Samsung CorbyF Shows Up On Official Website

A new flip phone just went up on Samsung's South Korean website under the ever-growing Corby line.  Called the Samsung CorbyF (the F stands for Folder), the handset bundles a fun, playful design, along with smooth, curvy lines.

Intended for mid-range to low-end markets, the device borrows the youthful style available from previous cellphones in the series, making it a bit more attractive than the form you usually find on flip-style phones.  Otherwise, it seems like a conventional clamshell, with regular, non-touchscreen displays.

The 15.9mm-thick Samsung CorbyF features a 2.6-inch internal LCD (QVGA resolution), an external LED display (unspecified size), a 3.0 megapixel camera module, a video-calling front camera, DMB TV, SOS calling, subway maps and microSD card extension (up to 16GB).  It supports HSDPA 3.6Mbps (for SK Telecom and KT, not sure for non-Korean versions).

From the looks of it, this will be running Samsung's default non-touch interface, which isn't really anything special, despite being quite easy to use.   The device will come in Candy Pink, Lime Green and Blue Black colors.

There's no exact pricing nor availability date, but Samsung says the CorbyF should come to South Korea soon.  Since it's coming out with the the usually-affordable Corby branding, expect it to be generally inexpensive.

[via Samsung Hub]

LG Intros Their Second Android Smartphone, The LG GT540 Swift

LGSwift1

LG just announced their second Android smartphone at CES 2010.  Billed as the LG GT540 Swift, the new handset goes heavy on the social networking.

Sporting unique, rounded top and bottom edges, it's an attractive-looking device that you should actually be able to recognize in a shelf of competing Android devices.  It will come in various colorways, including the sexy-looking ivory white in the photo.

Despite the S-Class-style buttons at the bottom of the front face, the LG GT540 Swift delivers a largely out-of-the-box Android experience, with the integrated SNS Manager providing the central differentiating feature.  Through the proprietary system, the handset provides a single location to access different popular social networking facilities, including Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and Bebo.

Phone details include a resistive touchscreen (320 x 480 resolution, size unannounced), a 3.0 megapixel camera module (with autofocus), microSD card support (up to 32GB) and a range of connectivity options (3G, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth).  It will come with the usual suite of Google apps, as well as native support for both DivX and WMV.

The LG GT540 Swift will debut in worldwide markets by April at an, as of yet, undisclosed price.  It's being positioned as an entry-level smartphone, though, so expect it within the $300 to $400 range when it does hit stores.

[via Phonescoop]

Nokia N900 Becomes Official, Rocks Maemo 5 And OpenGL ES 2.0 Support

nokian900

It's been a long time coming but Nokia's finally veered away (for one time, at least) from rocking Symbian OS on their phones.  The Nokia N900 just became official and it will be running with the new Maemo 5.

Set to become the company's new flagship device, the N900 boasts a 600MHz ARM Cortex-A8 CPU, 256MB of RAM and a PowerVR SGX with OpenGL ES 2.0 support, essentially giving it the same guts as the iPhone 3GS.  All that power is put to good use with the Linux-based operating system, which comes with Palm Pre-like multi-tasking capabilities and up to 768MB of virtual memory (bringing the effective RAM total to 1GB).

The phone comes with a side-sliding QWERTY keypad, 110.9 × 59.8 × 18mm dimensions and a weight of 181 grams. Connectivity set consists of quad-band GSM, tri-band WCDMA, Wi-Fi b/g, Bluetooth and USB.  Hardware details include a 3.5-inch touchscreen display (800 x 480 resolution), a 5.0 megapixel camera (with autofocus and Carl Zeiss lens), 32GB of onboard storage, 1320mAh battery and microSDHC card expansion (up to 16GB).   It naturally comes with a rich feature set, including a highly-capable media player (including XviD and DivX support, with unconverted video playback), aGPS, an FM tuner, a Mozilla-based full HTML browser with support for Flash 9.4 and TV-out.

