Sunday, 17 July 2011
Wednesday, 13 July 2011
ARCHOS, an award winning technology innovator and pioneer in the tablet market, introduces an unrivaled combination of speed and storage with its latest ARCHOS 101 G9 featuring an OMAP 4 processor with an ARM Cortex dual-core A9 running at 1.5 GHz and Seagate's 250GB Hard Disk Drive (HDD)capacity.
The 10" ARCHOS 101 G9 is powered by Android 3.1 "Honeycomb", the latest Android version. ARCHOS 101 G9 comes with Google's full suite of mobile applications and Android Market, giving users access to over 200,000 applications such as games, books, social media and news. With the latest version of Honeycomb, ARCHOS 101 G9 also offers a full web experience complete with Adobe Flash support for on-the-go web browsing, communication and applications.
Additionally, the ARCHOS 101 G9 features a unique 3G ready solution where customers no longer need to choose between WiFi and 3G models at purchase. ARCHOS 3G Stick is a standard 3G stick for laptops which has been designed to be compatible with all ARCHOS G9 tablets. ARCHOS 101 G9 comes with a concealed USB port on the back of the device that when paired with the ARCHOS 3G USB Stick will enable 3G connectivity.
The 10" ARCHOS 101 G9 is powered by Android 3.1 "Honeycomb", the latest Android version. ARCHOS 101 G9 comes with Google's full suite of mobile applications and Android Market, giving users access to over 200,000 applications such as games, books, social media and news. With the latest version of Honeycomb, ARCHOS 101 G9 also offers a full web experience complete with Adobe Flash support for on-the-go web browsing, communication and applications.
Additionally, the ARCHOS 101 G9 features a unique 3G ready solution where customers no longer need to choose between WiFi and 3G models at purchase. ARCHOS 3G Stick is a standard 3G stick for laptops which has been designed to be compatible with all ARCHOS G9 tablets. ARCHOS 101 G9 comes with a concealed USB port on the back of the device that when paired with the ARCHOS 3G USB Stick will enable 3G connectivity.
Tuesday, 12 July 2011
OUR COMPANY HISTORY.....
Our company in specialize in manufacture hand phone such as nokia, sony erisson, Motorola, hp, apple and many more else. We are the first company that do manufactoring handphone since 1989 in Malaysia. We import and export handphone to overseas. We also expert in doing adverticement about handphone and sell handphone spare part. We also selling handphone online via our blog. If you have doubt or question, you can come to our company , email, faxs, phone or view our blogs.
Saturday, 9 July 2011
New CSL
CSL is a leading and most established mobile phone service company in Malaysia. CSL phone is mainly utilizing MTK platform to deliver feature-rich mobile phones with exciting experience that enables you to do all the things you want on the phone easily, which includes analog TV features, camera-enabled, loud and clear music player and of course, the dual-SIM feature which allows two lines to be active at the same time.
Thursday, 7 July 2011
Wednesday, 6 July 2011
Company Name Card
Saturday, 2 July 2011
Orange Rio 2
The Orange Rio II is a surprising little number. It looks like a BlackBerry, but costs a fraction of the price. Yet it gives a lot more than you'd expect from the price tag. In some ways it's even better than the BlackBerry 8520 costing twice as much. Orange are expecting this to be their top selling pay-as-you-go phone of 2011, and you can see why.
With the BlackBerry looks and the purse-friendly price tag, you can see at a glance that this is a phone for the facebook generation. It has a great QWERTY keyboard, plus the benefit of a touchscreen - something that the BlackBerry 8520 doesn't have. This isn't the highest spec phone by any means, but for messaging it's great. As well as text and video messaging, the Rio II comes pre-configured for push email, and there are widgets for quick access to facebook and other social networking sites. The Rio II also has the benefit of 3G with HSDPA giving fast access to the internet, so there's no hanging around waiting for facebook to load.
There's also a basic 3 megapixel camera with video, plus a media player and FM radio. A 3.5mm audio jack lets you plug in your own headphones. In fact you'll need to, as headphones aren't included in the box.
The built-in memory is just 80MB - average for this price range - but you can add a microSD card to give plenty of storage for music, etc. Connectivity is by Bluetooth or mini-USB, and a USB cable is supplied in the sales package. Battery life isn't great, however.
We think this is a fabulous little phone. It's smart, it's easy to use and it's not expensive. We've just got to say it - BlackBerries are not the only fruit.
Features of the Orange Rio II include:
With the BlackBerry looks and the purse-friendly price tag, you can see at a glance that this is a phone for the facebook generation. It has a great QWERTY keyboard, plus the benefit of a touchscreen - something that the BlackBerry 8520 doesn't have. This isn't the highest spec phone by any means, but for messaging it's great. As well as text and video messaging, the Rio II comes pre-configured for push email, and there are widgets for quick access to facebook and other social networking sites. The Rio II also has the benefit of 3G with HSDPA giving fast access to the internet, so there's no hanging around waiting for facebook to load.
There's also a basic 3 megapixel camera with video, plus a media player and FM radio. A 3.5mm audio jack lets you plug in your own headphones. In fact you'll need to, as headphones aren't included in the box.
The built-in memory is just 80MB - average for this price range - but you can add a microSD card to give plenty of storage for music, etc. Connectivity is by Bluetooth or mini-USB, and a USB cable is supplied in the sales package. Battery life isn't great, however.
We think this is a fabulous little phone. It's smart, it's easy to use and it's not expensive. We've just got to say it - BlackBerries are not the only fruit.
Features of the Orange Rio II include:
- 3.2 megapixel camera
- Video recording
- Display: TFT resistive touchscreen, 262,000 colours, 240 x 320 pixels (2.4 inches)
- MP3 & media player
- Stereo FM radio
- Ringtones: MP3 ringtones, vibration alert
- Voice recorder
- Integrated handsfree speaker
- Messaging: SMS, MMS, email, Orange Messenger
- Internet: Web browser, HSDPA
- Connectivity: Bluetooth, mini-USB, 3.5 mm audio jack
- Memory: 80MB plus microSD memory card
- Triband plus 3G
- Size: 110 x 61 x 12.5 mm
- Weight: 106g
- Talktime: 4 hours
- Battery standby: 288 hours
Nokia C5-03
The Nokia C5-03 is the successor to the highly popular Nokia 5230 and is a mid-range smartphone. Physically the phone looks and feels very much like the 5230. It's slightly smaller and lighter, but retains a 3.2 inch screen as well as 3 buttons below. The screen is exactly the same as in the 5230 and is the same size as the similarly-priced HTC Wildfire. It's a good size for a phone of this price, although being resistive rather than capacitive it does take a bit of poking to make it respond sometimes.
Now the 5230 was released a whole year before the C5-03, so we were anticipating some significant improvements in the C5-03. But it seems that time is standing still at Nokia. There's little improvement, and some things have actually gone backward. Most gobsmackingly awful is the fact that the C5-03 still uses Symbian Series 60. It's slow, it's unresponsive, it crashes if there's an "r" in the month or a "d" in the day and in combination with the cheap and nasty resistive screen makes for an unpleasant user experience.
