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Motorola RAZR V3xx Platinum Phone ATandT Version 1

June 8th, 2009 Cellphone Review No comments

Motorola RAZR V3xx Platinum Phone ATandT Version 1




The MOTORAZR V3xx is Motorola’s first 3G device to be offered through ATT – and it is now available in a premium PLATINUM finish. The V3xx in Platinum uses the same sleek, thin form factor as the original RAZR and includes advanced multimedia capabilities. Featuring the perfect blend of broadband-like speed, dynamic multimedia capabilities, and cutting-edge design, the MOTORAZR V3xx is the ultimate combination. The MOTORAZR V3xx delivers high-speed connectivity and premium multimedia capabilities in the award-winning RAZR form. The first Motorola handset to ship with High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) and EDGE technology, the MOTORAZR V3xx brings effortless style and the power of high-speed connectivity – no compromises necessary. A compact entertainment machine, the MOTORAZR V3xx knows how to connect you quickly to the information and content that matters most. Demand the best in elite style and unrivalled functionality and enjoy the best of both worlds with this stylish new model.

User Ratings and Reviews

1 Star Junk
My company issued me this piece of crap. I hope they replace this flashy junk phone with a model that works. Im trying a Sanyo next when it arrives again threw my company. Razor phones suck, and so does motorola, Sanyo I hope is going to be a more reliable phone.

5 Stars GREAT DEAL!!! GREAT PHONE!!!
Why would I ever even think of buying a phone or contract through the cell provider again????????????!!!!!!!! This was such a great deal and I LOVE the phone! The amazon sign up process was simple and seamless, despite what others may say! Read the fine print and make sure you can abide by it and if you have questions, just call amazon’s cell help number. They were very helpful, honest and courteous. I was hesitant at first but everything went perfectly!

5 Stars Detail of Motorola Razr V3xx
I purchased this phone about a year ago when my contract was up with Cingular (ATT), and I renewed.

My previous phone was a Razor, and before that an LG and before that another Motorola.

Once you become accustomed with the Motorola Menu, then go to LG, they are opposites of each other. You have to relearn how to get around the menu. (I even had a Nokia, which I will never purchase another one again)

Why I choose this phone

1. It is a Motorola; Motorola’s have always been very good with me. After my LG experience, I decided not to stray again.

2. MP3 playing ability.

Yes I am tired of having ten different things to carry in my pockets and this simplifies it to one product.

I really was not interested in the camera, web and other features. (Thou I will comment on this later)…

This phone comes with the ability to play MP3’s, you can put the phone in speaker mode where it sounds like an old transmitter is radio, or get a blue tooth head set. Which I have purchased a Stereo Bluetooth Headset. This feature works great, the phone it self will hold MP3s,(not sure how many) you can also purchase an additional memory card for it, which I have purchased a 2GB micro card which I have many MP3’s and a few pictures, (this does not support wma, wm4 only MP3).

Other features!

This phone has probably more than one might need?

You can forward calls to another phone, it you don’t answer the phone it can forward with out using your celluar carrier, the phone will do this if you set it up. If you find this feature and you have Cingular you will see it is forwarded to your voice mail number, so if you change this, remember that number so you can put it back in there.

You can block your out going number; accept data and fax calls, voice dialing, 3 way conference, etc

I notice cellular carriers offer these services; this phone can do this all without subscribing to another service from the cellular company.

One can assign ring tones to groups or individuals use MP3s as ring tones (Such as when my sister calls a whole song will play until I answer the phone).

Other features:

You can go online, but the site should be designed for viewing from a cellular phone. I have viewed my personal site with this phone, it worked, but the site is not designed for a cell phone. I just don’t care to use it to browse the web. But it is there if needed.

You can download special applications to go online, such as check your bank account, Wachovia offers such an application.

The Major instant messengers are included with the phone.

You can check your email with a special java application. Which is where I have a problem?

This phone you can only check certain e mails which are in this application. The last Generation Razor, you could set up the SMTP information directly into your phone and check any SMTP enabled email, I still have not found where to do this. This phone as far as I have found can only check the Email included in the Java applications (i.e. msn, yahoo, aol etc).

Data Connection: You can connect this phone via Bluetooth or Cable and use it as a modem with your PC and go online. This feature you have to subscribe to, I have unlimited Data with my carrier. I also have a Verizon Broadband card; this phone will connect to the internet at a faster speed then my Verizon Broadband card.

