Last Updated on Wednesday, 10 March 2010 01:41
Written by MobLove
Wednesday, March 10th, 2010
Dell’s Mini 5 is an Android tablet with a phone inside. Go hands-on from Barcelona with a pre-production version of the phone. Forums: forums.phonedog.com Win Free Phones www.phonedog.com More Videos: www.phonedog.com
Amazon.com Product Description With an all around eye-catching design, the compact and stylish clamshell Sony Ericsson TM506 for T-Mobile keeps you connected to your closest friends and family members with T-Mobiles myFaves. It’s also Sony Ericsson’s first handset supporting T-Mobile’s HSDPA 3G network (in select markets), which provides fast web downloads and multimedia messaging. With built-in GPS and Telenav Navigator software, you can get turn-by-turn directions via voice and scr… More >>
Last Updated on Sunday, 28 February 2010 02:35
Written by MobLove
Sunday, February 28th, 2010
See the Nokia 3720 classic put through some tough and unscientific tests, including being shot at with a paintball gun, drowned in green jelly, whacked with a golf club, kicked, dropped from a ladder and dunked in a pint of beer. PLEASE NOTE – DO NOT ATTEMPT TO REPLICATE ANY OF THE SCENARIOS SHOWN IN THIS VIDEO. THE SCENARIOS SHOWN IN THESE VIDEOS ARE EXTREME AND WHILST THE RESULTS SHOWN ARE GENUINE, THEY ARE NOT MEANT TO DEMONSTRATE COMPLIANCE WITH ANY PUBLISHED PHONE SPECIFICATION.
Last Updated on Tuesday, 23 February 2010 04:07
Written by MobLove
Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010
Mobile phones are one of the most common pieces of technology used in our daily lives. Some reports put the number of cell phones sold in 2007 worldwide at 1.1 billion. With that number of cellular phones sold in 2007 alone, the market is very hot leading to expanded research and development of new handsets. Nokia and the University of Cambridge have teamed up on a new concept phone called the Morph described as a nanotechnology concept device. The concept design was launched at the “Design and the Elastic Mind” exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. According to Nokia, the Morph is a concept intended to demonstrate how devices in the future could be stretchable and flexible allowing the user to change the shape of their device on a whim. The nanotechnology construction is capable of providing users with flexible materials, transparent electronics and self-cleaning surfaces. Nokia Chief Technology Officer Dr. Bob Iannucci said in a statement, “Nokia Research Center is looking at ways to reinvent the form and function of mobile devices; the Morph concept shows what might be possible.” Nokia claims that certain elements of the Morph could be integrated into high-end handheld devices in the next seven years. Nokia adds that nanotechnology could at some point lead to low cost manufacturing solutions providing complex devices at low prices. University of Cambridge Professor Mark Welland added, “Developing the Morph concept with Nokia has provided us with a focus that is both artistically inspirational but, more importantly, sets the technology agenda for our joint nanoscience research that will stimulate our future work together.” Nokia made headlines earlier this month when the German government demanded $60.5 million in a refund of subsidies it provided.