10‏/12‏/2009


To find out the best Windows laptops of 2009, we checked in with Mark Spoonauer who, as editor-in-chief of Laptop Magazine and Laptopmag.com, oversaw 130+ notebook and netbook reviews this year. If you're buying, buy one of these.

Under $400

Acer Aspire 1410

Starting Price: $399
This 3.2-pound ultraportable is such a sweet deal it makes us question whether netbooks are long for this world. Acer stuffed a dual-core Celeron processor (about double the performance of Atom), 2GB of RAM and Windows 7 Premium inside a 11.6-inch system with a full-size keyboard—all for just $399. Plus, you get 6.5 hours of battery life. Sure, the 160GB hard drive is a bit skimpy, but the 1410 is a real PC you can take anywhere. [Review]

Under $700

Gateway NV

Starting Price: $599.99
The NV proves that you can get a good-looking budget laptop that performs. In addition to four color choices (blue, brown, read, and black), this 15.6-inch notebook sports a fashionable metal hinge and glowing LED controls. Under the hood the NV satisfies with the combination of an Intel Core 2 Duo CPU, 4GB of RAM, and a 320GB hard drive. Our only nitpick is the narrow touchpad button. [Review]

Asus UL30A

Starting Price: $649.99
If we had to pick a notebook of the year, the UL30A would be it. Why? Because this 13 incher is light enough to take anywhere yet offers enough pep to be your primary machine. This 4-pound ultraportable lasted nearly 10 hours on a charge in our tests (continuous surfing over Wi-Fi), and its ultra-low voltage Core 2 Duo processor can easily handle Windows 7. Bonus: 500GB of storage is nice for the $650 price. [Review]

Under $1000

Dell Studio 14z

Starting Price: $749.99
Think of it as the poor man's MacBook—with better specs and sound. Dell's 14-inch thin and light notebook weighs in at just 4.4 pounds and features Nvidia 9400 graphics for extra multimedia punch. But unlike the entry level $999 Mac, the Dell offers 70GB more hard drive space, superior speakers, and a backlit keyboard for $160 less. The only trade-offs are the lack of a DVD drive and the need for an adapter for plugging in memory cards. [Review]

Under $1500

Toshiba Qosmio X505

Starting Price : $1399
Ideal for multimedia mavens and good enough for gamers, the 18.4-inch Qosmio X505 brings serious muscle in the $1,499 configuration, including a blazing Core i7 CPU and Nvidia GTS 250M graphics (with 1 GB of dedicated video memory). We also dig the classy glossy black design with metallic red accents, integrated Blu-ray drive, and booming Harman Kardon speakers. If you want to step up from the 1680 x 945 display to a full HD screen, splurge for the $1,899 model, which also sports 6GB of RAM and an SSD. [Review]

ThinkPad T400s

Starting Price: $1599 ($1359.15 after coupon)
If BMWs are the ultimate driving machines, ThinkPads are the ultimate business machines, and this is the flagship vehicle. The T400s measures just 0.8 inches thick and weighs 3.9 pounds, and it's decked out in supersturdy magnesium (for the bottom and deck) and carbon fiber (for the lid). More important, this 14-incher blows away the competition in terms of ergonomic comfort and performance—when you spring for the 2.53-GHz processor and 128GB solid state drive. [Review]

To see all of Laptop's top picks of the year, click here.

Acer: Dell and HP Are Sabotaging Ultra-Thin Laptops

Jared Newman

Dec 9, 2009 5:32 pm

Wondering why thin and light laptops with monster battery life haven't been a smashing success? Acer chairman J.T. Wang says Dell and HP are to blame.

According to DigiTimes, Wang says HP and Dell aren't pushing the ultra-thin category hard enough, particularly in the United States. Instead, they're slashing prices on mainstream notebooks, selling them for as little as $400.

As a result, Intel's not seeing good enough sales on its consumer ultra-low voltage, or CULV, processors, Wang argued. In 2010, the chip maker plans to mainly push mainstream notebook platforms, possibly investing less in ultra-thins.

