Thursday, July 23, 2009

Asphalt 4: Elite Racing


Games - Racing
$5.99
Compatibility: iPhone dan iPod Touch (2.1 Software update)
My verdict: 9/10


Car racing games such as Need For Speed. In this game there are many options and motor cars (24 cars and 4 motorcycles) from the super sport compact car. Which make interesting cars can also be improved performance on the engine modifications. Level also provided, with each level of mode 4 available races.

Control available for option 3: touch, tilt, and swap. To touch, we touch the left side going right to swing the car, to tilt, we use the accelerometer feature, and we swap the steering wheel friction. This game can also be played in potrait or landscape mode, although according to a much more comfortable with the landscape mode.

Graphed very good and stable.

Those who would like a racing game like Need For Speed can buy this game while waiting for game Need For Speed come out in the iphone. (yup, according to information from the EA Games mobile, they plan to launch a NFS ipod touch and iphone).

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Thursday, July 16, 2009

Google Voice Release for Blackberry and Android. iPhone? NO!!


Although iPhone users can access Google in the browser, Safari browser, the voice of robots and received on Wednesday, BlackBerry users are totally independent applications, allowing users to make calls, send text messages and control of voice mail as part of a Google phone number.


Google to launch iPhone versions of applications, "Apple" to do so, according to the New York Times.

Unique content to promote the ability of Google to the international community to reduce tariffs. This also allows the sending and receiving messages through the toll-free number, bypassing the phone operators. Google has also transcribes voice messages and reading the number of smart phones from the telephone directory.

This leadership speculation Cable, AT & T and Apple can "kill" Google iPhone voice applications. The fact that the agreement, both companies have blocked the implementation of video and Phoenix were forced to the Skype feature, you can make free calls over the phone data plan.

At present, the voice of the service of Google, the user of the guests.

New applications to address an important issue, Google Voice: Even if some people in May require users to Google their votes, they will receive the back of the cell, home or office are available. The adoption of a new plan, now that we have Google as the voice number.

It was originally known as Grand Central, the voice of Google is a service allowing consumers to control through various phone numbers, number concentration. Configuration through the service, calls can be sent or phone number and a mobile phone can ring.

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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Maxblaster, a Flashlight That Can Reached a Moone


One morning, standing in front of Ralf Ottow the bathroom mirror when I saw the bronzed forehead. The tanning - got his hand on the flashlight and the skin is not fried.

He was 8 after 45 - year - old Dutch engineer their own built-in optical light, but the new 38-10000 - candlepower creation, Maxablaster, more like a miniature star. To start, Ottow built-in powerful commercial flashlight and close spacing of the gas is very hot plasma between two electrodes - the center of the lamp to produce light by creating a space filled with mercury arc bulb, to deprive said. Bright, more focus, as well as the results bimui it (the sun, the initial test of the product), the more ultraviolet light kick. So he designed a special reflective coating, ground, and coated glass window to add a trap ultraviolet light and nuts.



POWER: Thebulb is typically used for lab equipment and is designed to run off an outlet, so Ottow had the difficult task of packing together 54 off-the-shelf nickel-metal-hydride batteries. To regulate the current, he added a ballast.

PERFORMANCE: Some flashlights pump out more light, but the Maxblaster has a much greater reach because the mercury arc lamp creates a tightly focused beam. Ottow says he once illuminated a ferry boat some nine miles away.

SAFETY: Ottow installed a strong glass window in case the pressure shatters the bulb and gave it an extra coating to block harmful UV rays. He also added a mechanism so the light needs a key to operate.




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Monday, July 13, 2009

[Case iPhone] When Apple meeting with Sony PlayStation


STYLE GUIDE: The idea of a PlayStation Console case for iPhone with matching controller key chain is one fantastical work of genius that instantly restored a feeling of childlike wonder for me at first glance. Hand tooled with a felt outside and black felt lining, this magical sheath is hand embroidered with great detail certain to spark epic conversations about the glory days of video gaming.

Price
Only Case = $20
Case + Hook = $27

Are you Interested??




