Tuesday, 4 September 2012

Nokia Lumia 800 phone Specifications and Reviews

 

 

nokia-lumia-800

Nokia Lumia  800

Also known as Nokia Sea Ray

General            2G Network     GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900

3G Network     HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100 - RM-819

                          HSDPA 850 / 1900 / 2100 - For Canada

                          HSDPA 900 / 1900 / 2100 - RM-801 CV

Announced       2011, October

Status               Available. Released 2011, November

Body                 Dimensions     116.5 x 61.2 x 12.1 mm, 76.1 cc

Weight             142 g

                          - Touch-sensitive controls

Display             Type     AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors

Size                   480 x 800 pixels, 3.7 inches (~252 ppi pixel density)

Multitouch       Yes

Protection         Corning Gorilla Glass

                         - Nokia ClearBlack display

Sound               Alert types     Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones

Loudspeaker    Yes

3.5mm jack      Yes

Memory Card slot     No

Internal     16 GB storage, 512 MB RAM

Data          GPRS     Class 33

EDGE       Class 33

Speed        HSDPA 14.4 Mbps, HSUPA 5.76 Mbps

WLAN     Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n

Bluetooth     Yes, v2.1 with A2DP, EDR

USB          Yes, microUSB v2.0

Camera     Primary     8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus, dual-LED flash, check quality

Features     Geo-tagging

Video         Yes, 720p@30fps, check quality

Secondary     No

Features     OS     Microsoft Windows Phone 7.5 Mango

Chipset      Qualcomm MSM8255 Snapdragon

CPU          1.4 GHz Scorpion

GPU          Adreno 205

Sensors     Accelerometer, proximity, compass

Messaging     SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email, IM

Browser     WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML5, RSS feeds

Radio     Stereo FM radio with RDS

GPS     Yes, with A-GPS support

Java     No

Colors     Black, Cyan, Magenta, White

     - MicroSIM card support only

     - SNS integration

     - Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic

- MP3/WAV/eAAC+/WMA player

- MP4/H.264/H.263/WMV player

- Document viewer/editor

- Video/photo editor

- Voice memo/command/dial

- Predictive text input

Battery        Standard battery, Li-Ion 1450 mAh (BV-5JW)

Stand-by      Up to 265 h (2G) / Up to 335 h (3G)

Talk time     Up to 13 h (2G) / Up to 9 h 30 min (3G)

Music play   Up to 55 h

Misc   SAR US     1.27 W/kg (head)     1.08 W/kg (body)   

SAR EU                 0.94 W/kg (head)   

Price in india:        14000 (around 270 euro)

Tests     Display     Contrast ratio: Infinite (nominal)

Loudspeaker      Voice 60dB / Noise 59dB / Ring 61dB

Audio quality     Noise -87.3dB / Crosstalk -87.8dB

Camera           Photo / Video

Battery life     Endurance rating 35h

Nokia Lumia 800 review:

Introduction

It will take crowds erupting in delight to silence the ring of the "burning platform" speech in the Nokia Lumia 800's ears. The speaker being Nokia CEO Stephen Elop and the burning platform Symbian.

As Nokia are starting over, the Lumia 800 would do well not to look back. It's certainly beyond the ifs and buts. A shadow still lingers though. And there are people out there - loyal Nokia users too - who would've jumped in the fire with MeeGo rather than the freezing waters of Windows Phone.

But it was for others to decide. The N9 was ordered to share its impressive unibody design with the Lumia 800. Good decision by Nokia - not saying fair - to give its WP7 pioneer a strong start. There are some Windows Phone mandated changes like the touch-sensitive Back, Menu and Search keys and a hardware shutter key.

The screen lost 0.2" and 54 pixels in height to make room for the capacitive controls. The oddly positioned secondary camera is gone as well. Still, the image quality of the screen seems unchanged - and we quite liked that AMOLED unit.

What else has changed? Well, there's a new chipset, among other things. To make this short, here're the pros and cons of the Nokia Lumia 800.