Ultra-thin laptops, such as Acer's Aspire Timeline 3810T and Asus' UL30a, tend to measure an inch thick or less, can last an entire work day on a charge and forgo an optical drive to trim down on bulk. They're larger and more powerful than netbooks, but they can struggle with gaming and 1080p HD video, partly because many ultra-thins lack dedicated graphics cards (Asus' UL80vt, on which I'm typing this, is an exception).

Wang believes that interest in ultra-thin laptops is stronger than HP and Dell would have Intel believe. At a recent trade show in Taiwan, ultra-thins accounted for half of Acer's laptops sold. Wang didn't say how Acer ultra-thins fared in 2009, but expects that they'll account for 30 percent of sales next year, backed by new models in March or April.

Wang's take on the ultra-thin market seems convoluted to me. HP and Dell aren't totally ignoring the category, with HP's ProBook 5310m and Pavilion DV2 (using AMD's Athlon Neo processor) and Dell's Inspiron 11zand the new Vostro V13. But Wang is essentially saying the competition isn't focusing on the laptops he wants to compete with, but that's of course their prerogative. And just last month, Wang was hinting at faster Intel chips on the horizon, presumably to power Acer's upcoming models, so the situation doesn't sound all bad.

In any case, Acer is the second-largest PC maker now. If ultra-thin notebooks haven't flourished, it could just be because Acer's offers haven't been attractive enough.

These Apple MacBooks fall beneath 5 lbs, making them amoung the lightest notebooks on the market.
These thin Apple MacBooks come in at about 1" or thinner. Looking for a notebook that doesn't take up much travel space? Look no further.
Choose a MacBook based on Sceen sizes ranging from 12.1" to 15.4" to 17". You're sure to find one that's perfect for you.
Apple MacBooks use G4 PowerPC processors and Intel Core Duo Processors. Find the one that meets your power and speed needs.
Quality accessories made exclusively for your Apple MacBook.
Technology 2009 – the 20th international exhibition for technological
innovations and achievements will be held at the Tel Aviv Exhibition Center, 22 – 25 June 2009.

Technology 2009 Exhibition is the “zenith” of professional meetings for those involved in the field
of technology and is sponsored by the Ministry of Industry, Trade & Labor.

Technology 2009 Exhibition will present categories related to the field of technology and to high-tech industries,
in pavilions divided into categories and situated next to national pavilions where the various countries
will present technological innovations and developments with an emphasis on Israeli industries.

Technology 2009 Exhibition is an important milestone in the fast-developing Israeli industry and is a focal point
for those involved in the field, both in Israel and abroad.
Many countries and overseas firms, as well as Israeli companies, have already promised to
participate and are looking for new markets for their products and a new forum for making economic business contact

Gartner Identifies the Top 10 Strategic Technologies for 2009

Analysts Examine Latest Industry Trends During Gartner Symposium/ITxpo, October 12-16, in Orlando

STAMFORD, Conn., October 14, 2008 — Gartner, Inc. analysts today highlighted the top 10 technologies and trends that will be strategic for most organizations. The analysts presented their findings during Gartner Symposium/ITxpo, being held here through October 16.

Gartner defines a strategic technology as one with the potential for significant impact on the enterprise in the next three years. Factors that denote significant impact include a high potential for disruption to IT or the business, the need for a major dollar investment, or the risk of being late to adopt.

These technologies impact the organization's long-term plans, programs and initiatives. They may be strategic because they have matured to broad market use or because they enable strategic advantage from early adoption.

“Strategic technologies affect, run, grow and transform the business initiatives of an organization,” said David Cearley, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. “Companies should look at these 10 opportunities and evaluate where these technologies can add value to their business services and solutions, as well as develop a process for detecting and evaluating the business value of new technologies as they enter the market.”

The top 10 strategic technologies for 2009 include:

Virtualization. Much of the current buzz is focused on server virtualization, but virtualization in storage and client devices is also moving rapidly. Virtualization to eliminate duplicate copies of data on the real storage devices while maintaining the illusion to the accessing systems that the files are as originally stored (data deduplication) can significantly decrease the cost of storage devices and media to hold information. Hosted virtual images deliver a near-identical result to blade-based PCs. But, instead of the motherboard function being located in the data center as hardware, it is located there as a virtual machine bubble. However, despite ambitious deployment plans from many organizations, deployments of hosted virtual desktop capabilities will be adopted by fewer than 40 percent of target users by 2010.

