Sanyo MVP - with ESPN

This is really a cellphone with an MP3 player in it but I thought it sounded so cool. The Sanyo MVP will be launched nationwide in February.

Sanyo MVP - ESPN

Targeted to avid sports fans, the SANYO MVP is designed to work on a high-speed “EV-DO” (Evolution Data Optimized) wireless network, enabling it to deliver the world of ESPN at ultra-fast speeds.

The SANYO MVP will give Mobile ESPN users one-touch, real-time access to personalized sports content, including the ESPN BottomLine scores and headlines service; Gamecast – a live, graphical representation of games; player and team statistics; ESPN video clips and game highlights; ESPN commentary and analysis; sports alerts and fantasy updates. Among its myriad features, the multimedia SANYO MVP will also offer a high-resolution color display; external color picture caller ID; built-in 1.3 megapixel digital camera with flash; video recording capabilities; MP3 music player; 16MB miniSD memory card and voice recorder.

The SANYO MVP is designed to operate on a new CDMA wireless network technology referred to as “EV-DO”, which provides Broadband-like download speeds. This enables extremely fast access to ESPN’s sports content, as well as fast Internet browsing, email access and downloads.

Utilizing a 2.1-inch, 260K-color QVGA LCD, the main display of SANYO MVP is larger, has a richer color palette and delivers three times as much resolution as a conventional cell phone display — making it ideal for viewing detailed box scores, stats, images and video. It also has a 1.1-inch, 260K-color external LCD for quickly referencing key information and for Picture Caller ID.

The phone also includes a 1.3 megapixel camera which is pictbridge-enable. It also has a built-in MP3/AAC/AAC+ music player and a digital voice recorder with hours of playback and record time available (depending on the memory card size used).

The SANYO MVP comes with a 16MB miniSD memory card and a miniSD-to-SD adapter included. MiniSD cards up to 1GB are available optionally. The miniSD card not only provides an extremely convenient way to save and transfer pictures, videos, music and voice recordings, it also enables the phone to be used as a mass storage device, much like a “pen drive”, when used together with the included USB cable.

Other features include a high-quality speakerphone, voice-activated dialing, a WAP 2.0 Web browser, Java (J2ME) functionality and a personal information manager.

December 31st, 2005 by site admin | Comments Off

Lost your iPod?

If you’re like me, I have a habit of putting down my cellphone, wallet, keys… you name it, and then spend half an hour trying to find them again. *Sigh*. Anyways, when I get my new iPod, I might also invest in one of these, because it’ll be a little more freaked out if my iPod went missing.

Loc8tor is the first product of its type on the market using James Bond style miniaturized tags as a homing device. In an increasingly cluttered and frantic world, Loc8tor is a versatile product designed to help you find and indeed help stop you from losing your possessions in the first place. Loc8tor can help prevent that all to often feeling of frustration we all to frequently get.

Key benefits and features of Loc8tor :
• Completely portable and easy to use. Small enough to fit in your pocket
• Small discrete Tags (20 x 31 x 9mm) can be attached in seconds in or on almost any item.
• Loc8tor is directional. Guides you in to within 1 inch of the lost item.
• Extensive range of up to 180 metres.
• Loc8tor will warn you when batteries are low on Loc8tor or Tags.
• Dual function – Alert or Locate mode.
• Alert mode enables users to set the distance of items to be monitored per Tag from a choice of three settings: near, medium or far.
• Up to 24 tags can be registered, enabling multiple items to be simultaneously protected.
• Two types of miniaturised Tag available: Homing Tag and Panic Tag. Panic version enables a child or guardian to activate an alert sequence by pressing the panic button on the Tag.

A Loc8tor tale – a real life example of how it works

Emma Nichols suddenly realized: she had left her purse somewhere. But where? She had visited a number of shops on the High Street. As it turned out, it wasn’t a problem. Emma pressed a button on a small locating device in her coat pocket and within a few minutes, located her purse. There it was, in the dressing room of a shop. And she didn’t even have to open the door of the dressing room to know her purse was inside. Emma had simply pressed a button on her Loc8tor … the new electronic device that uses miniaturized tags to locate anything up to 500 feet.

The Loc8tor Emma used to find her purse might also have found her keys, her handbag, or even warned her if her son started to wander off.

Loc8tor has two modes: Locate lets you find any tagged item up to a range of 500 feet (150 metres) using directional, audio, visual and vibration technology, guiding you to within 1 inch (2.5cms) of your lost item. Alert prevents things from getting lost in the first place: when a tagged item moves out of your pre-set “safety zone”, Loc8tor lets you know immediately what’s missing and can direct you to where it’s gone.

