Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Boost your mobile cell phones productivity with RIM BlackBerry 8830 World Edition

Boost your mobile cell phones productivity with RIM BlackBerry 8830 World Edition


So much about the RIM BlackBerry 8830 World Edition is familiar. But one aspect is very foreign--and therein lies this Sprint phone's appeal.

The RIM BlackBerry 8830 ($300 after a two-year activation with Sprint and an ongoing instant rebate) is the first PDA phone that is compatible both with Sprint's CDMA network and with GSM networks for international use. The inclusion of GSM--even if it's only for overseas--is a huge bonus for mobile workers who need a phone that can work wherever they are. The 8830 comes close to fitting that bill--it will work on 900-MHz and 1800-MHz GSM networks outside of the United States (and that covers Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and most of Asia).
The SIM card slot for GSM use is located in the battery compartment, next to the mini-SD Card slot. Sprint says the SIM card is unlocked for both voice and data use, which means that you can either use the Sprint-supplied SIM card that ships with the phone, or buy a local SIM card while traveling abroad.

The Sprint SIM card is not unlocked for use on a domestic GSM network. The company makes a point of noting that the BlackBerry 8830 will operate only on the Sprint network in the United States, not over a GSM network.

In addition to the GSM card for international use, Sprint supplies an international charger. This nice touch means that, if you don't already have one, you won't have to go hunting around at your local electronics store for a power plug adapter.

When overseas, should you stick with Sprint or spring for a SIM card from a local carrier? That depends at least partly on how heavily you plan to use your phone. A quick spot check of Sprint's international roaming voice and data rates indicates that those rates can run about 30 percent higher than AT&T and T-Mobile. For example, placing a call from Berlin, Germany, would cost you $1.29 a minute on Sprint and $0.99 on T-Mobile.

Beyond the international appeal of this PDA phone, the phone itself is what you'd expect from a BlackBerry 8800. The industrial design and software are the same as the BlackBerry 8800 we've already reviewed: It has a full QWERTY keyboard that's easy to type on, a Pearl-like trackball for scroll navigation, and the same slim, contoured profile.

I found two big differences in our tests, though, between our original AT&T Wireless BlackBerry 8800's performance and that of this Sprint 8830. One was in call quality: I thought voice calls sounded great on Sprint's network; we described the AT&T iteration as "occasionally staticky," with an echo. Another difference was in battery life. The BlackBerry 8830's talk time lasted only 5 hours, 42 minutes in our tests; the GSM-only AT&T Wireless 8800 lasted to the 10-hour mark, our battery test ceiling.

Though the BlackBerry 8830 is an excellent phone and a great e-mail device, it does lack both a camera and a consumer instant messaging client.
Nevertheless, the flexibility of GSM international roaming, paired with BlackBerry's easy-to-use messaging capabilities, gives the BlackBerry 8830 World Phone an unbeatable one-two punch for business users and frequent international travelers.

Melissa J. Perenson

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Samsung Instinct™ product overview the iPhone Clone

Samsung Instinct™ product overview the iPhone Clone


Samsung Instinct™ product overview


The Ultimate in Touch Screen Speed and Simplicity

Samsung Instinct, exclusively from Sprint, offers consumers an industry-leading user experience by combining full touch screen functionality with access to the fast speed of Sprint’s EV-DO Rev A Mobile Broadband Network. Samsung Instinct provides easy access to Sprint exclusive multimedia content, business or personal email, GPS navigation, live and on-demand TV content, full song downloads, streaming radio and an impressive HTML Web experience. Samsung Instinct offers localized haptic feedback and a new level of customization by allowing the user to access their favorite applications with a single touch. This stylish handset provides an expansive touch screen display and three navigation keys that keep all of the device’s features and applications within immediate access. Samsung Instinct offers Visual Voicemail, stereo Bluetooth® with audible caller ID, expandable memory up to 8 GB and a 2.0MP camera with camcorder.