Key features:

    Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support

    Quad-band 3G with 14.4 Mbps HSDPA and 5.7 Mbps HSUPA support

    3.7" 16M-color AMOLED capacitive touchscreen of 480 x 800 pixel resolution

    Scratch resistant Gorilla glass display with anti-glare polarizer

    8 megapixel autofocus camera with dual LED flash, 720p@27fps video recording and fast f/2.2 lens

    Windows Phone 7.5 OS (Mango)

    1.4GHz Scorpion CPU, Adreno 205 GPU, Qualcomm MSM8255 chipset, 512MB of RAM

    Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n

    Non-painted polycarbonate unibody, curved screen

    GPS receiver with A-GPS support and free lifetime voice-guided navigation

    Digital compass

    16GB on-board storage

    Active noise cancellation with a dedicated mic

    Built-in accelerometer and proximity sensor

    Standard 3.5 mm audio jack; FM Radio with RDS

    microUSB port

    Bluetooth v2.1 with A2DP and EDR

    Impressively deep and coherent SNS integration throughout the interface

Main disadvantages:

    Display is much dimmer than the N9's display

    No Flash or Silverlight support in browser

    No USB mass storage (file management and sync pass only through Zune)

    No video calls and no front-facing camera either

    Non-user-replaceable battery

    No memory card slot (and no 64GB version like the N9)

    microSIM card slot

    No native DivX/XviD support, videos have to be transcoded by Zune

A strong showing by Nokia, but it's a bit late to the Windows Phone party. They do have the design experience from being in the business longer than almost anyone else and they have Nokia Drive as their ace in the hole.

Disclaimer: We can not guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct

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LG Optimus L7 full phone specifications and price in india

 

lg-optimus-l7-front

 

LG L7 is a Android smartphone with 4.3 Inch display and 1 GHz Dual Core processor.

  Phone Highlights:

  • - 1 GHz Dual Core Processor
  • - 4.3Inch Display
  • - Android 4.0
  • - 5MP Cam With 1080p Video
  • - 3G
  • - Bluetooth
  • - Wi-Fi
  • - GPS
  • - HDMI Port
  • Price in India is 19900 (approx)

Full Phone Specifications:

Network:

Technology / Frequency Bands

GSM : 850/900/1800/1900 MHz

HSDPA : 900/2100 MHz

Battery:

Type     Li - Ion

Capacity     1700 mAh

Standby     -

Talktime     -

Built:

Dimensions     127.5x69x8.7 mm

Weight     -

Form Factor     bar

Colors     Black

Display:

Size     480x800 pixels

Type     color : TFT

Colors     262144 colors

Secondary Display     no

Camera / Imaging / Video:

Camera     Yes 5.0 Megapixel

Resolution  - 2592x1944 pixels

Zoom     yes

Flash     yes

Secondary Camera     no

Connectivity:

Bluetooth     Yes

Irda     No

Wlan/Wi-fi :    Yes

USB     yes

GPS     yes

Data:

GPRS     Yes

EDGE     Yes

3G     Yes

Internet Browsing     Yes , Android Webkit browser

Media:

Audio Playback     Yes

Video Playback     Yes

Ringtones -     64 polyphonic MP3/MIDI/WAV/AMR

FM Radio     Yes

3.5mm Headphone Jack     yes

Memory:

Inbuilt     4 GB

Memory Slot - Yes microSD/TransFlash

Messaging:

SMS     Yes

MMS     Yes

Email     Yes

Software:

Operating System     Android 

 

 

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Samsung I9300 Galaxy S III Phone specifications and Reviews

 

Samsung Galaxy S III: Super Phone

samsung-galaxy-s-iii-300512

The Galaxy S III comes in a professional looking navy blue box with sleeve wrapped around it that has some highlighted features on it on the back. Inside you will find the Galaxy S III, USB cable, USB charger, and a wired stereo headset. The presentation is actually quite nice. I was immediately impressed by the feel of the device in the hand, especially considering it has a 4.8 inch display. The metallic blue back is attractive as well. It doesn't have the same high quality build as the HTC One X, but it is good for a Samsung smartphone.

General :   

                    2G Network     GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900

                    3G Network     HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100

                    4G Network     LTE (regional)

Announced:  2012, May 

Status :         Available.

