Nokia 220 hands-on
Posted in: Today's ChiliWhat does €29 get you in a phone? If it’s the Nokia 220 you’re looking at, it gets you Nokia’s cheapest ever data-capable handset, though don’t get too excited: this … Continue reading
What does €29 get you in a phone? If it’s the Nokia 220 you’re looking at, it gets you Nokia’s cheapest ever data-capable handset, though don’t get too excited: this … Continue reading
ZTE, like fellow Chinese ODM Huawei, is hoping to become more famous for the hardware that it makes under its own flag, instead of the gear it makes for other people. A year after the Galaxy Note-troubling Grand Memo, the follow-up has made its…
It’s now two years since we first clapped eyes on an Intel-based smartphone, and yet we’re still waiting to see something compelling. If we’re able to trust Intel’s in-house benchmarks, however, then the wait could be over. The publicity slides…
We’ve always had a soft-spot for Nokia’s Asha range here at SlashGear, and the Asha 230 is no different, an even smaller, more affordable point of entry to the Finnish … Continue reading
A couple of years ago, we would’ve said that the day Nokia announced an Android device was the day Hades froze over. The hour has come, however, and it’s only slightly chilly this morning. The Nokia X is the company’s inaugural Android-based devices…
Do you remember the T-1000 robot from Terminator 2? Well, that was certainly a villain that was certainly memorable, capable of mimicking other forms as well as voices. Well, that science fiction world might not seem to be too far fetched now, with researchers Lei Sheng, Jie Zhang, and Jing Liu from Tsinghua University in Beijing having come up with a method of manipulating liquid metal, even allowing it to transform its shape on command.
Liquid Metal Robot A Possibility original content from Ubergizmo.