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Phone BlackBerry World Tour is now held by Sprint and Verizon

As promised, both Verizon and Sprint, the BlackBerry tour today. The smartphone from RIM supports GSM and CDMA networks - including EV-DO and HSDPA - use throughout the world.


Overview of the tour BlackBerry
RIM as a device in which a good thing for both the professional and personal communication.

Your personal ability to access social networking sites like Facebook, Flickr and MySpace. It will also allow users photos and videos via MMS, instant messaging, and the most popular or BlackBerry Messenger.

For professional users who have access to tour RIM push e-mail messages with attachments, calendar, contacts, applications, business processes and the localization.

Hardware
BlackBerry tour in the form of a tablet with a HVGA (480 x 360) display, trackball and QWERTY keyboard.

It contains a camera 3 / 2 MPX (with variable zoom, auto focus, flash and image stabilization) and Bluetooth GPS receiver, while the users are capable of up to 16 GB of data with a microSD / SDHC card (sold separately).

The BlackBerry works on Verizon and Sprint mobile broadband (EV-DO Rev A) in the network and can also be roaming to other wireless broadband 3G networks throughout the world for voice and e-mail service. Roaming Offer 850/900/1800/1900 MHz GSM / GPRS / EDGE as well as support for 2100 MHz UMTS / HSPA networks.

The outer casing is with 4.4 inch 2.4 inch 0.6 inch (112 mm x 62 mm x 14.2 mm) and weight of 4.6 ounces. (130 g).

Pricing and Availability
The BlackBerry 9630 is available on the tour from Verizon for 200 dollars with a term of two years service. It can now verizonwireless.com

Sprint is charging the same price of 100 U.S. Dollar after deduction card and two years service contract. The tour is presented on the website of the airline: Sprint.com.

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Friday, July 10, 2009

Loves HTC Android, Windows Mobile

HTC is the manufacturer, which is always releasing new Android and Windows Mobile Phones. However, the end of the year, we see some unblock mobile phone based on Android. Does this mean that people on the HTC have gradually transition to free and Android slow the work of former horse trench, Windows Mobile?


According to Jon French, Country Manager, HTC UK and Ireland. The answer is a big no! Recently in an interview with the CWP Mobile News has confirmed that Windows Mobile is a priority, and we'll see more Windows Mobile devices in the future. In addition, with Windows Mobile 7 on the anvil. Only one year, so that the platform is Windows Mobile. HTC has just announced the World Cup, three new phone, Diamond2 HTC Touch, HTC Touch and HTC Snap Pro2.

On Android, a platform that more and more players and mobile phones. In addition, the new Sony has showed that the implementation of the platform, it is always interesting. However, HTC does not have a plan, "the difference between" Windows Mobile for Android - at least not in the near future.

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Sprint, a Wi-Fi in the Future BlackBerrys

All Sprint Nextel (NYSE: S) will be Wi-Fi smartphone in the future, including next BlackBerry necessary, they are on a par with AT & T (NYSE: T) and T-Mobile.

The company will soon be the BlackBerry Tour Sunday, high-end device is by some companies and occasional users of the consumer. Although there is no CPU, the speed of the 3G connection, the high mobile phone e-mail, Bluetooth, members of certain professions, of mobile telephony in May miss no Wi-Fi phone in the first iteration.


The tour is a dual-mode, which means he can do CDMA network of Sprint in the U.S. and the GSM networks foreigners. Following the model of BlackBerry, he also plays with the e-mail and schedule for the infrastructure and services on the Internet such as Gmail, Yahoo Mail and many others. The device costs $ 199 with a new two-year contract and Verizon Wireless will also be the device to the network at the same price.

Sprint has not set a date when the smartphone market has Wi-Fi, but the executive branch means that the service plans to release a new version of the Tour, with a Wi-Fi connection in 2010.

"Sprint takes Wi-Fi in all major facility to be developed," Jeff Clemow, Sprint director of marketing, Fierce Wireless.

Sprint has some smartphone Wi-Fi, including Palm, and the Touch Diamond, BlackBerry smartphone, but behind some of the competition in this category. AT & T BlackBerry Bold, and T-Mobile BlackBerry Curve 8900 includes both Wi-Fi, but Verizon (NYSE: VZ) 's BlackBerry without this ability.