It also has all the other usual functions alarm clock, calculator, and a bunch of other stuff I never use.

Photos, MP3s, phone book etc…

You can purchase a program (Motorola Phone tools) and install it to a PC to sync the phonebook to outlook, retrieve photos, to and from the phone. This program you can create ring tones from MP3’s, edit photos, send text messages and bunch of other stuff I never use.

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You can also use the Bluetooth bonding to PC/Mac to exchange information without the program as well. And another interesting thing you can print to a Bluetooth enabled printer, which I have yet to try! (But as soon as I find a printer I will try it, Toshiba’s MFP can have this feature)

Reception Quality:

I work as a PC / Laser Printer tech and drive from office to office; I have been in the Everglades of Florida to South Carolina, to Upstate NY with this phone. I have another phone I carry for work, a Motorola V325i with Verizon. In comparison: the ATT Razor V3xx always has a signal, where as the Verizon is a gamble. I still have not figured out if it is the phone or service?

I wish my company would go with Cingular, then I could have a single phone as this Phone will allow more than one number assigned to a single phone. (Most modern phones have this feature).

Overall it the quality of service has been good, I use it as a back up to my work phone, when it will not work in a building, and I use my Razor, because it will work.

I have been in very few places where it doesn’t work.

After reading other reviews some mention a beep if you don’t answer the phone, and no zoom?

This beep can be turned off, read the Manual that comes with the phone sometime, this guy would rather buy a new phone, and then spend a minute reading and investigating?

As for the Zoom on the Camera? Mine has lettering around the eye, 1.3 MP and 8X Zoom. Which in English translates to?

1.3 Mega Pixels… 1.3 million pixels. (If you don’t understand this, look up some information about Pixels)

8X zoom, it does Zoom 8 Times, the quality of the pic decreases as you zoom. I can even send the photos as an email from this phone.

Not the high quality SLR, but pretty good considering it is a phone. The camera features different modes and adjustments, I have gotten some good quality photos but this takes a bit of adjustment. But then again so does my digital camera? Again if you read up on this you to will know how to use this feature?

And the Red Dot problem!

Open any phone look for a little dot of some sort!

This is standard and can you blame the manufactures, certainly after warranting the many retards that jumped into the pool with their phones, would you want to cover that?

I have the phone insurance with ATT; I have in the past smashed my phone, went to ATT and got another one. ATT phones use a SIM card which I have discovered, will work in any SIM card phone! I have put my SIM card into other phones just to see if it will work.

It does, I have put the card into $20 pay as you go junk phones and it works. Rather than pay the monthly fee for insurance, or pay for a new $200 phone, if I break my phone I will be buying a cheap pay as you go phone and using it with my SIM card. (A trick they don’t tell you about!)…

I have dropped this phone so many times, lost it in the car, tends to fall out of my pocket and go under the driver seat. It has scratches and has been abused. Still works well.

The Battery life? If I talk, it goes dead after about 1.5 hours, using it as an MP3 Player seems to last longer. Just leaving it on has lasted days. I haven’t really paid much attention to this.

I am not really concerned about battery life as I understand it is a battery, I always have something to charge my phone with, and you can also charge this phone with the Proper USB cable to a PC.

The thing I don’t like is it gets warm when I am talking on it, this dosen’t matter it I am using Bluetooth or using the headset.

The last thing I didn’t like about this phone, which I did not know until I bought it…

Using an earpiece, there is no 1.5m Jack, only Bluetooth Enabled Earpieces will work.

If one can get an earpiece that connects through the data / battery port, I do not know?

After reading the reviews I would conclude half the problems are User Error, not manufacture error? Simply because people are lazy and cant find the time to learn something new. Some infact would rather invest more money and not Time? (I have found this to be true in many different areas not just this phone)

If all else fails Read the Book!

1 Star Amazon rebate is a BIG FRAUD!
I bought Motorazor black cell phone – servica at&t. I bought it for $200 with mail & rebate for $200. The rebate is very tricky, they asked me to mail the rebate stuff after 5 months of usage of the phone with my first phone bill (must have thought this is a good idea since most people might forget about the rebate by then). I mailed everything on time for 2 mail & rebates $100 each. I got one $100 promptly but the 2nd $100, I waited and called the rebate center and they said they are still processing..called couple of more times. After some 10 or 15 phone calls, they gave me a phone number and asked me to talk to them directly and these people can’t help me any more. I called the other number and it always goes to answering machine and nobody answers…so basically it’s a fraud and I never got my $100..