Body :           Dimensions     136.6 x 70.6 x 8.6 mm

Weight:        133 g

                     - Touch-sensitive controls

Display:     Type - Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors

Size:     720 x 1280 pixels, 4.8 inches (~306 ppi pixel density)

Multitouch:     Yes

Protection:     Corning Gorilla Glass 2

                      - TouchWiz UI

Sound:     Alert types - Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones

Loudspeaker:     Yes

3.5mm jack:     Yes

Memory:     Card slot     microSD, up to 64 GB

Internal:     16/32/64 GB storage, 1 GB RAM

Data:          GPRS     Class 12 (4+1/3+2/2+3/1+4 slots), 32 - 48 kbps

EDGE:      Class 12

Speed:      HSDPA, 21 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps

WLAN :   Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, DLNA, Wi-Fi Direct, Wi-Fi hotspot

Bluetooth:     Yes, v4.0 with A2DP, EDR

NFC:     Yes

USB :    Yes, microUSB v2.0 (MHL), USB On-the-go

Camera:     Primary     8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, autofocus, LED flash, check quality

Features:     Simultaneous HD video and image recording, geo-tagging, touch focus, face and

                    detection, image stabilization

Video:     Yes, 1080p@30fps, check quality

Secondary:     Yes, 1.9 MP, 720p@30fps

Features:     OS     Android OS, v4.0.4 (Ice Cream Sandwich)

Chipset :    Exynos 4212 Quad

CPU :    Quad-core 1.4 GHz Cortex-A9

GPU:     Mali-400MP

Sensors:     Accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass, barometer

Messaging:     SMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM, RSS

Browser:     HTML, Adobe Flash

Radio:     Stereo FM radio with RDS

GPS :    Yes, with A-GPS support and GLONASS

Java:     Yes, via Java MIDP emulator

Colors:     Pebble blue, Marble white

     - MicroSIM card support only

- S-Voice natural language commands and dictation

- Smart Stay eye tracking

- Dropbox (50 GB storage)

- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic

- TV-out (via MHL A/V link)

- SNS integration

- MP4/DivX/XviD/WMV/H.264/H.263 player

- MP3/WAV/eAAC+/AC3/FLAC player

- Organizer

- Image/video editor

- Document viewer (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, PDF)

- Google Search, Maps, Gmail,

YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk, Picasa integration

- Voice memo/dial/commands

- Predictive text input (Swype)

Battery:           Standard battery, Li-Ion 2100 mAh

Stand-by:     Up to 590 h (2G) / Up to 790 h (3G)

Talk time :    Up to 21 h 40 min (2G) / Up to 11 h 40 min (3G)

Misc :    SAR US     0.55 W/kg (head)     1.49 W/kg (body)   

SAR EU:     0.21 W/kg (head)   

Price :    [About 540 EUR]

Tests:     Display     Contrast ratio: Infinite (nominal) / 3.419:1 (sunlight)

Loudspeaker:     Voice 75dB / Noise 66dB / Ring 75dB

Audio quality:     Noise -90.3dB / Crosstalk -92.6dB

Camera:     Photo / Video

Battery life:     Endurance rating 43h

Disclaimer: We can not guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct.  Please go through for reference

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SAMSUNG GALAXY TAB 2 310

 

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SAMSUNG GALAXY TAB 2 310 is now available in india for 20,500 according to the August market.

It was announced in February, unveiled in Asia in March and launched in India in May. This tablet packs in a 7-inch (1024×600) PLS TFT LCD display and is powered by 1GHz dual-core processor. Yes, it runs on Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich). This tablet has 3G support and also lets you make voice calls. Let’s get into the detailed review.

There are Samsung’s app such as Readers Hub, Game Hub, S Planner (Similar to calendar) ChatON messenger. There is a default mail client and Google Mail for emails. Other Google apps include, Google+, Maps, Search (with voice search) and Talk. The utility apps include, Alarm, Calculator, Memo, My file (File browser), Gallery, Polar Office (to view documents) and World clock.

There is a photo editor to edit images and video maker to edit videos with also supports video themes and video import up to 1080p resolution and export up to 720p video resolution. You can download more apps from the Google Play Store and Samsung Apps store.

The first thing you notice about the tablet is how thin it is. It is also compact and easy to carry. The 7-inch multi-touch LCD display is bright and but it is too glossy and prone to smudges.The SIM card slot and the microSD card slot are at the right. It uses a normal SIM card and the memory is expandable up to 32GB.

There is a 30-pin jack at the bottom to charge and to transfer data instead of a micro USB slot on the Samsung phones. The speakers are present on the either side and a small microphone.There is a 3.5mm headset jack at the top and a secondary microphone that is active when you use speakerphone or while recording videos.There is a 3MP camera at the back that can shoot videos at 720p resolution at 30 fps.The tab is 10.5mm thin and weighs 344g, which is pretty good compared to the other 7-inch 3G tablets.

The Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 310 runs on the Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) software.

