T-Mobile willing to knock $100 off G-Slate, if you ask nicely

G-Slate Discount

Here’s a little secret that T-Mobile didn’t really intend for public consumption: if you give the company a ring you can nab an extra $100 off a G-Slate. The discount was emailed out to those who signed up for a special promotional offer T-Mo teased recently. Like most things, though, the internet got ahold of this juicy morsel and we’re happy to tell you it’s open to everyone. Just reference promo code GSLATE100 and you can pick up a shiny new Honeycomb tablet for $430 — provided you have an existing voice plan or sign up for one, are willing to commit to a two-year data contract on top of that, and don’t mind dealing with a mail-in rebate. If those caveats don’t scare you off, go ahead and call. Just act quick, the offer ends April 27th. Check out the larger image after the break for full instructions.

Continue reading T-Mobile willing to knock $100 off G-Slate, if you ask nicely

T-Mobile willing to knock $100 off G-Slate, if you ask nicely originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Apr 2011 09:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile G2x review

It’s only been a few weeks since the Optimus 2X crossed the desk of our European review bureau as the first known dual-core smartphone in the universe. Now LG’s wunderkind has made its way across the pond and landed on US soil to be reborn as the G2x on T-Mobile. While the hardware remains the same elegant Tegra 2-infused slab of glass, metal and plastic, the software has been liberated from the shackles of LG’s UI customizations into a serving of vanilla Froyo — the exact same approach T-Mobile took when it introduced the Desire Z as the G2 without HTC’s custom Sense skin last fall. Unlike previous G-series phones, the G2x ditches the physical keyboard for a 4-inch WVGA display with HDMI output and an 8 megapixel camera with 1080p video capture. Beyond the transition from messaging-centric device to multimedia powerhouse, what else is different about the hardware? Is plain Android a vast improvement over the lackluster software that shipped on the Optimus 2X? How does the G2x fare against T-Mobile’s current flagship, the Samsung Galaxy S 4G? Find out in our full review after the break.

Continue reading T-Mobile G2x review

T-Mobile G2x review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Apr 2011 11:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T affirms: Windows Phone 7 NoDo rollouts start today for Focus and Quantum owners

What’s this, a rollout hitting as planned? Believe it or not, the leaked memo we spotted a few days back has now proven true, with Microsoft’s long-awaited NoDo update (complete with copy-and-paste) being pushed out today for select LG Quantum and Samsung Focus users. The update itself has been looping around for some time, but this marks the first launch of it on AT&T’s airwaves. We’ve confirmed with the carrier that the folks in Redmond are indeed pushing it out as we speak, but there’s no word yet on how long it’ll take for everyone to get served. Let us know how the new build’s treating you in comments below… should you be lucky enough to get it, that is.

[Thanks, Sean]

Update: Microsoft also confirms this rollout, and says that the update is currently being tested on the HTC Surround. Thanks, Jeff G.!

Update 2: In case the upload speed is restricted on your updated Focus, wpcentral has published an easy how-to on reactivating HSUPA. Thanks, zblack!

AT&T affirms: Windows Phone 7 NoDo rollouts start today for Focus and Quantum owners originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Apr 2011 14:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands-On With LG’s Latest Android Phone, the G2X

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LG’s G2X is the American version of the Optimus 2X, which has already been released in Europe. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com
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Along with the Motorola Atrix, LG’s G2X is one of the first dual-core smartphones powered by Nvidia’s Tegra 2 processor to hit the market. Our first impression after getting our hands on it: Two cores really are better than one.

As soon as we picked the phone up and started scrolling through the app menus, the phone’s speed was immediately noticeable. Switching back and forth between different menu screens was speedier than ever. Playing the Halo-like pre-loaded app “Nova” was a super smooth experience, as the game ran with minimal choppiness while handling some fairly intense animations.

What’s worrisome, however, is the relatively small amount of RAM that comes in the G2X. With such a powerful processor under the hood, we’re a bit surprised the phone only comes with 512 MB of RAM installed. That might not prove to be enough for future resource-hungry apps and games. For now though, the phone ran the games we played like a charm.