The camera has been upgraded to 5 megapixels, but there's still no flash or autofocus. Whilst the aGPS with Ovi Maps goes some way to redeeming the phone, the paltry 40MB of built-in memory and the lack of even video calling makes it look like Nokia are taking the micky with this phone. They're even quoting an extraordinary battery standby of 25 days. Considering that it's powered by a less-than-impressive 1000 mAh battery, we think it'll be more likely to average a few days in the real world.
This is not the worst phone in the world, but it's very mundane. And when you consider that it's priced at around the £150 level (that's three times the price of the almost identical Nokia 5230) you'd be better off considering the HTC Wildfire or perhaps even take a punt on the Samsung Wave with its Super AMOLED screen and HD video. Even the antiquated Nokia 5800 is a better buy.
Features of the Nokia C5-03 include:
Now the 5230 was released a whole year before the C5-03, so we were anticipating some significant improvements in the C5-03. But it seems that time is standing still at Nokia. There's little improvement, and some things have actually gone backward. Most gobsmackingly awful is the fact that the C5-03 still uses Symbian Series 60. It's slow, it's unresponsive, it crashes if there's an "r" in the month or a "d" in the day and in combination with the cheap and nasty resistive screen makes for an unpleasant user experience.
The camera has been upgraded to 5 megapixels, but there's still no flash or autofocus. Whilst the aGPS with Ovi Maps goes some way to redeeming the phone, the paltry 40MB of built-in memory and the lack of even video calling makes it look like Nokia are taking the micky with this phone. They're even quoting an extraordinary battery standby of 25 days. Considering that it's powered by a less-than-impressive 1000 mAh battery, we think it'll be more likely to average a few days in the real world.
This is not the worst phone in the world, but it's very mundane. And when you consider that it's priced at around the £150 level (that's three times the price of the almost identical Nokia 5230) you'd be better off considering the HTC Wildfire or perhaps even take a punt on the Samsung Wave with its Super AMOLED screen and HD video. Even the antiquated Nokia 5800 is a better buy.
Features of the Nokia C5-03 include:
- Symbian S60 5th edition smartphone
- 5 megapixel camera with 3x digital zoom
- Video recording at up to 640 x 352 resolution and up to 15 fps, 2x digital video zoom
- Display: Touchscreen, 16.7 million colours, 640 x 360 pixels (3.2 inches) with automatic display rotation and proximity sensor
- Nokia Ovi player (MP3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA formats)
- FM radio
- Ringtones: MP3 & video ringtones, 64-voice polyphonic ringtones, vibration alert
- A-GPS with Ovi Maps 3.0
- Voice commands: speaker independent dialling and voice commands
- Voice recorder
- Integrated handsfree speaker
- Messaging: SMS, MMS, email (support for IMAP, POP, SMTP) plus attachments, Audio messaging
- Internet: HSCSD, GPRS, EDGE, HSDPA (10.2 Mbps), XHTML web browser
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1 with EDR, USB, 3.5 mm audio jack
- Memory: 40MB plus microSD memory card slot (up to 16 GB supported)
- Offline mode
- 3G plus quadband GSM (850/900/1800/1900 MHz)
- Size: 106 x 51 x 13.8 mm
- Weight: 93g
- Battery: 1000 mAh
- Talktime: up to 11.7 hours
- Battery standby: 600 hours
Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Mini Pro
The X10 Mini Pro is almost exactly the same as the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Mini, except that it has a slide-out QWERTY keyboard. This adds a little to the weight of the phone, although it's by no means heavy. Amazingly, Sony Ericsson have managed to sneak the keyboard into the design without compromising any of the phone's hardware, and adding only a millimetre to its thickness. Astonishing! It's not a perfect keyboard, with a somewhat dead feel about it, but the keys are a good size and they're well spaced out. After an hour of use, you get used to the feel and can type quickly.
Apart from the keyboard, it's basically the same phone as the X10 Mini, so read our review of that phone for more insight. We like the keyboard very much, but we dislike the poor battery life, small screen, less than perfect reception and general clunkiness of the software.
Features of the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Mini Pro include:
Apart from the keyboard, it's basically the same phone as the X10 Mini, so read our review of that phone for more insight. We like the keyboard very much, but we dislike the poor battery life, small screen, less than perfect reception and general clunkiness of the software.
Features of the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Mini Pro include:
- 5 megapixel camera with autofocus and flash
- Video camera with video light
- Display: 16 million colours, TFT touchscreen, 240 x 320 pixels with auto-rotation
- Media player with album art, TrackID and PlayNow
- FM radio with RDS
- MP3/ AAC ringtones
- Speakerphone
- aGPS with Google Maps, geo-tagging and WisePilot Turn-by-Turn navigation software (demo)
- Messaging: SMS, MMS, email, conversations
- 3D games
- Picture wallpaper
- Personal organiser functions
- Vibration alert
- Internet: WAP 2.0, GPRS, EDGE, HSPA, web browser, RSS feeds, YouTube
- Memory: 128MB plus microSD memory card (up to 16GB supported)
- Connectivity: WiFi, Bluetooth, micro USB, 3.5mm audio jack
- Quadband GSM (850/900/1800/1900) plus 3G UMTS/HSPA (900/1700/2100)
- Size: 90 x 52 x 17 mm
- Weight: 120g
- Talktime: 3.5 - 4 hours
- Battery standby: 300 - 360 hours
Apple iPhone 4
Whereas the iPhone 3G S was available free on an (already very expensive) £45 per month contract, you'll have to sign up to an eye-watering £60 per month 24-month contract to get the iPhone 4 16GB free, and to get the 32GB version you'll have to shell out an extra £60 on top! On the cheapest tariff available, you'll still end up paying more than £800 over two years. We seriously question just how far Apple can keep pushing their customers, especially in these cash-strapped times.
There's also a problem with the new design. The stainless steel body of the handset acts as an antenna and Apple claim this will help to improve reception of mobile signals. But only if you hold it the right way, because if you place your hand over the bottom left corner of the phone, you'll see your signal drop to zero. Is that a problem? "Just avoid holding it in that way," Steve Jobs remarked. Apple's official statement is more sober, but no less reassuring: "Avoid gripping it in the lower left corner in a way that covers both sides of the black strip in the metal band." Actually that's quite hard to do, especially for a large device like the iPhone. Alternatively, you can buy a case to shield the antenna. You know, if this was any other phone, we'd simply have marked our rating down and advised you not to buy it. But this is the iPhone after all, and you can maybe learn to hold your phone in the way approved by Steve Jobs or buy a case and then the problems will go away. So, we'll drop one star from our rating and carry on with the review.
So, if you can handle the high cost and the signal problem you'll want to know what you get for your money. Well, what you get is a very high quality device that's approximately the same height and width as the previous iPhone, but considerably slimmer, at just 9.3mm thick. It still weighs in at a chunky 137g though. It smells of quality, of course, from the box to the accessories, to the device itself, but apart from the slimness it doesn't look very different to previous generations of iPhones.
The display is the same size as previous iPhones at 3.5 inches, but the new Retina display packs in double the number of pixels in each direction, giving a total of 960 x 640 pixels in total and fantastic image quality as a result. It can't beat the Samsung Galaxy S if you want the best display on the market, but it's probably second best and surely that's good enough.