Completely portable, lightweight and easy to use, with tags similar in size to a postage stamp, Loc8tor launches with two models in the range: The Loc8tor pack is priced at $99.99 and helps you find mislaid items. The Loc8tor Plus pack is priced at $169.99, includes both Locate and Alert modes and includes a panic tag that can be worn by a child, pet or dependent. For businesses an upgrade is available enabling the Loc8tor to be used as an Asset Protection device. This enables staff to be warned if an attempt is made to remove items from the premises.

For more information see their website.

December 31st, 2005 by site admin | Comments Off

iPod nano accessories

Belkin’s existing line of iPod accessories include devices that are both compatible with the iPod nano and are available in both black and white colors, such as the TuneCast(TM) II (F8V3080tt and F8V3080ttAPL). These products are currently available in Mexico. Other new and to-be-announced accessories for nano will be available starting October 2005.

The TuneCast II, an FM transmitter that plays music from your MP3 player through FM radio waves, plugs into the nano’s headphone jack. It keeps the dock connector, which is situated next to the headphone jack on the nano, accessible. The TuneCast II is available in both black and white colors, as is the Auto Kit, which charges the nano in your car.



Belkin accessories for nano:

Power and listen to your nano in your car

– Auto Kit for iPod w/Dock Connector (F8V7058ttAPL) — Estimated Retail Price (ERP) — $469.99 Pesos
– TuneCast II Mobile FM Transmitter, Gray/Black (includes a Belkin Auto Power Cord that connects to your car’s cigarette lighter) (F8V3080tt) — ERP $589.99
– TuneCast II Mobile FM Transmitter, White (F8V3080ttAPL) — ERP $469.99
– Cassette Adapter (F8V366ttAPL) — ERP $239.99
– TuneCast Mobile FM Transmitter, Gray (F8V367tt) and White (F8V367-APL) — ERP $359.99
– Auto Power Cord for iPod w/Dock Connector (F8V7067ttAPL) — ERP $239.99

Listen to your nano through your home stereo

– Mini-Stereo Audio Cable — 3.5MM to 3.5MM M/M — 6ft (F8V203tt06-APL) — ERP $49.99
– Mini-Stereo Audio Cable — 3.5MM to 3.5MM M/M — 6ft (F8V203tt06GLDAP) — ERP $119.99
– Mini-Stereo Extension Cable — 3.5MM to 3.5MM M/F — 6ft (F8V204tt06GLDAP) — ERP $119.99
– Y Audio Cable, 6 ft. (F8V235tt06) — ERP $69.99
– Stereo Link Cable, 7 ft. (F8V235tt07GLDAP) — ERP $119.99

Share the music from your nano over two sets of headphones

– Headphone Splitter (F8V234ttWHT) — ERP $49.99
– Speaker and Headphone Splitter (F8V234ttGLD-APL) — ERP $119.99

November 7th, 2005 by site admin | 2 Comments »

Worldwide Use of Music on Cell Phones Gaining Wide Acceptance

Almost one in five (19 percent) of all mobile phone owners worldwide now listen to music on their phones, according to a new study by TNS, a leading global provider of market information. Amongst this global group, some 16 percent of all music they listen to daily is on their phones, compared with 15 percent on a stereo system at home and just 10 percent on a personal digital music player, such as an iPod. However, in the United States, only four percent of cell phone users listened to MP3s or digital music on their cell phone on a regular basis.

Across the 15 countries covered by the TNS study, 13 percent of all mobile phone users said that they use MP3 or digital music players on their phones daily or weekly. While the United States ranked last in the study, with only four percent, 26 percent of those polled in South Korea report regular listening of music via their mobile phone. In Hong Kong, 23 percent of respondents reported using their phones to listen to music; and 19 percent of those surveyed in the U.K. also reported regular usage.

While low in the United States, the trend may bode well for mobile music once MP3/digital music players become more widely available on handsets. However, a recent separate TNS study in the United States among 1,976 wireless users indicated that only 10 percent were either extremely or highly likely to purchase a wireless phone with an integrated iPod or MP3 player. One possible reason for slow U.S. adoption of the technology is that phones capable of downloading music were only introduced in the U.S. market within the past few months, and U.S. consumers are still unfamiliar with its uses and potential. In the same TNS U.S. based study, nearly-half of all users indicated no interest in having music on their wireless phones, while another 25 percent pointed to the expense associated with purchasing a wireless phone as a barrier to purchasing an integrated iPod or MP3 handset. Clearly, considerable work needs to be done to sell in the advantages of an integrated music handset approach to U.S. consumers.