Cloud Computing. Cloud computing is a style of computing that characterizes a model in which providers deliver a variety of IT-enabled capabilities to consumers. They key characteristics of cloud computing are 1) delivery of capabilities “as a service,” 2) delivery of services in a highly scalable and elastic fashion, 3) using Internet technologies and techniques to develop and deliver the services, and 4) designing for delivery to external customers. Although cost is a potential benefit for small companies, the biggest benefits are the built-in elasticity and scalability, which not only reduce barriers to entry, but also enable these companies to grow quickly. As certain IT functions are industrializing and becoming less customized, there are more possibilities for larger organizations to benefit from cloud computing.

Servers Beyond Blades. Servers are evolving beyond the blade server stage that exists today. This evolution will simplify the provisioning of capacity to meet growing needs. The organization tracks the various resource types, for example, memory, separately and replenishes only the type that is in short supply. This eliminates the need to pay for all three resource types to upgrade capacity. It also simplifies the inventory of systems, eliminating the need to track and purchase various sizes and configurations. The result will be higher utilization because of lessened “waste” of resources that are in the wrong configuration or that come along with the needed processors and memory in a fixed bundle.

Web-Oriented Architectures. The Internet is arguably the best example of an agile, interoperable and scalable service-oriented environment in existence. This level of flexibility is achieved because of key design principles inherent in the Internet/Web approach, as well as the emergence of Web-centric technologies and standards that promote these principles. The use of Web-centric models to build global-class solutions cannot address the full breadth of enterprise computing needs. However, Gartner expects that continued evolution of the Web-centric approach will enable its use in an ever-broadening set of enterprise solutions during the next five years.

EnterpriseMashups. Enterprises are now investigating taking mashups from cool Web hobby to enterprise-class systems to augment their models for delivering and managing applications. Through 2010, the enterprise mashup product environment will experience significant flux and consolidation, and application architects and IT leaders should investigate this growing space for the significant and transformational potential it may offer their enterprises.

Specialized Systems. Appliances have been used to accomplish IT purposes, but only with a few classes of function have appliances prevailed. Heterogeneous systems are an emerging trend in high-performance computing to address the requirements of the most demanding workloads, and this approach will eventually reach the general-purpose computing market. Heterogeneous systems are also specialized systems with the same single-purpose imitations of appliances, but the heterogeneous system is a server system into which the owner installs software to accomplish its function.

Social Software and Social Networking. Social software includes a broad range of technologies, such as social networking, social collaboration, social media and social validation. Organizations should consider adding a social dimension to a conventional Web site or application and should adopt a social platform sooner, rather than later, because the greatest risk lies in failure to engage and thereby, being left mute in a dialogue where your voice must be heard.

Unified Communications. During the next five years, the number of different communications vendors with which a typical organization works with will be reduced by at least 50 percent. This change is driven by increases in the capability of application servers and the general shift of communications applications to common off-the-shelf server and operating systems. As this occurs, formerly distinct markets, each with distinct vendors, converge, resulting in massive consolidation in the communications industry. Organizations must build careful, detailed plans for when each category of communications function is replaced or converged, coupling this step with the prior completion of appropriate administrative team convergence.

Business Intelligence. Business Intelligence (BI), the top technology priority in Gartner’s 2008 CIO survey, can have a direct positive impact on a company’s business performance, dramatically improving its ability to accomplish its mission by making smarter decisions at every level of the business from corporate strategy to operational processes. BI is particularly strategic because it is directed toward business managers and knowledge workers who make up the pool of thinkers and decision makers that are tasked with running, growing and transforming the business. Tools that let these users make faster, better and more-informed decisions are particularly valuable in a difficult business environment.