Apart from the screen, the biggest change comes in the form of upgraded cameras. The still camera has been given a larger sensor so it takes better images at night and in low light, the resolution has been increased to 5 megapixels and an LED flash added. The video camera has been seriously uprated to record videos at HD resolution (720p). That places the iPhone 4 in the top league for video recording with only a handful of other phones able to match - the Samsung Galaxy S, the Samsung Wave and the Sony Ericsson Vivaz among them. But perhaps the biggest change is the addition of a secondary video camera that enables video calling. "People have been dreaming about video calling for decades. iPhone 4 makes it a reality," exclaim Apple, ignoring the fact that other manufacturers have been offering this feature since 2003. Note also that you can only make video calls to other iPhone 4 users and only on Wi-Fi. That's rather limiting.
The other main improvement is the battery life of the phone. Although the quoted standby time is the same, Apple say that talktime and web browsing time have been improved by around 40%.
Multi-tasking has also been improved so you can run multiple apps without slowing down the performance of the foreground app or draining the battery unnecessarily.
Features of the Apple iPhone 4 include:
There's also a problem with the new design. The stainless steel body of the handset acts as an antenna and Apple claim this will help to improve reception of mobile signals. But only if you hold it the right way, because if you place your hand over the bottom left corner of the phone, you'll see your signal drop to zero. Is that a problem? "Just avoid holding it in that way," Steve Jobs remarked. Apple's official statement is more sober, but no less reassuring: "Avoid gripping it in the lower left corner in a way that covers both sides of the black strip in the metal band." Actually that's quite hard to do, especially for a large device like the iPhone. Alternatively, you can buy a case to shield the antenna. You know, if this was any other phone, we'd simply have marked our rating down and advised you not to buy it. But this is the iPhone after all, and you can maybe learn to hold your phone in the way approved by Steve Jobs or buy a case and then the problems will go away. So, we'll drop one star from our rating and carry on with the review.
So, if you can handle the high cost and the signal problem you'll want to know what you get for your money. Well, what you get is a very high quality device that's approximately the same height and width as the previous iPhone, but considerably slimmer, at just 9.3mm thick. It still weighs in at a chunky 137g though. It smells of quality, of course, from the box to the accessories, to the device itself, but apart from the slimness it doesn't look very different to previous generations of iPhones.
The display is the same size as previous iPhones at 3.5 inches, but the new Retina display packs in double the number of pixels in each direction, giving a total of 960 x 640 pixels in total and fantastic image quality as a result. It can't beat the Samsung Galaxy S if you want the best display on the market, but it's probably second best and surely that's good enough.
Apart from the screen, the biggest change comes in the form of upgraded cameras. The still camera has been given a larger sensor so it takes better images at night and in low light, the resolution has been increased to 5 megapixels and an LED flash added. The video camera has been seriously uprated to record videos at HD resolution (720p). That places the iPhone 4 in the top league for video recording with only a handful of other phones able to match - the Samsung Galaxy S, the Samsung Wave and the Sony Ericsson Vivaz among them. But perhaps the biggest change is the addition of a secondary video camera that enables video calling. "People have been dreaming about video calling for decades. iPhone 4 makes it a reality," exclaim Apple, ignoring the fact that other manufacturers have been offering this feature since 2003. Note also that you can only make video calls to other iPhone 4 users and only on Wi-Fi. That's rather limiting.
The other main improvement is the battery life of the phone. Although the quoted standby time is the same, Apple say that talktime and web browsing time have been improved by around 40%.
Multi-tasking has also been improved so you can run multiple apps without slowing down the performance of the foreground app or draining the battery unnecessarily.
Features of the Apple iPhone 4 include:
- OS X Operating System
- Assisted GPS with digital compass
- 5 megapixel camera with touch autofocus, LED flash and geo-tagging
- Video camera: HD (720p) up to 30 frames per second with audio, VGA secondary camera for video calling
- Display: 960 x 640 pixels (3.5 inch) touchscreen
- Music player (AAC, Protected AAC, MP3, MP3 VBR, Audible (formats 1, 2, and 3), Apple Lossless, AIFF, and WAV formats)
- Video player supports 720p HD playback at 30 frames/second
- Voice control, voice memos
- Messaging: SMS, MMS, email
- Memory: 16GB or 32GB flash drive
- Connectivity: Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR, USB 2.0, Wi-Fi (802.11b/g), 3.5mm headphone jack
- WAP, EDGE, HSDPA
- Size: 115 x 59 x 9.3 mm
- Weight: 137g
- Quad-band (850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz) plus UMTS/HSDPA (850, 900, 1900, 2100 MHz)
- Talktime: 7 - 14 hours
- Battery standby: 300 hours
- Audio playback: Up to 30 hours
Samsung Ch@t 335
The Samsung Ch@t 335 (or Samsung Chat if you prefer, since the web isn't very good at @ characters) looks like a BlackBerry, smells like a BlackBerry and does very much what a BlackBerry does. Yet it retails for less than half the cost of the entry-level BlackBerry 8520. Is this for real?
We gave Samsung's first attempt at a budget BlackBerry, the Genio Qwerty, a bit of a thumbs down. But the ch@t is something altogether different. Although it retails as a budget pay as you go phone, Samsung have styled it as if it really were the BlackBerry-beater it yearns to be. It's pretty much the same size as the BlackBerry 8520, but noticeably slimmer, being ultraslim at just 11.9mm. Yet it doesn't feel like it's about to snap in half. It has a metal finish and a quality feel about it. The QWERTY keyboard has been completely re-engineered and is much easier to use. The keys aren't huge, especially the space bar, but they're as big as they can be in a phone this size and they respond nicely to the touch. You can program shortcuts into the QWERTY keyboard for fast access to favourite apps.
The display is completely standard for this kind of phone: 2.4 inches, 320 x 240 pixels, LCD. It's the "correct" display for the phone. Between the display and the keyboard sits the optical trackpad, which differentiates between normal finger movement and fast swipes, helping you to move around the screen and scroll up and down easily. We have to say that QWERTY keyboard + trackpad + slim design = superb ergonomics.
So, we've got a great keyboard, let's start typing. The Ch@t is great for texts, emails and instant messaging, and equally handy if you like to tweet or catch up on facebook. The Chat may not be a 3G phone, but it's about the only sub-£50 phone that comes with Wi-Fi, so it's pretty nippy getting on to the net. As well as Wi-Fi, there's Bluetooth and USB connectivity too.
The Ch@t is no smartphone, but there are a few apps you can install and it comes with 5 embedded Java games. You won't get bored on the bus either, because it has a music player and an FM radio, with the ability to record songs from the radio. The 3.5mm audio connector lets you plug in any standard-fit headphones for the best audio quality.
Like most other phones in this price range, the camera is very limited, being just 2 megapixels and with no autofocus or flash. It can record video, if you really push it, but don't expect much from it. It's fair to say that imaging is not the Chat's strong point, but then the BlackBerry 8520 and the Nokia C3 are no better.
The memory of the phone isn't huge, but is adequate for the job at 60MB. If you're going to use the Ch@t as your music player, you'll want to buy a microSD memory card, and the Ch@t can take cards up to 8GB. The battery isn't very high powered, but the phone manages to eke out enough juice to last a couple of days between charges, even if you use it quite heavily.
