Archive for February, 2010

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Mozilla’s mobile port of my favorite web browser is quickly progressing. This week, the developers uploaded a few pictures of Fennec running on a Motorola Droid and a Nexus One. Programmer Mark Finkle also has a slide-show presentation about FireFox for mobile devices. More »


Menq is a company producing alarmingly inexpensive electronics and netbooks. The EasyPC E790 is a dual-booting Windows CE and Android computer that takes “affordable” to a whole new level at $80. It has yet to see retail, but if it arrives soon at the promised price, it could be decent for those on a very low budget. More »


French Evigroup’s Wallet, a 5″ Android tablet, was supposed to have been available last month, and that was after an initial month long delay, so where is it? More »


Adobe’s MWC appearance revealed something big: only smartphones with ARM Cortex-A8 or faster processors will run Flash 10.1 properly. Also, 50Mb of free RAM is required, but all current Android devices have this covered; unfortunately, in North America, only the Nexus One and Motorola Droid have the CPU requirements, so this means that the HTC Magic (myTouch), Dream (G1), Hero, Motorola CLIQ, and other top selling Android phones will not be supported. More »


From Ningin: Mixr love has no expiration date but our Falling in Love with Mixr giveaways do. Luckily, there’s still time for you to enter all of these awesome giveaways: More »


From Ziggytek: Haleron’s iLet Mini HAL tablet could be a great bargain. It has a tempting price and decent specs, but with little information about the company that makes it and currently no reviews of the product, it is a $199 risk. More »


Unknown company Haleron has an equally obscure Android smartphone called the Swordfish G5, which sports a 3″ LCD (240 x 400) with multi-touch, a Marvell PXA310 624MHz processor, a 5 megapixel camera, and dual SIM card slots. More »


A somewhat different take on the e-reader, Spring Design’s Alex is a handheld that operates Android with a 3.5” color LCD touchscreen (for browsing and graphics) and a 6” EPD screen for text. More »


AdMob has published some interesting statistics. While females comprise roughly 42-46% of Palm and iPhone users, they make up only 26% of Android operators… More »


Depending on which GSM carrier you are looking at, SIM cards can be preposterously overpriced for what you get. Face it: a SIM card is simply a small data bank embedded on a metallic strip and flattened onto a piece of cardboard. Bell Canada charges a mere $5 each, which is acceptable, but Rogers and Fido demand $35-40, AT&T $25, and T-mobile $20-30! SK Telecom demonstrated what truly revolutionary SIM cards are capable of. At MWC, a SIM card integrated with a CPU, 1Gb storage, and Android OS was shown. More »


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