Posted by on under chinaking, lanye, iphe, candybar, iphone, n70, voice recording, phe, dual band, projector, handset, mms, nbsp, little bit, bargain, interface, china |

Filed under: Cellphones
Look, here's what you need to do: reach into the appropriate pocket on your personage, take out your phone, and throw it into the nearest wall. It sucks. The N70 from Lanye (or ChinaKing, or... somebody from China), which we've
drooled over previously, is a candybar phone with a 2.4-inch screen, Bluetooth 2.0, and a little bit of dual-band GSM. Oh, and a built-in projector. And an interface that almost perfectly mirrors that of the iPhone with the addition of voice recording and MMS. It's awesome, and it's now available for import for a mere $345. A bargain at any price.
[Thanks, Andrew]
Greatest projector / iPhone clone combo handset in the world now up for sale originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Oct 2008 11:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Tagi: chinaking, lanye, iphe, candybar, iphone, n70, voice recording, phe, dual band, projector, handset, mms, nbsp, little bit, bargain, interface, china
Posted by on under kesko |

Tagi: kesko
Posted by on under iphe, american dollars, android, australian dollars, g1, handset, agora, bet, blackjack, keyboard, capabilities, china |


The next gPhone has arrived, and surprisingly, it looks pretty nice. Although we were all very excited about
China's Sciphone (not really),
the Kogan Agora and its upgraded twin, the Agora Pro, are probably a much better bet. It looks rather like a Blackjack, but it fits all the capabilities of a G1 or iPhone into that thinner form factor. Iā??m a bit jealous, although I think Iā??ll much prefer the keyboard on my handset. Itā??s being sold for 300 and 400 Australian dollars for the Agora and Pro respectively, which translates to about $200 or $260 in American dollars.
Tagi: iphe, american dollars, android, australian dollars, g1, handset, agora, bet, blackjack, keyboard, capabilities, china
Posted by on under sandisk cruzer, encrypted storage, mac os x, course windows, mac side, lten, flavors, storage area, sandisk, firmware, os x, passwords, nbsp, tiger |


Listen up, paranoid readers.
SanDisk has just introduced what it's calling "the first secure USB flash drive to fully support Apple Mac OS X computers." The new
Cruzer Enterprise was designed to meet unique USB security / compliance needs by implementing a "hardware-based 256-bit AES USB encryption solution that puts mandatory access control on all files as protection against theft or loss of the drive." Of course, Windows environments are also supported, and on both platforms users can log in / shut down access to the encrypted storage area, change and manage passwords, alter contact information (among other preferences), launch online support (woo!) and view current firmware and drive information. The drive is available in 1/2/4/8GB flavors (runs around $60 to $300) and plays nice with both OS X 10.4 (Tiger) and 10.5 (Leopard) on the Mac side.
Filed under: Storage
SanDisk Cruzer Enterprise: first secure USB drive fully compatible with OS X originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Dec 2008 13:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Tagi: sandisk cruzer, encrypted storage, mac os x, course windows, mac side, lten, flavors, storage area, sandisk, firmware, os x, passwords, nbsp, tiger
Posted by on under industry norms, phes, veriz, fri, liking, unge, ly, handset, blackberry, sprint, proof, ing, verizon |

Sprint had told us in a statement that its BlackBerry Tours
only had trackball issues on "early production" units, and now Verizon is telling us pretty much the same thing:
Early on there was an issue with the trackball that affected a small percentage [of] the early production units -- far less than industry norms. The issue was detected early, addressed immediately and is no longer an issue. Returns on this device are some of the lowest among any of our smart phones.
In other words, it sounds like new buyers (and anyone who's taken the plunge recently) should be fine, and Verizon's actually taking it to another level by boasting that the handset's now one of its most return-proof smartphones. That doesn't change the fact that the trackball's
a little too recessed for our liking -- but at least it should stay functional.
Filed under: Cellphones, Handhelds
Verizon says trackball issue is 'addressed' on Tour, no longer a problem originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Sep 2009 22:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Tagi: industry norms, phes, veriz, fri, liking, unge, ly, handset, blackberry, sprint, proof, ing, verizon