This shows the growing importance of mobile smartphone gives users an opportunity to stay. While Verizon and Sprint, have strong EV-DO 3G network, is not wholly to be ensured, particularly in the area.

In addition, the Wi-Fi connection can opt for a connection to the reduction of the hotspots are on the 3G network of the operator by revenue, and the smartphone, as most customers have for the mobile broadband packages.

AT & T to invest more in infrastructure, Wi-Fi Connection, and enter the iPhone and BlackBerry users free access to hotspots in the four seasons, McDonald's, and at other public places.


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Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Nokia Denies Android Reports

Nokia (NYSE: NOK) said there is "absolutely no truth" to the rumor that it would be using the Google (NSDQ: GOOG)-backed Android operating system for a smartphone or mobile Internet device.

The speculation came after a report in the Guardian quoted industry insiders who said the world's largest cell phone manufacturer would use the Android platform to help it be more competitive against high-end devices like Apple's iPhone and Research In Motion (NSDQ: RIMM)'s BlackBerry smartphones.


"Everyone knows that Symbian is our preferred platform for advanced mobile devices," a Nokia spokesman told the Reuters news service.

The move would be a stunning shift in strategy for Nokia. The company spent more than $400 million to buy out Symbian last year in order to spin it off into a non-profit foundation that offers an open source version of the OS. The Symbian Foundation was formed to achieve that goal, and its membership includes industry heavyweights such asAT&T (NYSE: T), Samsung, Nokia, Vodafone, LG Electronics, and others.

The open source version of Symbian will combine S60, DoCoMo MOAP, and UIQ into a single, royalty-free OS for handset manufacturers to use with the next generation of smartphones. Symbian is already the world's most widely used mobile OS, and the foundation believes a free, customizable version will help increase this footprint. The strategy is similar to what Google is doing with its Linux-based mobile operating system, Android, which it introduced in 2007 along with the Open Handset Alliance. The open source OS can be downloaded and used by anyone, and Google said it expects 18 Android-powered phones to be released by the end of the year from various manufacturers including Motorola (NYSE: MOT), and Samsung.



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Sony Joins the Netbook Market

Sony on Tuesday announced the launch of its Vaio W-Series of mini-notebooks, or netbooks, which the company is billing as a "perfect family accessory."

While some could argue that the Lifestyle PC was really Sony's first foray into the netbook category, the W-Series represents Sony's official notice that it's throwing its hat into the netbook ring.


The W-Series PC measures 10.5 inches high by 1.28 inches wide by 7.1 inches deep, and weighs in at 2.6 pounds. It comes in three colors – berry pink, sugar white and cocoa brown – and sports a 10-inch widescreen display, which is a pretty common size for netbooks. The screen comes in 1,366 x 768 resolution, which should give it an edge over the vast majority of netbooks out there. It offers 2 USB ports, VGA Out, and Ethernet ports, as well as a webcam and multimedia slots for Memory Stick Duo and SD memory.

Like most netbooks, the Sony Vaio W-Series comes with an Intel Atom processor, in this case a 1.66-GHz N280. The system has 1 Gbyte of system memory, and a 160-GB, 5,400-RPM hard drive. In terms of networking capability, the W-Series has Ethernet, 802.11a/b/g, and Bluetooth technology. It comes with Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition pre-installed.

Other apps include Sony's VAIO Multimedia Suite (VAIO Media plus Multimedia Streaming Software), as well as a 30-day trial of Norton Internet Security 2009 and a 60-day trial of Microsoft Home and Student 2007.

With the W-Series, Sony seems to be emphasizing what you might call its "ecoconsiousness"; the W-Series is Energy Star 5.0 compliant and EPEAT GOLD registered. Its LCD is mercury free, and the packaging the system comes in is comprised of 95 percent recycled cardboard packaging. Sony also says it will help recycle your old PC. (Some fees may apply; for more details, visit Sony's "green" site.)

The Sony VAIO W-Series is available for pre-order at www.sonystyle.com and will be available in major retail stores in the U.S. beginning in August, with a price tag of about $500.