So pl think before buying anything on mail & rebates esp. something expensive..

Regarding the phone, the screen used to go off blank and phone used to shut down suddenly after a week of purchase so at&t exchanged it with another motorazor. This worked fine until battery went dead after 1.5 years of usage. Two of friends who used this phone had similar problems also.

4 Stars Happy with it
Pretty good. I like pretty much everything in it. The only problem is that the charge goes out within a day or two.

Buy/More Info

Sony Ericsson GC89 GPRS EDGE and Wi Fi Laptop PC Card T Mobile

June 6th, 2009 Cellphone Review No comments

Sony Ericsson GC89 GPRS EDGE and Wi Fi Laptop PC Card T Mobile




Enjoy the same communication and computing power that you have in the office while you’re on the move. The seamless global connectivity of the quad-band GC89 keeps you connected to email, Web, and company networks, regardless of where business takes you. In addition to quad-band GSM coverage, the GC89 also features EDGE and GPRS data capabilities, and includes WiFi support–the perfect way to take advantage of T-Mobile HotSpots.

Stay Connected
Whether you’re waiting at an airport, relaxing at your hotel, or meeting a client, it doesn’t really matter; the GC89 allows you to stay connected as if you were in your office or at home. Covering more geographical territory than any other cellular technology, the T-Mobile supported card supports EDGE technology and offers transfer speeds comparable to those of basic fixed-line services. Meanwhile, the built-in WiFi capabilities lets you enjoy high speed Internet access using wireless networks at hotspots around the country.

Before checkout, choose a T-Mobile Internet plan that’s right for you. The T-Mobile Total Internet plan gives you unlimited Internet access and unlimited T-Mobile HotSpot usage across the US. Or, for a little more each month, the T-Mobile Total Internet with Corporate My Email plan gives you all the features of the former plan, and also allows you to stay connected to your corporate email and Web services while on the go.

It’s easy to connect with what matters with unlimited Internet access and unlimited T-Mobile HotSpot access for your laptop. T-Mobile HotSpots are conveniently located nationwide at Starbucks coffeehouses, FedEx Kinko’s Office and Print Centers, and numerous airports.

Card Design and Features
The design of the GC89 incorporates a unique integrated antenna that frees you from the need to remove any part of your card from your notebook for transport.

Compatible with nearly all popular notebook PCs equipped with a type II PC card slot and the Microsoft Windows operating system, the GC89 data card can to be used with multiple laptops or other supported mobile devices, making it a great choice for personal or business use.

Vital Statistics
The Sony Ericsson GC89 Laptop PC card operates on the 850/900/1800/1900 GPS/GPRS/EDGE frequencies and features Wireless LAN IEEE 802.11b/g (Wi-Fi) support. It is a 32-bit Cardbus, card type II PC data card and measures 4.0 x 2.1 x 0.4 inches and weighs 2.0 ounces. It is compatible with the Windows98/Me/2000/XP operating systems.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Pleasantly Surprised
I type this review from the capital of Virginia with only 1-2 bars reaching, stretching, straining toward my distant EDGE/GPRS/T-Mobile tower. I’ve been with T-Mobile when it was Voicestream (in the Year 2k).

Before I decided to buy the card I checked the service map for my area and found it to be accurate; I basically get 2 bars on my cell phone, at home. Before I decided to buy the card, I read all the reviews I could find – some going back to 2006 – and still decided to give it a try. Before I decided to buy the card, I compared it to all the other carriers prices/plans/products and @ $50.00 a month including HotSpot access it was the best value so I ordered the card.

I rec’d the card today, called T-mobile to add the $50 sevice to my current Family Plan. When the rep told me it was only $19.99 including HotSpot access, I asked him to make sure it was only $19.99 and not $49.99. As I told the rep, I did not want to pay more, but I did not want a surprise later. I was pleasantly surprised as he confirmed the lower price.

So after dinner, I grabbed my wife’s laptop from her lap, installed the software and during the long 3 minute process I had to endure snickers and comments like, Is it working yet?, How’s it going? – as she made fun of yet another piece of plastic and wires entering the domain. As I scoffed at and ignored the do you want to reboot message, I snapped in the sim card from my little used family plan line, slid the card in and waited a technological lifetime – 2 minutes – for the card to find the Cell Tower.