Green IT. Shifting to more efficient products and approaches can allow for more equipment to fit within an energy footprint, or to fit into a previously filled center. Regulations are multiplying and have the potential to seriously constrain companies in building data centers, as the effect of power grids, carbon emissions from increased use and other environmental impacts are under scrutiny. Organizations should consider regulations and have alternative plans for data center and capacity growth.

“A strategic technology may be an existing technology that has matured and/or become suitable for a wider range of uses,” said Carl Claunch, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. “It may also be an emerging technology that offers an opportunity for strategic business advantage for early adopters or with potential for significant market disruption in the next five years. Companies should evaluate these technologies and adjust based on their industry need, unique business needs, technology adoption model and other factors.”

Additional comments from Mr. Cearley are available on the Gartner YouTube channel at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yglJUxqSCM. Additional videos are available athttp://www.youtube.com/gartnervideo.

Follow news, photos and video coming from Symposium/ITxpo on FriendFeed athttp://friendfeed.com/rooms/gartner and on Twitter athttp://twitter.com/Gartner_inc.

About Gartner Symposium/ITxpo
Gartner Symposium/ITxpo is the IT industry's largest and most-strategic conference, providing business leaders with a look at the future of IT. Nearly 6,000 senior business and IT strategists will gather for the insights, tools and solutions they need to ensure their IT initiatives are key contributors to and drivers of their enterprise's success. Gartner's annual Symposium/ITxpo events are key components of attendees' annual planning efforts. They rely on Gartner Symposium/ITxpo to gain insight into how their organizations can use IT to address business challenges and improve operational efficiency. Additional information is available atwww.gartner.com/symposium/us.

15th Information and Communications Technology Exhibition (SHAAM-2009) opens

15th Information and Communications Technology Exhibition (SHAAM-2009) opens

Damascus, ChamPress- The 15th Information and Communications Technology Exhibition (SHAAM-2009) was opened in Damascus on Wednesday with the participation of 729 trade marks from 42 countries. The five-day event is held by the Syrian Computer Society (SCS) and organized by the Arab Group for Exhibitions.

Minister of Communications and Technology Emad Sabouni told journalists that the exposition has become a meeting place for ICT experts from all countries of the region and for people interested.
Sabouni added that the Exhibition has been transferred into a new stage aiming at consolidating interaction among parties working in the ICT sector with the purpose of implement joint projects.

The exhibition needs to be supported through increasing the number of exhibitors from outside Syria, because international participation is important to exchange expertise and knowledge of ICT.

He pointed out that Syria is keen to cope with the latest developments of technology in the world and stressed the importance of the exhibition in updating the society's technological information.

Rakan Razzouk, Chairman of the Syrian Computer Society (SCS) said that the SHAAM 2009 is one of the most important occasions which aims at establishing communications, and at displaying ICT experiences and products.

He added that the exhibition serves Syria's basic goals in building a strong ICT sector. It is in itself a goal that all government and private parties in addition to civil society associations seek to achieve.
The exposition contains four main stands dedicated for software programming, ICT, equipments and solutions, and selling market


Dell has started shipping the 13.3-inch Vostro V13 ultra-thin business laptop starting $449. The Vostro 13 designed exclusively for small business travelers weighs 3.5 pounds and is 0.65 thin. The notebook runs the Intel ULV processors and supports up to 4GB of DDR3 memory.



The notebook features:

- Equally Slim & Striking : As thin as 0.65 inches (16.5mm)6 and starting at 3.5 pounds (1.6kg)7 the Vostro V13 delivers a full-sized laptop experience that won’t weigh you down.

- Robust Design for Outstanding Durability : Why settle for plastic? The Vostro V13’s brushed-aluminum casing and reinforced zinc hinges offer durability you’re not likely to find in similarly priced ultra-compact business laptops.

- Power to Do More : Ultra-low-voltage Intel® processors help to manage energy efficiency while providing ample power for everyday computing.

- Full Laptop Experience : A full-sized keyboard and generous 13.3" display let you power through work without sacrificing comfort or visibility.



