Posted on 2007 under Digital Camera, Mobile phone |
15
Nov

Samsung Electro-Mechanics has developed an 8-megapixel CMOS camera module for cell phones. It measures just 10.5 x 11.5 x 9.4mm and you should be seeing 8-megapixel camera phones by next summer, as they are going into mass production during the first two quarters of 2008.
Posted on 2007 under Mobile phone |
12
Nov

HTC just went live with their Touch Cruise. “Touch” as in that TouchFLO interface, “Cruise” as in GPS-enabled. The third addition to HTC’s Touch lineup packs HSDPA, WiFi, Bluetooth, a 3 megapixel camera, microSD expansion, and a 2.8-inch touch-screen lying on top of a Windows Mobile 6 foundation. Oh, and it’s loaded with TomTom Navigator 6 software to make the most of that GPS receiver. Yup, everything mostly what we thought it would be. Available this month from European retailers or SIM-free direct from HTC.
Posted on 2007 under Smart phone, Mobile phone |
5
Nov

Samsung answers the iPhone (isn’t everyone?) with this Samsung SPH-M4650, a smartphone running Windows Mobile 6 that takes the touchscreen concept a step further while adding a dose of tacky design along the way. Its touch screen gives you haptic feedback, goosing you with a slight vibration when you touch an icon on its 2.8″ screen. The usual 2MP camera is on board, and its DMB TV tuner tells us this exact model isn’t headed for these shores. What we like best? Its 16mm thinness. Nice try, Samsung—almost iPhoney and a design that might be good enough for the gPhone.
Posted on 2007 under Smart phone, Mobile phone |
3
Nov

Cnet is reporting that as part of Monday’s big press conference, Google will unveil their iPhone killer gPhone OS, tentatively codenamed Android. Sources are calling the OS a “a complete mobile-phone software stack” that will be followed shortly after by a SDK (Translation: this isn’t just an ad system and will have more than a bunch of lame web apps).
CNET affirms that the OS should be open-source and Linux based, but we shouldn’t expect to see it in stores soon. The number of companies involved (over 30) will make it difficult to move quickly on this. I’m just glad that this thing is moving out from the shadowy depths of rumorville.