Nokia Nuron for T-Mobile review

When the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic was released a little more than a year ago, we thoroughly panned it in our review — put simply, it felt undercooked and uncompetitive in a world where webOS, iPhone OS, and Android were all realities, regardless of Nokia’s existing smartphone dominance through much of the world. More than a year later, we’re now presented with the Nokia Nuron, a pretty close relative of that first S60 5th Edition device from back in the day; it’s simply a carrier-branded version of the 5230, which itself is a lower-end variant of the 5800.

Despite its flaws, the 5800 has gone on to become a global success for Nokia — but can the Nuron do the same in a market traditionally unfazed by Nokia’s advances? More directly, has Nokia’s first volley in the modern touchphone battle evolved enough to become a prime-time player in the States? Let’s find out.

Continue reading Nokia Nuron for T-Mobile review

Nokia Nuron for T-Mobile review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Mar 2010 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile’s HTC HD2 gets purchased and unboxed early (video)

T-Mobile’s not officially selling its world-beating HD2 until Wednesday, but if you’ve a Walmart nearby and hankering to get HTC’s latest and greatest a few days early, it might be worth a trip out. JDMiPhoner managed to score one from his local Wally World a full four days early, and he’s been kind enough to unbox it, boot it up and give us a few first impressions on video. Is it really worth a couple of Benjamins with Windows Phone 7 Series just a few months away? Head on past the break if you’d care to be reminded of just how painful it is to know that this WinMo 6.5-packin’ gem won’t ever be upgradable (natively, anyway) to WP7S.

[Thanks, Andrew]

Update: Windows Mobile Nation got one as well (also from Walmart), and has hosted up a nice gallery of shots here.

Continue reading T-Mobile’s HTC HD2 gets purchased and unboxed early (video)

T-Mobile’s HTC HD2 gets purchased and unboxed early (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 21 Mar 2010 12:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile and Clearwire mulling 4G partnership

Looks like the kids at T-Mobile USA are well aware that their company’s future will depend on offering both compelling handsets and a competitive network for them to ride on. Reuters reports that the Deutsche Telekom subsidiary has been exploring all its options with regard to the provision of 4G services, including potential joint ventures with cable companies and even spectrum sharing with AT&T, though the likeliest candidate for the moment remains Clearwire’s WiMAX infrastructure. Asked about a potential merger with Sprint, who controls more than 50 percent of Clearwire, T-Mobile’s CEO Robert Dotson declined the idea, explaining that “what you never want to do is take one company that is going through challenges and take another company going through challenges.” Reports of ongoing discussions between Clearwire and T-Mo have been around since last September, and the latest from Dotson suggests that his company is keen to get a resolution either way as soon as possible.

T-Mobile and Clearwire mulling 4G partnership originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Mar 2010 07:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile USA eyeing iPhone launch this year or next?

We don’t like to stir up the nearly constant barrage of “so-and-so is getting the iPhone” rumors unless we’ve got a great reason to do so — and we’d argue that a Financial Times report involving statements from Deutsche Telekom’s CEO qualifies. The British rag was chatting up DT’s boss over the prospects of its American unit — T-Mobile USA — and stressed the company’s long-term commitment to turning around T-Mobile’s fortunes in the face of recent spinoff rumors, saying that it’s all about rapidly building out a speedy 3G network as part of an effort this year “to lay the foundation for future growth.”

Here’s where it gets juicy: referring to the iPhone, the report goes on to say that “T-Mobile USA is hoping to start selling the popular smartphone later this year or next year” while focusing on Android in the meantime, as if Android is merely a stopgap measure to make it through to the singular device that can save America’s number four carrier from going down the tubes. It’s not clear whether FT got the chief exec making a statement to that effect on the record or it’s merely gleaning this knowledge from other rumors, but the only way this would be able to happen is if the next iPhone were to come in an AWS-compatible version — and that seems unlikely considering that AWS coverage represents a trivially small fraction of 3G subscribers around the world. Of course, wireless CEOs of all walks of life regularly make statements saying they’d be more than happy to carry the iPhone if the opportunity presented itself, so this could be little more than off-the-cuff blather anyway.