The 3MP back camera takes some good shots in daylight but no good for in door low-light shooting. There are different scene modes (Landscape, Night, Sports, Party / Indoor, Beach / Snow , White balance settings, Shooting modes (Single shot, Single shot and Panorama) and Timer (2 sec, 5 sec and 10 sec intervals). You can also edit the shortcuts accordingly and edit the photo with the image editor. You can switch to either cameras to shoot an image or a video.

The TouchWiz UI has same homescreen as the Honeycomb with the Google search at the top, App drawer at the top right, Widgets, Icons and the system bar. There are back, home, recent / multitasking and screenshot at the bottom system bar. Since there is no capacitive buttons all the actions are performed using these on-screen menu icons.

Nokia 808 PureView: Mobile revolution

 

Nokia-808-PureView-White_back-and-front

Introduction

The Nokia 808 PureView is the best cameraphone ever made. End of story. Now, how do you proceed from there? And why is this particular phone so hard to write about? How about because a picture is worth a thousand words and we just had a truckload of them in the mother of all shootouts? Or is it because 41 megapixels is more than five, eight, twelve, or the sum thereof, and there's no two ways about it?

Close, but no cigar. What could've easily been an ode to Finnish awesomeness may be no more than a flash in the dark for struggling Nokia and the still-standing-against-all-odds Symbian. That's what makes it hard and we've been there with the Nokia N9.

At different points in its history, Nokia has had the best-selling phone, the best business phone, the best gaming phone, the best cameraphone and the best smartphone. At one particular time, they even had all of the above in one go. Honest to god, if there ever was anything like the best are-you-kidding-me phone and the best gimme-a-break phone, they would've been runners-up at least. Yeah, they were that good.

And yes, the Nokia 808 PureView camera is that good. They wanted something to maybe, just maybe, match the most basic of compact digicams. And they did so well that it scared the living daylights (and the low light) out of a Micro Four Thirds camera.

Key features

    38 megapixel autofocus camera with xenon flash and 1080p@30fps video recording

    Two capture modes: 38MP/34MP full-res and 3MP/5MP/8MP PureView

    Camera features: giant 1/1.2" camera sensor, mechanical shutter, ND filter, geotagging, face detection, up to 4x lossless digital zoom

    Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support

    Penta-band 3G with 14.4 Mbps HSDPA and 5.76 Mbps HSUPA support

    4" 16M-color AMOLED capacitive touchscreen of 640 x 360 pixel resolution

    Nokia Belle OS with Feature Pack 1

    Single-core 1.3 GHz ARM 11 CPU and 512 MB RAM

    Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n with DLNA and UPnP

    microHDMI port for HD TV-out functionality

    GPS receiver with A-GPS support and free voice-guided navigation

    Digital compass

    16GB on-board storage, expandable up to 32GB through the microSD card slot

    Active noise cancellation with a dedicated mic

    DivX and XviD video support

    Built-in accelerometer and proximity sensor

    Standard 3.5 mm audio jack

    Stereo FM Radio with RDS, FM transmitter

    microUSB port with USB On-the-go support

    Stereo Bluetooth 3.0 with A2DP

    NFC support

    Smart and voice dialing

    Scratch resistant Gorilla glass display

Main disadvantages

    Symbian ecosystem lags behind Android and iOS

    nHD resolution wears thin on the 4" screen

    The phone is quite bulky and heavy

    Relatively limited 3rd party software availability

    microSIM support

The 808 PureView has no business with cameraphones as we know them. It can look down at any of the smartphone flagships of the competition and make fun of their so-called advanced camera tricks. But guess what - it doesn't. It's so much better than that.

And of course the flipside is that the smartphone is not of the same order as the cameraphone. The Symbian-powered Nokia 808 PureView knows darn well it cannot match the quad-cores, HD screens and the app stores of the competition.

So, what's it then? Sort of the fat kid, and not too bright? It may as well be - but hang on. You may have a use for a sharpshooter in your team. Stuff movies are made of. Grabs you by the heart.

The Nokia 808 PureView has a whole review ahead and we don't think it's going to try and impress anyone, or make them change their mind. But you'd do well to pay attention. This is a phone that knows what it's doing and does it well.