On paper, the Nokia N900 appears poised to be one of the most solid smartphone efforts of the year.  Whether it ends up becoming formidable competition in the high-end smartphone market, however, will depend largely on how the Maemo actually performs, relative to the phone's hardware suite.  It's scheduled for release in October, at an estimated retail price of 500 Euros (around $720), before taxes and subsidies.

Verizon Drops Prices On Most Of Their Smartphones To $99 And Below

verizonsmartphones

In response, perhaps, to the iPhone 3G's drop to $99, Verizon is slashing a huge chunk of the price off the majority of smartphones on its roster.  With the exception of the new Blackberry Tour and the Samsung Saga, all smartphones are now $99 and below.

Premium handsets like the HTC Touch Diamond, the HTC Touch Pro and the Samsung Omnia can now be had for the same price as an iPhone 3G, if you sign up for a two-year contract with the carrier.  This development makes the $99 smartphone price point extremely competitive, especially considering Verizon's track record as a considerably better wireless provider compared to AT&T.  Before this, it's hard to imagine beginning a new contract without putting the iPhone 3G as a first consideration: it's a heck of a phone at a very affordable price.

Apart from challenging the iPhone's difficult-to-combat $99 position, the price cuts also make room for Verizon's upcoming smartphones.  Based on previous reports, the company is set to introduce a number  of new models for power users before the end of the year, including the HTC Touch Pro2, the BlackBerry Storm 2 and an Android-based Motorola handset.

Verizon Wireless just began looking like a more attractive destination for those in the market for a brand new smartphone.

Photo Credit: Verizon Wireless

Rumored Nokia N97 Mini Caught On Pictures

n97mini2

Despite many unfavorable editorial reviews, Nokia isn't giving up on their flagship N97.  In fact, it looks like they're adding a new handset to the line based directly from it.  Currently touted as the Nokia N97 Mini, the rumored phone borrows the same styling as the original in a slightly smaller package.

The handset was unwittingly outed by a moderator on the Vodafone Ireland forum, who wrote in response to a customer inquiry that, "Vodafone Ireland will not be launching the N97 but will be launching the N97 Mini later this year. Due to the N97 Mini's competitive pricing, we feel that it will appeal to a wider segment of consumers."  As expected, that post has been taken down and everyone has returned to being tight-lipped about the upcoming device.

n97mini

Based on the photos, it looks thinner and smaller than the full-sized N97, although only by slight dimensions.  It also appears to be rocking a different camera module and has lost the original's sliding cover.

Because of the comment about "competitive pricing," it might be fair to assume that the Mini won't feature the same high-end hardware as found on the Nokia N97.  Otherwise, it just wouldn't make sense, since the differences in size between the two isn't all that notable.  While, technically, still a rumor, this phone is more likely real and is on its way to market within the year.

Photo Credit: Into Mobile

Nokia E63 Gets You The Same E71 Smartphone Talents At A Much Affordable Price

nokia-e63-red-blue

The Nokia E63 looks very much like the company's highly-acclaimed E71, with fewer features and a more affordable price.  Like its more expensive predecessor, it fits in a good set of smartphone talents in a good-looking, compact frame.  Is the experience just as positive, however?

Armed with a very good QWERTY panel, the E63 offers excellent typing experience, with raised surfaces, soft keys and very good travel.  Physical dimensions are thicker than the E71, allowing it to handle much better in one hand.

In terms of the phone's actual use, it delivers a near-similar quality to the E71, less a few features.  Specifically, it ditches the GPS, infrared and 3.5G.  Web browsing still remains tolerable and, with Wi-Fi also available, it's not likely to be that much of an issue, unless you specifically need ultra-high speed access on the road.

As a phone, it offers clear-sounding voice calls, with no noticeable distortion.  The loudspeaker is also quite good.  It fits in all the basic phone features, along with a complete messaging suite, including emails and IM.  Email setup is particularly straightforward and offers Exchange support, along with POP3 and IMAP.

One thing we like better than the E71 is the addition of a 3.5mm audio jack, which makes the E63 much more usable for media playback.  It can handle a decent range of media files, along with an onboard FM  tuner and support for podcasts, YouTube videos and internet radio.