T-Mobile USA eyeing iPhone launch this year or next? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Mar 2010 17:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile HD2, CLIQ XT Get Prices and Release Dates

HTC_HD2.jpg
T-Mobile has finally taken the wraps off plans for two highly anticipated smartphones.
First, T-Mobile has announced a price and release date for the long-awaited, Windows Mobile 6.5-powered HTC HD2 (pictured): March 24th, $199.99 with a two-year contract. Customers will also be able to get the HD2 for $449.99 with no monthly contract and the carrier’s less expensive, Even More Plus plan.
In addition, T-Mobile has announced that the Android-powered Motorola CLIQ XT will hit stores today, for $129.99 with a two-year contract and after rebates.
For more information, check out our full Motorola CLIQ XT review. We’ll also have a hands-on with the HD2 up very soon.

Motorola CLIQ XT comes to T-Mobile for $129.99

Your hopes, dreams, and deepest desires for a keyboardless CLIQ have finally materialized today now that Motorola’s CLIQ XT has reached T-Mobile shops across the country. Interestingly, yesterday’s leaked documentation pegged the date, but not the price — rather than the rumored $99.99, the XT will actually be going for $129.99 on a two-year contract. We guess that’s still not bad for a bona fide myTouch 3G alternative with a 5 megapixel cam — as long as you can get down with Blur, of course.

Motorola CLIQ XT comes to T-Mobile for $129.99 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Mar 2010 06:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile goes official with HTC HD2 launch details: March 24th for $200

We’ve heard it all before, but it’s always nice to get a modicum of legitimacy from a primary source. T-Mobile has now officially announced the release details for the HTC HD2 — you know, that phone whose cool factor has dropped a few Mega Fonzies since we confirmed once and for all it wasn’t getting a Windows Phone 7 upgrade. Look for it next Wednesday, March 24th, for just a penny under $200 on a two-year contract (and $450 without). Hey, at least this one’s definitely got copy and paste, right?

T-Mobile goes official with HTC HD2 launch details: March 24th for $200 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Mar 2010 20:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Leaked slide points to March 17th launch, $99 price for Motorola CLIQ XT

Motorola already said that its new CLIQ XT Android phone would be available sometime this month when it let us get our hands on the phone last week, but it unfortunately didn’t get very specific about an actual date or a price. If this seemingly authentic slide obtained by TmoToday is any indication, however, it looks like the Blur-skinned handset will hit retail on March 17th (tomorrow), and run $99 on a two-year contract (or $199 for a year). That places it right in line with the current pricing of the original CLIQ, which would seem to be prime for a price drop if it’s sticking around.

Leaked slide points to March 17th launch, $99 price for Motorola CLIQ XT originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Mar 2010 17:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Launches Nexus One for ATT

nexus-one

Google has launched a version of its HTC designed Nexus One phone that will finally allow customers using the phone to access AT&T’s 3G network in the United States and Rogers Wireless in Canada.

The earlier Nexus One worked only with T-Mobile’s 3G network. Those with SIM cards from AT&T could make voice calls but were limited to the 2G or EDGE network on their Nexus One.

Google launched the Nexus One on January 5. The phone runs Android 2.1 and retails for $180 with a two-year T-Mobile contract. The unsubsidized version of the phone is available for $530. The Nexus One retails through Google’s online store only.

Google says it will now offer two versions of the smartphone. Both versions support four GSM radio frequencies -850 MHz, 900 MHz, 1800 MHz and 1900 MHz. But the support for 3G bands will differ depending on the version selected.

When ordering phones, customers will be able to select from the version that supports 850 MHz, 1900 MHz, and 2100 MHz frequency bands for use on on AT&T in the U.S and Rogers Wireless in Canada. Or they can choose the version that supports 900 MHz, AWS, and 2100 MHz frequency bands can be used with T-Mobile in the U.S., says Google. The two versions will otherwise be identical in terms of their hardware specifications.