Among those factors globally deterring mobile phone users from downloading more songs onto their phones are ‘insufficient memory’, ‘poor quality’ of the listening experience and ‘transferring music from other devices is easier than downloading’. U.S. respondents listed “expensive charges” and the fact that downloading uses up battery life as the top two reasons for not downloading music.

The global TNS study shows that many customers who listen to music on their phone do so while at home in addition to ‘on the go’, with almost a quarter (23 percent) who say they listen to music on their mobile phone ‘in bed’, ‘at home at weekends’ (21 percent) and ‘at home before and after work’ (16 percent). This is compared to nearly half (47 percent) who listen to music on their mobile phones on public transportation, and 32 percent ‘while waiting for an appointment or meeting’.

As proof of the growing global appetite for music on mobile phones, more than a third (35 percent) of phone users worldwide chose mobile music as one of the five applications they would like to start using, or use more of in the future. This puts mobile music in top place as the application with highest potential. This figure is highest amongst mobile users in South Korea (60 percent) and Sweden (46 percent). Once again, the U.S. ranked last in the study, with only 19 percent of respondents stating that they want to start listening to music on their cell phones.

Hanis Harun, Regional Director for Asia Pacific TNS Technology, comments: “The TNS study confirms a significant global interest in listening to music using mobile phones, with considerable potential for mobiles to take a greater share of the market in the future. Accessibility is still very much an issue, but usage, intensity and appeal are both high. Additionally mobile music appeals to a broad cross-section of consumers around the globe, with the main adoption drivers being lifestyle-related and a love for music.

“The pricing of downloads is still probably the greatest single barrier to encouraging more people to download and listen to songs on their phones. Other factors play a smaller part, including limitations of the capabilities of handsets and the time it takes to download. However, all the evidence points towards mobile music becoming increasingly competitive, on a worldwide scale, with personal digital music players such as iPods.”

Respondents also showed interest in either ’starting to use’ or ‘use more of’ the following applications in the future: ‘camera for photography’ (34 percent), ‘SMS’ (28 percent), ‘live radio’ (25 percent) and ‘video camera’ (24 percent).

About the study:

Global Tech Insight 2005 surveyed 6,800 adults aged 16-49 who own either a mobile phone, PDA or laptop and who access the Internet every week. The study was conducted in 15 countries globally between 11th July and 15th August 2005. The countries included in the study were:

Australia Brazil (Metro) China (Metro)
France Germany Hong Kong
India (Metro) Japan Korea
Netherlands New Zealand Russia (Metro)
Sweden UK USA

For further information about the study click here.

November 7th, 2005 by site admin | Comments Off

MP3 Players Top Teens’ Wish Lists This Christmas

According to a study released today by the Consumer Electronics Association, portable MP3 players rank as the most wanted gift among teens this holiday season. Seventeen percent of teenagers in the study selected the device as a desired gift, a 9 percent increase over 2003. Video game consoles, computers, portable gaming devices and cell phones rounded out the top five on teens’ technology wish lists.

“With portable music players in high demand and the next generation of video game consoles set to launch, teens are clear about what they want this holiday season,” said Sean Wargo, CEA’s director of industry analysis.

Teens also named digital cameras, game peripherals and portable CD players as potential gift items. Beyond consumer electronics products, the study results showed that teens remain consistently interested in clothes, CDs and video game titles as gifts they wish to receive.

“CDs in particular stand out as a reminder of the remaining importance of the shiny disk format as the preferred medium for music, despite the strong growth of online music services and teens’ predilection for MP3,” said Wargo. “While many teens continue to buy tracks online, it’s clear that they also continue to rely on CDs to fill their hungry portable devices and music appetites.”

MP3 players also top the list of gifts teens expect to give this holiday season. Nearly 60 percent of teens who will buy at least one consumer electronics item reported that they may choose an MP3 player as a gift. According to the survey, nearly half of teens (47 percent) plan to pay for all or most of the gifts they plan to give this season with their own money, which may come as a welcome surprise for parents. Older teens, who are more likely to have part-time employment, show higher self-funding. In addition, the number of teens who report that they’ll purchase gifts online is 43 percent, up from 40 percent in 2003.

November 7th, 2005 by site admin | Comments Off


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