View Poll Results: Which mobile handset do you use?

Voters
144. You may not vote on this poll
  • Nokia

    44 30.56%
  • Samsung

    59 40.97%
  • BlackBerry

    3 2.08%
  • Apple iPhone

    25 17.36%
  • HTC, LG, Sony, Motorola etc. Please mention it.

    26 18.06%
  • Local brands (Micromax, Karbonn etc). Please mention it.

    9 6.25%
Multiple Choice Poll.
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Thread: 📲📶🤳 Mobiles and Tabs : News and updates 🔋🔌

  1. #31

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    samsung guru, nalla themes evidun kittum?

  2. #32

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    Quote Originally Posted by nitinvkamath_1987 View Post
    my friend is using HTC Wildfire.. available for 15k.. decent phone.. but battery charge stays for 2 days only..
    Wildfire resolution is pretty poor.. The pixels seems to be too stretched.. a poor brother of htc hero..

    Legend & desire have top notch screen quality..probably next only to Samsung galaxy... I wanted to hear first hand experience if some1 used it for some period of time... becos new to HTC & new to android..

    And battery life seems to be a general issue with android phones..

  3. #33

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    njan sony ericsson xperia x10 mini vangan udesikkunnu , entanu abipryam?

  4. #34

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    Quote Originally Posted by srk@fk View Post
    njan sony ericsson xperia x10 mini vangan udesikkunnu , entanu abipryam?
    X-8 nokiyille?? it is rated in between x-10 mini and x-10.. also it has got the latest android 2.2..
    not sure if x-10 mini is upgradable..

  5. #35

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    Quote Originally Posted by Rohith View Post
    samsung guru, nalla themes evidun kittum?
    try mobile9.com, or just google themes for your phone number..
    Every flight begins with a fall.

  6. #36

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    Tata DoCoMo unveils 3G pricing.. 0.66 paise per second for a call..
    Every flight begins with a fall.

  7. #37

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    PC maker Dell has made its entry in the Indian smartphone market with the launch of Android-based smartphones -- XCD28 and XCD35.

    Featuring a 2.8-inch LCD touchscreen display, Dell XCD28 will come with a 3.2 megapixel digital camera. Dell XCD35 sports a 3.5-inch capacitive touchscreen display and has access to Android Market for applications.

    Powered by Android 2.1 OS, the phones will support 3G for high speed connectivity, WiFi and Bluetooth. Dell XCD28 also offers full internet browsing, a media player supporting multiple formats for videos, music and photos and features such as location awareness.

    Additionally, the phones will offer support for FM Radio and access to Microsoft Email Exchange through Activesync. The phones come equipped with 200MB of internal memory that can be expanded upto 16GB using Micro SD memory cards.

    "For more than 25 years, Dell has played a critical role in transforming computing, enabling more affordable and more pervasive access to technology around the world. With today's launch, we extend the same to the smartphones market as starting with the XCD series, we look to offer technology solutions to a much larger audience," said Mahesh Bhalla, General Manager, Consumer & SMB, Dell India.

    "Today's launch validates our intention to bring accessible technology to key markets like India as we work relentlessly to enable our customers to grow and thrive. We chose to launch the new XCD range of smartphones first in India to offer a complete portfolio of Dell mobile Internet products in all screen sizes", said Farooq Butt, Vice President Worldwide Business Development & Strategy, Dell Inc.

    Dell XCD28 is priced at Rs 10,990 while Dell XCD35 will sell for Rs 16,990. According to Dell, XCD28 will be immediately available in the market while XCD35 will be available by December 2010.
    Every flight begins with a fall.

