Saturday, December 29, 2007

Motarola new Mobile

The big M has apparently picked its pony, because what you see here is the limited edition Ferrari Motorola Z8 cell phone. The Italian automaker seems to be lending its name to all sorts of electronics these days, presumably because most of us can't afford to buy an actual Ferrari car. The next best thing, I suppose, would be an Acer Ferrari notebook or this Ferrari Motorola mobile phone.
As you can quite plainly see, this limited edition handset has been emblazoned with all sorts of Ferrari branding, including logos and a hot black-and-red color scheme. Some people call it a banana phone, but the limited edition Ferrari Motorola Z8 is one speedy-looking banana.On the inside, you'll find things like free video from Ferrari, pre-registration to ferrariworld.com, custom wallpapers and ringtones, some online magazine subscriptions, and The Bourne Identity. Don't ask me what Jason Bourne has to do with Ferrari. Look for the hotness to drop in Q1 2008.

Friday, December 21, 2007

Ringtons

Happy x-mas
The global ringtone market is coming to the end of its crescendo, depending on how you measure."In some parts of the world, ringtone sales are actually declining, and the former ringtone kings, like Jamba of Germany and Musiwave of France, are reorganizing their businesses to focus on more profitable ways for consumers to personalize their cellphones.
The market changed in unexpected ways. For one, more mobile phones were being made with the ability to create or record their own tunes. For another, record labels actively promoted so-called "master ringtones" - excerpts from the original pop recordings - for about the same price as the knockoffs but with higher royalty fees. And digital music stores like iTunes began packaging and selling ringtones alongside their 99-cent singles."

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Vodafone and Google ti up


British mobile operator Vodafone Group, said it has signed a deal with Google to offer search capabilities on its Vodafone live! 3G service to provide customers with the most relevant information, wherever they are and whatever time of day it is. Users will be able to use Google's search engine to find content within Vodafone live and on the wider Web. Search results will be delivered through Vodafone's data networks. Examples of the kind of information that will be available include news, weather and details of restaurants, the company said. Vodafone hopes that the deal with Google will help it increase Internet usage by customers and help it raise data revenues. For Google, the alliance will help it expand its reach into the world of mobile devices.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Free Ringtones Dunia

Free Ringtones India is a community site for Bollywood Ringtones , Monotones, Polyphonic Ringtones, Real tones (MP3, WAV, AMR and MMF tones) , Java Games / Applications, Symbian Applications / Games, 3gp Videos, PC-To-Mobile Software, Monophonic ringtones, (i.e. Nokia Keypress, Composer and RTTTL ringtones ) and a lot lot more. (Including WAP based downloads)We have very active cellphone forums where you can share your stuff, discuss your mobile related problems or just hang So come on in and join the fun!Pls note you will not be able to access mobile downloads section or see downloads in the mobile forums unless you are registered and logged on (which is free of course). Do not ask mods for help in this regard.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Nokia enivision



Cellphones with built-in fingerprint scanners aren't exactly revolutionary, but a recent patent application filed by Nokia could foreshadow mobile displays that recognize and react to biometric inputs. More specifically, the technology would see a touch-sensitive user interface that could allow / deny access or morph depending on what user swiped their finger.
Moreover, a mysterious "visual display cursor" is also referenced, which would seemingly allow the device to bring important applications / lists / etc. to the screen's forefront depending on the preferences saved for each fingerprint. As always, it's a mystery as to when something like this will actually go mainstream, but we certainly dig the sound of it -- even when written in totally incomprehensible patent app lingo.

Monday, December 3, 2007

Mother Music of rington for mobile

"There has to be a better way for ringtones to be less intrusive and yet audible enough to the user so they actually hear it. My solution is simple. I read somewhere that the US Air Force in the 1950s was experimenting with early versions of synethesized voices delivering cockpit warnings. What they found was that a pilot was much more likely to hear an important instruction if the voice used was the pilot’s mother .
So this is what I propose. When I buy my phone, I hand it over to my mother and have her call out my name at a reasonable volume. That recording becomes my ringtone. Trust me, I’m always going to recognise her voice, across the room, across town, across continents. Mothers’ voices have that kind of quality. "