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Review Motorola Defy Pro Smartphone Tough and Classy

The Motorola Defy Pro has a strong resemblance to a BlackBerry model, but adds IP67 certification which means it is resistant to spills and dust. The Motorola Defy Pro offers a 2.7 inch touchscreen made from Gorilla Glass and is built to take all the abuse that someone with an active lifestyle heaps upon his smartphone.

Speaking of active lifestyles, the Motorola Defy Pro has a special dashboard that helps you track specific outdoor activities such as camping, hiking and a daily workout. There is both a 5MP rear-facing camera and a VGA shooter on front for self-portraits and video chat. Android 2.3 is installed.

Motorola Defy Pro Smartphone Tough and Classy

Whether it’s the rain or a clumsy cocktail, a sandy beach or a pocket full of change, the MOTOROLA DEFY PRO is ready for whatever life throws your way. It's dustproof and water resistant, with a Corning® Gorilla® Glass display that resists scuffs and scratches too. And with its large capacity (1700 mAh) battery, it’s up to you when the fun stops, not your phone.

MOTOROLA DEFY PRO is not only smart, it's fun! It has our advanced user interface, featuring customizable activity dashboards. The Social Graph grants instant access to your most frequently contacted friends, while the Activity Graph displays your most actively used apps.

Motorola Defy Pro Smartphone Tough and Classy

Your active lifestyle demands it, and the MOTOROLA DEFY PRO delivers, with front- and rear-facing cameras that allow you to both show and tell. Use the webcam on front, for video chat, or the quality 5 MP camera with auto-focus, LED flash and 4x digital zoom, for great pictures and videos you can easily save or share.

MOTOROLA DEFY PRO has all the functionality you'd expect from a smartphone, plus access to infinite entertainment choices via Google Play™, where there are more than 600,000 apps, games, books and videos at your disposal. It's a complete digital universe, right there in your pocket.

Motorola Defy Pro Smartphone Tough and Classy

Never miss a meeting (or anniversary) with MOTOROLA DEFY PRO, your lifeline to logistics. Use it as a personal planner, to coordinate your work schedule with family play. A specialized instrument dashboard helps you track specific outdoor activities, with camping, hiking and daily workout views.

When the day is done and it’s time to chill, MOTOROLA DEFY PRO will have plenty of power left in its high capacity battery to entertain. There's an integrated music player and easy-to-use interface, for instant access to your favourite songs.

Motorola Defy Pro XT560 Specification


Datasheet;Views: 7819 views since addition of datasheet (July 06, 2012)
Datasheet;State: Final specifications
Release+Date: July, 2012
Dimensions: 66 x 110.8 x 12.35 millimetres
Mass: 116 grams (battery included)

Software:Environment

Embedded;Operating+System: Google Android 2.3.7
Browse devices running this OS

Microprocessor,;Chipset

CPU;Clock: 1000 MHz
CPU: Qualcomm MSM7227A
Browse devices based on this microprocessor

Memory,:Storage+capacity

RAM+capacity: 512 MiB
ROM;capacity: 1 GiB

Display

Display:Type: Supported
Display-Diagonal: 2.7 "
Display:Resolution: 480 x 320

Sound

Microphone(s): mono
Loudspeaker(s): mono
Audio:Output: 3.5mm

Cellular:Phone

Cellular-Networks: GSM900, GSM1800, GSM1900, UMTS850 (B5), UMTS2100 (B1)
Cellular-Data_Links: GPRS, EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA, HSUPA
Call+Alert: 64 -chord melody
Vibrating-Alert: Supported
Speakerphone_: Supported

Control+Peripherals

Positioning;Device: Multi-touch screen
Primary;Keyboard: Built-in QWERTY-type keyboard
Directional_Pad: Not supported
Scroll+Wheel: Not supported

Interfaces

Expansion_Slots: microSD, microSDHC, TransFlash
USB: USB 2.0 client, 480Mbit/s
micro-USB
Bluetooth: Bluetooth 3.0
Wireless:LAN: 802.11b, 802.11i, 802.11g, 802.11n
Infrared_Gate: Not supported

Multimedia+Telecommunication

Analog-Radio-Receiver: FM radio (76-90MHz) with RDS
Digital+Media+Broadcast-Tuner: Not supported

Satellite:Navigation

Built-in:GPS-module: Supported
Complementary:GPS+Services: Assisted GPS, QuickGPS, Geotagging