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Microsoft: Stop Playing Games with the Customer!

The glory days of Microsoft ended with Vista for one reason, and one reason only: Vista Ultimate. It was part of an ill-advised scheme called "subtractive marketing" or "fake versioning"—purposely taking features out of a finished product to create an artificial range or selection.

Who ever dreamed up the Vista Ultimate moniker, I consider that individual responsible for the decline of Microsoft. This is where the tide turned. Microsoft had been selling disabled versions of its products for some time, but never went to the extreme that it did with Vista, and now we see the company doing the same thing with Windows 7.


This is all the same one product, folks. What is the point of selling six versions of the same code base? It does not cost one nickel more to manufacture Windows 7 Ultimate than it costs to manufacture Windows 7 Home Basic, and the differences are confusing to just about everyone.

Microsoft could sell a single version of the new OS at some median price just as easily as it can sell disabled versions of the product for various prices. The public will realize this eventually.

The psychology is just bad, because the code for Ultimate is done. Why not just sell everyone Ultimate?

This is like selling a car that is complete and loaded with everything when it's manufactured (we'll call it the Lincoln Ultimate). But you need a downgraded version of the car, so after the Lincoln Ultimate comes off the assembly line, you rip out the leather seats, discard them, and put in cloth seats, in order to sell the car for less money. You could have just as easily left in the leather seats. It would have been easier on everyone!

Or try this analogy. I walk into a store that is having a sale on coffee mugs with cracked handles. They are selling for $1 instead of $10. People are buying the mugs for a dollar, and the last one is sold just as I walk in.

"We're sold out, but here is what I'll do for you," the owner says. He grabs a perfectly good $10 mug and cracks off the handle and sells it to me for $1. I'm left wondering why he didn't just sell me the mug with the handle intact for $1. It would cost him nothing more, since it was a good mug he broke. What would be the point of doing what he did? I perceive that something is wrong with this person, especially because he thought he was doing me a favor to move some inventory.

There is a sense of larceny when one witnesses this sort of scam. The Ultimate product is coded. It is finished. Why is Microsoft taking features out of the product after they have been designed in? Is the company doing it to create a totally artificial line up of different products for different markets? Apparently so, but why? The Ultimate product would have serviced all these markets in the first place.

I think this sort of thinking comes from the idea of the value-add. You sell a basic product, then sell some add-on or plug-in or utility for a little more money. This, I think, people can fathom and accept, as they did with different versions of Microsoft Office for the school and the home. So what if the MS-Office for the home does not include, say, PowerPoint? Not including something in a bundle is one thing, but disabling features in MS-Word is something different.

The subtractive approach that Microsoft is using generates plenty of ill will. Someone buys Windows 7 and expects it to have a feature. But no, you got the wrong version. XP-compatibility, for example, does not exist on many versions. This would be a crucial thing to have, especially on the cheaper versions, since people on a budget are more likely to be running old code. So Microsoft has to field support calls about this and people get irked.

The company should pull the plug on this entire scheme ASAP. It was the reason Vista failed. It generates ill-will. It generates suspicion. And it's stupid. Stop doing it Microsoft!



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Monday, July 6, 2009

Teen hacker releases Windows and Mac jailbreaking programs for iPhone 3G S


The teen hacker who unlocked the original iPhone is at it again. George Hotz, 19, claims to have created an app that can “jailbreak” the iPhone 3G S.

That means the program, dubbed purplera1n, can install third-party software on an iPhone 3G S, even if that software is not approved by Apple. It didn’t take him that long to hack the iPhone 3G S, which has only been available since June 19.


Jailbreaking is a big deal because it shows that it isn’t impossible to overcome Apple’s built-in security features for the iPhone. To some users, jailbreaking adds value to the phone because they are able to run a variety of unauthorized apps. Apple tries to close off vulnerabilities that make jailbreaking possible, but hackers such as Hotz look for new ones in a cat-and-mouse game.

Note that while Hotz originally was able to “unlock” the iPhone so that it could make phone calls on non-AT&T networks, “jailbreaking” is different in that it merely allows unapproved apps to run on the iPhone.

