Sony Ericsson Idou hands-on and video walkthrough

Sony Ericsson launched its 12.1 megapixel Idou at Mobile World Congress yesterday evening, and while not a finished device, we checked it out anyway. The Idou will eventually roll with the Symbian Foundation’s OS, but the version we’re seeing here is somewhere in between. The resistive touchscreen (essentially the same as found on the XpressMusic 5800) is immense, glossy, and already brilliant. The transitions and sweeping gestures (check them in the vid) are really responsive and quick, with no real lag. We checked it against its nearest neighbor in the C905 and it is slim in comparison. Top notch stuff, we are anxiously waiting for more. Video and gallery follow.

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Sony Ericsson Idou hands-on and video walkthrough originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 15:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ARM debuts Sparrow multicore netbook processor

We’ve had our eyes peeled for ARM Cortex-based netbook news, and now among the action this week at MWC ’09 we’re getting our first look at Sparrow, a Cortex A9 processor aimed squarely at netbook manufacturers. This is a multi-core update to the Cortex A8 (processor of choice for the Palm Pre and Pandora), and it’s been speculated that this could be the processor for the next generation iPhone, with “at least triple the computing power of the ARM11 processors found in the [current] iPhone and T-Mobile G1.” Toshiba, Pegatron and Wistron are all said to be showing demos of their ARM-powered netbooks at the conference this year, with a company spokesman saying that Ubuntu for ARM will go public in April, with Sparrow phones coming to market sometime in 2010. Additionally, companies like Adobe, On2, and Symbian are said to be “tuning their apps to run on the latest cores from ARM” as we speak.

[Via Gadget Mix, Mac Rumors]

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ARM debuts Sparrow multicore netbook processor originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 15:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG’s KS360 to be company’s first Android phone?

It was about this time last year when we heard that LG was aiming to push out Android-powered handsets by 2009, and sure enough, it looks like it’ll happen by this summer. According to T3, the company’s altogether bubbly KS360 will be relaunched with Google’s operating system, though the actual specifications (outside of the OS, obviously) will remain the same. Marketing Manager Jeremy Newing also confirmed at Mobile World Congress that LG would be releasing two other Android phones this year, though he wouldn’t divulge any model names or favorite colors for us to guess.

[Thanks, Kat]

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LG’s KS360 to be company’s first Android phone? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 13:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG Arena KM900 hands-on with video interface tour

We’ve been waiting to get our grubby mitts on the LG Arena KM900 and try out the S-Class 3D UI for ourselves, and well — it’s a nice featurephone interface, but it’s not exactly revolutionary. The widget interface is nice, and we’re into the picture-based contacts screen, but the icon-based home screen just feels cluttered, especially when viewed in the expanded horizontal orientation. It’ll be interesting to see how LG refines these elements in its upcoming onslaught of Windows Mobile phones — we wouldn’t drop back to a featurephone for this stuff, but we’d be plenty interested in seeing more phones like the GM730 with this interface. Video after the break!

Read – Engadget Spanish coverage of the KM900
Read – Press release

Continue reading LG Arena KM900 hands-on with video interface tour

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LG Arena KM900 hands-on with video interface tour originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 12:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Mobile 6.5 walkthrough with Engadget (now with video!)

We saw a Touch Diamond2 running old-skool Windows Mobile 6.1 this morning — and don’t get us wrong, the hardware’s pretty hot, but who really wants that noise when we’ve got the same thing running Windows Mobile 6.5 a few blocks away? Shortly after the fanfare of Microsoft’s press conference today, we were ushered downstairs for a walkthrough on a freshly-flashed Touch Diamond2 of virtually everything that makes 6.5 different from the versions before it, and while we’re not blown away by the sheer freshness or paradigm-shiftyness of what we’re seeing here, it’s a totally acceptable bump of 0.4 in the version number. Let’s put it this way: we still have a burning desire in our hearts and our loins for 7.0, whenever that happens. Follow the break for video and some key highlights!