Built-in+Digital;Camera

Main-Camera: 5 MP
Autofocus+(AF): Supported
Optical;Zoom: 1 x
Built-in-Flash: mobile light (LED)
Secondary;Camera: 0.3 MP

Additional+Details

Built-in;accelerometer: Supported
Ingress:Protection;Level: IP67
Battery: removable
Battery+Capacity: 1700 mAh

Review and Specifications Nokia Lumia 800 Details

Products Nokia Lumia 800 is the best breakthrough Nokia at the moment. Lumia 800 not less hebaat from other Android phones and iPhones. But very, very unfortunate, and I am very sorry about this, that Lumia 800 does not have a secondary camera, and so can not do video calling. This is similar to the existing N9 is perfect, there is a secondary camera but not able to do video calling. In my opinion, the decision taken by Nokia of late very great, but it was too frivolous.

Why Nokia did not dare to release a perfect product as well as what Apple can give perfection during this time, why be postponed. Should additional facilities and a secondary video calling camera does not need to be added to the product Lumia 900. Lumia 900 only comes with an extra minimal, there is no significant innovation. Lumia 800 was great, but a bit disappointing owners were ultimately unable to reconcile Lumia 800 miilknya with Android phones and the iPhone belonged to someone else. It is unfortunate.

Nokia lumia is a phone that is pretty good considering that the processor is the processor used in the above average as well as how to use a fairly good and completeness is laudable.


Review and Specifications Nokia Lumia 800 Details
Nokia Lumia 800

Unfortunately the level of applications and games, nokia lumia still not perfect considering the number of paid games and at least a game that has graphics high definition (HD), an even number of games with high definition graphics on the nokia lumia still less than the number of Symbian, but it still nokia lumia need to focus on in terms of payment that can be changed quickly with the rupiah currency and payment via mobile phone.

If nokia lumia was able to have a game with high definition graphics quality a lot, obviously nokia lumia will be much better and have a lot of interest in considering the use of basic nokia easier and operation of windows that are currently the majority, obviously it is inversely proportional to the android and apple with basic operations difficult. coupled with the ease of mobile repair nokia, nokia lumia obviously is a perfect phone if it has apps and games are more and more good, especially in terms of graphics.


Full Specifications of Nokia Lumia 800
GENERALNetworkGSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900, 3G HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100
SCREENTipeAMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Ukuran480 x 800 pixels, 3.7 inches (~252 ppi pixel density) Multitouch, Corning Gorilla Glass - Nokia ClearBlack display
DIMENSIUkuran/Berat116.5 x 61.2 x 12.1 mm, 76.1 cc / 142 g
AUDIOFiturVibration MP3, WAV Ringtones
Jack3.5mm jack audio
SpeakerphoneYa
MEMORYInternal16 GB storage, 512 MB RAM
EksternalTidak
DATA3GHSDPA 14.4 Mbps, HSUPA 5.76 Mbps
EDGEClass 33
GPRSClass 33
WLANWi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n
Bluetoothv2.1 with A2DP, EDR
InfraredTidak
USB/PortmicroUSB v2.0
CAMERAPrimer8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, Carl Zeiss optics, autofoc
SekunderTidak
Video Record720p@30fps
BATERAITipeStandard battery, Li-Ion 1450 mAh (BV-5JW)
StandbyUp to 265 h (2G) / Up to 335 h (3G)
Talk TimeUp to 13 h (2G) / Up to 9 h 30 min (3G)
FITUROSMicrosoft Windows Phone 7.5 Mango
CPUQualcomm MSM8255 Snapdragon, 1.4 GHz Scorpion, GPU Adreno 205 Sensors: Accelerometer, proximity, compass
BrowserWAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML5, RSS feeds
GPSwith A-GPS support
MessagingSMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email, IM
JavaJava: Tidak Fitur Lain: - MicroSIM card support only - SNS integration - Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic - Document viewer/editor - Video/photo editor - Voice memo/command/dial - Predictive text input
OTHER FEATURESMultiple SIMMicro SIM
Video PlayerMP4/H.264/H.263/WMV player
MP3 Player- MP3/WAV/eAAC+/WMA player
Audio RecordYa
TVTidak

Prices and Specifications Latest Nokia E6

Latest Nokia E6
Prices and Specifications Nokia E6 Gallery - Nokia E6 is the successor of the Nokia E71 and Nokia E72 are unique with a full Qwerty keyboard and a high resolution touch screen. Designed using premium materials such as glass and stainless steel, the device comes in the right size for easy use with either one or two hands.

