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Porsche Design Sagem P9522 Unlocked Quad Band Cell Phone 5 Mp Camera, Finger Print Scanner, Aluminum Body, Mineral Glass Reviews

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Best Price: $ 999.99 |

Display: * AM-OLED 262k color * 2.8 inch widescreen touch display * 400 x 240 [WQVGA] pixels * Sensitive touch/fingerprint sensor
Material: * Aluminum * dark mineral glass
Network standards: * GSM: GSM-GPRS/EDGE Class 10: * Quadband 850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz
Photos: * Camera: 5.0…

First lawsuit against Apple and AT&T

With the iPhone 4′s bad reception issues and law firms like KCR gearing up to sue Apple its no wonder that this lawsuit is poping up. This will surely be the first of several lawsuits against Apple and AT&T for the phones poor reception. The phone is accused of numerous problems like antenna issues, screen issues, proximity sensor issues, and exchange issues. To read about some of the problems check out this article. It seems that Apple and AT&T are being sued for: * General Negligence (APPLE and AT&T) * Defect in Design, Manufacture, and Assembly (APPLE) * Breach of Express Warranty (APPLE) * Breach of Implied Warranty for Merchantability (APPLE and AT&T) * Breach of Implied Warranty of Fitness for a Particular Purpose (APPLE and AT&T) * Deceptive Trade Practices (APPLE and AT&T) * Intentional Misrepresentation (APPLE and AT&T) * Negligent Misrepresentation (APPLE and AT&T), Fraud by Concealment (APPLE and AT&T) How will Apple and AT&T respond to this? Read the full call action lawsuit after the break.

Motorola Flipout Review

Yesterday, the Motorola Flipout was revealed. This phone is a odd phone taking the shape of a sqaure with a screen that flips out on a swivel. Many users would be concerned with the life of the screen swivel but this design does look solid for typical use. The phone looks similar to a makeup compact and sports Android as the operating system. The phone is going to a more trendy style allowing users to switch the color of the phones back. It runs a revamped Moto Blur user interface but unfortunately the phone’s screen resolution is only 320 x 240.

WDSGlobal: Mobile handset brand constancy is weak

WDSGlobal is out with a study that explains punters purchasing verdicts of mobile gadgets are devastatingly made on price, not on the product’s brand. It appears that, 49% of users quoted price to be the most important factor and only 7% based their purchase on the handset brand. Other findings comprise: Consumers don’t care about the design as

T-Mobile UK to Offer Xperia X10 Mini Pro, BlackBerry Pearl 3G

The new Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Mini Pro and BlackBerry Pearl 3G smartphones will disembark to the UK through T-Mobile. The network swears a June and July release date for the gadgets, correspondingly. The Xperia X10 Mini Pro is a latest edition of Sony Ericsson’s Xperia X10, being smaller, and enclosing a slide-out QWERTY keyboard. The X10 itself was

LinnStrument multitouch music maker gets demoed on video, grasps for investors

Roger Linn. Ever heard of him? He’s only the man behind the modern day drum machine and the original MPC-60 , and he’s also the man behind the concept you’re inevitably peering at above. For now, Roger’s calling this beaut the LinnStrument, and there’s quite a back story to go along with it. The design began way back in 2006, with the goal being to create a full-on multitouch instrument with the ability to let one’s finger dictate volume, timbre, pitch and pressure

TATO’s Central Storage System for Bicycles makes room for your briefcase, manpurse

While walking to a home office in slippers is probably the best way to get to work, riding on a bike isn’t far behind, but these people-powered contrivances aren’t exactly known for their storage space. If you need to lug a laptop or tote your tablet you really don’t have many options beyond somehow strapping it to your body or throwing on a set of bulky saddlebags. The Central Storage System for Bicycles (CSSB) from Swiss start-up TATO makes room by splitting the top tub on the frame, leaving space to slip in a laptop bag, purse, or your oversized copy of the Necronomicon, making this perfect for getting to the next Cthulhu fhtagn meeting while minimizing your environmental impact. It’s all yours for about $1,450, but shipping out of Switzerland will likely add a good bit on to that. [Thanks, James] Continue reading TATO’s Central Storage System for Bicycles makes room for your briefcase, manpurse TATO’s Central Storage System for Bicycles makes room for your briefcase, manpurse originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 May 2010 08:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

This Power Strip Has an Entire Miniature City On It [Art]

As part of a graduate show at the Kyoto University of Art and Design, students built miniature cities out of common household objects—including this power strip . They’re just missing mini-people. [ Spoon Tamago via Crib Candy via Boing Boing ] More

E-Book Readers: Will Secondary Features Win Consumers’ Hearts Or Leave Them Cold?

