Monday, October 13, 2008

BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8220 (T-Mobile)

Stay effortlessly connected with the first BlackBerry Pearl
to feature Wi-Fi and mobile calling in a new flip design. With the
BlackBerry Pearl 8220 smartphone tucked in your pocket, you're always
just a flip away from the people, fun and facts that matter. This
smartphone puts you in charge of how, when and where you communicate.
The BlackBerry Pearl 8220 is fun in a life-friendly package. It's
designed with you in mind. It looks and feels good in your hand, but
still offers you everything you need for your life on the go.





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Source : http://www.pcmag.com/

Video showing Nokia 5800 XpressMusic and Britney Spears

In today’s music videos this seems to be one of the most powerful
ways to sell a product. If you are watching a music video of your
favorite artist and the latest gadget appears on it, then you as a fan
will want to go out and get it for yourself.


Britney Spears has done just that with her new video for her
Womanizer single. You can see in one scene of the video that someone is
holding a Nokia 5800 XpressMusic, and recording a video of Britney as
she plays a secretary.


So now that you have seen Britney Spears Womanizer video, would it make you go out and purchase the new Nokia 5800 XpressMusic?


Source : http://www.product-reviews.net/

Sybase iAnywhere offers lifeline to Nokia Intellisync users

Sybase iAnywhere is offering to support mobile business customers left in the lurch by Nokia's decision to focus on consumers.




The enterprise mobility specialist has unveiled a Nokia Intellisync Migration Programme, under which such companies can obtain selected tools from its Information Anywhere Suite for free.

Nokia
announced on 30 September that it would cease developing or marketing
its behind-the-firewall offerings for business mobility, and instead
concentrate on consumer mobile messaging services.

Sybase
iAnywhere, however, said that enterprise mobility is its main area of
focus, and that it hopes to gain new business from Nokia customers
seeking continued support.

The company expects that there are
enterprise customers "in the hundreds" who are still using Nokia
Intellisync products, plus a somewhat larger number of smaller firms.

"Our
offer is that for Nokia customers looking for another vendor, we will
offer the equivalent product, or as close as we can get, free of
licensing charges," said Rob Veitch, senior director of business
development at Sybase iAnywhere.

Companies taking up this offer
will have to pay the ongoing costs of support and maintenance, but will
already be paying for this for the Nokia Intellisync products they are
using. "From a finance point of view, it should be a seamless
transition," Veitch said.

How easy this will be for customers
will depend on the technology they are using. Organisations using
Intellisync for mobile access to Lotus Notes or Microsoft Exchange
Email should have little difficulty making the switch, according to
Veitch, although it may require some installation work from a systems
integrator.

The same applies for device management and security,
according to Veitch. " These tend to be transparent to users, so only
the IT department needs to worry about deployment," he said.

Mobile
applications built on Intellisync's platform, such as salesforce
automation or field service support, could prove more problematic and
would likely involve starting again from the ground up.

"In this
situation, instead of moving the application over, we'll look at
conversations along the line of refreshing the features and
technology," said Veitch, who claimed that enterprise mobility has
moved on since many Intellisync customers deployed their applications.

As
an example, Veitch said that Sybase iAnywhere expects to soon have a
capability it calls the "inbox for the future". This will allow mobile
executives to sign off items needing approval direct from their mobile
inbox, rather than having to open a browser window and follow a web
link.

"There's a great deal of interest in letting users extend the approvals process so it can be embedded in an email," he said.

Source : http://www.itnews.com.au/

First Nokia Touch-Screen Phone for Mass Market

NOKIA has entered the mobile music market with the launch of its first touch-screen device, the 5800 XpressMusic.


The model is the company's first touch-screen device on the S60 Fifth
Edition smartphone platform. It also supports Comes With Music, a
service which offers users unlimited access to songs from Nokia Music
Store for one year.

At the recent Nokia Remix event in
Singapore, company vice president, category management, Live category
Tuula Rytila-Uotila said the 5800 XpressMusic is the company's first
mass-market device with a touch-screen. She explained that Nokia
decided to offer one- point touch experience on the 5800 XpressMusic to
enable touch technology.

According to her, the phone's user
interface is now made into a "human interface" with the introduction of
Nokia Contacts Bar, which allows users to visualise contacts and
communicate with them easily. This feature also allows users to add
pictures of four favourite contacts on the home screen.