Nokia E6 mobile phone with dimensions of 115.5 x 59 x 10.5mm with a weight of 133 g is not only tasty and sturdy when gripped. Casing material is a combination of glass and steel, so it looks solid and elegant.

CellPhone Nokia E6 operates in quad-band 2G and five-band 3G. In addition, the Nokia E6 offers high-speed HSDPA network capabilities are claimed to be able download speeds up to 10.2Mbps and upload speeds of 2Mbps (HSUPA). Nokia E6 uses the latest Symbian platform together with the Symbian Anna Nokia X7.


GENERAL
2G Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G Network HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1700 / 1900 / 2100
Announced 2011, April
Status Coming soon. Exp. release 2011, Q2
 

SIZE
Dimensions 115.5 x 59 x 10.5 mm, 66 cc
Weight 133 g
 

DISPLAY
Type TFT capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size 640 x 480 pixels, 2.46 inches
- QWERTY keyboard
- Multi-touch input method
- Accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate
- Proximity sensor for auto turn-off
 

SOUND
Alert types Vibration, MP3, WAV ringtones
Loudspeaker Yes
3.5mm jack Yes
 

MEMORY
Phonebook Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall
Call records Detailed, max 30 days
Internal 8 GB storage, 256 MB RAM, 1 GB ROM
Card slot microSD, up to 32GB
 

DATA
GPRS Class 33
EDGE Class 33
3G HSDPA 10.2Mbps, HSUPA 2.0Mbps
WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n
Bluetooth Yes, v3.0 with A2DP
Infrared port No
USB Yes, v2.0 microUSB, USB On-the-go support
 

CAMERA
Primary 8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, fixed focus, dual-LED flash
Features Geo-tagging, face detection
Video Yes, 720p@25fps
Secondary Yes, VGA
 

FEATURES
OS Symbian Anna OS
CPU 600 MHz ARM 11 processor, 2D/3D Graphics HW Accelerator with OpenVG1.1 and OpenGL ES 2.0
Messaging SMS, MMS, Email, Push Email, IM
Browser WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML
Radio Stereo FM radio with RDS
Games Yes + downloadable
Colors Black, White, Silver
GPS Yes, with A-GPS support
Java Yes, MIDP 2.1
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- Digital compass
- TV-out
- MP4/H.264/H.263/RV player
- MP3/WMA/WAV/RA/eAAC+ player
- QuickOffice document editor (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, PDF)
- Organizer
- Flash Lite 4.0
- Voice command/dial/commands
- Predictive text input
 

BATTERY
 Standard battery, Li-Ion 1500 mAh (BP-4L)
Stand-by Up to 681 h (2G) / Up to 744 h (3G)
Talk time Up to 14 h 48 min (2G) / Up to 7 h 30 min (3G)

Samsung Galaxy Axiom With Android 4.0

Meet the Samsung Galaxy Axiom, the U.S. Cellular poster product for the GS3-ification of entry-level and midrange phones. The Axiom shares many of the same basic elements and a lot of the same design philosophy as the Samsung Galaxy S3 and the Samsung Galaxy S3 Mini. Although it's roughly the same size as the Mini, its hardware and software features are still a step down.

That isn't to say you should steer clear of the Axiom. Its excellent price just a penny on contract if you live in a 4G area and $79.99 if you're in a 3G 'hood keeps it in the running as a midrange Android phone, and it comes with a lot of hardware features, including two cameras and HD video, plus the Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich OS and NFC.

Samsung Galaxy Axiom

These features make it a good choice for people who are watching their purse strings or who are transitioning to a smartphone; however, I wouldn't recommend it for those looking for more power. There are a few red flags in addition: call quality was a little choppy, the roaming 3G network was slow and frequently stuttered, and the handset is a little bulky. Since I wasn't able to test the Axiom's 4G network -- or even its 3G network in its home area take my experiences with a grain of salt.

Design and build
With its rounded corners, gray-blue brushed-metal look, and central physical home button, the stylish Galaxy Axiom strongly resembles the Galaxy S3 Mini. Like the Mini, the Axiom has a 4-inch screen and some slick metallic-looking accents. That's where the similarities stop. The Axiom is thicker than the Mini, and uses a different display technology, an LCD touch screen with WVGA resolution (800x480 pixels) rather than an AMOLED screen.

