Panasonic Unveils International 3G Cell Phone
Panasonic Mobile Communications is unveiling its first Wideband Code Division Multiple Access cell phone for the international market, the company says.
Source: PC World
But will it cost 3 G's too? -KFThe handset is a clamshell-style cell phone that supports WCDMA and tri-band Global System for Mobile Communications and General Packet Radio Service. It includes a browser compatible with Wireless Application Protocol version 2.0, Java support, and software for e-mail, Short Message Service and Multimedia Message Service. The main display is a color thin film transistor LCD with 176-by-220-pixel resolution, and the subdisplay on the outside of the body is a color LCD with 64-by-96-pixel resolution. There are two cameras, an outer one with 1.3-megapixel resolution and an inner one with 110,000-pixel resolution. The phone also has Bluetooth, USB 2.0, and IrDA infrared ports and supports MiniSD memory cards. It measures 3.8 inches by 2 inches by 1 inch and weighs 4 ounces.
Source: PC World
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Comments
Along with EDGE. It's another "going to revolutionise mobile devices" that just hasn't been taken up. GPRS has started to gain ground in some markets (predominantly Canada) because providers have stopped ripping off their customers with overpriced tariffs.
Perhaps the 3G crowd should think hard about their pricing model?
But could the failure of "Revolutionary" technological advancements in cellphones be attributed to the distinct lack of market uptake in the United States? Japan nonwithstanding (They'll like anything with an LCD screen!), the US seems to be a trendsetter in regards to the adoption of many technologies. If the US market fails to adopt a product, it seems to do relatively poorly in western Europe and Canada as well.
It seems to me that the United States' sincere lack (And I mean that in a deriding context) of 3G or any other revolutionary broadband cell protocol is stifling the production elsewhere in the world as companies must artificially inflate their prices to compensate for a lack of US market penetration.
Eh? Am I full of ****?
-drasnor
Actually, those were just plain asterisks.
But see how stupid it/you look(s)? :shakehead
3 entries found for netiquette.
net·i·quette ( P ) Pronunciation Key (nt-kt, -kt)
n.
Etiquette practiced or advocated in electronic communication over a computer network.
[(Inter)net + (et)iquette.]
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Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
netiquette
<convention, networking> /net'ee-ket/ or /net'i-ket/ Network
etiquette.
The conventions of politeness recognised on Usenet and in
mailing lists, such as not (cross-)posting to inappropriate
groups and refraining from commercial advertising outside the
biz groups.
The most important rule of netiquette is "Think before you
post". If what you intend to post will not make a positive
contribution to the newsgroup and be of interest to several
readers, don't post it!