Hotz released software on Friday that works with Windows-based computers and the latest version of iTunes, as well as an iPhone 3G S running the latest iPhone 3.0 software. He talked about it in a blog post. Today, he released a Mac version. He warns that people who try the software should do a backup before they start.

In the initial post, Hotz wrote, “We release, Apple fixes, we find new holes.” Various blogs have confirmed that the software works. Hotz gained fame in August, 2007 when, at the age of 17, he became the first hacker to crack the iPhone’s security so it could run unauthorized apps.



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Sunday, July 5, 2009

Taking flight: why the iPhone still beats Pre for air travel


Palm's new phone is great for keeping you connected while on the road, but you can't do cloud messaging when you're physically in the clouds. You also can't play games, because there really aren't any, and in fact the Pre doesn't offer much in the way of sheer fun (unless your idea of fun is tweeting about the lack of available apps in Palm's store). Ars reports from the road.

If you're one of the handful of people who follows me on Twitter, you know that I (plus wife and eight-month-old baby) was stuck in New York's JFK airport for two days with no luggage, no laptop power cord, and a Palm Pre. Because I've now spent lots of quality time with the Pre in airports and on planes (some of them grounded on runways for hours), I can now report with authority on what it's like to travel with Palm's newest phone. What I found is that the Pre is a pretty boring travel companion who tires way too easily.

The first thing to note about air travel with the Pre is that airports are very iPhone-friendly places. You don't notice just how many shops and electronics vending machines have iPhone accessories—chargers, battery extenders, external speakers, etc.—until you've rejoined the ranks of the iPhone-less. So, when traveling with a Pre, you need your charger with you at all times; if you've left it behind somewhere, don't expect to walk into some random shop and find much in the way of charging options. (Though I imagine that at least one of the iGo attachments would work, if you can find it.)

Speaking of not being able to buy things for the Pre, Palm seriously needs to get its App Catalog in order. Compared with the iTunes App store, with its tens of thousands of diversions and amusements, Palm's App Catalog is a barren wasteland with only about 30 titles currently on offer. As great as cloud messaging is, its entertainment value is limited, and even if you're a complete messaging addict you still can't do it in-flight.

You also have to be careful how much you message on the ground, since doing intensive e-mail and IM seriously drains the battery. After a full night's recharge, I picked up the Pre and began doing e-mails and IM over breakfast. By the time I was on the shuttle back to JFK an hour later, my battery was down 30 percent. Ouch. If you are going to sit and tap out one message after another on the Pre, make sure you've got access to a power outlet.

There is one diversion on the Pre that's really great, but you'll definitely want to be plugged in while you use it: Sprint TV. The live TV streaming to the device works quite well, and I got a huge kick out of watching ABC News and some reality TV shows on my phone. But I estimate (I haven't formally tested) that I could stream about 30 minutes of TV to the Pre before completely nuking the battery.


It's the battery software, stupid
You'll notice a theme in the comments above, a theme that's familiar to all smartphone users nowadays: battery life, or rather, lack thereof.

My gripe isn't so much with the Pre's battery life, though I wish it were much better, as it is with the fact that webOS doesn't give users nearly enough easy control over the software and OS side of battery optimization. Sure, I can turn off Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, but why can't I also temporarily disable Synergy? Even better would be the ability to temporarily disable messaging services that might be operating in the background and that I don't need—maybe I want to retain the ability to see incoming SMS but I can do without Gtalk and AIM. Indeed, Palm should include a "just a phone" mode for those times when your battery gets down to 20 percent and you really need to retain the ability to make and receive calls. Conversely, it should also include a WiFi-only mode for when you just need to use the data services and don't need to make calls.

My other suggestion would be to include all of the battery optimization tweaks on a single card. Screen brightness, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth enable and disable, airplane mode, e-mail message polling intervals, and any other battery saving options could be pulled together under one card for me to access if I need to focus on power conservation. In short, doing manual battery optimization on Pre is a huge pain with the existing options, and it could be made much easier with a centralized interface and some preset battery profiles.