As the previous reviewer detailed quite accurately, Edge is much slower than WiFi. While I’m not sure if the speed is fast enough to replace my cable modem, the ability to connect anywhere I receive a signal along with the many T-Mobile hotspots (that I used to drive/walk by) plus the pleasantly surprising price of $19.99 may just be compelling enough to get rid of 2/3 (internet/phone) of those $99 triple play bundles, with a net savings of about $45.00.

Now, does anyone know of a signal booster………

5 Stars Not Bad for the Price
I purchased my card used at a substantial discount and signed up for the 39.95 unlimited data plan. Connection speeds range from 150kbps down and 50kbps up (Home) to 50kbps down and 15kbps up (work). Speeds tested using speedtest.net. At home I get 3-4 bars on the T-Mobile Connection Manager software and only 1-2 bars at work. Previously I had 0-1 bars at work, but I bought an external 7db antenna and the connection is improved. With the antenna plugged in at home the increase in speed is not noticeable. I reside in Southern California and have not had any issues with coverage. I mainly use it for Online college classes and checking e-mail from work, so speed is not paramount. If you are looking to stream music/video or VPN you should look to Verizon, but be cautious of the 5gb per month limit. One of my classmates has the Verizon service and page loads are extremely fast; almost comparable to my cable service at home. They also have more modems to choose from so do some research. The free wi-fi HotSpots are a nice feature but I haven’t used one yet.

1 Star Much slower than EVDO cards
I wasted my time and nerves using this slow card/provider at so many different places in Chicago and nationwide that I can now claim with confidence it is practically useless.

We bought T-Mobile GC89 for Internet access via cellular network. We don’t typically use its Wi-Fi functionality because all of our newer laptops already have a built-in WLAN. I chose this provider because this card supposedly also works in most European countries where T-Mobile is very present.

So far I tried to use it at home and at work (Chicago), at my in-laws’ house (Chicago suburbs), in Minneapolis suburbs and at a conference in Las Vegas. Although I had a strong signal (4/5 bars) at every single place, the internet browsing experience seems to be worse than during my long-gone modem years. I even upgraded the firmware and downloaded the latest software version for the card, but that didn’t help. Various ISP bandwidth tests usually report around 100 kbps and rarely close to 200 kbps, but my subjective experience is so much worse that I’d rather pay $15 per day from my own pocket instead of using this card in a hotel and wasting as much time as I did.

We have several different Verizon PC cards at work and their speed is comparable to DSL service, which is an order of magnitude faster than this one. I used to give the PC5740 Verizon card to my staff when there was a need for weekend remote network administration or possible emergency and we all loved it. Last weekend I gave this GC89 card to one of my staff members whose DSL was down while he needed to perform some DBA work from home and to use his words, it was useless. I tried to use this for remote access to work via VPN and connect to my PC there via Remote Desktop and I have to confirm it is virtually useless.

One good point about T-Mobile is their customer service, which seems very quick and professional, while Verizon’s customer service was so poor that I swore the next card I buy won’t be Verizon, but I must admit I shot myself in the foot by bying T-Mobile. I’d rather have poor customer service with high speed Internet than vice versa.

After researching other providers, I found out that Verizon and Sprint typically have the much faster EV-DO networks with speeds close to DSL access, while EDGE and GPRS protocols used by T-Mobile and AT&T (Cingular) networks are miles behind.

This card and/or T-Mobile’s internet access speed is so slow it’s virtually useless for any remote administration work, remote desktop access via VPN, serious internet downloads or even browsing – avoid by all means.

1 Star Look elsewhere
Bought the Sony Ericsson GC89 wireless card one year ago. Total desaster. First OneStopWirelesshop is totally incompetent. I started getting inaccurate emails from them the minute I entered the order. They claimed that T-Mobile needed more info to enter a new account. T-Mobile is my carrier and had all the info necessary. Then, after five and a half months when I sent in the rebate forms, I was denied the rebates (two for[..]total) They(OneStopWirelesshop) claimed that T-Mobile had contacted them and said I had discontinued service.(I still have the service after one year). T-Mobile said they had not and were not allowed by law to contact a third party about my account.

Now about the service. The speed is slower than old 56K dialup. You may be connected but don’t expect anything except checking mail and occassionally Yahoo.com. Also, after I updated the software at T-Mobile’s insistance, it expires every few months. When I complained, T-Mobile’s solution was to drive around until I found a wi-fi hot spot and login to renew the software. (I deleted the update and reinstalled the original).

