Dec
20th

How Safe Are Cell Phones for Your Health?

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Americans logged more than 1 trillion cell-phone minutes in the first half of 2007 alone, so it came as little surprise that this is the year cellular-phone spending is predicted to surpass that of landlines, according to Labor Department data released this week. But even as more people give up their traditional home phones altogether, and ever younger kids get their own cell phones, there are still questions in the scientific community about whether this new American staple is safe for heavy or long-term use.

Experts say the concern over cell-phone use stems from a form of radiation that’s produced when the devices communicate with their base station. Wireless phones transmit via radio frequency (RF), a low-frequency form of radiation that is also used in microwave ovens and AM/FM radios. While high-frequency radiation (the kind used in X-rays) is known to cause cancer at high doses, the risks of this milder form remain unclear. A cell phone’s main source of RF is its antenna, from which it sends a signal to the nearest base-station antenna. The further a cell phone is from the base station, the more RF it needs to establish and maintain a connection. So, the theory is that any risks posed by RF would be greater for people who live and work in areas with fewer base stations. In fact, Israeli researchers reported earlier this month in the American Journal of Epidemiology that long-term cell-phone users living in rural areas faced a “consistently elevated risk” of developing tumors in the parotid gland (a salivary gland located just below the ear) compared with users who live in suburban or urban areas.

Other research, including an ongoing multinational initiative known as INTERPHONE, has yielded mixed results so far. While a number of studies have found no correlation between cell-phone use and various types of brain tumors, most of those studies focused on people who had been using cell phones for three to five years. Long-term cell-phone use may be another story. A handful of small studies have indicated that using a cell phone for an hour each day over a 10-year period can increase the risk of developing a rare brain tumor and that those tumors are more likely to be on the side of your head that you use to talk on the phone.

But quantifying the health risks of cell phones is a trickier proposition than understanding how they work. The gadgets have been widely available for only about a decade; tumors can take twice as long to develop. And hands-free devices, which minimize a person’s RF exposure by enabling them to keep the phone’s antenna away from their head, have only been commonplace for a few years. The data on kids who use cell phones is even more scarce because not enough time has passed to examine the effects on children who use them extensively as they grow. However, many researchers believe younger cell-phone users may face a higher risk of developing tumors because their nervous systems are not fully developed and their skulls are not as thick as those of adults.

The bottom line: more research is needed before a consensus emerges. In the meantime, the Food and Drug Administration recommends minimizing any potential risk by using hands-free devices and keeping cell-phone talk to a minimum. Also, the Federal Communications Commission requires manufacturers to report the relative amount of RF absorbed into the head by any given cell phone. This number is known as the SAR, or specific absorption rate. You can find out how to check your phone’s SAR here.

via newsweek

Popularity: 15% [?]

Nov
27th

Sony Ericsson’s patent application for dual-sliding QWERTY-keyboard and numeric keypad

SE Patent

Dual-sliders are nothing new. Having a dedicated numeric keypad in addition to a full-QWERTY keyboard is just so convenient. And, it seems, Sony Ericsson is giving some serious consideration to bringing that convenience to a future handset. In their patent application, entitled “Two-way sliding mobile terminal,” Sony Ericsson reveals plans to use what looks like a pop-out mechanism that features a full-QWERTY keyboard layout as well as a numeric keypad. The keyboard pops out lengthwise to become a keyboard. Holding the handset vertically, the keypad pops out widthwise.

This actually looks like a way better alternative to the dual-sliding setup that we’re used to seeing. By combining the keyboard and keypad onto a single pop-out slab, Sony Ericsson’s future dual-sliding jobbies should be slimmer than the current dual-sliding offerings. We sure hope the Japanese-Swedish company will actually apply this concept to a handset in the near-term.

via intomobile 

Popularity: 23% [?]

Nov
16th

Samsung Prepares 8 Megapixel Camera for Handsets

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Samsung Prepares 8 Megapixel Camera for Handsets Samsung just developed an 8 megapixel CMOS camera module for mobile phones. The product has small sizes, which makes it excellent for being packed in the slim cases of its most evolved handsets.

The new 87 megapixel camera comes at the sizes of 10.5mm x 11.5mm x 9.4mm and it also includes autofocus. This should considerably
improve the capture quality, bringing this device even closer to what digital cameras are capable of providing. The company will use PIEZO technology in the production of this tiny camera module.

Samsung looks to set the standards for mobile phone cameras even higher. The company might just manage to raise the bar up even higher, now that the 5 megapixel performance in mobile phone cameras is no longer an exception. Nokia, Sony Ericsson and Samsung have all released at least one mobile phone capable of bringing this quality and this has made it possible for one of them to stand out.

Still, Samsung will break no record with this future 8-megapixel camera phone. If it had done it, it would have been its record to break, anyway. This handset producer has already released a mobile phone packed with such an evolved feature. It came in the shape of the SCH-V8200 handset, about two years ago.

Still, this is not the record with camera phones. The same producer brought out on the Korean market only the SCH-B600 handset with a stunning performance of 10 megapixels. The only thing that could make the future mobile phone to pack this 8 mpx camera more special than all previous ones would be a global release, not just a local one, as it happened before.

Samsung wastes no time and looks to start mass production of a mobile phone equipped with this new 8-megapixel camera in the first half of next year.

via softpedia.com

Popularity: 15% [?]