Price in india is 30,690 as on july 2nd 2012.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 specifications and review

 

samsung-galaxy-tab-2

 

 

Samsung decided to call its new 10.1-inch Android tablet the Galaxy Tab 2. That moniker should have been reserved for a true next-generation Galaxy Tab, one with a quad-core chip and high-resolution or Super AMOLED Plus display. As it stands, the Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 is only a modest update from the original Galaxy Tab 10.1, which was one of the better Android tablets released in 2011.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1

That said, I understand why Samsung would want to release a device like the Galaxy Tab 2 10.1. At $400, it's a modestly priced tablet, and TabletPCReview gave the Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 7.0, itself a small update from the Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus, a great review based largely on the fact it launched priced at $250. In addition, Apple dropped the price of the iPad 2 to $400, and this 10.1-inch Android Ice Cream Sandwich tablet gives Samsung a large-screen alternative to better compete with Apple.

So let's find out if the Galaxy Tab 2 10.1-inch can compete, and is in fact, a great tablet value.

Build & Design:

Samsung has some of the best-looking Android tablets on the market, and the Galaxy Tab 2 10.1-inch is no exception. It's sleek, thin, and light. Samsung has once again turned to an all-plastic build, which I've lamented in the past, but am starting to appreciate having recently dropped my iPad 2. The iPad's aluminum body dented, whereas I think the plastic Galaxy Tab would have shrugged it off. Overall, I still prefer the rubberized build of the BlackBerry PlayBook, or at least rubberized accents or edges like the Droid Xyboard 8.2.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 backWhatever the case, the plastic is not flimsy and the Tab 2 10.1 is very well built. In what is perhaps my favorite design tweak of 2012, the Tab 2 10.1 is slightly longer than its predecessor to make room for two front-facing speakers on each side. I've long complained about rear- or side-firing speakers, which direct sound away from the user, so I have nothing but praise for Samsung's new design. In fact, it's very reminiscent of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1N that launched in Germany following an Apple injunction against the original Tab 10.1, and I can't help but think the change has something to do with avoiding future legal hassles over tablet design between Apple and Samsung.

Sans the front-facing speakers, the tablet design is otherwise standard. The display dominates the front, with the VGA front-facing camera centered on the top long side, and Samsung branding underneath. Opposite, on the titanium-colored back, the 3-megapixel rear camera also sits centered.

Both short sides are bare, with no buttons or inputs.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 side     Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 side

The top long side houses the 3.5mm headphone jack/audio input next to an infrared blaster, microSD card slot, volume button, and power button.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 ports

A proprietary pin connector sits centered on the bottom, next to a tiny microphone pin hole.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 input

Missing are both HDMI and USB output, micro or otherwise. I'll give Samsung a pass for the lack of an HDMI output as the Tab 2 10.1 has the excellent All Share media streaming app (it's regrettably limited to Samsung home entertainment devices, however), but all Android tablets should support USB. The tablet ships with a USB mail to pin connector adapter to connect the Tab 2 to a PC.

Display & Speakers

Unfortunately, Samsung's well-placed speakers are mediocre at best. Thanks to the placement, they are loud enough that a user will be able to enjoy and understand streaming video dialogue without headphones. But tablet speakers are near universally lousy, and this tablet's two meet the same low standard as many others in terms of sound fidelity and fullness.

Plug in headphones, and that all that changes. The audio output is superb, and especially excellent with the Google Music app, complete with simple equalizer, 3D effect, and music genre presets. The sound can also get plenty loud, and Android helpfully delivers an on-screen message warning of the horrible things loud music does to one's ears.

Beginning with the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, Samsung tablets have sported superb displays, recently culminating with the Super AMOLED Plus screen featured on the Galaxy Tab 7.7. While the Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 doesn't have an advanced screen technology, and actually has display specs in line with the 2011 crop of Android slates (1280 x 800 resolution), it still holds up very well.

It can't compete with the new iPad's stunning Retina Display, or even the aforementioned Super AMOLED tech, but the Tab 2 10.1 still features a crisp image with colors that tend toward the cooler tones. It gets plenty bright at the highest setting, though still not bright enough to effectively cut through glare from the sun (a problem common to every iPad and Android tablet to date). Users should have no complaints watching HD videos or reading text, so long as they don't do it side by side next to a new iPad.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 specs:

    Android Ice Cream Sandwich 4.0

    10.1-inch 1280 x 800 resolution, 149 pixels per inch

    1.0GHz dual-core processor

    1GB RAM

    16GB of storage, expandable via microSD

    Rear-facing 3 megapixel camera, Front-facing VGA camera

    802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi

    Bluetooth 3.0

    microSD card slot, IR blaster, 3.5mm audio input, proprietary pin input

    10.1 x 6.9 x 0.38-inches

    1.28 pounds

    Price at launch: $399.99