AT&T informed gizmodo that anyone who bought an iPhone after May 27th will be able to swap out their handset with no additional charges for an iPhone 3G. If you signed a 2-year contract with AT&T when the iPhone came out, you’ll have to sign another new 2-year contract to score a new iPhone 3G. The good news is that AT&T will allow you to overwrite your old contract with your new contract. In other words, you’re just locked into another 2 years, not 3,very good!
Apple has officially announced the next generation iPhone at WWDC08. The iPhone 3G sports many of the enhancements that have been rumored for months, including 3G data, GPS, updated design, better battery life, and much more. It will also be much cheaper, launching at $199 for the 8GB model and $299 for the 16GB. The 8GB will be available in black, and the 16GB will launch in both black and white. The new phone will ship with iPhone firmware 2.0, which will include support for Apple’s new “exchange for the rest of us” dubbed MobileMe.
MobileMe Requirments:
- Compatible device: Mac, PC, iPhone, or iPod touch.
- For Mac: Mac OS X v10.4.11 or latest version of Mac OS X Leopard; Safari 3, Firefox 2, or later.
- For PC: Windows Vista or Windows XP Home or Professional (SP2) or later; Internet Explorer 7, Safari 3, Firefox 2, or later. Microsoft Outlook 2003 or later recommended.
- For iPhone and iPod touch: 2.0 software.
- iTunes 7.7 or later (free download from www.itunes.com/download).
- Internet access with compatible ISP (broadband required for web applications); fees may apply.
- Some features require Mac OS X v10.5 and iLife ‘08.
Samsung Soul U900 Design
While the phone looks unusual enough to stand out from other models of the company, it is still very much Samsung-like. There are a lot of metallic elements in the Samsung U900, as expected from a fashion phone. The weight and size are well-balanced: the phone doesn’t feel like a toy, and at the same time is not too heavy. Samsung Soul display takes up the most of the face panel; it is finger mark-prone, and the fact that you need to touch it when closing the slider makes the situation even worse. The little touchscreen which serves the function of navigation buttons suffers from the same problem.
The display takes up the most of the face panel:

The camera and flash are hidden behind the back panel when the Samsung Soul is closed:

There is a slot for a microSD memory card in the right side of the phone:

When the slider is open, the overall look is slightly spoiled by a large hollow beneath the camera, and the opening mechanism protruding from it:

Samsung SGH-U900 Soul comes in two versions: metallic silver and black. Note that black only applies to the plastic parts; all the metallic elements will retain their color.
Samsung U900 Soul Display
The image quality and viewing angle of the display in Samsung Soul are both excellent thanks to the quality matrix installed – as expected from a Samsung phone, really. The reflective coating, however, brings its own problems – the screen is almost unreadable in bright sunlight, especially if you are using a dark theme.
Samsung Soul SGH-U900 ergonomics and controls
We’ll start with the Samsung Soul keypad, leaving the most interesting part for later. It is a solid plastic plate, with engraved labels and metallic insets separating the rows of keys. These help a lot in finding the correct buttons without looking, but I still wouldn’t call the keyboard completely comfortable.
Reaching the bottom row of the keys might be difficult due to the construction of the device – the phone leans forward:

As for the navigation block, it takes some time to get used to. The unexpected (but not bad, by all means!) design decision was to use mechanical navigation buttons together with a touch panel. Normally you would expect touch-sensitive buttons to come with it (like it is with E900, E950 and LG products), but there you go.
Samsung Soul touch panel itself works surprisingly well; it has an adjustable vibration force feedback and takes only half an hour or so to get used to. We didn’t experience any problems whatsoever with it – what’s more, different modes of operation help a lot, especially when using the camera.
Samsung Soul Features
The Samsung Soul U900 is feature-packed, with the biggest emphasis on multimedia. It has a pretty good music player which gives you more than acceptable functionality and sound, an FM radio receiver, and a 5 Mpx built-in camera with autofocus. You can make okay-looking photos with it (provided the weather is good) and share them right away or post them to your blog by using the integrated ShoZu client. It’s also possible to edit photos and videos on the phone, and it actually comes in handy sometimes – for simple tasks like cropping, anyway. You can see some screenshots of the camera software and the music player below:



Using the Samsung U900 Soul
We encountered only one real problem when using the phone, and that’s the display and the touch sensor being extremely finger mark-prone. Since it is a widespread problem among all modern phones, however, we can’t even give the Samsung Soul U900 lower marks because of it.
All the other aspects are in order: the ringtone is loud enough, and the battery life is as expected. Fully charged, the phone will hold for around two days with average usage.
via unwiredview
TomTom already has a version of their navigation software running on the device. Unfortunately, no other details regarding a release date, features or pricing have been released—but it stands a good chance of being the first, truly powerful GPS navigator for the iPhone. via gizmodo
Though Nokia still hasn’t issued an official press release for its two highly-awaited upcoming business handsets, the Nokia E66 and E71, the two are finally made confirmed through two interactive demos that are available from Nokia’s web site.
Read Nokia E71 Demo and Nokia E66 Demo
via Symbian-Freak
hat mantra of mobile computing sure sounds good on paper, but a rapidly evolving array of nascent devices, standards, and technologies is making things tough for the people that need to manage business communications operations.
The answer, according to Cisco Systems, is something that’s always there: the network.
Claiming an industry-first, Cisco says the Mobility Services Engine offers a flexible platform for third-party companies to develop new tools and applications to better integrate mobile communications with the other parts of a business’ information infrastructure.
T-Mobile USA, Inc. today announced that the company has taken the first commercial step in the rollout of its third-generation (3G) wireless network by launching its UMTS/HSDPA network in New York City. T-Mobile plans to continue the rollout of its 3G network across major metropolitan markets through the year. By year’s end, T-Mobile expects its high-speed data network will be available in those cities where a majority of its subscribers currently use data services.
T-Mobile’s 3G network supports voice and data services consistent with available service and handset offerings. The company today offers multiple phones that are able to operate on the UMTS network. The phones are designed to automatically connect to the best available network (3G or GSM/GPRS/EDGE) to provide the great call quality and rich communication services customers expect from T-Mobile.