We've been quite charmed by the Ch@t 335, despite its silly n@me. It sets out to deliver the power of a BlackBerry for half the money, and we think it succeeds. Corners have been cut in certain places, but not in core functionality, nor in build quality or aesthetics. As a result, we really can't find fault with this phone. If you want to spend more money and get the real thing, then the BlackBerry 8520 is the one to choose, and you might also like to check out the Nokia C3.
Features of the Samsung Chat 335 include:
We gave Samsung's first attempt at a budget BlackBerry, the Genio Qwerty, a bit of a thumbs down. But the ch@t is something altogether different. Although it retails as a budget pay as you go phone, Samsung have styled it as if it really were the BlackBerry-beater it yearns to be. It's pretty much the same size as the BlackBerry 8520, but noticeably slimmer, being ultraslim at just 11.9mm. Yet it doesn't feel like it's about to snap in half. It has a metal finish and a quality feel about it. The QWERTY keyboard has been completely re-engineered and is much easier to use. The keys aren't huge, especially the space bar, but they're as big as they can be in a phone this size and they respond nicely to the touch. You can program shortcuts into the QWERTY keyboard for fast access to favourite apps.
The display is completely standard for this kind of phone: 2.4 inches, 320 x 240 pixels, LCD. It's the "correct" display for the phone. Between the display and the keyboard sits the optical trackpad, which differentiates between normal finger movement and fast swipes, helping you to move around the screen and scroll up and down easily. We have to say that QWERTY keyboard + trackpad + slim design = superb ergonomics.
So, we've got a great keyboard, let's start typing. The Ch@t is great for texts, emails and instant messaging, and equally handy if you like to tweet or catch up on facebook. The Chat may not be a 3G phone, but it's about the only sub-£50 phone that comes with Wi-Fi, so it's pretty nippy getting on to the net. As well as Wi-Fi, there's Bluetooth and USB connectivity too.
The Ch@t is no smartphone, but there are a few apps you can install and it comes with 5 embedded Java games. You won't get bored on the bus either, because it has a music player and an FM radio, with the ability to record songs from the radio. The 3.5mm audio connector lets you plug in any standard-fit headphones for the best audio quality.
Like most other phones in this price range, the camera is very limited, being just 2 megapixels and with no autofocus or flash. It can record video, if you really push it, but don't expect much from it. It's fair to say that imaging is not the Chat's strong point, but then the BlackBerry 8520 and the Nokia C3 are no better.
The memory of the phone isn't huge, but is adequate for the job at 60MB. If you're going to use the Ch@t as your music player, you'll want to buy a microSD memory card, and the Ch@t can take cards up to 8GB. The battery isn't very high powered, but the phone manages to eke out enough juice to last a couple of days between charges, even if you use it quite heavily.
We've been quite charmed by the Ch@t 335, despite its silly n@me. It sets out to deliver the power of a BlackBerry for half the money, and we think it succeeds. Corners have been cut in certain places, but not in core functionality, nor in build quality or aesthetics. As a result, we really can't find fault with this phone. If you want to spend more money and get the real thing, then the BlackBerry 8520 is the one to choose, and you might also like to check out the Nokia C3.
Features of the Samsung Chat 335 include:
- 2 megapixel camera with 2x digital zoom
- Video camera (15fps, QCIF)
- Display: TFT, 240 x 320 pixels (2.4 inches)
- QWERTY keyboard with optical trackpad
- Music player with DNSe 3D sound
- FM radio RDS
- Ringtones: MP3 ringtones, 64 voice polyphonic ringtones
- Messaging: SMS, MMS, email, IM
- Voice memo & voice mail
- Speakerphone
- 5 embedded Java games
- Offline mode
- WAP 2.0, GPRS, EDGE, web browser
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1, USB, 3.5mm jack
- Memory: 60MB plus microSD memory card slot (up to 8GB supported)
- Personal organiser functions
- Quadband GSM (850/900/1800/1900 MHz)
- Size: 111 x 61 x 11.9 mm
- Weight: 100g
- Battery: 1000mAh
- Talktime: 720 minutes
- Battery standby: 520 hours
Nokia X6
The Nokia X6-00 is the first Xseries phone from Nokia. It's a touchscreen smartphone running the Symbian operating system, but it's not based on the Nseries phones. Instead, the X series is an evolution of Nokia's XpressMusic range, and this a welcome relief, as the XpressMusic phones seem to have been much more robust than the bug-ridden Nseries.
Nokia have taken the hugely popular mid-range 5800 and pimped it to the max. It's physically almost the same size as the 5800, although a few millimetres have been shaved off, making it nice and slim to hold. At the same time the weight has increased slightly, lending it a purposeful and solid feel. It's a good phone to hold, and certainly a lot less bulky than most touchscreens. In fact it's one of the few touchscreen phones that you can easily operate single-handedly.
The display is a capacitive touchscreen, and is very responsive. It's the same size and resolution as the 5800: 3.2 inches across and with 640x360 pixels. This gives it one of the smaller screen sizes amongst the high-end touchscreen phones, but that's the price you pay for having a compact form factor. The screen isn't the biggest, but it's big enough to do the job. It offers a choice of virtual alphanumeric and QWERTY keypads with automatic display rotation. The user interface is nice, sharing much with the 5800, including the contacts bar which lets you easily access friends on your home screen. The contacts bar gives you access to dialling, call records and texts for up to 20 friends. The capacitive touchscreen is very responsive and we think that this is a very easy phone to use.
X stands for XpressMusic, so you'd expect the X6 to be pretty good in the music arena. And it is! The X6 comes with an Nseries music player and an FM radio. The music player handles most digital music formats, including MP3, WMA and AAC, and supports selection of songs by artist, composer, album and genre, with album graphics displayed. A dedicated audio chip and 3D surround sound from stereo speakers delivers excellent performance, especially when the bass booster, stereo widening and loudness effects are added. There's also an 8-band graphic equaliser for additional control. Naturally a 3.5mm audio jack is included, so you can plug in your own headphones, and perhaps best of all is the massive 32GB of built-in memory. The optional Comes With Music feature gives you free unlimited music downloads for a whole year!
The X6 isn't just a phone with a music player attached though. It's also got an impressive camera. With 5 megapixels, Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus and dual LED flash, this is an excellent camera, and it punches above its 5 megapixel weight too. It's the optics that matter most, and the X6 has quality, so don't worry too much that there are cameras with more megapixels available. The X6 has a really excellent still camera. The video recording capability is good too, with recording at up to 640 x 480 pixels and 30 frames per second, which is standard definition TV quality. A second front-mounted video camera enables video calls to be made too.
A-GPS is included, which works with the new Ovi Maps. The phone has outstanding connectivity, with quadband GSM and triband 3G, so your phone will work wherever you take it on your travels. You should always have the fastest data connection too, with HSDPA giving downloads of up to 3.6 Mbps and WLAN available too for even faster data transfer in a WiFi zone. You can connect wirelessly via Bluetooth, or via USB cable, 3.5mm audio connection and a TV-Out socket.