All tolled, mediocre-outdated equipment, criminal service by vendor (OneStopWirelesshop), and a we don’t care we have you under contract attitude by T-Mobile. (I could have gotten extremely better performance by getting cable broadband at a similar price and free equipment.)

5 Stars Know What You’re Paying For!
I’m not really the type to review things, but I was looking for updates for the GC89 and I saw this Amazon page; thought I’d take a look at what other people are saying. Turns out, not much, and what is being said indicates that there’s a lot of confusion. I thought I’d set things straight. So read on!

What You’re Getting

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First things first: this card is a twofer! There are two networking “widgets” in this card. One lets you access Wi-Fi networks (what I’m guessing many people reading this have at home or at a coffee shop nearby); this may also be referred to 802.11b, 802.11g, or the very new 802.11n. Other electronics allow you to access cellular networks, referred to as GPRS or EDGE (in this case, T-Mobile’s cellular networks… others are also possible, but let’s not get ahead of oursevles). That’s what you’re buying: a card that allows you to access two different networks. Not bad for $50 (which is what you can expect to pay for it elsewhere online, or at the T-Mobile store if the manager feels especially generous).

I don’t bother with the external antenna since the signal strength isn’t bad around here… more than what I get in the same spot with my phone anyways. It’s fairly compact, only a piece the width of the slot and half an inch length sticking out. It’s a light grey, which matches my laptop. Oh, and the antenna is only for the cellular network; I believe it has no effect on the Wi-Fi.

Installation

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Installation went smoothly, took about 5 minutes in all, including READING THE INSTRUCTIONS. Always read the instructions, even if it’s suppoosed to be “Easy as 1-2-3!”. Many things aren’t, and if it is, then you can be pleasantly surprised. In this case I was; I didn’t even need to type in any account info (as I already have an account with T-Mobile; if you don’t have service with them yet, you will need to activate your account first; SEE THE INSTRUCTIONS!).

Usage

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I’ll talk about the Wi-Fi first, since it can be summed up in two words: it works. I don’t need it, as my laptop already has Wi-Fi built-in (as should just about all laptops these days) but I figured I should test it out. This particular card supports 802.11g, which isn’t important to most folks except for the fact that it can work with older 802.11b networks as well as getting you faster speeds on 802.11g networks. I suppose it’s nice to know that if my onboard Wi-Fi ever breaks down I won’t have to pay for repairs.

Ah… the contentious cellular data. This is where things get tricky. Remember, this second part is working off of the same network as cellphones. Cellular data is generally no faster than Wi-Fi on ANY network. In many locations, it is slower. With T-Mobile’s EDGE network, I am consistently getting around 10% of a DSL connection, or 3-4x the speed of a dial-up connection. It’s a little slow getting things started, but web browsing is just fine. Downloads are okay; just don’t wait until the last moment to download a 25MB PowerPoint presentation. The benefit? It’s available anywhere you can get a cell signal, and not just at libraries or coffee shops. You can get it while driving around, on a train (sometimes even underground if the company put signal points there) etc. It works just fine for me.

Service

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T-Mobile HotSpots are for Wi-Fi access. Like at your home and office, except at Starbucks, Kinko’s, airports and other places T-Mobile expect people to want to have net access. Again, the card works. Not much to say here.

The T-Mobile EDGE network has pretty good coverage where I travel (San Francisco Bay Area). In fact, I’m using it for this review right now. As I said, speeds are okay and consistent. Again, I need to stress: it’s not as fast as Wi-Fi by any means, but it’s good to have data access everywhere I go. If I really need the speed, I know I can go to a HotSpot and get the boost.

I also need to clarify: EDGE access has a contract like a cellphone because it uses the same network as cellphones! I don’t know how the other reviewer “often lost jobs” because of the connection; I really can’t imagine a scenario where it would directly affect her (missed an e-mail? and if the service has cost someone a job, you would think that they’d switch or something and not wait until multiple “jobs” are missed), but at the very least it’s amazing that a BUSINESSwoman won’t read at least a portion of the CONTRACT she’s signing to figure out that it indeed has a contract period JUST LIKE A CELLPHONE. So, it’s a little suspicious. Anyways. Yes, it can slow down a little bit if a lot of people are making phone calls or using data, just like if there’s a lot of people on your home network things go slower. That’s how things work, so keep that in mind.

