August 30th, 2007
The HSDPA speed on the phone is quite impressive. While we can’t say we’re too impressed with the phone’s design, the LG Trax does come with a great feature set.

CNET Reviewed LG CU575 trax and gave out “The good: The LG Trax has a lightweight design with plenty of features, which include HSDPA support, a megapixel camera, and access to AT&T’s array of multimedia and broadband services.The bad: The LG Trax utilizes a strange, skinny touch pad for music player controls, and a terribly flat and crowded keypad that makes it tricky to navigate and dial.The bottom line: The LG Trax has a host of features that will please the multimedia hungry consumer, as long as you can see past its design flaws.”
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August 29th, 2007
The web browser is best in its class and the mail application is decent. BlackBerry users will appreciate BlackBerry Connect and the phone’s overall stability is excellent.

MobileTechReview Reviewed Nokia E90 and gave out “Pro: Fantastic wide screen display with 800 x 352 resolution that’s very viewable outdoors. Very good camera, WiFi, Bluetooth and a GPS. Excellent Communicator design melds a mobile phone with a notebook. The E90 is extremely stable and reliable.Con: In the US, the GPS and Nokia Maps is a mixed bag. Nokia has improved on the N95’s GPS with firmware updates, and we hope they do the same with the E90. Large by phone standards. No US 3G. The mobile office and strong PDA features feel a bit hobbled without a touch screen.”
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August 28th, 2007
The DLX not only has a better look but it scores EV-DO, a better camera and extra multimedia bonuses that make it more comparable to the LG MUZIQ from Sprint and the LG VX8600 on Verizon.

MobileTechReview Reviewed Sanyo Katana DLX and gave out “Pro: Better aesthetics than the original Katana with pleasing curves and color choices. Strong signal strength and fast data speed by EV-DO standards on feature phones. Support for $.99 per song music store with a Power Vision plan. Comes with Sprint TV and On-Demand. A2DP and AVRCP support. Good camera quality by 1.3MP camera phone standards. Good battery life.Con: Keyboard backlight is dim. Limited numbers of speed dial entries and voice tags . No external music controls.”
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August 28th, 2007
HTC P3600i Collection By digitalBoy:
HTC launched a Windows Mobile smartphone called P3600i which is a feature-upgraded P3600 and even includes Windows Mobile 6 Professional.

Beside all the other P3600 goodies (like quadband GSM/GPRS/EDGE, UMTS/HSDPA, Bluetooth, WiFi and the 2 megapixel camera), the P3600i sports an improved 500 MHz Samsung chip and 256MB of ROM (while the P3600 “only” featured a 400 MHz Samsung chip and 128 MB of ROM). Continue Reading »
August 28th, 2007
the new FX33 has a specification that is strikingly close to that of a new camera announced by Canon just this month, the new IXUS 860 IS. Since this model is a replacement for the most popular camera in the IXUS range, the excellent 850 IS, Panasonic’s new model is going to have a tough job.

trustedreviews Reviewed the DMC-FX33 and gave out “Panasonic keeps chipping away at Canon’s position in the premium ultra-compact market, and with the wide-angle Lumix DMC-FX33 it has a camera that can take on the best of the IXUS range. It has style, elegance, build quality, performance and simplicity of operation, and while it is slightly lacking in picture quality it will seldom disappoint, producing good pictures in almost any situation.”
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August 26th, 2007
Rumours of the Canon EOS 40D have been around for a while, but it wasn’t until yesterday that the new mid-range SLR was launched officially at the Canon Autumn Collection press event. And it was worth every bit of the wait.

ephotozine Reviewed the Canon EOS 40D and gave out”The camera is easy to grip and feels sturdy and well-built, if slightly on the heavy side, and when carrying out test shots it was quick to start up. The focusing was fast enough, though the 9-point focusing system could pick up things nearest the camera, rather than in the centre of the image. When the camera is reviewed fully we’ll look at how the different focusing modes work. The results were bright and colourful by default, and were easily viewable on the sizeable 3in. LCD screen. The LCD can, unusually if you don’t use Olympus, also be used to frame the scene in a Live view mode. The fast shooting speed of 6.5fps enables you to rattle pictures off in rapid succession and this gives pleasing feedback in use.”
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August 25th, 2007
The new Panasonics claim to measure up differently. Instead of having just one hero feature (such as Fujifilm’s notably high ISO), the Japanese firm has cobbled up a meta-hero-feature that it calls the Intelligent Auto Mode.

Cnet asia Reviewed the DMC-FX33 and gave out “The good: Competent automatic mode; minimalist looks; relatively speedy performance; wide-angle lens.The bad: Very average optical zoom; no real option for switching to manual mode.The bottom line: If you really crave a literal point-and-shoot capability in a camera, minus the hassles and flaws that come with most compact cameras, the FX-33 would possibly be your best bet so far.”
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August 25th, 2007
Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX33 Newdigitalfans Collection
Like the entire 2007 Lumix line, the Lumix DMC-FX33 incorporates Panasonic’s revolutionary Intelligent Image Stabilization technologies, and is among the first Panasonic cameras to offer Intelligent Auto Mode,

a system which combines Mega Optical Image Stabilization (O.I.S) and Intelligent ISO Control with three new features: Face Detection System, Intelligent Scene Selector, and Continuous Autofocus. The camera combines 8.1-megapixel resolution with a 28mm wide-angle Leica DC lens that features 3.6x optical zoom.
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