Web browsing on the X6 is quite satisfactory. As mentioned, the screen isn't the biggest available, but 3.2 inches is a respectable size, and the responsive touchscreen and fast data speeds make for a good mobile browsing experience overall. The X6 runs the same Series 60 5th Edition Symbian version 9.4 OS/interface as the 5800, so there are a fair number of apps available to download from the Ovi store.
The X6 comes with a large 1320 mAh Li-Ion battery which gives very impressive performance. Theoretically the X6 is capable of 8.5 hours of talktime or 35 hours of music playback between charges. Although real world performance will never match this, it still means that you'll be able to use the phone for several days between charges in most cases.
Overall, the X6 is a good performer. It's a powerful smartphone in a compact form, with a feeling of quality and durability. It may not have the biggest screen around, but the screen is by no means small, and is superbly responsive. The music player and camera are superb. The X6 ticks all the connectivity boxes and has outstanding memory and battery life to boot.
Features of the Nokia X6 include:
Nokia have taken the hugely popular mid-range 5800 and pimped it to the max. It's physically almost the same size as the 5800, although a few millimetres have been shaved off, making it nice and slim to hold. At the same time the weight has increased slightly, lending it a purposeful and solid feel. It's a good phone to hold, and certainly a lot less bulky than most touchscreens. In fact it's one of the few touchscreen phones that you can easily operate single-handedly.
The display is a capacitive touchscreen, and is very responsive. It's the same size and resolution as the 5800: 3.2 inches across and with 640x360 pixels. This gives it one of the smaller screen sizes amongst the high-end touchscreen phones, but that's the price you pay for having a compact form factor. The screen isn't the biggest, but it's big enough to do the job. It offers a choice of virtual alphanumeric and QWERTY keypads with automatic display rotation. The user interface is nice, sharing much with the 5800, including the contacts bar which lets you easily access friends on your home screen. The contacts bar gives you access to dialling, call records and texts for up to 20 friends. The capacitive touchscreen is very responsive and we think that this is a very easy phone to use.
X stands for XpressMusic, so you'd expect the X6 to be pretty good in the music arena. And it is! The X6 comes with an Nseries music player and an FM radio. The music player handles most digital music formats, including MP3, WMA and AAC, and supports selection of songs by artist, composer, album and genre, with album graphics displayed. A dedicated audio chip and 3D surround sound from stereo speakers delivers excellent performance, especially when the bass booster, stereo widening and loudness effects are added. There's also an 8-band graphic equaliser for additional control. Naturally a 3.5mm audio jack is included, so you can plug in your own headphones, and perhaps best of all is the massive 32GB of built-in memory. The optional Comes With Music feature gives you free unlimited music downloads for a whole year!
The X6 isn't just a phone with a music player attached though. It's also got an impressive camera. With 5 megapixels, Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus and dual LED flash, this is an excellent camera, and it punches above its 5 megapixel weight too. It's the optics that matter most, and the X6 has quality, so don't worry too much that there are cameras with more megapixels available. The X6 has a really excellent still camera. The video recording capability is good too, with recording at up to 640 x 480 pixels and 30 frames per second, which is standard definition TV quality. A second front-mounted video camera enables video calls to be made too.
A-GPS is included, which works with the new Ovi Maps. The phone has outstanding connectivity, with quadband GSM and triband 3G, so your phone will work wherever you take it on your travels. You should always have the fastest data connection too, with HSDPA giving downloads of up to 3.6 Mbps and WLAN available too for even faster data transfer in a WiFi zone. You can connect wirelessly via Bluetooth, or via USB cable, 3.5mm audio connection and a TV-Out socket.
Web browsing on the X6 is quite satisfactory. As mentioned, the screen isn't the biggest available, but 3.2 inches is a respectable size, and the responsive touchscreen and fast data speeds make for a good mobile browsing experience overall. The X6 runs the same Series 60 5th Edition Symbian version 9.4 OS/interface as the 5800, so there are a fair number of apps available to download from the Ovi store.
The X6 comes with a large 1320 mAh Li-Ion battery which gives very impressive performance. Theoretically the X6 is capable of 8.5 hours of talktime or 35 hours of music playback between charges. Although real world performance will never match this, it still means that you'll be able to use the phone for several days between charges in most cases.
Overall, the X6 is a good performer. It's a powerful smartphone in a compact form, with a feeling of quality and durability. It may not have the biggest screen around, but the screen is by no means small, and is superbly responsive. The music player and camera are superb. The X6 ticks all the connectivity boxes and has outstanding memory and battery life to boot.
Features of the Nokia X6 include:
- Series 60 5th Edition Symbian version 9.4 3G Smartphone
- 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus, 4x digital zoom and double LED flash
- Video recording (up to 640 x 480 pixels and up to 30 fps), 4x digital video zoom, front camera for 3G video calling
- Display: Touchscreen, 16.7 million colours, 640 x 360 pixels (3.2 inches) with automatic display rotation
- NSeries music player (MP3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA formats) with 8-band graphical equaliser
- FM radio with Visual Radio
- Stereo loudspeakers with 3D effect
- Ringtones: MP3 & video ringtones, 64-voice polyphonic ringtones, vibration alert
- Voice commands: speaker independent dialling and voice commands
- Voice recorder (digital stereo microphone)
- Integrated handsfree speaker
- Messaging: SMS, MMS, email (support for IMAP, POP, SMTP) plus attachments, Audio messaging
- Advanced Series 60 personal organiser functions, Flash Lite 3.0
- Integrated A-GPS with Ovi Maps 3.0
- Internet: HSCSD, GPRS, EDGE, 3G HSDPA (3.6 Mbps), XHTML web browser
- Connectivity: WiFi, Bluetooth 2.0, USB 2.0, 3.5 mm audio jack, TV-Out
- Memory: 8GB / 16GB / 32GB
- Flight mode
- Quadband (GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz) plus 3G (WCDMA 900/1900/2100 MHz)
- Size: 111 x 51 x 13.8 mm
- Weight: 122g
- Talktime: 6 hours (3G) - 8.5 hours (2G)
- Battery standby: 420 hours
- Music playback: up to 35 hours
Nokia E7
The E7 looks at first like an oversized Nokia N8. It has a larger screen (4 inches across), which is clearly a bonus when browsing the web or running apps, and it uses AMOLED and Nokia's ClearBlack technology, so it isn't at all bad. But the real reason for the phone's massive size and weight is inside. Push the screen gently and the top half of the phone will snap open rather alarmingly to reveal a full QWERTY keyboard inside. The keyboard is very similar in style and feel to the old Nokia N97, although thankfully the space bar has been moved to its rightful place centre-bottom. It's a great keyboard for fast and accurate typing, although you'll need two hands to do it.
The combination of a large physical keyboard plus a 4 inch capacitive touchscreen should make the perfect communications device, but this is a Nokia smartphone, and the beast that lives inside is of course, Symbian^3, so be prepared for unintuitive menus, unexpected button presses and routine freezing and crashing. Compare the E7 to the physically-similar HTC Desire Z if you want to know what you're missing in terms of the operating system.