As for the size, the Axiom's curved back fit well into my hands. At 4.8 inches tall by 2.5 inches wide, it's small enough to operate one-handed. The 0.47-inch thickness and 4.8-ounce weight made the phone seem thick and heavy, but more than once I forgot I had slipped it into my back pocket, which means in the end, it didn't really weigh me down.

Below the screen, you'll find touch-sensitive navigation buttons for the menu and the back button. Between these is the physical home button. In Android 4.0, these take on double functions, such as launching thumbnails of recently opened apps. Above the display are all the proximity and light sensors, plus a front-facing camera. The bottom of the phone houses the Micro-USB charging port, and the top has the 3.5mm headset jack. You'll find the volume rocker on the left, above a microSD card slot. The power button is on the right and the 5-megapixel camera lens and flash are on the back panel.

I really like the handset's appearance, and although it is broad in girth, on the whole I did enjoy the illusion of a premium product.

OS and apps
Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich powers the Axiom, with Samsung's TouchWiz interface on top. Thanks to the combination, you can customize multiple home screens, access system settings from the notifications menu, pinch to see all your screens, and trace your words on a virtual keyboard. As on all Android phones, you'll be able to manage multiple inboxes and social-networking accounts, syncing contacts and calendars.
A plethora of Google services at your fingertips includes access to turn-by-turn voice navigation, YouTube, and Google Music. The Play store is your source for thousands of other apps and games, and of course, you'll get a browser, a music player, a file manager, and a calculator all bundled into Android.

GPS, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth are smartphone standards, but the addition of NFC support means you'll be able to share photos among compatible phones via S Beam, and you can pay for goods and services using the preloaded Google Wallet app.

Speaking of preloaded apps, you'll also find Flipboard, Samsung's Media Hub, and Google's Chrome browser. The S Voice assistant is on tap to help out, or you can continue to use Google's own built-in voice actions feature. U.S. Cellular refrains from adding its own apps, which helps keep clutter down.

Cameras
Samsung cameras are generally pretty good, and the Axiom's 5-megapixel shooter conformed more or less to my expectations. Outdoor shots taken in natural daylight situations were the best of the bunch. Artificial, indoor lighting tended to overwhelm the mechanism and produce blurrier photos.

Call quality
I tested the Galaxy Axiom in San Francisco using U.S. Cellular's roaming network (CDMA:850/1900/1700/2100.) Since San Francisco is neither in the carrier's 4G zone nor even in its home network, my experience with call quality will likely differ from your own if you live within U.S. Cellular's network footprint.
Regardless, audio was fairly poor on my end. I heard a high though quiet whine throughout my main test call, and fellow CNET editor Brian Bennett's voice on the other end of the line sounded choppy, though the voice quality was true to life. Volume was strong set on medium-high in a relatively quiet room. If the room were louder, I might have surpassed my volume needs. I've heard much clearer, less distorted calls on Samsung devices. On his end, Brian said I sounded warm, clear, and loud, but he could detect a faint background hiss each time I spoke.

Performance
When it comes to the processor and network speeds, you'll find uneven performance. I mentioned that since I live and test in a U.S. Cellular roaming network area, I only sucked down 3G speeds and very slow ones at that. Out of seven tests using the diagnostic Speedtest.net app, results typically showed 0.07Mbps downlink and 0.13Mbps uplink. The highest scores were, respectively, 0.26 down and 0.82 up. Real-world tests painted a similar story, with app downloads taking minutes for a handful of megabytes to install, and Web site pages loading up four times more slowly than the top LTE performers.

To make matters worse, the network frequently disconnected, requiring me to reload the Google Play store over and over again before I could download a single app -- to cite just one example. I really hope that the carrier's home network behaves better.

HTC Wildfire review and Spesification

The hardware of the HTC Wildfire isn't exactly 'jaw dropping,' but still great for an 'entry-level' handset for folks on a budget. Specs include a 5 MP camera with geo-tagging & auto-focus, 3.2" inch capacitive that supports multi-touch and gesture input and packed with Android 2.1 Eclair definitely showing the Wildfire is the successor to HTC's other budget phone - the Tattoo.

