Posts tagged microsoft
Nokia E6 is a VGA Symbian QWERTY messaging phone is OFFICIAL…!!
Apr 13th
The Nokia E6 is basically designed with business customers in mind. It boasts a 2.46″ touch screen and full QWERTY keyboard. Nokia said that the smartphone can maintain its battery life for 681 hours on standby and boasts more than 14.8 hours of talk time over GSM. Users can listen to music in offline mode for up to 75 hours. To appeal to business customers, the Nokia E6 comes with access to Microsoft Exchange, Microsoft Communicator Mobile, and Microsoft SharePoint.
The Nokia E6 is another smartphone from the past few months, and the company has finally made the messaging Symbian handset official. Like the X7 it runs the latest Symbian Anna OS, but unlike Nokias of old it also has a 2.46″ VGA touchscreen display, offering 4x the pixels (326ppi) of earlier Eseries handsets.
There’s also an 8-megapixel full-focus camera with HD video support. Obviously the big draw is the QWERTY thumb-board, like the E71 and E72, which should work well with the native Exchange support, Microsoft Communicator Mobile, and browser access to Microsoft SharePoint. Pre-loaded Quick Office means easy Word, PowerPoint and Excel editing.
Talktime is up to 14.8hrs, while standby is a whopping 31 days. Check other Nokia mobile phones, Click Pricesbolo.com.
Nokia X7 smartphone with updated Symbian Software…
Apr 13th
With 2 new smartphones from Nokia, it is showing no immediate signs of letting up on its Symbian operating system.
The E6 and the X7, both announced today, will be the first smartphones to ship with Symbian Anna, the latest update to the mobile operating system, which is used primarily by Nokia. Earlier this year, however, Nokia signed a deal with Microsoft that will make Windows Phone 7 the principal operating system on its smartphones, with the shift the Microsoft OS starting as early as next year.
Nokia has officially taken the wraps off its new X7 smartphone – an entertainment and mobile gaming focused unit that packs a 4-inch, 16:9, AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 8 megapixel camera and 720p video capture into nicely chiseled stainless steel casing that’s less than half an inch (11.9 mm) thick. Along with the (also freshly announced) QWERTY keyboard equipped E6, the X7 is the first Nokia device to run on the updated Symbian “Anna” platform which introduces a raft of enhancements including new icons, improved text input, faster browsing and a spruced-up version of Ovi Maps.
Though the 4-inch screen size trumps some of the obvious competition, the X7 still seems a little light on pixels with its 640 x 360 resolution. The 8 megapixel camera is enhanced by a face recognition software and a dual LED flash, with 2x digital zoom available for still images and 3x digital for video.
Under the bonnet there’s a 680MHz CPU with 256MB RAM and the phone will ship with an 8 GB microSD card (supporting up to 32 GB), includes GPS receivers, an accelerometer for screen orientation and gaming. There is also 802.11 b/g/n WiFi and a 3.5mm audio jack.
“With these new products and more Symbian devices and user enhancements coming in the near future, we are confident we can keep existing Nokia smartphone customers engaged, as well as attract new first-time and competitor smartphone users,” Jo Harlow, head of Nokia’s Smart Devices business, said in a statement today.
Nokia X7′s key specifications:
1. Size: 119.7 x 62.8 x 11.9 mm
2. Weight (with battery): 146 g
3. Screen size: 4″
4. Resolution: 16:9 nHD (640 x 360 pixels) AMOLED
5. 16.7 million colors
6. Capacitive touch screen
7. Orientation sensor (Accelerometer)
8. Proximity sensor
9. Ambient light detector
10. Integrated GPS, A-GPS receivers
11. Ovi Maps with free car and pedestrian navigation
12. Wi-Fi network positioning
13. Accelerometer for correct orientation of display
14. Talk-time (max): 6 h 30 min (GSM), 4 h 30 min (WCDMA)
15. Standby time (max): 450 h (GSM), 450 h (WCDMA)
16. 8 GB microSD card included, support for up to 32 GB with an external MicroSD memory card (with hot swap)
17. Bluetooth 3.0
18. Micro USB 2.0 connector and charging
19. 3.5 mm Nokia standard audio connector
20. FM Radio
21. Dedicated graphics processor with OpenGL 2.0 enables 3D graphics
22. Java games
23. Handwriting recognition for Chinese
24. Flash Lite 4
25. 8 megapixel camera
26. Fullscreen 16:9 viewfinder with easy on-screen touch controls
27. 3rd generation dual LED flash
28. Face recognition software
29. Focal length: 4.3 mm
30. Aperture: F2.8
31. Zoom up to 2x (digital) for still images
32. Zoom up to 3x (digital) for video
33. Video capture in 720p 25 fps with codecs H.264, MPEG-4
34. Shoots 16:9 videos in HD
35. Settings for scene, video light, white balance, color tone.
Nokia has also announced that the Symbian Anna update will become available as standard on for Nokia N8, Nokia E7, Nokia C7 and Nokia C6-01 devices.