The E7 comes with a not-bad kind of camera. Rated at 8 megapixels with fixed focus and dual LED flash it can't match the 12 megapixels and xenon flash of the N8, but it does a decent job. It can also record video at 720p HD resolution, and there's a secondary front-facing camera for making video calls.
There's a media player and FM radio with RDS, plus the usual smartphone features including assisted GPS with Ovi Maps, Symbian and Java apps, web browsing with support for Flash web pages. A dedicated graphics processor does a good job of powering 3D games.
The phone has fast internet access, with HSPA giving downloads of up to 10.2Mbps. There's also Wi-Fi, and the full range of connectivity options including Bluetooth 3.0 and a HDMI connection.
The battery life isn't so good. The E7 has the same battery as the N8, despite having a larger screen. 1200 mAh really isn't enough for a device of this capability, and we're baffled why Nokia didn't use a larger one.
Overall the E7 does a lot for your money, despite its faults. We'd be excited if it weren't for the fact that it's a Symbian phone. Compare the E7 with the Android-powered HTC Desire Z which costs the same, but does the same job with a lot more panache.
Features of the Nokia E7 include:
The combination of a large physical keyboard plus a 4 inch capacitive touchscreen should make the perfect communications device, but this is a Nokia smartphone, and the beast that lives inside is of course, Symbian^3, so be prepared for unintuitive menus, unexpected button presses and routine freezing and crashing. Compare the E7 to the physically-similar HTC Desire Z if you want to know what you're missing in terms of the operating system.
The E7 comes with a not-bad kind of camera. Rated at 8 megapixels with fixed focus and dual LED flash it can't match the 12 megapixels and xenon flash of the N8, but it does a decent job. It can also record video at 720p HD resolution, and there's a secondary front-facing camera for making video calls.
There's a media player and FM radio with RDS, plus the usual smartphone features including assisted GPS with Ovi Maps, Symbian and Java apps, web browsing with support for Flash web pages. A dedicated graphics processor does a good job of powering 3D games.
The phone has fast internet access, with HSPA giving downloads of up to 10.2Mbps. There's also Wi-Fi, and the full range of connectivity options including Bluetooth 3.0 and a HDMI connection.
The battery life isn't so good. The E7 has the same battery as the N8, despite having a larger screen. 1200 mAh really isn't enough for a device of this capability, and we're baffled why Nokia didn't use a larger one.
Overall the E7 does a lot for your money, despite its faults. We'd be excited if it weren't for the fact that it's a Symbian phone. Compare the E7 with the Android-powered HTC Desire Z which costs the same, but does the same job with a lot more panache.
Features of the Nokia E7 include:
- Symbian ^3 for Nokia
- 8 megapixel camera with face recognition, dual LED flash, 2x digital zoom
- Video camera: HD quality 720p resolution, 25 fps, video light and 3x digital zoom
- Front camera for video calling (VGA, 640 x 480 pixels)
- Video and still image editors
- Display: AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16 million colours, 640 x 360 pixels (4 inches) with auto rotation
- Media player (HD 720p Video playback and Dolby Digital Plus surround sound on HDTV through HDMI cable)
- Stereo FM radio with RDS
- aGPS and GPS positioning, Ovi Maps with free car & pedestrian navigation, geotagging and digital compass
- MP3, AAC & WMA ringtones, video ringtones
- Integrated hands-free speaker
- Messaging: SMS, MMS, push email (support for attachments)
- Java games with dedicated 3D graphics processor
- Memory: 16GB plus microSD memory card slot (max 32 GB)
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 3.0, micro USB 2.0, HDMI, 3.5 mm stereo headphone plug
- Data: WAP, EGPRS class B, WCDMA/HSPA (10.2 Mbps download, 2.0 Mbps upload)
- Internet: Full web browsing of real web pages, Flash Lite 4.0, RSS reader, YouTube browsing and streaming
- Quadband plus 3G WCDMA 850/900/1700/1900/2100
- Size: 124 x 62 x 13.6 mm
- Weight: 176g
- 1200 mAh Li-Ion battery
- Talktime: 300 - 540 minutes
- Battery standby: 430 - 470 hours
Motorola's Atrix Android phone leads secret double life as a netbook
Motorola unveiled its new Android-based Atrix 4G smartphone at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) this week in Las Vegas. The device has extremely impressive hardware specifications and a strong feature set, but its most compelling characteristic is the ability to provide a desktop-like computing experience when it is docked in a unique netbook shell.
The Atrix 4G handset uses NVIDIA's dual-core Tegra 2 chipset, has 1GB of RAM, 16GB of internal storage, a 5MP rear camera with LED flash, a front-facing VGA camera, a fingerprint reader for secure unlocking, and a 4-inch display with a resolution of 960x540—a nice boost over the usual WVGA resolution that is common in high-end smartphones. It's a GSM handset that will be launching in Q1 with AT&T.
Unfortunately, the Atrix will ship with Android 2.2 instead of the latest version. And it's not yet clear when it will be getting an upgrade to Gingerbread. Another minor disappointment is that the "4G" in the device's moniker means HSPA+ rather than LTE.
The 2.4 pound netbook shell has an 11.6-inch screen and a three-cell battery. It has no internal storage at all, because it boots its Linux-based "webtop" operating system entirely from the Atrix smartphone. The netbook shell has a docking area in the rear with an HDMI plug and a micro-USB plug that slide into the ports on the phone when it is placed in the dock. The phone can charge itself from the netbook shell's battery.
In addition to the netbook shell, Motorola has also developed a multimedia dock with USB ports and an HDMI output. The user can plug a television into the dock for media viewing, or plug in a monitor, keyboard, and mouse to use with the webtop computing environment.
The general idea is to put the phone at the center of the user's computing experience. Users keep their applications and data on a single device and simply plug it into the netbook shell or media dock if they want a more desktop-like computing experience. Because the phone itself is the storage medium for the platform, the webtop environment's application state (such as browser bookmarks and open tabs) will be carried over wherever the user plugs in the phone.
We tested the Atrix and its netbook dock at Motorola's pavilion on the CES show floor. Although Motorola isn't the first to develop a netbook companion device for smartphones, we think the company is possibly the first to get the formula right. It has the potential to succeed where previous contenders—such as Palm's ill-fated Folio and Celio's RedFly—have fallen short.
Although the Atrix's webtop environment is booting from the Android phone, it appears to be a custom desktop Linux distribution. A close inspection of the included applications revealed that the webtop platform incorporates a number of components from the GNOME desktop environment, including GNOME's Nautilus file manager. It also runs the full desktop version of Firefox 3.6. It has a dock-like panel at the bottom of the screen with launchers and shortcuts to websites.
The Android environment on the user's phone is fully accessible through a window in webtop mode. This means that you can use Android applications from your phone on the netbook alongside the conventional desktop applications that come with the webtop platform. It's unclear what level of third-party extensibility the webtop environment offers, but it can obviously run some Gtk+ applications.
When I discussed the webtop environment with a Motorola developer and asked about command line access, he said that they omitted a terminal program because the product is intended for general consumers rather than enthusiasts. We will have to wait until it is launched in order to discover whether it is open to modding, though it seems unlikely given the history of lockdown on AT&T and Motorola Android phones.