Ultimately, traveling with the Pre made me want my iPhone back, because while the Pre keeps you connected, when you're stuck on an airplane you often just want to watch a TV show or play Field Runners. But hopefully the App Catalog-related gripes have only a temporary shelf-life, and Palm's store will soon be overflowing with games, puzzles, e-books, and other downtime-killing distractions. Once that happens, and if Palm puts the battery situation more under the user's control, it will have a much more travel-friendly device that will keep Pre users from wishing the Best Buy vending machine sold the iPhone 3GS.



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Apple patching critical SMS vulnerability in iPhone OS

Security researcher Charlie Miller has revealed that Apple is working on a patch for a security flaw he identified in the iPhone's SMS implementation. The flaw can actually lead to arbitrary code execution, as he explained to Ars last month. Miller hasn't yet detailed the flaw, citing an agreement with Apple, though he and partner Vincenzo Iozzo plan to detail their discovery later this month at the Black Hat Security Conference in Las Vegas.


During a presentation at the SyScan security conference in Singapore, Miller explained that a vulnerability in the iPhone's handling of SMS messages makes it possible to send code instead of strictly text. Despite SMS's 140 byte size limitation, the iPhone can reassemble larger messages that are broken up to fit the limitation, which allows larger programs to be sent. The iPhone can be instructed to execute SMS data as code instead of text, and when it executes the code it does so with root privileges and without any interaction from the user.

This vulnerability makes it possible to then turn off the signed code checks built in to iPhone OS and load unsigned libraries. That basically allows an attacker to load a complete shell environment and have complete control over the device, including access to any data stored on it. Miller told Ars last month that he didn't know if the vulnerability still existed in iPhone OS 3.0, though the fact that Apple is working on a patch—and already has iPhone OS 3.1 in beta—suggests it still exists in the latest version, despite Apple patching 46 other potential security issues in the update.

Miller has noted on numerous occasions that iPhone OS actually has pretty good security. The code signing requirements and individual application sandboxes provide a relatively secure environment, which is the reason that they haven't yet been targeted by hackers. Miller also noted during his SyScan presentation that a side effect of jailbreaking an iPhone or iPod touch is that it removes most—about 80 percent—of these protections, and cautioned that users concerned about security should avoid jailbreaking.

Apple is expected to have a fix for the SMS issue released sometime this month before Miller and Iozzo present at the Black Hat Conference, which kicks off July 25. It's not known if the patch will come in the form of iPhone OS 3.1 or a separate 3.0.x point release.





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Leaked: Sony Ericsson's Upcoming Android Phone

We know for some time now that Sony Ericsson (SE) is working on a Google Android based mobile phone, but the company has been keeping mum on details. However, pictures leaked by a Danish site appear to reveal Sony Ericsson's upcoming Android phone, and it looks like a good one.


Code-named Rachael, Sony Ericsson's Android phone will be announced later this year, according to information obtained by the Danish Mobil magazine. The phone will part of SE's XPERIA series, which so far includes the Windows Mobile-based X1 model.

And as SE joined the Open Handset Alliance in December last year, it was shaping out quite clearly that the Swedish company would join the Android-running smartphone army. Mobil says that the Android-loving SE Rachel is based on the Qualcomm Snapdragon platform (QSD8250), wich would give the phone processor speeds of up to 1GHz and 7.2Mbit per second HSPA downlink speeds.

The leaked pictures also show the SE's upcoming Android phone featuring an 8.1-megapixel camera with autofocus and flash. At the top of the phone a 3.5mm headphone jack and a miniUSB port are also present. No specific details on the phone's display size or resolution were released, but the Dutch magazine says it has a pressure-sensitive touchscreen.

Some of the specifications of SE's Android phone are looking very good in comparison to other smartphones on the market today. An 8.1-megapixel camera would be most powerful on an Android handset yet, and remarkably better than the 3-megapixel camera on the latest iPhone 3GS. On the Android realm, the HTC Hero and the Samsung Galaxy have only a 5-megapixel camera.

It's highly likely that SE's Rachel will run on the upcoming 2.0 version of Google Android operating system, which is also expected to be released towards the end of this year. As for Adobe Flash, it is yet unclear whether this phone will feature this capability.




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Thursday, January 1, 2009

Privacy Policy

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