The availability of the Nexus One for AT&T 3G customers comes at a time when sales of the device have been slow. Google has sold about 135,000 HTC Nexus One phones in the 74 days since the device launched, a rate that’s about eight times lower than Motorola’s Droid and Apple’s original iPhone, says mobile analytics company Flurry.

See Also:

Photo: Google Nexus One (Jon Snyder/Wired.com)


It’s Time For One Data Plan to Rule All Our Gadgets [All Giz Wants]

It's Time For One Data Plan to Rule All Our GadgetsIf you buy a 3G iPad, you’ll be able to purchase data, month by month, from AT&T. Neat! But you already pay for unlimited data access on your iPhone, also from AT&T. So why not have one plan, for everything?

This isn’t a rant about iPad data or AT&T, because if anything, the iPad’s contract-free data plans represent progress, albeit in a very specific way. No, I’m talking about something bigger. You know how you pay for your home broadband, your smartphone data plan, and possibly your netbook or mobile broadband data plan? And how you may soon be shelling out for a tablet data plan? This is, in a word, dumb.

Imagine a model in which people buy total access to a wireless network, whether it be on a contract or month-by-month basis. Once you’ve paid for your “unlimited” data connection—a word which wireless providers are already comfortable throwing around in relation to single devices—you can connect all of your devices to it, be they smartphones, computers, tablets or really, whatever. It’s data sold on a per-person basis, instead of a per-device basis.

It’s easy to see how we, and the companies we buy our data access from, have ended up where we are today. Broadband is purchased from one company, and that covers most of your home devices. Wireless data was generally purchased for use in cellphones, and until recently, cost quite a bit and transferred painfully slowly. 3G data access for non-phone devices is still fairly rare. Our current separation, I guess, was natural. But it’s starting to feel silly, and within a few years, it’ll seem downright preposterous.

Imagine having 4-5 different 3g capable devices, and then paying 30 dollars for access on each? This is a subset, actually, of the subscription war, but speaking specifically to our pipes as a utility, not content and all that other stuff.

Take Sprint’s 4G wireless network. To access it, you can buy a mobile dongle, which lets you access it from outside your house, from any device that accepts USB network accessories. Or, now, you can buy the Overdrive hub, which behaves like a wireless router, and connecting whatever devices you have with you via Wi-Fi, whether you’re in your house or not. It’s not a perfect vision of how things could work—it doesn’t account for phones, and coverage is limited—but it’s a step. 4G phones are coming—Sprint will probably have at least one this year—and many of those will behave like Wi-Fi access points, too.

Consider this: Wireless and home broadband networks will one day be one and the same. When that day comes, will it make sense to pay multiple subscription fees, just because you have multiple gadgets? I get it, wireless providers want to know what data is going to what device. In a time when wireless data is expensive, and network buildout costs ridiculous money, it’s understandable. But this happened before with land-based ISPs, who actively tried to stop their user from installing routers, and they had to get over it—completely. How soon before wireless companies take the same road? An all-in-one wireless plan offered to millions of people isn’t feasible now, and it probably won’t be for a while. But shouldn’t it be a goal?

Yes it should. Some companies, like Verizon, are talking about moving to metered usage, for reasons of cost. I’m going to say it’s better to charge a lot—but at a flat rate with discounts for multiple devices—rather than penny pinch us to death across multiple subscriptions. Issuing different bills for every device that’s connected to a wireless network only obfuscates the core truth: We’re consuming the same resources, costing wireless companies the same amount, and downloading the same bits whether we’re using an iPad or a cellphone. Maybe we’re consuming more now, but that’s fine: We’ll pay more.

So, wireless companies: Please find a way to sell us wireless data access, flat out, someday. It can be on contract, or month by month, or metered. Hell, it can even be expensive—to switch to the right system, wireless companies would have to sacrifice all the income they would have made from redundant data subscriptions, some of which they’ll have to make up in the cost of the mega plan. Whatever. That’s fine. Just sell us our data access—let us decide how we want to take it.