Archive for September, 2009

Palm Pre Browser Matches Up Well With iPhone Safari

Monday, September 14th, 2009

The Palm Pre’s WebOS browser is a relatively recent entrant in the mobile browser arena, arriving in early June of this year. But the Pre’s new mobile browser comes fully prepared for a battle royalewith other leading smartphone browsers.

The opening screen of thePalm Pre’s browser contains your bookmarks and a combination address-and-search bar at the top. When you start typing a URL, the Pre’s browser will look through your visited sites and try to match the string you’re typing to addresses you’ve typed previously–so with luck you won’t have to type the whole thing more than once. If you enter a search term, the browser asks you whether you want to search Google or Wikipedia, and then it directs you to the relevant results.

After you enter the URL that you want to visit, a persistent loading-progress bubble appears at the bottom right of the screen, which then becomes a reload/stop button. A back/forward button floats at the bottom left of the screen. The page’s title appears in a floating bubble at the top (it disappears when you scroll down).

Palm Pre browser; click for full-size image.Like the iPhone’s browser, the Palm Pre’s browser can perform adaptive zooming when you double-tap a given area of the page. The transition during zooming isn’t as smooth as on the iPhone, however. The Pre’s browser doesn’t display a scroll bar, so it gives you no way of knowing where you are on a page. You won’t find a button on the Pre for switching tabs either, as Palm’s playing-card metaphor requires you to open a new browser window from the menu launcher in order to open a new Web page. On the other hand, this method does allow you to load two pages side to side (or in the background).

Flicking through browser windows on the Pre works exactly the same as browsing through multiple open applications (also displayed as cards), with virtually no limit to how many pages you can open at the same time. You can also flick between open browser windows without being in card mode on the Pre, but only by flicking left/right on the touch-sensitive area underneath the screen (the option must be enabled from device settings).

One major shortcoming of the Pre’s browser is that it doesn’t let you save images. On the iPhone, when you tap and hold an image, the browser prompts you to save it.

source:http://www.pcworld.com/article/171808/

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Additions make new iPod Nano

Friday, September 11th, 2009

The iPod Nano has been Apple’s best-seller, moving 110 million units with its promise of easy music listening in a very slim package.

But Apple believes the era of dedicated devices is waning, and the Nano is a good example of how Apple is evolving its market-leading media players into much more.

Dr Cell Phone Ready to Repair iPod Nano Fifth Generation

Dr Cell Phone Ready to Repair iPod Nano Fifth Generation

The Nano got video playback two years ago and then added voice recording last year with a microphone or special headset.

Now, with the fifth-generation Nano released Wednesday, the slim player sports a video camera, an FM radio, a pedometer and an integrated microphone for voice recording. It’s a remarkable feat considering Apple has left the dimensions of this iPod virtually unchanged.

Let’s take a look at the additions to the Nano.

The camera offers standard-definition 640×480 video, although it can’t do still shots. The lens is built into the back corner along with a small microphone. The 16 GB version can hold up to 16 hours of video.

The video generally looked good, on the order of the standard definition Flip camcorder. The sound quality is decent, although I found it easy to get too close to the microphone, which distorted the sound.

I had more problems just holding the Nano in camera mode. My fingers repeatedly obscured shots and the device is not terribly comfortable to hold for long periods of time. The bulkier Flip fits better in your hand.

The best part about the Nano is the effects the camera applies in real time to video recordings. There are 16 effects that let you stretch or distort images or throw the video into thermal, sepia or X-ray view. My favorite was one called Cyborg, offering a view of what the Terminator sees when it stalks victims.

Getting the video up to YouTube isn’t as easy as it is with the Flip, which lets you do easy uploading with its integrated Flipshare software. But with all the cool effects and the ability to take spontaneous video, the Nano should be a major source of YouTube videos, especially from kids.

An iPod radio has been on people’s wish list for years and it’s finally here. Apple has given the long-awaited feature a twist, building in a 15-minute buffer that allows you to pause a radio feed and listen to anything in that period. You can’t save the buffered audio – it just keeps moving along – but it’s a nice feature to back up and hear what you might have missed.

The radio also allows you to tag certain tunes so you can remember them or buy them later through iTunes. Though the Nano has a tiny speaker, you won’t be able to listen to radio over it because you’ll need to plug in the headphones – Apple’s or your own ear buds – which act as an antenna for the radio.

A healthy touch

The pedometer is also a welcome touch, especially for health-conscious users. The Nano uses its accelerometer to record your steps and give you a sense of how many calories you’ve burned off. Though it won’t track your distance, I found it was a nice way to chart my activity. It also encouraged me to keep moving.

Better recording

Finally, while the previous Nano had voice recording, you had to use a microphone-equipped headset for it. The latest Nano relies on its integrated microphone to do the trick. It does a good job recording interviews, though you’ll want to observe a little distance from the mike for personal memos.

The Nano offers the same storage as its predecessor: 8 and 16 GBs at $149 and $179 respectively. Aside from the new additions, the latest Nano features a slightly larger 2.2-inch screen and five hours of video playback, one more than the previous model.

