morning to provide WiFi access at some 7,000 locations, replacing the service previously offered by T-Mobile. It used to be you could pay T-Mobile $9.99 per day or $19.99-$39.99 (depending on your relationship with T-mobile) a month for access at Starbucks. Now, with AT&T, it’ll be $3.99 for two hours, and $19.99 a month - but there are a couple ways to get it for free:

1) Use a Starbucks card and get two hours free. (e.g. Gift Card, Prepaid Card…)
2) Be an AT&T Broadband or U-Verse subscriber and get unlimited free access.

Unfortunately there isn’t any love for iPhone owners, at least not yet - though there are plans to express some “soon.” The iTunes WiFi Music Store rollout will continue as planned under the new partnership, and T-Mobile customers under contract for Starbucks WiFi access will retain their access for the duration of their agreement with T-Mobile - in other words, nothing changes if you already subscribe for access at Starbucks. But for those of us who don’t, this is good news.

Source: Ars Technica

Filed under: Computers, Gadgets | Technology, PhonesMax @ 4:23 pm
 

iPhone adapter

Finally a cheap, non-destructive way of using different Headphones with the iPhone. $5.43 ($2.45 + $2.98 shipping) gets you the freedom to pick the headphones YOU want to use (because personally, i can’t stand the apple ear buds)

One downside. Reading some of the reviews, it seems like the construction/quality might be a little shoddy. Maybe you’ll want to pick up a couple of them.

[source amazon.com]

 
 
 

Filed under: Gadgets | Technology, Phones, Portable AudioSanti @ 10:15 pm
 
vocewirelessshutdown

So, I had seen their billboards around LA. They were simple, with the word “Voce” and a picture of a silver Motorola KRZR. Intriguing, but never enough to get me to commit the time for a Google search. I could tell just by the fact that there was no mention of one of the big four crooks mobile companies, that it was another MVNO looking to defy fate. It’s not that I’m in love with any of the products or services offered by the Verizons, Sprints, AT&Ts or T-Mobiles of the world, I just am not convinced that the MVNO business model can remain profitable. It is no coincidence that, in the last few years, the better part of a dozen new niche carriers have sprung up and it’s pretty much just Helio, Virgin and Boost that are still around. My guess? Virgin has the backing of a multibillion dollar conglomerate behind it and an upcoming IPO and Boost has hilarious commercials. Sorry, Helio, I think you might be next to go.

Anyway, Voce has reached the end of their road, much to the surprise of even its top executives. Customers were given no notice of the shutdown. Well, no written notice; they found out when their phones stopped making calls. Voce was even thorough enough to bill their customers for February in advance, right before the February 1st shutdown. Even more disturbing, their COO, Roy Kosuge, only found out he was out of a job when his phone line was disconnected. Maybe I’m the only one, but I find it truly ironic that the internal communication of a phone company is this bad. I have to ask, if the COO didn’t know, who did? If Kosuge missed out on an invite, who was in that meeting that was more important? Did the CEO and CFO make the decision over coffee at a Starbucks? I suppose the world may never know.

Maybe the marketing guys at Voce saw the writing on the wall. Their website has always featured the picture you see above. To me, that looks like a guy confused to be searching for cell service after paying for this month in advance. At least the tag is right, most people have never been taken care of like this.

Source RCR Wireless News

Filed under: Gadgets | Technology, PhonesRoy @ 12:56 am
 
iphonesizematters

In a fairly clandestine release (by Apple’s standards, anyway) the iPhone was updated today with a new 16GB model. The Touch also saw a refresh with a new, capacious 32GB SKU.

Continue reading Apple Doubles Down on iPhone, Now 16 Gigs of Fun

Filed under: Gadgets | Technology, Phones, Portable AudioRoy @ 9:08 pm
 
garminnuvifone

There are a lot of devices that are influenced by the iPhone. While some imitations are more egregious, others are merely what one would expect as the technology in the iPhone is brought to the American market. Competition requires some imitation. That aside, Garmin’s first entry into the jungle that is the mobile phone market looks to be more than just a flattering imitation.

First of all, it makes no claims to being the fashion-forward lifestyle device that the Apple marketing team has trumpeted since its coming out party last January. Also, it boasts a list of functionality that the iPhone just doesn’t have.
Continue reading I Want One II: Garmin nüvifone

Filed under: Gadgets | Technology, PhonesRoy @ 10:34 pm
 

iphone image I love my iPhone.

It does what I need, and isn’t too big. Most of it’s flaws are software - the camera is decent enough, the lack of a GPS isn’t as bad as I thought it would be, and EDGE is fast enough for most tasks and coverage is plentiful.

But the software is lacking.

For example, cell-tower triangulation could make the phone aware of it’s location, though not as precisely as GPS. But unlike GPS, it requires no extra hardware.

The lack of Multimedia Messaging is absurd, especially when someone attempts to send you one: you’ll receive a text message pointing you to a website to view the message, but the link isn’t clickable, and the page won’t open in Mobile Safari anyway. Is this some kind of joke perpetrated by Apple and AT&T? I hope someone is laughing, somewhere.

The list, sadly, goes on - but none of these shortcomings ends up being a dealbreaker: the phone is still fantastic. This is, perhaps, a testament to how crappy most smartphone offerings are.

I replaced a Samsung Blackjack with the iPhone. That phone could do almost everything: 3G data, MMS, run third-party applications, email, and a bunch of other things I loved having. The problem was, again, the software. Windows Mobile is the least stable OS I have ever used. Simple tasks, like deleting photos, became a hassle because the file browser would crash after each delete, and several key presses were required to get back into it. The OS lagged constantly - startup took a minute. The phone actually froze on me pretty regularly. It was bad enough that the iPhone is a huge improvement, even though it can’t do nearly as much as the Blackjack could.

Anyway, the iPhone should keep improving as software updates are released. Apple knows that the software needs improvement; they announced that Mail.app 3.0, which comes with OS X 10.5 Leopard, would sync with the Notes application on the iPhone. It doesn’t now, though it definitely looks like it should, which is baffling - but hopefully an update that allows them to sync will be out soon.

In the end, I’ve got a phone that was clearly rushed to the market with a very limited set of features, but I still love it. Part of it is simple gadget lust, but there’s more: Apple is actually rethinking the cell phone by starting with a minimal feature set and adding the things that people actually need. The iPhone doesn’t do as much as other phones out there, it just does what it does exceptionally well in most cases.

Filed under: Gadgets | Technology, Phones, Reviews | GuidesMax @ 7:27 am