
Nokia N95 and N98 Compare Review
Posted by bensto in Nokia on 06 18th, 2008
A good choice to the N95, the N81 offers almost the same features, but at a significantly lower price. It’s a classic-style smartphone with GPS navigation, an outstanding media player, 5 mp camera, wireless LAN, a 2 Gb memory card and HSDPA for accelerated 3G connectivity.
The role of the N82 then, is not to push the boundaries of technology any further, rather it’s to offer essentially the same features as the N95, but in a different package that will broaden its appeal.
read comments (0)Boombox : Mini Phone GSM
Posted by bensto in CELL PHONE on 04 10th, 2008
This cell phone features a built in MP3 playing boombox that gets shockingly loud. The good thing is you don’t have to forsake your existing cell phone (unless you want to). Just pop the SIM card out of your current cell phone from AT&T/Cingular or T-Mobile and insert it into the back of the Mini Boombox Cell Phone and power it up. Make call to your existing cell phone number and your Mini Boombox phone starts ringing.

Like other cell phone you are also get all the standard cell phone features you would expect including a 1.3 megapixel camera, voice dialing, SMS/MMS messaging and WAP Browser.
This mini phone also has the ability to read aloud the numbers of incoming calls using voice synthesis. The Mini Boombox GSM Cell Phone comes with 256 MB of built in memory to store your MP3 music files or videos, and the storage is expandable up to 2GB via a Micro SD card slot. Now you can share your musical tastes with everyone around you without making your old phone mad.
Express Your Music With Nokia 5300
Posted by bensto in Nokia on 03 25th, 2008
From the face, maybe you are not realizing that the Nokia 5300 XpressMusic Phone is a cell phone at all. With its boxy black-and-white case, well-known music controls, and large screen, you could easily mistake it for a digital audio player. And you wouldn’t be wrong: The 5300 is, in fact, almost equal parts music player and cell phone, and the music features are some of the best that we’ve seen on a phone.
this slider-style phone looks squared-off and slightly bulky when you closed, but its gorgeous 2-inch display takes center stage. The music controls sit in the black rim around the display (a red-and white-version also is available); to the left are keys for scrolling through your music collection, as well as keys for playing and pausing tracks. Volume keys sit on the right side of the handset. Since the keys are rubbery, they’re simple to locate by touch, and easy to push.
Basic controls below the screen make navigating the phone’s many features a breeze. Sliding the device open reveals the one disappointing aspect of its controls: a phone keypad that feels overly plasticky. Still, the keys are nicely raised, so dialing is easy.
But the music features really make the phone shine. The music player, which is easily accessible through the unit’s home page or via the external music controls, is very user-friendly. You can quickly scroll through your music library, which is organized by artists, albums, genres, composers, or playlists. The phone ships with Nokia’s Music Manager software for organizing your library on your PC and a USB cable for transferring tunes to the phone, which includes a 1GB microSD card for storing them. While the desktop software isn’t as intuitive as the phone’s music player, it is still relatively easy to use. It scans your PC for audio files and lets you transfer any of them to your phone with one click. You can also use the Music Manager app to delete songs from the phone and to create playlists, which you can’t do on the phone itself. T-Mobile does not offer its own music service with over-the-air downloads, so you’ll have to obtain your music collection elsewhere.
The 5300 also includes a 1.3-megapixel camera that takes serviceable to very good snapshots. Still-life photos came out great, but like many camera phones, this model suffers from a significant shutter delay, so capturing moving subjects is hard. The phone also takes video clips, but they look pixelated and slightly grainy (typical for a camera phone).
Make Phone With M600i GSM Watch
Posted by bensto in Watch on 03 24th, 2008
This gadged GSM Watch Phone M600i, works like a normal watch and a normal phone both at the same time, blue tooth + MP3/MP4 full screen play, forward and pause, internal 60MB memory, SMS group sending, Voice recorder, WAP, Handwritten input, Bluetooth, GPRS download, MMS, E-book, IP dialing, calendar, health manager, caculator, unit converter, rate exchange, memo, world clock, note.
This DigitalRiseTM M600i Mobile phone watch brings a shock to us with its cool appearance, smooth handwritten messaging, touchscreen dialing, and stereo Bluetooth music! This M600imobile watch overcomes many shortcoming of previous models such as its support for TF card up to 2GB memory, its camera and video recording, and WAP internet access! All these amazing functions are integrated into the smallest mobile phone watch!
DigitalRise M600i designers are most considerate for customers’ concerns. It also comes with much demanded features such as calls vibration, voice recognition for (voice control, such as dial, music playing)! The flaws of previous mobile phone watches have become bright spots.
Sony Ericsson R306i
Posted by bensto in Sony Ericsson on 03 15th, 2008
The Sony Ericsson R306i is designed to deliver a radio-listening experience to emerging markets. Opening up into a clamshell, two integrated stereo speakers that face the listener.
Featuring the Audio Enhancer key, users can activate volume boost when listening to the radio through the speakers or 3D sound enhancement when they have the stereo headset plugged in, ensuring a first-class radio listening experience even when it is noisy. See which station is tuned-in to on the phone’s external display. The R306i features Bluetooth technology, allowing consumers to handle phone calls handsfree with optional accessories.