The onboard 2 megapixel camera is decidedly average. Even with an integrated flash, it doesn't capture darker areas very well.  It's usable, however, like most low-end camera phones around.  Other features include Bluetooth, microSD expansion and USB mass storage.

Overall, we love the Nokia E63 for the E71-like experience it delivers, all while sporting a very affordable price.  It's a compelling smartphone choice and should be very attractive for both professionals and casual users alike.


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Blackberry Curve 8520 Now Official, Comes With Optical Trackpad, Improved Multimedia

curve8520

RIM finally put the official stamp on the much-talked-about Blackberry Curve 8520.  While it's not yet officially released, the phone now has a dedicated page on the company's website, with plenty of photos and complete details, to boot.

As usual, it will fit in Blackberry's typical messaging and productivity talents, along with a few features more attuned to modern smartphone uses.  Multimedia seems to have been given particular attention for the long-awaited handset, which comes with a robust onboard player and a set of dedicated media keys situated on top.

Details of the phone include a 2.64-inch TFT LCD with 320 x 240 resolution, a 2.0 megapixel camera module (with 5x digital zoom and video recording), 256MB default storage, microSDHC expansion (up to 32GB), Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.  It fits in a 35-key backlit QWERTY keyboard and a unique optical trackpad.

RIM is promising "out of the box Mac compatibility" for this iteration of the Curve, with the BlackBerry Desktop Software to be fully-available on OS X machines.  It also supports RIM's download storefront, Blackberry App World, for those who'd like to extend their handset's functionalities, apart from shipping with a number of social media and IM tools built-in.

The Blackberry Curve 8520 is listed for availability on August 5th.  T-Mobile will be carrying it for $130 with a two-year contract.

Blackberry

BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8230 Offers An Excellent Entry-Level Smartphone Experience

blackberrypearlflip

We rarely get to see smartphones sporting a clamshell form factor, with the design cue typically reserved for lower-end devices with more basic features. It's that reason why a handset like the BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8230 feels relevant - it offers something different for those whose tastes might not exactly be the norm.

Since RIM decided to keep it within a reasonable size for a flip phone, the 8230 isn't able to fit in a full-size QWERTY keyboard. Instead, it uses a SureType entry panel, which allows for semi-QWERTY typing, with two characters assigned for each key. Like we said about the Samsung SGH T349, the partial QWERTY takes a bit of getting used to, although it does allow for some pretty fast texting once you get the hang of the layout.

Physically, I find the Pearl Flip to be one of the sexier clamshell phones around. While it does come in a little bulky, the entry-level smartphone talents more than make up for it.

As a phone, it offers great voice calls, with loud volume and zero interference the whole time we tried it. Speakerphone was similarly pleasant. It fits in all basic phone features you can expect from a modern handset, along with Blackberry's signature range of messaging capabilities. Like other RIM devices, it supports SMS, MMS, IM and multiple email accounts of pretty much any configuration you can ask for.

On the features end, the phone comes with an onboard music player (great quality), a 2.0 megapixel camera (average stills, with some amount of shutter lag), aGPS and a full HTML browser. It supports 3G connectivity, although does without Wi-Fi, which is sort of Blackberry's perennial Achilles Heel.

It comes with a great set of bundled apps that include various social networking tools, Documents To Go, five IM clients and Visual Voice Mail. There's also support for the Blackberry App World, which allows it download access to more apps that are compatible with the phone. Despite the broadband capability, it doesn't seem to support music and video streaming services (at least, with Verizon).

Overall, the BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8230 is a good-looking option for first-time smartphone users. It's not the most feature-rich handset available, but it's priced very competitively and fits in, pretty much, every business talent you can find in other Blackberry phones.

Photo Credit: Into Mobile

Palm Pre Review: Multi-Tasking And Simply Amazing

palmpre

The Palm Pre launches all over the US today, with a buzz only paralleled by the iPhone's initial launch.  Surely, a handset that gets so much attention has to be extremely good, right?