Nov
11th

The top 10 selling PDAs/Smart phones in October 2007 from Krusell

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Nokia 6300
Krusell’s top 10 for October shows Apple iphone further will strengthen its position on the market. In United Kingdom and Germany it is already official that iPhone will exclusively be launched with the operator O2, and T-mobile. With the debut in Europe we will most likely see a boost in sales just in time for Christmas. Thus we have made an extra effort to launch model specific cases within this segment, and we will see an exiting coming months of cases in line with Apples assortment from Krusell, says Ulf Sandberg, Managing Director at Krusell.
1. (2) Nokia 6300
2. (1) Sony Ericsson K810i
3. (3) Nokia N95
4. (5) Nokia N73
5. (7) Apple iphone
6. (8) Nokia 3109/3110
7. (4) Sony Ericsson P1
8. (-) Sony Ericsson K850i
9. (6) Sony Ericsson W880i
10. (-) Sony Ericsson K530i
() = Last month’s position.
The Swedish manufacturer of carrying cases for portable electronics, Krusell, has released their ‘Top 10′ list for October 2007. The list is based upon the number of pieces of model specific mobile and smart phone cases that have been ordered from Krusell during October 2007. Krusell’s list is unique due to the fact that it reflects the sales of phones on six continents and in more than 50 countries around the globe.

via pdasnews

Popularity: 10% [?]

Oct
29th

KISS60 enables Flash Lite screensavers on Symbian S60 3rd devices!

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Nokia N73 KISS60Ever wanted to have an animated screensaver on your Nokia smartphone (or any other Symbian S60 3rd edition based device)? Well, now you can thanks to KISS60, the application which “enables users to collect, manage, share and enjoy” Adobe Flash Lite screensavers on their S60 smartphones.

KISS60 is work of Finland-based mobile design and development company, Kuneri, and has been created using the company’s KuneriLite Rapid Application Development toolkit for Adobe Flash Lite. It (KISS60) has an easy to use interface, allowing users to seamlessly create their own screensaver collections, download new screensavers and share them using SMS or Bluetooth. The application is in public beta, and you can grab it free of charge from here.

via pdasnews

Popularity: 26% [?]

Oct
26th

Opera Link Connects Mobile and Desktop Web Browsers

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Opera Mini 4 Beta 3

While mobile web usage is growing, an issue that seems to constantly pop up is how to synchronize shared content between mobile web browsers and their desktop counterparts. Opera Software seeks to do this through its new Opera Link solution. This is a combination of a MyOpera account and the desktop and mobile versions of the Opera web browser.

By working together, these allow users to have the same bookmarks appear on both the desktop version of Opera and on devices that use Opera Mini/Opera Mobile.In order to use the Opera Link service, users need to set up a MyOpera account and download the latest beta of Opera for desktops and laptops (version 9.5). Upon opening Opera, choose the menu option “synchronize bookmarks”. Login information will be asked for the MyOpera account, and then the bookmarks will be synced to that account.Then, from a smartphone the user needs to download and install Opera Mini 4 Beta and go to the menu option for “synchronizing bookmarks”. The bookmarks from the desktop version of Opera will then appear on the mobile device.Devices with a browser that does not support Opera Link can view synced bookmarks by going to link.opera.com and then clicking on the list of links there

via pdasnews

Popularity: 11% [?]

Oct
23rd

Trolltech Sells Out of Qtopia Greenphones, Migrates Community to Neo1973!

greenphoneagreenphoneaTrolltech today announced that it has sold its entire inventory of Qtopia Greenphones, the world’s first open phone built by the company to drive developer and operator interest. Trolltech, having accomplished its mission and committed to its roots as a software company, will not order additional units and will work closely with developers to migrate them to new, compatible reference platforms that have since been introduced to the market.

As an open, Linux-based mobile phone, Qtopia Greenphone was a project initiated by Trolltech to stimulate open development of mobile phones and to serve as an industry catalyst for the open phone movement. The pioneering initiative resulted in the creation of the first platform for open phones and, in turn, provided the developer community and mobile phone operators a platform on which to test and advance the creation and demonstration of new mobile technology services to foster mobile phone innovation. “At Vodafone Betavine we launched a web portal to interact with the developer community, said Stephen Wolak, on the Vodafone Betavine Team. “Greenphone was an innovative programme that responded well to open source developers, and mobile application experimentation. At Vodafone Betavine we believe there is a growing community and developer interest in open platform devices, Greenphone has certainly helped in the visibility of this growing trend.

“Going forward, Vodafone Betavine hopes to be stimulating the development and growing awareness of the Open Source community by housing their innovative work, and offering open API’s on the portal.”
Trolltech will continue to work with a number of device manufacturers to make Qtopia Phone Edition, the popular application platform for Linux-based mobile phones, available to further leverage the innovative work the community has already done on the Greenphone.

Since the introduction of Greenphone, Trolltech has given open source developers and commercial organizations the tools to create innovative, inspiring applications and services.
“The success of Greenphone is due in large part to the void it filled in the market by providing an open phone platform that could be used for experimentation and to build innovate applications,” said Benoit Schillings, Trolltech CTO. “While we have sold out our inventory of Greenphones, we continue to work with other hardware manufacturers which have open devices on the market. Our community now has a choice of phone platforms to work with and we aim to support additional platforms in the future.”

Trolltech will continue to support the Qtopia Greenphone community with new software releases in the coming months. In addition, community developers and organizations looking for phone hardware on which to develop Qtopia applications, Trolltech recommends the Neo1973 from FIC and OpenMoko. Trolltech is also currently working on support for additional devices and hopes to announce support for these devices in the coming weeks.

via pdasnews

Popularity: 12% [?]