Full specs of the Dell Vostro V13:

Processors
Intel Core 2 Duo SU7300 (1.3GHz, 3MB L2 cache) (Ultra Low Voltage)
Intel Core 2 Solo SU3500 (1.4GHz, 3MB L2 cache) (Ultra Low Voltage)
Intel Celeron 743 (1.2GHz, 1MB L2 cache) (Ultra Low Voltage)

Operating System
Genuine Windows 7 Home Basic
Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 32-Bit
Genuine Windows 7 Professional 32-Bit
Genuine Windows 7 Professional 32-Bit with Downgrade Rights Service to Windows XP Professional
Genuine Windows Vista Business 32-Bit
Genuine Windows Vista Home Basic 32-Bit
Ubuntu Linux

Memory
DDR3 SDRAM (1066 MHz) one slot supporting 4GB3 DIMM.

Chipset
Mobile Intel GS45 Express Chipset ICH9M-Enhanced

Graphics
Intel Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) 4500MHD

Display
13.3-inch diagonal LED-backlit HD (1366 x 768) Anti-glare

Primary Storage
7200 rpm SATA up to 500GB
7200 rpm SATA with Full Disk Encryption 250GB
Free Fall Sensor on the motherboard Standard

Optical Drives
Optional External 8X DVD+/-RW or Blu-ray Disc

Multimedia
Speaker
Stereo headphone jack
Microphone jack and integrated microphone array
Integrated 1.3 Mega pixel webcam and Dell Webcam Central software

Power
6-cell Lithium Ion sealed

Connectivity
Optional Dell 5540 HSPA Mobile Broadband Module (requires mobile network operator service) (coming soon)
Up to 802.11n wireless module
BluetoothTM 2.1
Gigabit Ethernet (10/100/1000 NIC)

Ports, Slots & Chassis
Network connector (RJ45)
USB 2.0 (1)
USB 2.0/eSATA combo (1)
Microphone jack
Headphone/speaker out
5-in-1 card reader
34 mm ExpressCard

Dimensions & Weight:
Width: 13" / 330mm
Height: (front/back) 0.65-0.78inches/16.5-19.7mm
Depth: 9.06" / 230mm

Starting weight: 3.5lbs/1.59kg (with 6-cell battery)

BlackBerry Storm 9500 Touch Screen 3G Phone

The BlackBerry Storm 9500 is a latest touch screen 3G phone that is nice designed by Blackberry Mobiles. This super looking phone comes in a sophisticated black colored casing. The phone weights 155 gms and measures 14mm deep, 62.2mm wide & 112.5mm tall. The BlackBerry Storm 9500 is a member of the BlackBerry family that includes other business focused features phone including the BlackBerry Bold 9000. This business focused phone comes with a fitted rechargeable battery that can provide approximately five & a half hours of talk time depending on other features being used by the user. The large 3.2 inches colored touch screen provides a high resolution display for the user to control their features as well as viewing a clear colorful display.

This attractive phone comes with a user friendly organizer & calendar feature that allows the user to plan their appointments. This elegant looking touch screen phone comes with high quality Smartphone features include GPS navigation Maps & HTML Web browser that supports popular social network websites such as Facebook, MySpace, etc. A built in GPS works with a BlackBerry maps application allows the user to find the easiest routes to desired locations. The built in 3G HSDPA technology allows the user to enjoy multitasking skills, high speed Internet connectivity & fast speed data transfers. The Storm 9500 supports quad band technology that allows the user to use their phone worldwide. The user can transfer data between their compatible devices either by using cabled USB connection or by using Bluetooth wireless technology.

The built in EDGE technology & GPRS allows the user to experience fast data transfer rates. The phone comes with 128 megabyte of Flash type memory plus 1 gigabytes of on board memory and user can expand the phones memory further by adding a Micro SD memory card up to 8 gigabytes in size. The phone includes integrated music player and 3.2 megapixel camera that can take still photo as well as record video footages. The user can access & surf the Web using the integrated HTML web Browser and also enjoy email service that includes document attachments, instant messaging service, multimedia messaging service & a text messaging service. The BlackBerry Storm is a superior touch screen phone that will fit into the user’s life for both business & communication requirements. Compare a lot of touch screen Phones like BlackBerry Storm 9500, samsung Pixon and Htc Touch etc.