How many e-book readers do you think are out there right now for you to choose from? If you did a little digging, I bet you’d find 50 or so. Maybe 10 really worth checking out. But right now is a bit of a weird period in e-reader history. The Kindle cemented e-readers in the consumer headspace, catapulting them from weirdo alternative technology to mainstream gadget

One man band rocks the iPod touch, rescues the MIDI clarinet from obscurity

We’ve seen blow-hard electronic music makers in the past (one particular didgeridoo hack comes to mind) but still, when one makes us take note we feel like we just have to pass it along. Onyx Ashanti is an American living in Berlin and a one-man band to boot. His instrument of choice is a Yamaha MIDI wind controller for triggering audio and the TouchOSC app for iPod touch for controlling PureData audio processing. And the music he makes from the two is pretty, pretty wild… see for yourself after the break. Continue reading One man band rocks the iPod touch, rescues the MIDI clarinet from obscurity One man band rocks the iPod touch, rescues the MIDI clarinet from obscurity originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Mar 2010 21:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds .

Black Ninja Monday is When the Commenter Trolls Get Their Due []

Several star commenter have noted recently that the troll factor is rising again. This post is reminder that all comments wasting words and the comment moderator’s time wondering about such issues as “why does gizmodo love/hate/get paid by company XYZ?” may result in zero warnings and then a ban. And whatever happens to your comment account, remember: it’s not my fault if you lose your account because you said something stupid. Black Ninja Monday is when the action goes down, so you’ve got two days to turn things around.

Multi-Tab concept elevates power strips to an art form

We’ve seen plenty products both real and imagined that promise to improve on the standard power strip , but few as elegantly designed as this so-called “Multi-Tab” concept from designer Soon Mo Kang. Not only is it modular to accommodate as many plugs as you need, but each module also has its own release mechanism to eject the plug without pulling on it, and it would come with a set of stickers to let you label each plug for minimal confusion. About the only drawback is that it might not be able to handle larger plugs, but that’s nothing a little fine-tuning can’t fix — optional brick modules, perhaps? Either way, you likely haven’t seen a better video of a power strip than the one after the break. Continue reading Multi-Tab concept elevates power strips to an art form Multi-Tab concept elevates power strips to an art form originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Feb 2010 02:57:00 EST.

Brick Lamp Takes Apple Minimalism to a Whole ‘Nother Level [Design]

You think that your MacBook embodies the essence of simplicity because of it was painstakingly machined from a single slab of aluminum? Well, the Brick Lamp by HC Wang is pretty much just that slab of aluminum. The Brick Lamp’s controls couldn’t be simpler. You want light? Place the lamp on one of its edges. You want dark? Place the lamp on its back. Of course, while HC Wang may be on to something here, I’m pretty sure that I can take the design to the next level.

Microsoft’s ‘Turtle’ and ‘Pure’ phones linked to Tegra chipset, expected in both GSM and CDMA varieties

They might not have been revealed at MWC, but that doesn’t mean the news flow on Microsoft’s long-rumored Pink phones needs to stop. Following the FCC entries that hinted at the future character of these devices, we now have word of an industrious hacker getting hold of the firmware for both the Turtle and Pure handsets. According to his data, the Turtle (believed to look like the square-ish creature on the left) will sport a 320 x 240 screen, while the Pure will have a more generous 480 x 320. Neither would encourage much hope for seeing these as the vanguard handsets of the Windows Phone 7 movement, but a litany of references to Premium Mobile Experiences would both confirm our earlier information and suggest that Microsoft is still going to hit us with something more than a simple feature phone. This is backed up by “a strong connection” to NVIDIA’s Tegra chipset, which would be powerful enough to service the rumored video and media management capabilities. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, separate codenames of Lion and Pride have been uncovered, indicating CDMA versions of the Pure and Turtle, whose names are attached to the GSM variants of the two phones.

BlackBerry Enterprise Server Express gets official

Big news out of Barcelona today as RIM has announced BlackBerry Enterprise Server Express, the software we exclusively told you about a couple of days ago. Simply put, BESX allows SMBs with a Microsoft Exchange or Windows Small Business Server to take advantage of the following BES features without having to splurge on the pricey software: Wirelessly synchronize their email, calendar, contacts, notes and tasks Manage email folders and search email on the mail server remotely Book meetings and appointments, check availability and forward calendar attachments Set an out-of-office reply Edit Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint files using Documents To Go® Access files stored on the company network Deployment of BESX shouldn’t be much of an issue for most SMBs as the software is compatible with Microsoft Exchange 2003, 2007 and 2010 as well as Microsoft Windows Small Business Server 2003 and 2008. In terms of security, RIM says BESX has “the same robust security architecture found in BlackBerry Enterprise Server” whilst allowing IT admins to oversee over 35 IT policies and controls, including password controls and remote wiping. The BlackBerry Enterprise Server Express software itself will be free, but we’ve been told RIM will charge $5 per user per month.