Nokia X7 Price in India :
Price of Nokia X7 is Rs. 25,000 (380 Euros) approx. in India. Check other Nokia mobile phones, Click Pricesbolo.com.
Microsoft Zune gets first HD E-mail App, long after launch….
Apr 4th
It is about 1-and-a-half years because the HD Zune music player from Microsoft has a gala launch. The software giant has now calm, the rolled for the 1st actual e-mail application for their High Definition Zune device.
The application allows users to develop their Zune HD Gmail or Windows Live accounts, or check, in truth, every single mail account with a POP3 server for incoming messages.
Despite the fact that it checking mail, it assists you is not the full functionality of the application that on the Windows Mobile 7
Nevertheless, users their emails to folders or the status of the message about the new e-mail app for Zune HD filter. It permits users to mass delete emails if essential.
The new app is now for sale in the Zune Marketplace. There you can either get with the Zune device or with the Windows-based Zune software.
We observed that the new app presents intuitive navigation, but one particular ought to not compare it with the Windows Mobile 7 to experience.
What we really feel that the new app is just meant to be checking the mail. It is not probable to give oneself a small message with the small keyboard on the screen on the Zune HD.
In addition, the assessment of his mail accounts like Gmail, a herculean process, as the app requires a lengthy time to load those mail accounts. The release, although late, at final an e-mail app obtained for the Zune user.
HTC HD7 preview
Oct 12th
Alright, so by now we all know that HTC’s HD7 is mostly a HD2 in imperial new clothes, but let’s give the new phone a chance, shall we? We’ve just gotten to grips with the latest member of HTC’s 4.3-inch brigade and predictably enough it feels just as snappy as the rest of the Windows Phone 7 devices introduced today. Navigation is blazingly quick, interrupted only by Microsoft’s excessive fascination with animated screen transitions. Clearly, designing the new WP7 OS around hard-set minimum specs has paid off for Microsoft, whose end product exhibits a great deal of polish. T-Mobile, the HD7′s exclusive carrier in the US, is keen to point out that it’s the largest Windows Phone 7 launch device, so if size is atop your list of priorities, this will be the phone you’ll want to start your journey with. We’ve got some in-depth impressions of the hardware after the break and a video is coming right up as well. Enjoy!
Update: As promised, a lengthy video exhibition of the HD7 awaits your eyeballs just past the break.
Much like the HD2 before it, the sheer size of the HD7 will be the first thing that grabs you. The 4.3-inch screen is again framed by a minimal bezel, lending a feel of efficient, raw, electronic prowess, and it just feels bigger without the HD2′s hardware buttons in the way. We were less impressed by the display’s viewing angles, however — maybe the recent spate of AMOLED, IPS, and Super LCD panels has spoiled us, but the color degradation as you move off center is really offputting. We appreciate that a 4.3-inch superscreen is probably beyond any reasonable manufacturing budgets, but the fact remains that the HD7′s current screen feels a step behind the competition, both in terms of pixel density and general performance. There was no faulting the capacitive digitizer, though, as every touch was responded to almost instantaneously in our brief tests and WP7′s virtual landscape keyboard was a pleasure.
Build quality seems to be on par with HTC’s recent efforts, with a metallic band accounting for most of the bezel and firm matte plastic covering the rear. A squeaky battery door left us feeling a little uneasy, however, and the kickstand’s a fairly thin and weak affair, even if it does have a nice, solid click. The problem is that while the rounded edge of the stand looks neat, it actually serves to make the hefty device easier to topple. We’re again left with the sense that the oversized form factor has limited HTC’s budget and, consequently, options.
Flip the phone sideways, however, trust that kickstand to do its job, and the HD7 becomes a multimedia machine. A pair of front-facing stereo speakers, complete with Dolby and SRS Surround for extra branding points, will fire off anything you can magic up with the preloaded Netflix, Slacker Radio and T-Mobile TV apps. In our time with it, Netflix worked about as well here as it does on the iPhone, piping a very watchable framerate (but with considerable artifacting) over T-Mobile’s 3G. Speaking of connectivity, we’re afraid the HD7 won’t feature the carrier’s new HSPA+ transfer speeds — T-Mobile reps said the HD7′s silicon doesn’t support it, and neither does Microsoft’s spec.
The T-Mobile “Family Room” promises to be an interesting piece of software — a cloud sharing app built on Microsoft Azure that lets individuals leave notes, pictures, calendar events and the like on a Metro UI-ified bulletin board of sorts. Though its appeal would be fairly limited if restricted only to high-end WP7 devices such as those currently on offer from T-Mobile — which the kiddies aren’t exactly liable to own any time soon — the company stressed its brand is “about value,” without letting us in on its plans.
You won’t be surprised to hear that the biggest downer we found with the HD7 was its failure to advance the hardware spec (in any meaningful way) from the HD2. Then again, if specs mean less to you than overall user experience and the chance to jump aboard a shiny new bandwagon, the HD7 should tick your boxes quite competently. It certainly promises to fill many an early WP7 adopter’s time with happy memories of snappy, oversized smartphone action.





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