Motorola says that the netbook shell gets about 7 or 8 hours of operating time on a full charge, depending on what the user is doing. One big question that is still unanswered is what kind of pricing model we can expect for the system. Due to the fact that the netbook shell can run a complete desktop browser, it's possible that AT&T might want to jack up the service price for the Atrix to align it with their tethering plans.
Motorola says that the Atrix and its docking system represents the company's vision of the future of computing. The notion of carrying around your entire computing experience in your pocket and simply plugging it into other form factors is extremely intriguing, but I think it will need a third-party application ecosystem on the desktop side in order to truly replace the current approach to computing for any but the most basic use cases.
Regardless of whether the netbook shell and dock accessories really take off, the Atrix handset itself is a high-powered marvel and solid entrant in the next-generation Android handset arena.
The Atrix 4G handset uses NVIDIA's dual-core Tegra 2 chipset, has 1GB of RAM, 16GB of internal storage, a 5MP rear camera with LED flash, a front-facing VGA camera, a fingerprint reader for secure unlocking, and a 4-inch display with a resolution of 960x540—a nice boost over the usual WVGA resolution that is common in high-end smartphones. It's a GSM handset that will be launching in Q1 with AT&T.
Unfortunately, the Atrix will ship with Android 2.2 instead of the latest version. And it's not yet clear when it will be getting an upgrade to Gingerbread. Another minor disappointment is that the "4G" in the device's moniker means HSPA+ rather than LTE.
The 2.4 pound netbook shell has an 11.6-inch screen and a three-cell battery. It has no internal storage at all, because it boots its Linux-based "webtop" operating system entirely from the Atrix smartphone. The netbook shell has a docking area in the rear with an HDMI plug and a micro-USB plug that slide into the ports on the phone when it is placed in the dock. The phone can charge itself from the netbook shell's battery.
In addition to the netbook shell, Motorola has also developed a multimedia dock with USB ports and an HDMI output. The user can plug a television into the dock for media viewing, or plug in a monitor, keyboard, and mouse to use with the webtop computing environment.
The general idea is to put the phone at the center of the user's computing experience. Users keep their applications and data on a single device and simply plug it into the netbook shell or media dock if they want a more desktop-like computing experience. Because the phone itself is the storage medium for the platform, the webtop environment's application state (such as browser bookmarks and open tabs) will be carried over wherever the user plugs in the phone.
We tested the Atrix and its netbook dock at Motorola's pavilion on the CES show floor. Although Motorola isn't the first to develop a netbook companion device for smartphones, we think the company is possibly the first to get the formula right. It has the potential to succeed where previous contenders—such as Palm's ill-fated Folio and Celio's RedFly—have fallen short.
Although the Atrix's webtop environment is booting from the Android phone, it appears to be a custom desktop Linux distribution. A close inspection of the included applications revealed that the webtop platform incorporates a number of components from the GNOME desktop environment, including GNOME's Nautilus file manager. It also runs the full desktop version of Firefox 3.6. It has a dock-like panel at the bottom of the screen with launchers and shortcuts to websites.
The Android environment on the user's phone is fully accessible through a window in webtop mode. This means that you can use Android applications from your phone on the netbook alongside the conventional desktop applications that come with the webtop platform. It's unclear what level of third-party extensibility the webtop environment offers, but it can obviously run some Gtk+ applications.
When I discussed the webtop environment with a Motorola developer and asked about command line access, he said that they omitted a terminal program because the product is intended for general consumers rather than enthusiasts. We will have to wait until it is launched in order to discover whether it is open to modding, though it seems unlikely given the history of lockdown on AT&T and Motorola Android phones.
Tegra 2 and performance
During my hands-on tests, I was extremely impressed with the phone's stellar performance. The dual-core Tegra 2 is also entirely capable of driving the browser-centric webtop environment, which felt reasonably responsive during our time with the device. The netbook shell had a really solid feel, though I wasn't particularly impressed with the keyboard. It's a full-sized keyboard, but the individual keys felt a bit small, had an odd rounded shape, and a slight indentation in the center. It wasn't really as good as some of the chiclet-style keyboards that I've tested on regular netbooks.Motorola says that the netbook shell gets about 7 or 8 hours of operating time on a full charge, depending on what the user is doing. One big question that is still unanswered is what kind of pricing model we can expect for the system. Due to the fact that the netbook shell can run a complete desktop browser, it's possible that AT&T might want to jack up the service price for the Atrix to align it with their tethering plans.
Motorola says that the Atrix and its docking system represents the company's vision of the future of computing. The notion of carrying around your entire computing experience in your pocket and simply plugging it into other form factors is extremely intriguing, but I think it will need a third-party application ecosystem on the desktop side in order to truly replace the current approach to computing for any but the most basic use cases.
Regardless of whether the netbook shell and dock accessories really take off, the Atrix handset itself is a high-powered marvel and solid entrant in the next-generation Android handset arena.
Thursday, 30 June 2011
Sunday, 26 June 2011
Nokia's new flagship N9 gets mixed reviews
Nokia's latest attempt to win back market share with its N9 phone received mixed reviews Wednesday but analysts said the real test will come when it releases new models using the Windows Phone 7 operating system.
Fans lauded the N9's ease of use without any "home" button -- a feature of the iPhone and other rivals -- while detractors mocked what they saw as its outdated Meego operating system.
Unveiled by Nokia chief executive Stephen Elop at the CommunicAsia telecoms fair in Singapore this week, fans crowded around the company's booth to try out the device.
The N9 has a 99-millimetre (less than four inches), 854 x 480 pixel display and weighs 135 grams (less than five ounces), putting it clearly in iPhone territory.
Its most distinctive feature is an "all-screen" display, with users swiping the screen to switch between applications.
The device also has a function that allows users to link it to dedicated accessories such as a headset or speakers by simply touching the phone against them.
"Being a user of Apple, an iPhone, this is light years ahead of what iPhone 3G does," declared Paul Krzystoszek, operations and marketing manager for Australian Satellite Communications.
"The ease of use... the intuitive nature of swiping across the screen instead of using a button, there's no button on it, the plastic casing, I think they're all things that make it a lot better than what we have already," he told AFP after trying the phone at the Nokia booth.
"Awesome" was how Shahiran Jaafar, chief executive officer of Malaysian firm Microtel Systems and user of an iPhone 3G, described the N9.
"The fact that you can just swipe it and it goes back to whatever screen that you need it to go back to, the fact that it can show all the open tasks that's available, that's fantastic," he said.
"It just dwarfs the iPhone, the iPhone is nothing now."
However, some were unimpressed by the fact that the N9 was still operating on Nokia's MeeGo platform despite the company's impending adoption of the Windows Phone 7 platform later this year.
"I have a problem with... the operating system," said Phoosith Ratpiyasoontorn, a Thai systems integration engineer, lamenting that MeeGo lacked user volume and compatibility with many applications.
Technological consultancy firm Ovum's consumer information technology analyst Tim Renowden said the true test of whether Nokia can reverse its sagging fortunes will be when its new handsets using Windows Phone 7 are rolled out.
"The N9 is an interesting demonstration that Nokia can still build excellent hardware, and it shows the progress made on the MeeGo OS," he said.