Expensive Black Diamond Sony Ericsson Mobile


Apparently the Black Diamond will be available in market, not from Sony Ericsson but by a company called VIPN. Initially only five unique numered pieces will be available for the unbelievable price of, wait for it… $299,000.

With regards to the specifications, don’t expect anything remarkable for your money. It will have Quad-band with Wi-Fi, an Intel 400 Mhz processor running windows mobile 5, and a touch sensitive 2″ screen. It will also include internal memory of 128 mb and will come with a 2 Gb SD card for external storage, plus a respectable 4 Megapixel camera.

The designer Jaren Goh has used some pretty impressive materials for the build, featuring titane with polycarbonate, mirror-finish cladding and

Thumbs Down:

A bit heavy and the slider key board makes the phone thick.

Inside the Trunk:

Technology: CDMA2000
Band: CDMA2000 1X
Phone design: Slider
Caller ID: Yes
Other features: GPS, music player, camera, AMOLED display.

The Whiz Kid Speaks:

Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 has a 3.1 AMOLED touch screen which gives a resolution of 800X480 pixels. It is a color depth of 18-bit (262000 Colors)

The music player of the phone can play formats of AAC+, MP3, AAC, WMA, eAAC+. Video player can play H.264, H.263 and MP4 formats. The phone has a 3.5 mm phone jack. The device has a 3 mega pixel camera with flash and self portrait mirror. It also has a full size slide out QWERTY keyboard.

For messaging there is support for PDF documents, Microsoft Excel, Microsoft Word, Microsoft PowerPoint. The handset has 1000 memory for phone book-contacts and there is a 90 entry memory each for missed calls, dialed calls and received calls. Lithium ion battery gives you a talk time of 282 minutes and stand by time of 300 hours.

Razzle Dazzle:

The Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 looks good and had it not been for the QWERTY keyboard we would have called it sleek too. It is on par with most of the smartphones when it comes to the looks department. There isn’t much clutter of physical buttons below the screen; just three buttons make up the front face.

Inside Dope:

We are not sure why Samsung put in the QWERTY slide out keyboard in the back of the mobile phone. The big screen has a good virtual keyboard plus the phone would have had a bit slimmer.

Samsung rogue sch-u960 phone

The screen of the Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 is AMOLED which means great video viewing and more battery life since AMOLED screens consume less power as compared to standard LCDs. AMOLEDs are supposed to withstand bright sunlight but we found the screen has not quite clear when you take it out there. But this screen is definitely better performer than standard LCDs.

3.1 inch screen of the Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 gives 480×800 pixel resolution and support for 262,000 colors. The screen lives up to what you expect from AMOLED display and the picture is quite sharp, video viewing was excellent and browsing the internet was also a great experience.

In the display you can adjust the size of the dial font, backlight, format of the clock on the home screen, font style of the menu and the effect of transition between the menus. The phone has haptic feedback which means it will vibrate when it registers a touch. The phone also has Samsung’s TouchWiz interface, a bar which is hidden on the left side of the screen wakes up to reveal a host of short cuts of applications that you use the most on the phone. The bar is collapsible and will go away if you don’t want it to ruin the brilliant wallpaper of the screen.

Along with these, there are four icons at the bottom of the screen like dialer, contacts, message and menu, which are the functions that one uses the most on a phone. The phone has a touch screen dialer interface as well as the numeric buttons on the QWERTY keyboard. Likewise, when typing messages, there is virtual keyboard as well as QWERTY keyboard.

Just three buttons make up the physical buttons on the bottom of the screen; they are call, end and the clear key. The end key also doubles up as the power button of the phone. There are a few physical buttons on the sides of the phone like the volume rocker, key to lock the screen, speaker phone key, key for voice commands. The speaker phone key which is also on the sides can be used as a zoom key when in camera mode. The card slot on the sides of the phone is always welcome as you don’t have to go digging inside the phone for accessing the card. Also we were glad to see the phone having a 3.5 mm phone jack which lets you plug your favorite head phones.

