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Author: Ritu BhardwajRitu Bhardwaj
Date: Jun 8, 2010 09:27
Asus P565 Mobile Price and Feature
Asus P565 is a Windows Mobile smartphone features 2.8-inch touchscreen
at 480 x 640 resolution, powered by 800 MHz Marvell Tavor processor,
256 MB ROM and 128 MB RAM, Wifi, bluetooth, 3 MP camera with
autofocus, HSDPA connectivity and runs on Windows Mobile 6.1
Professional operating system. Other business features in the ASUS
P565 are anytime Launcher, ASUS Today, EziMusic, EziPhoto, Business
Card Recognition and PDF viewer. For more information on Asus P565
Mobile visit- http://www.naaptol.com/features/40719-Asus-P565-Windows-Mobile.html
General
2G Network : GSM 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G Network : HSDPA 2100
Asus P565 Mobile Size
Dimensions : 102 x 60.5 x 16 mm
Weight : 120 g
Asus P565 Mobile Display
Type : TFT touchscreen, 65K colors
Size : 480 x 640 pixels, 2.8 inches
Ringtones
Type : Polyphonic, MP3 ...
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Author: LarryLarry
Date: Jun 8, 2010 02:01
> Alongside Apple's iPhone 4 introduction, the company also previewed an
> iMovie app designed specifically for the handset. The new device
allows
> users to record video in 720p resolution at 30 frames per second.
> Recordings can then be edited in iMovie and exported via e-mail, SMS
or
> YouTube.
>
http://att.macrumors.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=99997&d=1201708357
Assuming Jobs is sticking to the iTunes/H264 720p definition, total
bitrate is 4Mbps/8 bits in a byte = 500KB/sec. A 1 minute movie would
be 60 x 500KB/sec = 30MB/minute at 720p iTunes/H.264 standard.
How big an attachment will they allow you to send to an email on ATT?
How big an attachment will the receiver's email allow per message on
their end?
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Author: SMSSMS
Date: Jun 7, 2010 23:26
It took a while, but Picturephone service similar to what AT&T
demonstrated at the 1964 NYC World's Fair will be coming to AT&T via the
new Apple iPhone 4.
While Steve Jobs demonstrated it today, he did not demo it over the AT&T
network, which, just as in 1964, did not have the necessary bandwidth to
support the technology. Instead he used WiFi.
Hopefully it will take AT&T less than 46 more years to make this service
a commercial reality. It's been renamed "FaceTime." Back in 1964, Bell
Labs and Western Electric had the hardware ready to go, just like Apple
has the iPhone 4 ready to go, but it was the network that wasn't ready.
It's deja vu all over again.
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Author: Jolly RogerJolly Roger
Date: Jun 1, 2010 05:24
In article <310520101931461407%%nospam@nospam.invalid>,
nospam wrote:
> In article news.eternal-september.org>,
> Michelle Steiner michelle.org> wrote:
>
>>>> And claiming unilaterally that it can't tether with AT&T when it can
>>>> is even more misleading.
>>>
>>> not when 90%% of iphone users don't jailbreak it isn't.
>>
>> Yes it is because it denies the fact that you can tether with AT&T via
>> jailbreaking.
>
> then apple only had an exclusive with at&t for just a couple of months,
> since you could use t-mobile or any other carrier since fall, 2007.
That has nothing to do with the current discussion.
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Author: JustinJustin
Date: Jun 1, 2010 04:43
nospam wrote on [Mon, 31 May 2010 18:42:15 -0700]:
> In article news.eternal-september.org>, Justin
> insightbb.com> wrote:
>
>>> calling a prerelease version of android non-vapor and a pre-release
>>> version of iphone os 4 vapor is to be blunt, hypocritical bullshit.
>>
>> Once again you show your ignoraice. The iphone OS is not available
>> to end users. Only developers. End users are not developers.
>
> i've said it before, *any* end user can sign up as a developer and
> download it if they want it. they can even pirate it.
Only if you have a Mac, the vast majority of people don't have one.
So, using your own standards, it's only available to a miniscule number
of users so it's vapor.
> iphone os 4 is very definitely available to anyone who wants it. in
> fact, there are even iphones with 4.0 beta sold on ebay.
You forget we have been talking about legally and ethically here.
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5 Comments |
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Author: nospamnospam
Date: Jun 1, 2010 04:31
In article news.eternal-september.org>,
Michelle Steiner michelle.org> wrote:
>>> And claiming unilaterally that it can't tether with AT&T when it can
>>> is even more misleading.
>>
>> not when 90%% of iphone users don't jailbreak it isn't.
>
> Yes it is because it denies the fact that you can tether with AT&T via
> jailbreaking.
then apple only had an exclusive with at&t for just a couple of months,
since you could use t-mobile or any other carrier since fall, 2007.
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Author: Your NameYour Name
Date: Jun 1, 2010 04:04
In article news.eternal-september.org>,
Michelle Steiner michelle.org> wrote:
> In article 4ax.com>,
> Jeff Liebermann cruzio.com> wrote:
>
>> Ok, so why duz Apple continue to ship one button mice and laptops with
>> one button touchpads?
>
> Apple hasn't shipped a one-button mouse five years.
>
> Apple's touch pad doesn't have any buttons; the touch pad itself acts as a
> button. One finger for the left button; two fingers for the right. For
> that matter, it can sense up to five fingers.
Like the Apple mice, the trackpad does have REAL buttons, they simply
aren't visible ones. The bottom of the trackpad has at leat one cliackable
button (I haven't checked to see if there are two separate ones or perhaps
a left-right rocker switch).
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Author: nospamnospam
Date: Jun 1, 2010 04:03
> Like the Apple mice, the trackpad does have REAL buttons, they simply
> aren't visible ones. The bottom of the trackpad has at leat one cliackable
> button (I haven't checked to see if there are two separate ones or perhaps
> a left-right rocker switch).
there is only one physical button. everything else is done via
multitouch and software.
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Author: Your NameYour Name
Date: Jun 1, 2010 04:02
In article <310520101651093201%%nospam@nospam.invalid>, nospam
wrote:
> In article 4ax.com>, Jeff
> Liebermann cruzio.com> wrote:
>
>>>multiple buttons have been supported by mac os since the early 1990s,
>>>and contextual...
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