Instead of rolling its own custom user interface, LG went with a stock version of Android 2.2 (Froyo) for the G2X. Frankly, not having to deal with another manufacturer’s skin is a big plus for us: Interfaces like HTC’s Sense or Motoblur just feel chunky compared to the bare-bones version of the OS. And although it’s not running the latest version of Android (Gingerbread) quite yet, it’s slated to receive the OS update sometime this summer.

The 4-inch capacitive touch screen displays color brilliantly, and the 8-megapixel back facing camera takes some of the best camera phone shots we’ve seen yet (not to mention that 8 megapixels is one of the highest smartphone camera resolutions on the market now). A 1.3-megapixel front facing camera comes ready for video chat using T-Mobile’s QikTM app.

HDMI output on the phone allows you to connect it to a flatscreen, so you can watch 1080p video from your phone. The camcorder also supports 1080p video recording, and DLNA means wireless playback on compatible devices.

The phone comes with 8 GB of internal storage (a relatively small amount if you’ve got a big music library), upgradable to 32 GB via microSD card slot.

An interesting quirk: the phone’s power button is on the right-hand side of the top edge. If you’re right handed like I am, it can be a bit disorienting to reach for a button on the left-hand side that just isn’t there.

T-Mobile’s network performance on the phone was adequate, though left us wanting. T-Mobile markets its HSPA+ as “4G” — a term which has grown murkier in the recent past — with “theoretical peak download speeds reaching 21 Mbps and peak upload speeds of up to 5.7 Mbps.” Our average over two days of testing in the San Francisco Bay Area was significantly less than that optimistic “theoretical peak,” with download speeds in the 3.5 to 5.5 Mbps range, and upload speeds anywhere from 0.2 Mbps to 1.8 Mbps. 4G coverage was spotty at best outside of San Francisco proper, and the phone dropped two of the ten or so calls I made over the weekend.

Dual-core processors are hot this year. Motorola’s Atrix was the first to drop in February, and HTC’s dual-core Sensation 4G is scheduled for a mid-May release in the U.K. And as recently as last week, reports suggest that Samsung may produce a dual-core smartphone offering by next year.

Will the dual-core trend continue? If the speed of the LG G2X is any indication, we sure think so.

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T-Mobile G-Slate review

The tablet wars are building, petty disputes that will soon lead to bloodshed. Products will be launched into battle only to be gunned down straight out of their boxes, crying for their fabricators as bigger, faster, better slates step over the stricken chassis of their predecessors, running on to their own brief bits of glory. At a high level it’s obviously Android vs. Apple vs. The Rest, but battle lines are forming as we consumers, caught in the middle, try to decide just what the right size is for a tablet.

Right now two camps seem to be getting the most supporters: seven-inchers, like the Streak 7 and BlackBerry PlayBook, and 10-inchers, like the Motorola Xoom and the Apple iPad. But, sometimes weapon systems need to be a little more specialized. Sometimes the templates don’t fit, and the $530 (after rebate, on-contract) T-Mobile G-Slate by LG isn’t fitting into those categories, slotting somewhere in between with its 8.9-inch display backed with Tegra 2 graphics, 4G HSPA+ wireless, and all the oomph you want in a modern Android device. It’s a little smaller and little lighter than the 10-inchers, bigger and meatier than the sevens and, by cutting down the middle, it hits almost all the right marks.

Continue reading T-Mobile G-Slate review

T-Mobile G-Slate review originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Apr 2011 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG steps into Nokia’s MeeGo void (updated)

Sure, Nokia will ship a single MeeGo handset this year. But after that, MeeGo, Nokia’s previous strategic smartphone platform, will be pushed into the incubation lab as the team shifts focus to future user experiences. According to Reuters, LG Electronics has stepped in to fill the void by joining a working group with ZTE and China Mobile intent on developing a handset version of the software. This, according to a member of the MeeGo technical steering group, Valtteri Halla, speaking at a developer conference today. Of course, LG was talking about MeeGo phones back in January of 2010 when it was showing off its short-lived Intel Moorestown-based GW990 (pictured above). Happy now, MeeGo fans? You should be, we certainly are.

Update: LG has issued a statement meant to dampen any early enthusiasm we may have felt about an LG handset running MeeGo. According to the Reuters update, an LG spokesman says, “At this point in time LG has no definitive plans to mass produce devices with MeeGo other than car infotainment systems.”