Below the Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 is the full sized QWERTY keyboard which is quite unique in design. We said before that the phone could have been fine without the keyboard. But the keyboard is here and looking at the keyboard we think Samsung is trying to say ‘look we have a new design for keyboard’. And we really do think that the keyboard is unique. You seldom find raised keys in a slider keyboard, even slider keypads are known to be flat on the surface because they might come in the way of the slide.

But this keyboard does have raised keys which means you can type on these babies for hours and your fingers won’t howl at all. The built in accelerometer changes the display from portrait to landscape when you slide out the keyboard. Other than this, the accelerometer will work for a few more applications like photo gallery and web browser.

The Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 has a 1000 entry phone book for you to store contacts. The SIM card can take 250 more contacts. A single entry will accept up to five phone numbers, IM screen name, two e-mail addresses, birthday, postal address and notes. There are 22 ring tones for you so that you can give a unique ring tone to a contact. You can also set up a photo caller ID on the phone by clipping a contact to his/her photo.

Other features on the Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 include speaker phone, vibrate mode, calculator, alarm clock, calendar, stop watch, notepad, world clock, timer. There is also a sketch pad where you can draw things and send them to people.

Advanced features include voice commands, file viewer for reading MS office documents and PDFs, USB mass storage and GPS which has VZ Navigator support.

For messaging there is support for instant messaging clients like Yahoo, Windows Live messenger and AIM. For e-mail there are options of mobile Web e-mail, corporate e-mail and mobile e-mail.

You can groove to music on your Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 with the built in music player. The player supports formats like WMA, AAC, MP3 and AAC+. The phone supports 16 GB of expansion through microSD card. Using the music player was easy; the songs got automatically sorted by genres, artists and albums. You can edit and create playlists on the fly and there is also the shuffle and repeat function. You can hook up pictures with tracks using the album art feature but we were disappointed to see that we could not do other tasks with music player minimized in the back ground. There is a search bar which lets you look for the music in your phone library.

The 3.0 mega pixel camera of the phone was certainly great for taking pictures. The phone has both flash and self portrait mirror. The camera is capable for eight resolutions the highest being 2,048×1536 and the lowest is 320×240. There are settings like auto focus, three quality settings, macro focus, self-timer, autoshot mode, three options for metering, adjustable ISO of up to ISO 400. There are also settings for contrast, saturation brightness and sharpness. Advanced features include 10x digital zoom, five color effects, ready sound and three shutter sound along with silent option. There are five shooting modes like mosaic shot, multishot, panorama shot, frame shot and single shot.

The video mode also gives you above average quality. If you intend to send a clip as MMS 176×144 resolution is the only option for you and for saving files on the memory there are two resolutions 640×480 and 320×240. You can adjust brightness, white balance, flash LED, self timer and color effects.

For gamers the huge size and the AMOLED screen will be great to play games at. The phone comes bundled with games like Resident Evil: Degeneration, Need for Speed Undercover and Tetris. You can always download more if you are a gaming enthusiast. There is also a e-dice which is just like a virtual version if you ever need it.

We tested the Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 for call quality that the handset is one of the best when it comes to call quality. We could hear clearly what our friends were saying and they could hear us properly too. The voice was clear and loud too so you wont have much problem with high-noise environments.

Speaker phone calls were also good but you must accept the fact that all speakerphone dip in call quality because they attract a large amount of background noise. But at least you can keep this phone away from your mouth and still make yourself heard. Some of the other phones that we tested had to be kept close to the mouth. When it comes to listening to music on the speakers, it is not that good in quality. The speakers lack bass and we would recommend you to use the wired headset for music.

We also tested the Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 with come Bluetooth headsets and the quality was great. But that again depends on the head set that you are using.

The battery of the Samsung Rogue SCH-U960 will give you a talk time of 4.7 hours and standby time is 12.5 days.

can rent and purchase video from Amazon, great audio quality, superb battery life, features like FM tuner and FM recording rock!

Thumbs Down:

Features have been cut down to make it cheap, it doesn’t have noise cancellation feature or upgraded headphones.

