Ready for another round of rumors about Windows Mobile 7?
Well, here it is: MS Mobiles has it that WM 7 will feature free navigation – like Nokia’s new Symbian phones, and Android 2.
One day after unveiling the LG Mini GD880 and the LG GT350, LG has now announced another new touchscreen phone – the LG Cookie Plus GS500.
Opera Mini is already available for most major mobile platforms, but not for iPhone. Well, Opera has just announced that it would showcase Opera Mini for iPhone next week at MWC 2010 – although it will not do it publicly, but in an exclusive press and partner preview.
Back in November, Acer said that its 2010 portfolio would include more Android smartphones than in 2009 (when the company launched only one Android device – the Acer Liquid A1).
Google has just launched a new application/service called Google Buzz and available both for desktop computers, and mobile phones.
Available in Europe since November last year, the Nokia 5230 will be soon launched by T-Mobile USA as Nokia Nuron.
Now that the Nexus One and Moto DROID are starting to get Android 2.1 love, it’s only appropriate that other Android devices follow suit at a leisurely pace.
As usual, Cupid is shooting his arrow on Valentine’s Day, but this year it’s at a seemingly unlikely target: mobile phones.
Almost 30 million touchscreen smartphones were sold in the fourth quarter of 2009 worldwide (up to 138% year-on-year), meaning that 55% of the smartphones sold in said quarter were touchscreen-enabled.
Although Motorola is struggling for market share in Europe and Asia, it’s still the number one phone maker in the US.
It looks like it’s an important day for South Korea’s major phone makers: after the Samsung Monte S5620 and the LG Mini GD880, now the LG GT350 has been announced as well.
The same day when Samsung announced the Monte S5620, LG unveiled a new touchscreen phone, too – the LG Mini GD880.
Yesterday NEC introduced a new camera chip optimized for use in new cell phones that will make their included cameras comparable to DSLR cameras on the market today.
The Samsung Monte S5620 (seen in some leaked photos not long ago) has just been officially announced, and it’s presented by Samsung as an affordable “full touch screen device for style-conscious mobile users.
When Apple announced OS 3.0 last summer, one of the highly anticipated features was the ability to integrate Apple-certified third-party accessories into accompanying apps, thus giving the user a lot more possible functionality.
Last week we heard some news we’ve been waiting a long time for: the Nexus One has finally been updated with multitouch capabilities.
Followers of Star Trek have always been intrigued by the concept of the Universal Translator, a device that enables people who speak different languages to understand each other as if in their own native tongue.
We still don’t know the final name of Apple’s fourth generation iPhone (expected to be released in June or July), so until something official comes up, we’ll call it iPhone 4G.
Myriad Group, one of the founding members of the Open Handset Alliance, announced the Dalvik Turbo virtual machine for Android, which will replace the Dalvik engine that currently powers applications on Android phones.
We already know that Samsung will announce its first Bada phone at MWC 2010, and now it looks like the South Korean company has yet another surprise prepared for the show that’s set to debut next week.