LG steps into Nokia’s MeeGo void (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Apr 2011 08:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile G2x now available online for $200, hitting stores April 20th

T-Mobile’s Android roster is growing in number and sheer benchmarking virility today with the launch of the LG-produced G2x. This handset runs bone stock Android (Froyo today, Gingerbread in the future) atop a dual-core NVIDIA Tegra 2 system-on-chip, and just like its international twin the Optimus 2X, eschews the physical flair and focuses on being the best damn 4-inch smartphone that it can be. It costs $199.99 on a two-year contract and can be bought online today or in stores starting April 20th. Also scheduled for general availability on that date is the QWERTY slider-equipped Sidekick 4G, though that sleepyhead is missing out on any early web availability — it’s probably too busy adjusting its tricked-out Android skin and checking that its magenta accents are all spotless. Links are below, whether you’re feeling inquisitive or acquisitive.

[Thanks, Matt]

T-Mobile G2x now available online for $200, hitting stores April 20th originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Apr 2011 02:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG Optimus 2X to be upgraded to Gingerbread in June or July, says Danish support site

Other than saying Gingerbread will be forthcoming for its dual-core Optimus 2X Android handset, LG has been pretty mum on the subject of software updates. It’s good, therefore, to finally extract a timeframe out of the company, albeit from a somewhat obscure source. LG’s Danish support site tells us that the P990 (the internal code number for the 2X) will be updated to Android 2.3 “in June-July 2011.” That’s a fair bit later than we might have expected or hoped for the upgrade to happen, particularly given the various software foibles that the device we reviewed suffered from, but the summer of 2011 will always be preferable to the summer of never. A final warning is perhaps merited here to say that LG has a history of inconsistency when it comes to software roadmaps, so consider this one scribbled down in pencil until we hear more concrete confirmation from the company.

[Thanks, Michael]

LG Optimus 2X to be upgraded to Gingerbread in June or July, says Danish support site originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Apr 2011 06:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Froyo-based LG Thrive becomes AT&T’s first prepaid smartphone, ships April 17th alongside Phoenix

A G2x they ain’t, but AT&T’s newest duo from LG should certainly satisfy the cravings of less-demanding Android loyalists. Along with every other carrier in the world, Ma Bell has decided to pick up a couple of Optimus One variants, with the LG Thrive being christened as the operator’s first prepaid (GoPhone) smartphone. Aside from a tweak in hue, the postpaid Phoenix is the exact same handset, with both offering a totally familiar 600MHz processor, 3.2-inch (480 x 320) touchpanel, Android 2.2, a 3.2 megapixel camera and unlimited WiFi usage on the entire national AT&T WiFi Hot Spot network. Those opting for a contract-free affair can select the Thrive for $179.99, while the dark blue Phoenix will run $49.99 and demand two years of your cellular soul. In related news, AT&T is introducing a new prepaid data package with the LG Thrive, offering 500 MB of data for $25, with the fully skinny detailed just after the break.

Continue reading Froyo-based LG Thrive becomes AT&T’s first prepaid smartphone, ships April 17th alongside Phoenix

Froyo-based LG Thrive becomes AT&T’s first prepaid smartphone, ships April 17th alongside Phoenix originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Apr 2011 11:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG adds ‘Tweet-TV’ enabled Android phone to its list of Mobile DTV prototypes

Whenever mobile digital television broadcasts finally take off LG will be ready and its latest concept design — following the autostereoscopic 3D screen shown at CES — is the Tweet-TV pictured above. At the National Association of Broadcasters show this week it’s demonstrating the prototype Android phone with a Harris MDTV antenna that also pulls in relevant tweets and displays them over the broadcast being watched. Whether or not a dose of social networking will help MDTV succeed where others have failed remains to be seen but first we’ll see if it manages to reach 40% of the US population later this year. The press release and a bigger picture follow after the break.

Continue reading LG adds ‘Tweet-TV’ enabled Android phone to its list of Mobile DTV prototypes

LG adds ‘Tweet-TV’ enabled Android phone to its list of Mobile DTV prototypes originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 Apr 2011 05:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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