All in all, Apple has done it again, squeezing a video camera, radio and pedometer into an already slim package. This should keep the Nano chugging along as the predominant MP3 player.
Source : http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/09/10/BUV719LEA8.DTL#ixzz0QoLqbJNO

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Apple drops prices on iPod nanos, touches, classic

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

What with the next Apple event just hours away, it would be nice if we had some sort of concrete sign of what they might be announcing. Instead, all we’ve got is the news that the online Apple Store has cut prices across the iPod line. What are we supposed to take away from that?

Dr Cell Phone Repairs iPod Touch

Dr Cell Phone Repairs iPod Touch

Oh. Right. Well, if you don’t find yourself intrigued about whatmight be introduced, you can now pick up a known quantity for a significantly less, uh, known quantity. Apple has quietly dropped prices on its iPod models, in some cases dramatically.

The iPod touch line has seen the 8GB model drop from $229 to $189, the 16GB from $299 to $249, and the 32GB from $399 to a wolf-whistle-inducing $279. Cuts in the iPod nano reduce the 8GB model to $129 from $149 and the 16GB to $149 from $199. And not to feel left out, the 120GB iPod classic is now $229 instead of $249. The iPod shuffle has remained stable at $79.

A price drop this significant ahead of announcements of new products could suggest that any new iPod models introduced at Apple’s event will not ship immediately, thus giving Apple time to clear inventory of its old models. The store has also not been thoroughly updated yet (some of the old prices remain), so it’s also possible that an over-enthusiastic Apple employee jumped the gun—it’s happened before.

Whatever the case, we’ll know in a few hours what the deal is. Remember to tune into  live coverage from the Apple event in San Francisco at 10AM Pacific, 1PM Eastern.

source:http://www.macworld.com/article/142695/ipod_cuts.html

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Google Android Platform

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Seems like Apple and Blackberry REALLY have to watch out now. Motorola, LG, and even Acer (random much?) have signed with Google to produce Android-based products.

The myTouch 3G and G1 from Google

The myTouch 3G and G1 from Google

Android is the popular platform for the Google G1 and the new myTouch provided by T-Mobile. Remember, Dr. Cell Phone provides repair for the G1 and myTouch. And we also work on the iPhone 3G and Blackberry Bold.

The myTouch from Google and HTC--exclusively for T-Mobile

The myTouch from Google and HTC--exclusively for T-Mobile

http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Mobile-and-Wireless/Google-Android-Gaining-as-Mobile-Phone-Market-Sleeper-626246/

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The Beatles Ode to Dr. Cell Phone

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

So the Beatles decided to write us a song…no big deal.

Consider this the theme song for Dr. Cell Phone. We can help (fix your phone). Or iPhone. Or Blackberry. Anything, really.

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Sprint’s New Savior: The Google Android-Based HTC Hero?

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Move over Palm Pre, Sprint has another hot touch-screensmartphone to hang its hat on: the HTC Hero.

The HTC Hero is Sprint’s first smartphone based on the Google Android mobile operating system. It is expected to be available Oct. 11, but Sprint is taking preregistration for the HTC Hero starting today.

The 3G HTC Hero comes as the hype around the Sprint-exclusive Palm Pre starts to fizzle out in the shadow of the Apple iPhone 3G S, which has sold millions of units while the Pre has sold fewer than half a million by most estimates.

Sprint said the HTC Hero will be available through all of Sprint’s retail channels and Best Buy for $179.99 after $50 instant savings, a $100 mail-in rebate and a two-year service agreement.

“The arrival of HTC Hero and the Android platform to Sprint’s network is an important milestone for our customers and the U.S. wireless industry,” Kevin Packingham, senior vice president of product development for Sprint, said in a statement.

The HTC Hero is the first HTC smartphone in the U.S. to feature HTC Sense, a feature that lets users customize their smartphone via home-screen panels and widgets.

HTC Hero Repair

Dr. Cell Phone All Set for HTC Hero Repair

The HTC Hero smartphone features beveled edges and an angled bottom and is contoured to fit comfortably in users’ hands and against their faces while they’re on a call. The device also uses an anti-fingerprint screen coating for smudge resistance and a longer-lasting, clearer display.

The HTC Hero also features a 3.2-inch HVGA touch-screen display with pinch-to-zoom capabilties. The smartphone is optimized for Web, multimedia and other content and also includes a GPS, a digital compass, a gravity-sensor, a 3.5mm headphone jack, a 5-megapixel autofocus camera and expandable microSD memory.

The HTC Hero integrates a dedicated search button that goes beyond basic search, offering users a contextual experience that searches Twitter, locates contacts, finds e-mails and searches any other area on the smartphone.

Because the HTC Hero for Sprint is Google Android-based it also offers native access to a host of Google applications like Maps, Gmail and more. In addition, it offers access to applications through the Google Android Market, Android’s storefront for free and paid mobile applications and games.

Source: http://www.crn.com/mobile/219501237;

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