A fun fact about this phone is the name -HTC ran an online poll to decide what the handset should be called and "Wildfire" came out on top. The name ends up all too fitting.

The HTC Wildfire features HTC's typically fresh stylings, which include an optical trackpad for navigation. It has since seen its successor in the HTC Wildfire S.

The HTC Wildfire smartphone has a very similar design to the Desire, albeit in a smaller, more pocketable form factor. Despite targeting a young, budget-conscious audience, the Wildfire's build quality hasn't taken a hit; HTC has once again employed an attractive combination of brushed metal and solid feeling plastics. Like its more advanced sibling, the Wildfire is a delight to hold and has a distinctive slightly curved "chin". It comes in black and white variants, with the latter exclusively sold through Fone Zone stores on post-paid plans until 28 September, before it is available from all Telstra stores and partners.

The HTC Wildfire includes the same responsive optical trackpad seen on the Desire. Above it are four touch-sensitive keys — home, menu, back and search. They work well enough, but the lack of backlighting means using them at night is problematic. A physical power/lock button on top and left mounted volume controls complete the physical controls.
HTC Wildfire

HTC has kept the handset's price down by cutting a few corners with the HTC Wildfire's display, opting for a regular TFT LCD screen rather than the excellent AMOLED display used by phones like the Desire and the Legend. The result is a low-resolution display that's hard to see in direct sunlight and has poor viewing angles, but at this price, its hard to complain. It uses capacitive touchscreen technology, so it's already a step ahead of some other budget Google Android phones, such as LG's Optimus.

The capacitive touchscreen makes text input a positive experience, and the Wildfire's on-screen keyboard is well designed. Keys are slightly smaller and more cramped than the Desire, but the responsive screen, haptic feedback and excellent spelling correction aid the experience. Our main complaint is slight keystroke lag when typing quickly — the Wildfire is a little sluggish at keeping up with your taps, often taking half a second to register keystrokes on the screen.

The HTC Wildfire runs the 2.1 version of Google's Android operating system and it includes all the regular features and functions of more expensive Android smartphones. Access to the Android Market for third-party apps, an excellent notifications taskbar and automatic and seamless synchronisation with Google services are all part of the experience, as is HTC's Sense UI. The Wildfire can have up to seven home screens for live widgets and shortcuts, and you can pinch the screen to quickly display them and select an active screen.

The Sense UI includes HTC's Friend Stream, which integrates all of your social-networking contacts, including from Facebook, Twitter and Flickr, into one organised "stream" of updates; People, which combines all forms of contact with an individual in your phonebook; as well as News, Facebook, Web Bookmarks and HTC's much-loved weather widget. Finally, Footprints allows you to take a geotagged photo and store the image in a particular category, then instantly share it with others via email.

The HTC Wildfire has a few exclusive features, headed by a "next generation caller ID" function that allows you to see Facebook updates and birthday information when making or receiving a call. The Wildfire also has the ability to import contacts and calendar entries from your old mobile phone via Bluetooth, and includes HTC's Sync software for music synchronisation with your PC.

One of the more impressive features is Swype text input, an option that allows you to slide your fingers over the letters you want to type in a single motion, letting the software work out the word you are trying to write. Swype is an excellent feature and considering the smaller screen size of the HTC Wildfire compared to the Desire, it’s a very smart and thoughtful inclusion.

Although the HTC Wildfire is capable of almost everything the Desire is, most tasks take a second or two longer. In addition to the keystroke lag while text messaging, the Wildfire also chugs along when browsing through images in the gallery, loading web pages, playing videos and taking photos with the 5-megapixel camera. We've clearly been spoiled by playing with faster, more expensive Android smartphones, so the HTC Wildfire's sluggishness is a tad frustrating. When you consider its price though, these minor issues are much easier to live with and are a small compromise to pay for a handset that offers outstanding value for money.

The HTC Wildfire's camera has autofocus and flash, and doubles as a video recorder, but video playback on such a low resolution display isn't ideal. Other standard features include a built-in accelerometer, a digital compass and a GPS receiver, while the web browser displays Flash content and supports multitouch zooming. The Wildfire also has a microSD card slot for extra storage, located behind the rear battery cover.
A real positive of the HTC Wildfire is its battery life. No doubt partly thanks to the low-resolution display, the Wildfire managed to last more than a full day with moderate use — placing it ahead of the iPhone 3GS and HTC's own Desire and HTC Legend smartphones.

 
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