In terms of customer service, I’ve had T-Mobile for, oh, 3 years now (including phone-only service), and the staff has always been very helpful. In the case of T-Mobile, it really is a case of, if you hear about their customer service staff being unhelpful, you need to consider just how rude the person calling may be. Now, that might not be very professional, but getting angry at the staff doesn’t help solve the problem.

Comparisons

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Not going to compare Wi-Fi service simply because there aren’t any other really big players in the Wi-Fi service business.

You do have some options with cellular data. There are better resources to find out more information (google howardforums, for starters), but I might as well give some brief summaries.

Sprint: In terms of pricing, they’re pretty close to T-Mobile. I don’t know about their customer service or coverage, but from what I hear (take this with a grain of salt), it’s not so hot. No Wi-Fi service.

AT&T: AT&T actually has pretty speedy service (called 3G), comparable to a slow DSL line… IF you stay in large urban areas. And sometimes they don’t even cover all of a city. In those spots and outside of large cities, you get dropped down to EDGE speeds. That’s right, the same kind of network as T-Mobile. What’s even worse is the cost. $$$! A data-only plan costs $60/month; include their Wi-Fi service plan and it skyrockets to $100/month! I suppose if your business is paying for it, it’s not an issue, but it’s definitely not something I would even consider paying for. Even if you already have a voice plan with AT&T, then it’s not any cheaper if you go the legit route. It comes down to $50/month if you’re sneaky about it, but you’ll also need a PDA phone to use as a modem. Even if this were your only connection (no DSL or cable), it’d still be extremely expensive. Customer service is ok.

Verizon: Also has a speedy 3G network. Coverage is also not so hot, but supposedly somewhat better than AT&T. Legit cost is $60, but you can be sneaky about it and cut it down to about $40/month with a PDA phone. The downside? Verizon is VERY vigilant about how much you download. You definitely can’t use this as a dedicated connection: they will cut you off without any prior warning! So, no getting your money’s worth by downloading everything through it. No Wi-Fi service.

Compare it to T-Mobile. Data-only access it $40/month, which is EDGE plus Wi-Fi. If you have a voice plan, both services costs only $20/month. So for what you would pay for other companies to just have data access, you could get both data AND voice. But wait! It’s actually possible to get data access for even less if you have a voice plan – for $6! The process is a little complicated, and not for everyone, but if you want the cheapest, reliable data access available, this is it.

Conclusion

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The Sony GC89 provides reliable connectivity to the T-Mobile EDGE network and HotSpots. T-Mobile’s EDGE network is very reliable and allows data access anywhere on the T-Mobile network. T-Mobile’s HotSpot service is very fast and available in a lot of places, not just Starbucks (the software for this bundle includes a directory for locating HotSpots). T-Mobile data services are very cheap, and I would recommend it to just about anybody who needs general data access.

Buy/More Info

Nokia 7610 Supernova Mobile Phone – Review Photos Price & Specifications of Nokia 7610 Supernova

February 17th, 2009 Cellphone Review No comments
Nokia 7610 Supernova Review The Nokia 7610 Supernova is a slide quad-band hand portable phone, supporting EGSM 850/900/1800/1900. In Nokia 7610 there is a themed colored illumination feature which allows the user to change the laminated navigation key and their themed wallpaper to match their chosen colored exterior casing. The user can enjoy fast and speedy data file transfers with the EDGE technology with the support of GPRS all of which will make for a fantastic internet experience. The Noki

Several Popular Technology Related Product Reviews

September 8th, 2008 Cellphone Review No comments
What do cell phones, mp3 players and \”as seen on TV\” products all have in common? The answer, they are all products that stay on the cutting edge of technology. The fact that a footwear company and a computer manufacturer would team up together is astonishing. Nike and Apple joined forces together in 2006 to create the Apple+Nike shoe. This shoe fused Nike\’s design technology with Apple\’s innovative iPod. A Nano is contained in the shoes sole. With Apple selling over one million iPhones and

Motorola SLVR L7i Mobile Phone Review

June 30th, 2008 Cellphone Review No comments
The Motorola SLVR L7i gives you good features such as EDGE Technology and ability to play quality music through an integrated MP3 / AAC music player. This feature coupled with Stereo Bluetooth technology lets users have a great music listening in experience in a hands free way. You can do a whole lot of things with this cell phone. This phone includes a 1.3-megapixel camera with 8x zoom, through which you can capture all your pics and send them away to your friends through messaging. If you wa