Inside the Trunk:

Included accessories – earbud headphones, USB cable, flip-out stand.

The Whiz Kid Speaks:

The Sony S-Series Walkman second generation has a 2.4 inch display, with resolution of 240 x 320 pixels, supported audio formats are AAC, WMA-DRM, L-PCM, MP3. Supported video formats are WMV, AVC, MPEG-4. There are 2 external speakers at the either side of the display. 8 GB internal memory.

The device comes with four built in equalizer jazz, pop, unique, heavy. There is FM tuner with 30 station storage memory. There is a choice of colors – pink, black, violet, red. Other feature include voice recording, FM recording, etc. Lithium ion rechargeable battery has life of about 42 hours.

Razzle Dazzle:

The exterior of the second generation Sony S-Series Walkman is the same as the first generation device, but it has a bit of plastic feel which makes it look cheap. You get a choice of black, pink, violet and red. It is very much thin, as it is just a MP3 player and not much hardware is required for that.

Inside Dope:

Sony makes one of the best devices when it comes to MP3 players. We put Sony’s players in the list of elite which has big names like Apple and Cowon. Sony has been a trusted name when it came to music because we are still in awe at those music systems that Sony made in the 90s and it delivered awesome sound.

Sony s-series walkman second generation

Well, Sony is here with a new PMP, the second generation Sony S-Series Walkman and it was disappointing to find out that it has cut down on a few features that we were fond of. But there is a trade off, all this decreases the price of the player making it one of the cheapest players in the market.

This player is a bit bigger than what we got in the first generation. While this may not go well in the pocket you get a bigger screen which will give you better video viewing. The screen is 2.4 inch QVGA LCD and it has the same great quality. There are also speakers put up on the two sides of the display which was not found earlier.

A PMP is not supposed to have a lot of buttons below the display and Sony doesn’t have much either. There is just circular navigation button, there is a key in the centre which is for play/pause. Other than this there is a power off/option key and the home/back key on the two sides of the circular button. The set up of the navigational button and the 2 button on the sides looks like face of Mickey Mouse. We don’t know if this is done intentionally by Sony but the resemblance is uncanny. But this setup cannot beat the sleek and sexy click wheel that we found in iPod nanos.

There is a volume rocker on the sides on the phone and there is also a switch which locks the buttons against accidental presses when you put it in your pocket. The player has speaker, so there is a switch which toggles between the ear phone and the speaker phone. Other than this there is the 3.5 mm head phone jack and USB port.

We have already said that the price of the player has been slashed down and so are the features. This player doesn’t come with noise cancellation feature and you don’t get upgraded headphones in the package. Podcast support has also been discontinued and features such as SensMe Channels and smart playlist creator are also absent. Integration of Rhapsody DNA is also not there but we can do without it.

When it comes to playing music second generation Sony S-Series Walkman can play formats like WMA, MP3, AAC, Linear PCM which is Sony’s own version of WAV. You can store photos of JPEG format on the player but we were turned off by the fact that you cannot set these photos as wall papers. For video playback there is support for purchasing and renting videos from Amazon and the formats accepted are AVC, WMV and MPEG-4 but again you have to go by the player’s requirements of frame rate, size, etc.

The one feature where this device scores above Apple’s iPod is the FM tuner and it can store up to 30 stations. You can record directly from FM to the memory of the device. You can also record with the built in recorder in the device and there is an alarm feature with which you can set up the device to wake you up with a radio station or with the tracks stored in the player.

Another feature of the device which still is very much rocking is the sound quality of the PMP. The device absolutely rocks in sound quality and definitely is better than any player that we have seen. The battery is long life with rated audio playback of 17 hours and video playback of 5 hours. If you think Sony has cut down on the features to make it a deal breaker, it emerges from the ashes like a phoenix with great sound quality and battery life. The music quality will be even better if you ditch the bundled ear phones and buy a separate set of ear buds.

The player was next tested for video and photo quality and it came out with flying colors. Videos look crisp though a bigger screen would have made viewing a better experience. FM reception too is good.