"But it doesn't change the fact that most Nokia fans will be waiting for the first Windows Phone 7 handsets to arrive later this year," he told AFP.
Saturday, 25 June 2011
Job Application Form
a. Name :
b. Date Of Birth :
c. Age :
d. Race : malay chinese indian others
e. Religion :
f. Nationality :
g. Marital Status : single married
h. Contact No :
i. I/C No :
j. Mailing Address :
k. E-mail Address :
l. Education History :
m. Employment History :
n. Computer Literacy :
o. Spoken Languages : english bahasa chinese tamil other
p. Written Languages : english bahasa chinese tamil other
q. Interests/Hobbies :
r. Present Salary :
s. Expected Salary :
t. Other Comments :
u. Request :
Wednesday, 22 June 2011
The Droid
The Droid Charge by Samsung is one of the latest additions to the fastest 4G network in the U.S. Verizon Wireless’ 4G LTE network. It is the first phone to feature Samsung’s Super AMOLED Plus for a even brighter pixels, more vivid colors and a clearer screen for the amazing smartphone viewing experience. The Droid Charge is currently available for $199.99 through select authorized Verizon Wireless dealers.
Droid Charge Features
Droid Charge Features
- An Impressive 4.3″ Super AMOLED Plus Display A Super AMOLED Plus Display Is Thinner, Brighter, and More Efficient Than Other Displays
- Dual Cameras – 8MP Rear-facing Camera and a 1.3MP Front-facing Camera For Video Chat
- Connect Up To 10 Wifi-enabled Devices To The Internet
- Integrated GPS For Google Maps Navigation, Geo-tagging Photos, and More
- Share Your Photos and Videos With DLNA Streaming To HD TV’s
- 1GHz Hummingbird Processor For Faster Performance and Page Loading
The Samsung Galaxy S 4G
The Samsung Galaxy S 4G
This is one of the fastest smartphones on the market day. This 4G updated version of the Galaxy S offers faster upload and download times, streaming video and video chat without buffer over T-Mobile’s 4G network. It is also one of the few Android smartphones capable of streaming Netflix. This phone is internationally compatible for all you world travellers out there. The Samsung Galaxy S 4G is currently available for $129.99 with a new contract through T-Mobile authorized dealers.
Samsung Galaxy S 4G Features
This is one of the fastest smartphones on the market day. This 4G updated version of the Galaxy S offers faster upload and download times, streaming video and video chat without buffer over T-Mobile’s 4G network. It is also one of the few Android smartphones capable of streaming Netflix. This phone is internationally compatible for all you world travellers out there. The Samsung Galaxy S 4G is currently available for $129.99 with a new contract through T-Mobile authorized dealers.
Samsung Galaxy S 4G Features
- 4″ Super AMOLED Vivid Display With Full Touch Screen
- Runs On America’s Largest 4G Network
- Lightning-fast 1GHz Hummingbird Processor Boasts Impressive Speed With Less Battery Consumption
- Make Your Galaxy S 4G Uniquely Yours With Google’s Android 2.2 Operating System
- Dual Cameras – A Front Facing Camera For Video Chat By Qik and 5MP Rear Facing For Quality Pictures
- Google Maps Provides Voice-guide, Turn-by-turn Navigation
- Internationally Compatible – Call Or Access The Web On Compatible Data Networks Throughout The World
- The Hit Movie “Inception” Comes Exclusively Preloaded
LETTER TO DREMMAKER FROM E-BUSINESS
E-Business Sdn Bhd,
65, King Street,
10200, Penang.
Corporate Relations Associate,
DreamMakers Pt. Ltd.
12 June 2011
Dear Head Department of Corporate Relation Associate,
WE OFFER CORPORATE RELATION ASSOCIATE TO DO ADVERTISEMENT ON OUR PRODUCT
We are from E-Business Sdn Bhd, we are interest in your advertisement services. It is our pleasure to inform you that we are our company give you an offer to advertisement our manufacture thing such as hand phone.
2. Our company in specialize in manufacture hand phone such as nokia, sony erisson, Motorola, hp, apple and many more else. We as manufacture company interest in your advertisement services.
3. If your company accept our offer for giving advertisement to our company. Please notify that our company is waiting for your answer and want to discuss more on that.
4. You can contact E-Business Sdn Bhd at 04-2628450, fax at 01-2612289 or email us
at fairus20@gmail.com.my . We thank to your cooperation.
Yours Sincerely,
(SITI FAIRUS BINTI MOHD SICKANDAR)
Sales Manager of E-Business Sdn Bhd
65, King Street,
10200, Penang.
Corporate Relations Associate,
DreamMakers Pt. Ltd.
12 June 2011
Dear Head Department of Corporate Relation Associate,
WE OFFER CORPORATE RELATION ASSOCIATE TO DO ADVERTISEMENT ON OUR PRODUCT
We are from E-Business Sdn Bhd, we are interest in your advertisement services. It is our pleasure to inform you that we are our company give you an offer to advertisement our manufacture thing such as hand phone.
2. Our company in specialize in manufacture hand phone such as nokia, sony erisson, Motorola, hp, apple and many more else. We as manufacture company interest in your advertisement services.
3. If your company accept our offer for giving advertisement to our company. Please notify that our company is waiting for your answer and want to discuss more on that.
4. You can contact E-Business Sdn Bhd at 04-2628450, fax at 01-2612289 or email us
at fairus20@gmail.com.my . We thank to your cooperation.
Yours Sincerely,
(SITI FAIRUS BINTI MOHD SICKANDAR)
Sales Manager of E-Business Sdn Bhd
Thursday, 16 June 2011
VACANCY AVAILABLE....
E-BUSINESS SDN BHD IS PRINCIPALLY INVOLVED IN THE MANUFACTURING SECTOR. WE ARE FOCUSED ON THE BUSINESS ON THE MANUFACTURING HANDPHONE. WE ARE LOOKING FOR QUALIFIED, DYNAMIC AND SELF-DRIVEN CANDIDATES WITH REVELENT WORKING EXPERIENCES TO TAKE UP THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS.
SECRECTARY JOB : BASIC QUALIFICATION; 1 YEARS EXPERIENCES, MINIMUM DIPLOMA IN SECTECTARY
SALES EXUCUTIVE : BASIC QUALIFICATION; 1 YEARS EXPERIENCES, MINIMUM DIPLOMA IN MARKETING, BUSINESS, OR MANAGEMENT
SECURITY : BASIC QUALIFICATION; 3 YEARS EXPERIENCES, MINIMUM PASS SPM
OPERATOR : BASIC QUALIFICATION; PASS SPM, PREFERABLE THOSE IN MANUFACTURING FIELDS
INTERESTED CANDIDATES PLEASE WRITE-IN/EMAIL RESUMES AND INCLUDE EXPECTED SALARY, WITH PASSPORT-SIZED PHOTOGRAPH ATTACHED TO THE FOLLOWING ADDRESS
E-BUSINESS SDN BHD,
65, KING STREET,
10200, PENANG, MALAYSIA
FOR MORE INFORMATION, VIEW OUR COMPANY WEBSITE: http://sfairus.blogspots.com/ or email us at fairus20@gmail.com
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