Showing posts with label phone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label phone. Show all posts

Monday, 13 May 2013

Nokia’s Asha 501 Phone Claims 48-Day Battery Life

Nokia says it’s aiming to make “high-end design and quality accessible to more people” with the launch of the Asha 501 and its software platform. The unsubsidized cost of the Asha 501 will be $99, but the phone is not lacking in valuable features.


Appearing as a smaller variant of the Lumia Windows Phone series, the Asha 501 comes in a variety of colors (red, blue, black, yellow, white and green) and the hardware packs a 3″ multi-touch screen, Wifi and Bluetooth connectivity, a 3.2 Mega Pixel camera and a MicroSD memory option, expandable up to 32 GB.


The 1200 mAh battery on the palm-sized device enables 17 hours of talk time, 56 hours of music playback and 48 days of standby time on 2G networks, according to Nokia.


Though the Asha 501 doesn’t support 3G or 4G data speeds, the phone comes packaged with the new Nokia Xpress Browser. Xpress Browser compresses Internet data by “up to 90 percent,” according to Nokia, making mobile browsing a real possibility in emerging markets and offering lower cost data options to all users.


Nokia’s new Asha mobile operating system has already attracted app developers from some of the most popular content creators for Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android, including CNN, ESPN, Facebook, Foursquare, LinkedIn, The Weather Channel, Twitter, Electronic Arts and Gameloft.


READ: Nokia Lumia 820 and 920: Wireless Charging, High Hopes


Nokia has teamed up with wireless carrier Airtel and Facebook to provide Asha 501 users on Airtel neworks in Africa and India with free data access via the Asha Facebook app and all mobile Facebook web pages.


“The collaboration with Nokia is in line with our strategy of enabling people to access data in Africa as we seek to bridge the digital divide across the continent,” Andre Beyers, Chief Marketing Officer for Airtel Africa, said in statement about the partnership. “The provision of free Facebook access is an excellent proposition to the millions of Airtel consumers.”


The Nokia Asha 501 will be available to purchase in Asia Pacific, India, the Middle East, Africa, Latin America and Europe starting June 2013, a spokesperson for Nokia told ABC News. Individual country announcements will be made at a later time.

Sunday, 31 March 2013

New phone by Facebook to showcase its network

Facebook users post more photos, write more status updates and hit the like button more often from mobile devices than they do from computers. So it was almost inevitable that Facebook would introduce a smartphone that put its social network front and center.

On Thursday, Facebook plans to unveil the first smartphone created to showcase its social network. The phone, made by HTC, uses a version of Google's Android, according to two people briefed on the announcement, which will be made at a news conference at the company's headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif.

The software is designed so that some of the core features of the phone, like the camera, will be built around Facebook's services, according to one of the people, who is a Facebook employee. Both people briefed on Facebook's plans spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the product before the formal announcement.

Derick Mains, a Facebook spokesman, declined to share details of the event. But he said it would be a "significant mobile-focused announcement." The invitation sent to members of the news media says, "Come see our new home on Android."

For Facebook and any other online business that is supported by ads, mobile is a tough puzzle to crack. It is difficult to get people to look at advertisements on smaller screens, where display space is limited, without becoming too intrusive.

Facebook's business strategy is to persuade people to congregate around its social network as much as possible and eventually show them more ads. That is why, over the last year, Facebook has been revamping its organization to be "mobile first." Every team at Facebook is involved somehow in its mobile products. And the company has recruited engineers who specialize in mobile phone development, including former Apple employees who worked on the development of the iPhone.