ENTERTAINMENT/PERSONALIZATION

Sprint TV® with an extensive selection of live and on-demand programming including Sprint Exclusive Entertainment (SEE), the industry’s only made-for-mobile sports and entertainment video programming network

Sprint Music StoreSM allowing users to wirelessly download full-length songs directly to their phone for just 99 cents each

More than a dozen streaming-radio applications, including Sprint Radio with more than 150 channels

Sprint Media Manager PC to phone transfer application

Background music mode allowing the user to play music while text messaging, playing games or surfing the Internet

Customizable Favorites menu

PRODUCTIVITY

Sprint Navigation with GPS-enabled audio and visual turn-by-turn driving directions, one-click traffic rerouting and more than 10 million local listings

Live Search for Sprint, powered by Microsoft, provides easy access to directory information, integrated GPS-enabled directions, interactive maps and one-touch click to call access

Voice to Action button providing many functions using voice activation including call, text, picture messaging, traffic, movie, sports, news and search.

HTML Web browsing

Visual Voicemail allowing users to listen to messages in their order of preference and manage them with a tap of the screen

2.0 megapixel camera with 2x digital zoom and video camcorder

Advanced Stereo Bluetooth® Wireless Technology with audio caller ID

Access to corporate and consumer (POP3) email including AOL, Gmail and Yahoo!

Threaded text messaging provides a view of the full conversation

Mobile Sync to restore contact information if the device is lost, stolen or damaged

Phone as Modem connects the phone with a computer for Internet and email access


SPECIFICATIONS

Dimensions: 2.17 x 4.57 x 0.49 inches; 4.4 ounces

Display: 3.1” TFT (240 x 432 pixels and 262K vibrant colors)

Standard Lithium (LiIon) battery: up to 5.75 hours continuous talk time*
*Talk times will vary depending on phone usage patterns and conditions. Battery power consumption depends on factors such as network onfiguration, signal strength, operating temperature, features selected, vibrate mode, backlight settings, browser use, frequency of calls and voice, data and other application usage patterns.

Guide Note:Samsung Instinct is a cell phone similar to iPhone and offered exclusively through Sprint Nextel Corporation. The phone offers a touch screen interface and is hoped to revitalize Sprint's waining sales.

Fast Facts:

  1. Available in June 2008
  2. Haptic Feedback
  3. Expandable memory up to 8 GB
  4. 2.0MP camera
  5. Dimensions: 2.17 x 4.57 x 0.49 inches;
  6. Weight: 4.4 ounces
  7. Display: 3.1” TFT

Monday, April 14, 2008

I can has cheezeburger and SODA please LOLcats goes commercial

I can has a break?

OK. I love Icanhascheezburger.com, and LOLcats in general, as much as the next guy. Truly. I have spent hours, in aggregate, laughing myself to tears on the site.


But when I ran across an item on the site on Tuesday morning announcing that it is teaming up with the trendy micro-soda company Jones Soda to run a contest to put LOLcats labels for root beer and other flavor sodas, I had to ask myself if someone was maybe huffing a little too much catnip.

LOLcats, of course, are the whimsical combinations of silly pidgin English phrases and funny pictures of cats or other animals. And Icanhascheezburger.com is the lion in the LOLcat kingdom. And I even think Jones soda can be pretty good.

The two outfits are teaming to find the highest vote-getting LOLcats in a special contest, the top five of which will adorn special bottles of the soda.

But I just don't quite see the connection between LOLcats and the soda buying community. It's not that I don't think that a lot of people who buy Jones soda also enjoy LOLcats. It's just that I'm not sure how well they translate onto a soda label. It would be one thing if the LOLcat choices were specifically about soda in some way, but because they're going to be the top-five vote-getting choices from Icanhascheezburger.com's contest, they will likely be about walruses without buckets, or tigers pretending to be monorails. There's just likely to be a disconnect.
I can has cheezeburger and SODA please LOLcats goes commercial

On the other hand, maybe I'm over thinking this. I suppose it's possible that people will be walking down the aisle in their local supermarket, see the strange labels on the soda and laugh themselves into buying a few bottles.

And people do love custom labels, or magazine covers, things that bring a little social context to their everyday products. Just look at Reason magazine and the personalized satellite images of each subscriber's address that it put on the cover a few years ago.

This won't be quite so personalized, however. And that's probably good, since LOLcats definitely follow the 80/20 rule.

So will this sell more soda or raise the profile of LOLcats? I have no idea. I just wish instead of partnering with a soda company, Icanhascheezburger was teaming up with politicians to make campaign posters. Now that would be a mashup I'd like to see.