Saturday, October 30, 2004

The iPod Photo



I don't know why Apple has to call their new iPod the iPod Photo. They could have released it as the 5th Gen iPod (although it's just weeks since they released the 4th Gen). Yeah you can store and view pictures in it with it's new color-crisp screen, but hey, it's basically the same iPod with just a different screen. Heck they even released an HP and a special U2 iPod, so I guess, iPod Photo is a long shot when it comes to the name if you'll ask me.

The Treo 650



palmOne has officially introduced the new Treo 650 smartphone, the latest member of the Treo smartphone family. The Treo 650 combines a compact, full-featured mobile phone with a thumb keyboard with email, a Palm OS organizer, messaging and web access. It adds many requested features such as a high resolution screen, Bluetooth wireless and an improved camera.

The Treo 650 will be available as either a digital dual-band CDMA/1xRTT or a GSM/GPRS/EDGE quad-band world phone. General carrier availability is expected to begin later this year in the United States, with worldwide rollout to follow in 2005.

The Treo 650 improves upon the successful design of the Treo 600. The screen is a sharper 320x320 pixel high resolution 65,000 color TFT touch-screen display that offers improved visibility in sunlight. It also adds an improved camera, integrated Bluetooth wireless, a removable battery and non-volatile memory.

The keyboard features larger and flatter buttons arranged in a smile pattern. The keys also have an improved backlight for use in dark situations. The launcher and menu keys have been moved around the 5-way to create a central navigation region. More phone like green and red "send/end" buttons have also been added.

The VGA camera has been improved to take better pictures, especially in low light situations. It now features video capture and playback, 2x digital zoom and a small fixed mirror for self-portraits.

The Treo 650 runs Palm OS Garnet v5.4 on a 312 MHz Intel PXA270 processor. It includes 32MB of non-volatile Flash RAM (of which ~23 MB is user accessible), that will stay preserved even when not charged or the battery is removed.

The built in expansion slot can accommodate MMC, SD and SDIO cards. However, it will not support the palmOne WiFi SD card at launch. palmOne claims to be evaluating the situation, so there is only a slight potential the card will eventually be supported.

It comes with a 1900 mAH Li-ion rechargeable battery that can be removed. Battery life for GSM models is rated at 6 hours talk and 300 hours standby. The 650 includes the new Multi-Connector for recharging and hotsyncing the Treo via a cable.

The Treo 650 now comes with much of the same software as the Tungsten line. This includes palmOne enhanced PIM suite, the Blazer web browser v3.0, VersaMail v3.0, the Real Player for mp3 audio, and Dataviz Documents to Go v7 for Word, Excel and PowerPoint Microsoft office files and email attachments.

With VersaMail's support for POP and IMAP email servers, users can download mail wirelessly or by synchronizing with their desktops. For Enterprise users whose organizations run Microsoft Exchange Server 2003, the Treo 650 has built in Exchange Server ActiveSync that will directly import and enable corporate email and calendar synchronization.

The Treo 650 lets users send and receive sms/mms text messages, photos or video clips right away from one application with a single inbox. And with text messages threaded in a IM chat-style view, users can see the entire conversation.

With Calendar, Contacts, Tasks, Memos and more, the Treo 650 lets users organize and simplify their business and personal lives all in one place. Users can dial contacts by name from their contacts list or enter a name or number on the QWERTY keyboard or on-screen dial pad. Speakerphone, speed dial, conference calling, call history, and caller ID are there for managing calls.

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

The DOCK on a WINBOX

INVADERS! Looks like more and more people are trying to make Windows look more like a Mac. See, if there is a Windows emulator for the Mac -- the Virtual PC, then there are tweaks for windows that will make it look more like a Mac (although it may not function as one).

If you're a die-hard Windows user and there's nothing in you that can compel yourself to get yourself a Mac, but you obviously drool over the BEAUTIFUL Icons and transitions that the Mac has then salivate no more. A company named Stardock has created some programs for Windows that make it look more like a Mac. One of these programs is the OBJECT DOCK. If you're a Mac Fanatic then you'll know by now that what I'm talking about is the DOCK from OS X, if you're a Windows user and knows nothing about the Mac, then read on.

The DOCK is like the Task Bar in Windows. There you can find and place your Frequently Used Icons/Shortcuts for your (of Course) Frequently Used programs. The difference? THE WOW EFFECT that the Animation of the DOCK shows. With Windows Task Bar, yeah it's there. But that's it. With the DOCK, well it's there, you can see it's presence, but try running your mouse over the icons and....you should try to install it and be the judge.

OBJECT DOCK is just one of the wonderful and fun programs you can download from Stardock and is just one of the programs that will give you the feel of a Mac on Windows. Now who says that only Mac users can enjoy THE DOCK. The best thing about it is it's free!

Thursday, October 21, 2004

Clie VZ90 for US Importation

Looks like Clie Enthusiasts won't take it sitting down. A company called Dynamism is now accepting orders for the Japan-only clie VZ90. The company will import the PDA's and if you're going to ask..."how about the Jap OS?". Well the company is still thinking about how to translate the OS to English. The price? US$1099.