Nokia E 72

A great phone we had the chance to test is the Nokia E72, a phone that was conceived to compete the mobile phone market. Having a dimension of only 114 x 60 x 10 mm while weighting only 128 g, this phone is just the perfect size. It comes with a 1500 mAh Li-Ion battery, enabling a talk time of 12.50 hours and gives in standby 492 hours. Its creators incorporated a 250.0 MB memory, a good quantity a normal use! A cool thing of the Nokia E72 is the speaker phone, which is always useful in loud places! The nice screen of this cell phone is capable of setting wallpapers of 240 x 320 px.

If you want a customizable phone you will be happy the E72 supports custom themes. The gaming engine Nokia E72 runs on J2ME, providing cool games to play with! Not surprisingly, as it is available in all cell phones nowadays, the E72 has support for both SMS and EMS. You also have MMS messages enabled to send all multimedia files! The cell phone comes with a calendar which is very intuitive and Nokia provided a phone book having a capacity of 1000. The text prediction system exploits the T9 technology, being a top system for easy using.

The E72 does support streaming media using the MPEG-4 / H.263 / H.264 technology. Connection to a computer is possible with a cable to share data between both systems. We conclude believing the Nokia E72 to be a fantastic cell phone and we would recommend it to you!

SONY COMPUTER ENTERTAINMENT

SONY COMPUTER ENTERTAINMENT announced today that it will open up its Home online virtual environment to all PlayStation 3 users from tomorrow onwards.

Home will allow the users to create their own avatars whilst also enabling participation in a real-time virtual world.

Users will be able to interact with other players though voice as well as text chat using the service which provides mini-games, videos and special events.

Starting tomorrow, Home will be available to any PlayStation 3 user that has their console linked-up to a broadband connection. Once online, PS3 users will be able to download the software from the PlayStation Network section of the menu.

The launch of the beta test has been anticipated for quite a while. It was first unveiled in July last year and initially was promised for global release later in 2007, but was pushed back to early 2008. It was again delayed due to Sony's desire to 'refine' the service and rescheduled for a 'Fall' launch as an open beta.

Kaz Hirai, president and CEO of Sony's gaming unit said, "We are committed to providing PS3 users with exciting gaming experiences with PlayStation Home and together with our partners and users, expand the new world of interactive entertainment as we move forward."

In Europe, the gaming environments available will start with "Far Cry 2" and be joined soon by those for "Uncharted: Drake's Fortune," "Warhawk Resistance," "Motorstorm" and "SOCOM."

European tie-ups include Atari, Electronic Arts, Midway, Sega and Ubisoft on the games side. Video content will also be available from Hexus TV and Eurogamer.
Sony says some content will vary by region

THINK YOU KNOW Microsoft software?

THINK YOU KNOW Microsoft software? Think again, as the Vole harnesses the term as a cute tag for its new clothing line.

No, seriously. We aren't even kidding. Microsoft. With a clothing line.

It can't sell Vista without foisting that on naive punters through preloads, Apple's selling a lot more Macs, Linux is getting preloaded on netbooks, and free Open Office makes buying Microsoft Office seem spendthrift, so maybe the Vole is just hedging its bets in case that whole software thing goes all pear-shaped.

The company is to begin selling t-shirts with a retro theme, hoping to capitalise on a wave of computing nostalgia by alluding to the halycon days of yore, back when Windows was but a twinkle in Bill Gates' four eyes, and 640k of memory was enough for anyone. Ever.

The t-shirts have been created by advertising agency Crispin Porter Bogusky, and contain such wild slogans as "DOS" and "Microsoft". In crazy fonts, obviously.

Quite who the target market for these shirts are, we're not sure. We struggle to think of anyone - even the geekiest of the nerdcore - who would get down with these.

Obviously anticipating this problem, the Vole has signed up hip-hop artist and sometime actor Common to be its spokesman and paid model endorser. Forgive us if we think one of the coolest rappers around doesn't quite jive with the Microsoft retro vibe.

Bill Gates famously pronounced at last year's All Things Digital conference that he wished he had the taste of arch-nemises Steve Jobs. Clearly he needs it: if Jobs was crazy enough to launch a t-shirt line, it would at least look wearable, although they would likely be turtleneck t-shirts. In black.
Regardless, expect to see these rags on sale in the new year. And in the end-of-line bargain basket by Easter.

LOSING CANDIDATE for US President

LOSING CANDIDATE for US President, John McCain is offering you - yes, you! - the chance to finish your Christmas shopping with a tech bargain, courtesy of his failed political campaign.

McCain's campaign headquarters in Arlington, Virginia is flogging off the leftover kit that it bought with the millions of dollars in taxpayers dosh that funded his bid for the Presidency. We can't help but wonder if the cash should go back to the taxpayers, rather than to the McCain camp, but will leave others better versed in the intricacies of American campaign finance to debate that one.

Regardless, an email sent out by McCain operative Andrew Freeman to campaign staff and volunteers pitched the clearance sale as the chance to "Own a piece of history".

Blackberries, desktops and laptops are all on the chopping block, and the campaign will even accept credit cards.