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Windows Mobile 6.5 walkthrough with Engadget (now with video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 11:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Option announces uCAN remote data access for iCON USB modems

Fresh from Barcelona, the wireless modem gurus at Option have announced their new uCAN software platform. To be implemented across the entire iCON modem lineup, the software allows users to run applications (such as Open Office) from their USB modem and interact directly with documents situated on their workstation at home. You can also have those apps you might need to use in a pinch — such as Skype — preconfigured with all your data. If that weren’t enough, the device sports something called “Zero Footprint” technology, which is designed to ensure that “no trace of activity is left on the host computer, running either Windows XP, Windows Vista or Mac OS, when the device is disconnected.” You can even launch a browser from the thing, keeping all those passwords and cookies safely off of whichever machine you happen to be borrowing. The first uCAN devices are expected to appear sometime before July of this year. More pics after the break.

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Option announces uCAN remote data access for iCON USB modems originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 11:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint Simply Everything plan now includes mobile broadband for laptops

Sprint’s Simply Everything plan’s always brought a lot of bang for the buck, and it looks like it’s about to include a little more everything — you’ll now be able to add mobile broadband to the package. $149 a month ain’t cheap, but you won’t be short of connectivity with unlimited messaging, data, and voice, GPS navigation, and 5GB of laptop internet access a month. That explains Sprint’s willingness to promote the Pre’s data tethering abilities — anyone going to take the plunge?

Update:
Sprint pinged us to clarify that the additional fee only covers the use of a USB stick or laptop card, not tethering. We’d still love to just carry one thing, though.

[Via Phone Scoop]

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Sprint Simply Everything plan now includes mobile broadband for laptops originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 11:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia busts out its own 8 megapixel slider: the N86

Whoa, Nelly! While Samsung is strutting its 8 megapixel Memoir and Sony Ericsson is letting us all in on the forthcoming 12 megapixel Idou, Nokia is getting even with its 8 megapixel N86. Amazingly, we saw that the suits in Espoo had this thing on the brain way back in 2007, but not until today have we seen a real live product. The N-series slider boasts a Carl Zeiss lens, AutoFocus, dual-LED flash and Symbian S60, not to mention a 2.6-inch OLED display, 8GB of internal memory, a 3.5 millimeter headphone jack, microUSB connector and Share on Ovi integration. We’re left in the dark when it comes to pricing and availability, but we’re hoping to hear more really, really soon. More shots are waiting in the read link.

Update: The full specs sheets have just leaked, yum!

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Nokia busts out its own 8 megapixel slider: the N86 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 11:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm joins Adobe’s Open Screen Project, Pre to support Flash

Pandora's CTO talks about Pre, webOS development, gaming, and small children

Copy and paste, data tethering, and now Flash — it looks like the Pre’s going to fill in a lot of unchecked iPhone feature boxes, doesn’t it? Yep, Palm’s just joined Adobe’s Open Screen Project, and there’s no two bones about what that means: the press release flat out says “the Open Screen Project will help deliver Adobe Flash Player for smartphones on the new Palm webOS platform.” That’s especially interesting since the webOS SDK is so heavily based on web technologies and native player support potentially opens the door for Flash-based apps, which would instantly bring a ton of new devs to the Pre. That’s not a bad thing. We’ll find out more at the end of the year, when the mobile Flash player is due to arrive.

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Palm joins Adobe’s Open Screen Project, Pre to support Flash originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 11:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG GM730 hands-on (with video!)

We had opportunity to check out one of LG’s newest smartphones, the LG GM730 at MWC today. We’ve seen all the specs but thought knew you all needed a really good look at the new S-Class UI. This phone is not final, so our hands-on shows a few interface hiccups, but, you’ll get the drift. So what’s the take away here? This appears to be a darn fine overlay on Windows Mobile, access to things from the home screen are simple and quick: mail, messaging, calendar, menus to get at network settings and so forth are a welcome addition. The device feels sturdy (even without a back) and looks just fine in our sleep deprived eyes. Carry on for a video with all the action and a gallery stuffed full of MWC love.

Continue reading LG GM730 hands-on (with video!)

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LG GM730 hands-on (with video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 10:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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