Tue June 22 2004
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10:02 AM by sUnShInE in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
The goal of Minimo (or Mini Mozilla), is to reduce the footprint of the Mozilla browser to a size suitable for small consumer devices. Mozilla has already produced a preview release based on the 1.7a Mozilla code. If all goes according to plan, Nokia will stake an incredible return on its investment if it could use a browser free from licensing fees on its handsets (think Netscape). In the end, it will not only benefit Nokia, but all handset manufacturers -- not to mention end-users. Minimo v0.1 is part of the Handhelds.org stable feed. Read the CNET article. |
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09:28 AM by ignatz in Miscellaneous | Lounge
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06:37 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
Stock prices, football scores, ski reports, traffic information, racing results, last-minute travel deals, multi-player games, email and Instant Messaging – is the kind of live information on2go is striving to provide you. If you'd like to be involved in their Beta program, you can send them an e-mail to register your interest. |
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06:16 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Portable Audio/Video
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04:13 AM by faie in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
In the upcoming year, cellphones will be in forms that are cleverly disguised in watches, bracelets, jacket lapels, backpacks -- any imaginable place that will make gabbing a fashion statement. Taking part in this cellphone evolution, several big players has churned out their versions of wearable phones. Nokia plans to begin selling its Imagewear line of digital necklaces and chokers in the U.S. at the end of June. The necklaces' medallions will store and display up to eight photos, snapped by a Nokia camera phone and uploaded into the necklace wirelessly via Bluetooth (see accompanying image). Motorola has developed something it calls the SmartButton. The user pins the device onto a lapel, then taps on it and, using voice commands, dials a number and holds a conversation. The button forwards requests to the phone, which is somewhere nearby. Motorola also is looking at flexible phones that don't poke wearers when they take a seat. This trickle of wearable cell phones could quickly turn into a gushing stream -- and many electronics companies, chipmakers, and startups are betting that the technological tide will carry them into the next stage of cell-phone evolution. |
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02:02 AM by cbarnett in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
This could have a real impact on our ebook reading in the future... Craig. |
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Mon June 21 2004
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03:30 PM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Portable Audio/Video
I4U has now a review of this nifty little MP3 player. It's conclusion: "Overall this watch looks good, sounds good, and has a nice GEEK appeal (yes I am a geek) I mean, how many watches can you pull a USB connector out of, and hook to your computer??" |
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03:14 PM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
I am not sure if palmOne is in the position today to act like this, but I am definitely reconsidering my decision whether my next PDA will be Palm OS-based again |
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