Want a Blackberry 8700? 30 bucks will do the trick. A 4-gang power strip? That can be yours for just a dollar. A dollar will also get you a pound-weight of ethernet cables, should you so require.

Unfortunately, not everything on offer is a bargain. At $570, there are better machines available new than a second-hand Dell Latitude D820, unless you can pick one up with some campaign data left intact, in which case we suspect it would be worth a pretty penny.
The irony, of course, is that John McCain himself is a famed luddite, once telling reporters that he was internet "illiterate". Although McCain freely admitted that he had "Never felt the particular need to email", it seems that hawking email devices to staffers is now a crucial part of his campaign debt retirement strategy. Or just retirement strategy

Mobile TV battles get bloody

There once was a man from Brussels
Who made it in movies thanks to his muscles
His name was Van Damme,
He couldn't act a damn
But he could kick really hard and looked good in slo-mo

OK, SO IT DOESN'T RHYME, but the original Muscles From Brussels - Jean Claude Van Damme, was a huge success. The movies were largely rubbish and his acting made Dolph Lundgren look like Ed Norton, but he could perform some really cool, flashy kicks. Of course, in real conflict he'd be destroyed. Anyone with even the slightest knowledge of combat - even couch-potato theoretical - would know that by the time Van Damme had found a space big enough to leap, spin around in the air, re-acquire the target - who would have been so kind as stand perfectly still and dropped his defenses - he'd have been crushed. Which brings me to that other dubious Brussels export, the European Union (EU).

It would be nice to think that it too has a flashy fighting technique with great, gaping holes in its defenses, but no. The EU is more akin to a super-heavyweight from the UFC, it really doesn't matter what you throw at it, it's going to keep on coming and just kill you by falling on you. Some of the things it decides to enforce are good, while others are less so. The end result though is that there's very little you can do about it. Take for instance, the impending likelihood that the EU is going to tax digital cameras that can also record video. The threat has been knocking about for some time but it's now likely that the 4.9 per cent tax on camcorders will go ahead on cameras capable of recoding more than 30 minutes of video in 800x600 resolution. Obviously, that's not a good thing for us consumers but there's nothing you can do. The EU juggernaut rolls on. It did something similar with LCD monitors over 19in that had DVI inputs - in it's view they were capable of receiving TV signals so let's change their classification and tax ‘em.


And now we come to mobile TV. Just yesterday, the EU announced that the best way to get the newborn mobile TV market up and running [and ready to tax, of course] is to standardise things. As a result, it has decided to push for the widespread adoption of the Digital Video Broadcasting -Handheld (DVB-H) flavour of mobile TV. The overall idea is to make Mobile TV a broadcast-like system that can deliver lots of channels to mobile phones, compared to the 3G streaming system used by many operators. Of course, this is a good thing - more channels and potentially cheaper. Either way, the idea of implementing some form of standards on this arena is good but that doesn't mean that it's going to be popular and there won't be casualties along the way. DVB-H, backed by Nokia, is a good system [up to 30 channels] but it's not the only technology in use right now around Europe and the globe for mobile TV delivery. Think Ben & Jerry's ice-cream with even more flavours. For instance, here are some of the main ones: MediaFLO, DVB-SH, T-DMB, ISDB-T One Seg, DMB-S, CMMB and some mobile versions of ATSC 8-VSB.

The EU wants to act fast now because 2008 is ripe for mobile TV exploitation, what with the Olympics and European Championship footie on the cards. Let's not forget that the mobile TV market is also estimated to be worth around €7-9 million by 2010-11 and up to €20 billion by 2015. But that's only an estimate and the big cash will only start rolling in once diversity is crushed and there's just one mobile TV tech to rule them all.

Sport often plays a big role in the take up of many new technologies. OK, so the 2006 World Cup in glorious high-definition didn't drive the uptake of HDTVs the way broadcasters like Sky had hoped but HDTV are rocketing now. The biggest rival for DVB-H is probably DMB, a variation of the DAB radio system, that can also carry video signals. It's huge in South Korea and other parts of Asia where mobile TV is a reality, not just some crappy pilot programme. DAB coverage is already widespread in Germany.

Others like MediaFLO from Qualcomm are also on the fringes and in the UK, this might pose a problem to the smooth implementation of DVB-H. You see Sky likes MediaFLO and as most of you will know, Sky is the big cheese in subscription TV. Even more importantly, Sky owns the mobile phone rights to Premiership football for the next three years. Anyone wanting to broadcast No-neck Rooney's latest thunderous goal to mobile users has to deal with Sky. You can see where this going.

If the EU wants to get DVB-H off the ground in the big nations fast - especially the UK - it will have to at least see what Sky has to say. This might be one of the biggest hurdles but there will be others. Right now, TV broadcasters, telcos and mobile operators are all pushing, or working on, some mobile TV services. They are not all using the same system. The EU might be able to force through DVB-H but that's not to say there won't dissenting voices and spilled blood along the way. For consumers over here, it will inevitably lead to delays in getting a standardised mobile TV service. Considering how slowly the gears of politics turn, I doubt anything even approaching a workable, agreed-upon system will be in place for next year's big sporting events