Well, it is.  In fact, it is probably the first device to pose a legitimate challenge to the iPhone, in terms of actual capabilities.  While most modern smartphones make a habit of slapping the best hardware rig they can put together and outfitting it with a standard OS, Palm seemed to go the other way, crafting a terrific platform and building the handheld device to support it.

Physically, the Pre is unlike any phone we've seen so far, shaped more like a smooth pebble than the typical contoured brick that the iPhone has made popular.  At 3.9 x 2.3 x 0.6 inches, it's way more pocketable than a lot of high-end smartphones (including Apple's).  Also, dispelling earlier concerns about its plastic build, the Pre is actually well-built and feels very sturdy in the hand.

As you may know, it comes with a bottom-sliding QWERTY keyboard.  While the actual mechanism is smooth, the keyboard is a bit rough to use - just too cramped for its own good.  It's something that will take getting used to - that's for sure.

The 3.1-inch touchscreen is one of the phone's main highlights, despite being smaller than those on other handsets.  What it lacks in size, though, it more than makes up for in quality.  Everything looks picture-perfect across the 320 x 480 resolution display, with crisp lines that put many high-end screens to shame.

Screen interaction is extremely responsive, with a wide array of touch functions available.  As you may have heard, it comes with multi-touch support and implements it extremely well.  That brings us to an important point about the controls, though: they are not intuitive and requires users to get acquainted with the available gestures before being able to use the device to best results.  UI is simply one of the best we've seen (makes the Android screen look like it's years behind), with plenty of nice touches that really make life easier, such as one-touch access to the connections settings, the incredibly useful Universal Search (which searches everything on the phone), the unobtrusive notification bar (which alerts you to missed calls, messages and other in-phone events) and incredibly easy navigation.

Multitasking, however, is what really sets the Palm Pre apart, allowing you to run multiple applications at the same time, passing control as you wish from one to the other.  A single press to the center button will bring up all available running apps displayed in a "Deck of Cards" format.

As a phone, the Pre manages its business very well.  All the usual features are present, with the exception of voice dialing and visual voice mail (although Palm claims they can provide that via on-air update in the future).    Messaging is equally robust, with great SMS, support for multiple email accounts and IM.  Synchronizing emails, calendars and other similar applications is seamless.

While it is, hands-down, one of the best phone options out there, it doesn't come without some caveats.  The Pre, for one, has only 7GB of memory with no expansion slots.  Considering that the phone was built as a platform for apps, that sounds a tad too limiting.  Other missing features include Flash support, a virtual QWERTY and video recording.  There's also some amount of sluggishness.

As it is, though, the phone is an amazing piece of work, with well-integrated features, a robust web browser, great multimedia integration and mind-blowing multi-tasking capabilities.  While it may not be the best phone for business users (the cramped keyboard made sure of that), those who want the latest in technology will be mistaken not to get one.
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AT&T Launches Samsung Jack, Completes The Trilogy

samsungjack

There's really no tale to complete, but it is fun to imagine a story in there somewhere.  AT&T recently announced the launch of the Samsung Jack, the company's latest follow-up to the previous Blackjack and Blackjack II, both well-received business handsets from years past.

AT&T claims that the Blackjack line has been the number one selling Windows Mobile series in the history of the OS.  As such, they're expecting the trilogy's latest "installment" to continue the success.

Sporting classic and elegant looks reminiscent of Blackberry's handiwork, the masculine-looking phone comes with a complete set of business and messaging features designed for professionals on the go.  Like its predecessors, the Jack packs a full QWERTY keypad for comfortable typing, along with a set of modern smartphone conveniences.

Specs include a 3.2 megapixel camera module (with video capture support), aGPS, 3G, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth +EDR.  It features full email functionality, including support for multiple personal accounts and corporate email (MS Exchange Server with Direct Push).  Running on Windows Mobile 6.1, it comes with Office Mobile and will be fully compatible with the impending 6.5 upgrade.

The phone comes with multimedia support via a microSDHC slot (up to 16GB) and comes fitted with AT&T's suite of streaming content.  Interested parties can get the Samsung Jack beginning May 19th for $99 (under a two-year contract subsidy), after a $100 rebate.

Photo Credit: Engadget Mobile