
Looks like NEC's new L1 is a mere 11.9mm thick--- mere 0.46-inches---which is 2mm thinner than the RAZR, and 2.6mm thinner than the Blade (V740)...more...
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Brax wrote:Hopefully Japanese mobile phones will come to Australia soon... we are so far behind.
mr. sparkle wrote:I just got the Motorola Razr. Prob'ly primitive compared to what you guys got. Sheet, even in Thailand they are further along than the U.S. A lot of headphones coming out of the cell phones. Is iPod dead?
mr. sparkle wrote: Sheet, even in Thailand they are further along than the U.S. A lot of headphones coming out of the cell phones. Is iPod dead?
Apple said Monday it would hold a major music-related news event on Sept. 7 in San Francisco, according to the Times....The newspaper said the new phone brings together two of the most popular digital devices today -- the cell phone and Apple's (Research) iPod, which has popularized the practice of downloading songs from the Internet.
The report said having iTunes software on the phone would allow people to transfer songs from their personal computer to the phone and listen to them.
"It's a deluxe music player now on your cell phone," Roger Entner, the telecommunications analyst briefed on the announcement, told the Times.
http://money.cnn.com/2005/08/30/technology/personaltech/ipod_phone/
emperor wrote:Some people complain its too wide, but I think its nice.
Theres supposed to be a 2megapixel version with some other improvements later this year on beginning of next.
Taro wrote:The Japanese keitai with headphones are DOGSHIT because you cannot copy your 3MPs to (and from) the phone---you can only download tunes you may already own for 300yen each.
The rumored Motorola-iPod phone with use iTunes in the correct way so you can use the MP3s you already own on the phone and save any music you purchase with your cellphone onto your home computer.
mr. sparkle wrote:Oh, that sucks! I think that the new iPod phone is going to be huge for that reason alone. ...Taro wrote:The Japanese keitai with headphones are DOGSHIT because you cannot copy your 3MPs to (and from) the phone---you can only download tunes you may already own for 300yen each.
The rumored Motorola-iPod phone with use iTunes in the correct way so you can use the MP3s you already own on the phone and save any music you purchase with your cellphone onto your home computer.
Frobes.com wrote:With 25-Song Cap, ITunes Phone May Underwhelm
David M. Ewalt and Peter Kafka, 08.30.05, 4:03 PM ET
NEW YORK - For more than a year, Apple and Motorola's plans to release an iTunes-enabled phone have tantalized the music and mobile phone businesses. Now, with the two companies set to unveil the long-rumored handset Sept. 7, they might be underdelivering.
A person who has seen a version of the phone says it was designed to accommodate just 25 songs, which would be "sideloaded" from a user's computer using iTunes. The phone was equipped with a 128-megabyte Sandisk TransFlash memory card--just one-quarter the capacity of Apple's (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people ) smallest iPod, the 512-megabyte shuffle, which holds about 120 songs.
While it should be possible to swap out the memory card on the new iTunes phone for one with more capacity, the person who has seen the handset says the phone's software appears to artificially cap song storage at 25 songs, regardless of how much memory the phone has.
Both Apple and Motorola (nyse: MOT - news - people ) declined to comment. An earlier statement from Apple said the phones "are expected to become available later this summer."
On Monday, Apple distributed an an e-mail to the media hinting at a new product release on Sept. 7. Published reports say that Apple and Motorola will announce an agreement with wireless carrier Cingular, a joint venture between BellSouth (nyse: BLS - news - people ) and SBC Communications (nyse: SBC - news - people ), and will introduce the phone that day.
Some caveats: It is possible that the model the source previewed is different than the one Apple and Motorola will unveil next week. It is also possible that the two companies may be introducing multiple versions of an iTunes phone with different capacities.
But if the phone is reflective of Apple and Motorola's launch, it's likely to underwhelm analysts and Apple fans who have been waiting for an iTunes phone since July 2004, when Motorola Chief Executive Ed Zander first announced plans to roll one out.
Since then, the music and mobile-phone industry has been rife with rumors that the two companies have been unable to find a wireless carrier willing to work with them. The main problem: By loading music from a user's PC to a phone, the handset doesn't create any revenue-generating opportunity for the carriers....more....
oyajikun wrote:The 603 feels cheap in comparison with the beloved 602. And the TV gets zero reception anywhere I would actually want to use it. I might actually fork out the money for the 903.
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