  8. #38

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    Many corporate houses booked windfall profits from the 2G spectrum scandal, it has now come to light.
    The opposition continued to stall both houses of Parliament on Thursday, demanding a Joint Parliamentary Committee investigation into the scandal, but elsewhere, questions were being asked about businessmen who made money from ousted telecom minister A Raja’s scandalous deals.
    The CAG report tabled in Parliament earlier this week said Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group benefited the most from improper allocation of licences. The Hindu reported:
    The CAG has found that Mr. Ambani’s companies were given undue advantage over other players in at least three ways: first, the fact that Swan Telecom (now Etisalat DB Telecom), one of the 2G beneficiaries, appeared to have been acting as a front company for ADAG’s Reliance Telecom was ignored by the Department of Telecom; second, it got the spectrum before others in the queue; and third, Reliance Communications was favoured in the spectrum allocation while getting access to a dual technology licence for offering both CDMA and GSM services…
    The CAG also pointed out that the e-mail address of the corporate as well as registered office of Swan Telecom Pvt. Ltd was shown as hari.nair@relianceada.com, and the same e-mail ID was also given for the correspondence address and the authorised contact person of the applicant company.
    Meanwhile, pressure is mounting on Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to explain why he looked the other way when Raja was signing away the nation’s wealth for a pittance. BJP leader L K Advani said the Supreme Court had, for the first time, pointed fingers at a prime minister, and it was high time Singh made a statement.
    On television, Subramaniam Swamy, president of the Janata Party, said Singh was not corrupt but weak. Swamy has filed a case in the Supreme Court against Raja’s deals. He spoke to reporters in front of the Supreme Court on Thursday, and asked why Singh had remained unresponsive to his plea for permission to proceed against Raja. He alleged the government was “embroidering the truth”.
    Reporter Gopikrishnan, whose hard work as a reporter led to the unearthing of the scandal, believes telecom licences issued illegally will eventually be cancelled. Chandan Mitra, editor of The Pioneer, praised Gopikrishnan and revealed how he had grown into a reporter with a formidable reputation for digging out information.
    I don’t know how much pressure he came under and from which quarters. But I faced more pressure over these reports than anything else in my 27 years of journalism, of which nearly 20 have been spent in senior editorial positions. I am proud to have withstood them. But even more proud that I gave a dynamic young man from Kerala a break in the national media, a break he used to do the nation a sterling service. J Gopikrishnan has made history and The Pioneer basks in his achievement.
    In an interview Mitra ran with his article, titled The Man Who Felled a King, Gopikrishnan reveals that a whistleblower within the telecom ministry helped him unravel the complexities of the scandal.
    The Economic Times reported that the government would take action against five telecom companies that profited from the scandal. It quoted an official and said:
    The five companies notably Unitech, S Tel, Loop Mobile, Datacom (Videocon) and Etisalat, are likely to attract heavy penalties for disclosing incomplete information and submitting fictitious documents and adopting other fraudulent means to get licenses, the official said, adding that no plans were afoot to cancel their licences.
    Cancellation of licences retrospectively will penalise foreign operators who have bought stakes in these companies, and could send out wrong signals to investments from abroad, and also lead to complicated legal processes. It will also result in losses as some of these companies have invested significant amounts in rolling out operations, this official added.
    In news that broke late afternoon on Thursday, the Telephone Regulatory Authority of India recommended the cancellation of 69 telecom licences, and Videocon, Aircel and Uninor are among those who could lose their licences.
    Every flight begins with a fall.

  9. #39

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    LG on Thursday launched its latest smartphone ‘Optimus One' and announced plans to increase its mobile phone production capacity from 60-lakh units a year to 1.50-crore by the end of 2011.
    Powered by the Android operating system, the new handset is priced at Rs.13,500 and comes with 8.1-cm display, 3MP camera and expandable memory up to 32GB.
    “Over the next six months, we will launch ten more devices in the Optimus series, priced between Rs.8,000 and Rs.30,000,” LG Electronics India Managing Director Moon B. Shin told journalists here.
    “Smartphones are poised to drive growth in the India mobile market in the coming years and LG's focus on innovation based on thorough consumer research places us squarely at the forefront of that evolution.
    Next year will be acceleration phase for LG mobiles, and investments are aligned towards taking at least 15 per cent of market share in the smartphone segment,” he said. Stating that the company had identified mobile phones as a strategic growth engine category, Mr. Shin said: “Keeping this in mind we will increase the production capacity from 60-lakh units to 1.50-crore units by next year at the Pune plant.
    We also have an ambitious target of 80 per cent revenue growth in mobile business by 2011. Our revenues from the mobile business will touch around Rs.2,500 crore by next year.” “Our focus is to simplify smartphones for consumers and give them experience on how applications can improve life.
    Simultaneously, we are looking at expanding the retail presence by 25,000 outlets and 500 LG exclusive LG mobile gallery.
    Next year we plan to launch 55 new models, out of which 40 per cent will be smartphones and our marketing investments would be aligned accordingly,” said company Business Group Head (Mobile Communications) Vishal Chopra.
    Every flight begins with a fall.

  10. #40

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    Nokia Corp. says its top N8 model, aimed at making up lost ground in the smartphone market, has had power problems with some handsets not turning on after recharging.
    Nokia spokeswoman Eija-Riitta Huovinen says the problem is limited to “a small number of handsets” and will be fixed in line with Nokia warranty rules.
    Huovinen says Nokia has identified the problem and “has taken immediate precautionary measures.”
    Nokia said on Friday that it has not had any other complaints about the N8 touch screen phone, which features a 12-megapixel digital camera and 3.5 inch display, since the company started shipping the handsets in September.
    Every flight begins with a fall.

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