Galaxy Tab Phone, it’s amazing

All in one Get Everything

The Samsung Galaxy Tab™ brings you the media you want and keeps you connected with anyone, anytime. Compact and light, you can keep in touch with people and content through 3G connectivity, Wi-Fi® 802.11 b/g/n or Bluetooth® Wireless Technology 3.0. With a battery life of up to 13 hours* and a crisp TFT-LCD display, you’re free to communicate, update, and enjoy.

Very light in waight
The Samsung Galaxy Tab is a 13.58-ounce, 7-inch tablet that slips easily into a pocket or bag. A virtual QWERTY keyboard and SWYPE™ technology.

Android OS
Galaxy Tab features Froyo, Google’s Android™ 2.2 platform, bringing you great performance and speed for browsing Adobe® Flash® Player compatible websites.

Integrated Social Networking
The Samsung Galaxy Tab allows you to easily access Facebook®, MySpace™ and Twitter™ so that you can stay connected to friends and family.

E book reader and office
By downloading an e-Reader, such as NOOK™ or Kindle™, from Android Market™. Access all of your important documents as well as create new ones via ThinkFree Office™, which is compatible with Microsoft® Office applications like Word, Excel® and PowerPoint® as well as Adobe® pdf viewing.

Front cam
With its front-facing camera, you can easily stay in touch and video-chat for either business or pleasure.

Light as a breeze, soft as Symbian OS.

The key benefit of EPOC32 over its 16bit predecessor is the ability to multi-task, perform multiple functions at once. In newer devices, this might mean being able to surf the web using the phone and not lose your content when answering an incoming call.

Symbian OS is an open source operating system for mobile phones primarily used on Nokia advanced or data enabled smart phones. Symbian OS runs exclusively on ARM processors and has evolved from Psion’s EPOC which was developed as a basic operating system for early electronic organizers. The Psion EPOC OS was refered to EPOC16 beginning in the late 1990′s to help differentiate it from the newer 32bit Operating system EPOC32, which eventually became Symbian OS. Psion software created a joint venture with several mobile hardware manufacturers, Ericsson®, Motorola®, and Nokia® called Symbian and eventually took on the name Symbian Software, renaming EPOC32 Symbian OS.

Many third party manufacturers were able to license the 32bit EPOC OS for their organizers and other mobile data devices. Since the late 1990′s,Symbian OS has become one of the most popular mobile device operating systems available.

Symbian OS has also modified to include soft features such as global positioning software (GPS) which will become as common as a camera in the very near future. Service providers and other companies could then publish location based services that interact with the GPS found in a mobile phone, appearing on the display once the user is near an application.

Keep in touch with 5530 xpress music

The wireless device described in this guide is accepted for use on the GSM 850, 900,1800, and 1900 MHz networks. Contact your service provider for more information about networks.

Your device supports several connectivity methods and like computers may be exposed to viruses and other harmful content. Exercise caution with messages, connectivity needs, browsing, and downloads. Only install and use services and software from dependable sources that offer enough security and protection, such as applications that are Symbian Signed or have passed the Java Verified™ testing. Consider installing antivirus and other security software on your device and any connected computer.

Nokia 5800 XpressMusic may have preinstalled bookmarks and links for third-party internet sites and may allow you to access third-party sites. These are not affiliated with Nokia, and Nokia does not endorse or assume liability for them. If you access such sites, take precautions for security or content.

There was quite a excitement nearby the release of the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic, because this was the first device of the manufacturer featuring touch sensitive display. And until recently, it was the only one as well. With its reasonable price tag and good overall  functionality, the 5800 turned out to be a success, which must have tipped off the manufacturer that they could bite off a larger chunk of the lucrative market. Today Nokia

introducing the Nokia 5530 XpressMusic, the second touch screen model of the company’s music series. Nokia can definitely call it a younger sibling of the 5800 or its lighter version if you will. The 5530 also runs Symbian S60 5th Edition, but sports a smaller display, 4GB microSD card (the 5800 comes with 8GB), has no GPS and doesn’t support 3G.

It’s not a trick, it’s a Nokia N8.

Nokia n8

Nokia N8 is the first handset powered by Symbian^3 operating system. It features a 680 MHz processor, 3G Connectivity, Wi-Fi, 16GB internal memory, 32GB expandable memory, 12 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics and xenon flash, 3.5 inch AMOLED capacitive touchscreen display with 360 x 640 pixels resolution and much more.

Other features include HD (720p) video recording, TV-out via HDMI, Dolby Digital Plus, photo and video editor, Bluetooth 3.0 with A2DP, USB 2.0, A-GPS, 1200 mAh battery and so on. This phone comes with a price tag of €469. If you were eagerly waiting for this device, go and pre-order this amazing device right now.

Nokia N8, one of the most awaited smartphone from Nokia is up for pre-order in Italy. This is the first handset with Symbian^3 operating system. Few days ago, we have posted that Nokia N8 will available in UK on the airwaves of T-Mobile from October, but this handset will be shipped a month earlier in Italy. Nokia N8 will be available from September 2010.

New operating system WebOS

HP has been talking about the PalmPad approximately since the company bought Palm and its WebOS operating system in the spring, although the company has constantly said the device won’t actually be shipped until the end of the first quarter.

But a Fox News story today has some very interested details. The Fox reporter’s source forwarded him a diagram that is purported to be the approaching PalmPad. It has few labels except for a note about an optional PalmPad dock. The report says HP will bring in not one, but three slightly different models of the WebOS-based tablet, and that “they’re cooperatively a spin-off of the never-released HP Slate.”

That got us idea, so we looked back at our own story about the HP Slate 500–which was announced by HP in late October with a price tag of $799. We realized that the PalmPad diagram in Fox’s report is the same as HP’s Slate 500 diagram in our earlier report, except for all the labels missing in the PalmPad diagram save for the dock, whose label has been changed from “Optional HP Slate 500 dock” to “Optional palmPad dock.”

There are several possible conclusions here: Fox’s source distorted the diagram and details–it’s very odd that they would say the HP Slate was never released when the HP Slate 500 was introduced exactly two months ago. Or they mean a different HP Slate. Or maybe HP recycles general diagrams for internal purposes. On the other hand, there is some possibility HP is repurposing the HP Slate hardware for the PalmPad running, according to Fox, WebOS 2.5.1.

But would HP actually use the same hardware running a full-blown desktop operating system meant to target business users, and instead slap the lightweight, mobile operating system WebOS on it and try to sell it to the same people who are in view of an iPad or Galaxy Tab?