Archive for the 'Cell Phones' Category
New Cell Phone Laws in Effect
Author: Hi_Tech_Kid October 29, 2008
With all the automobile accidents, a lot of states and countries have instituted laws to prevent people from talking on their cell phones while driving. However this doesn’t mean you can’t talk on your phone while driving, it just means you need a headset. When purchasing a headset, you first want to ensure that it is Bluetooth capable. This will give you superior sound quality and definition.
Almost all of the major cell phone manufacturers now have a wireless headset. A Samsung, Motorola, or Nokia bluetooth headset will tend to have the best quality and be the best value.
Cell Phones Slimming Down
Author: Hi_Tech_Kid October 29, 2008
With civilization fully integrated into the twenty first century, cell phones keep getting smaller and slimmer. I’ve been waiting for some company to unveil the “insert company name” ToothPique. But I like a phone I can put up to my ear and have the other end near my mouth, and also one I don’t have to hold like a thumb laptop. There are a few phones on the market right now that I’ve found can accommodate my needs, personally I prefer those like the Samsung u600, or the Motorola Razr.
Phones like these that either flip or slide open are great for making me feel like I’m actually talking on a phone, instead of some foreign cell phone-esque brick. For all the features you get, it’s cost effective too.
Samsung Electronics
Author: Hi_Tech_Kid September 16, 2008
Samsung Electronics of Seoul, Korea, is the world’s largest consumer electronics company. It first surpassed its Japanese rival Sony in 2005, with its handset division overtaking American competitor Motorola in 2007, making Samsung the world’s second largest manufacturer of mobile phones. Samsung is third to Germany’s Siemens and America’s Hewlett-Packard as the world’s top three companies in the electric appliances and electronic industries.
Samsung remains the global market leader in numerous products, including Samsung cell phones, flash memory and hard drives, LCD and plasma displays, TVs, DVD and Blu-ray players, monitors, laptops, CD and DVD drives, laser printers, fax machines, and home appliances such as refrigerators, washing machines, microwave and conventional ovens, vacuum cleaners and air conditioners.
What is Bluetooth?
Author: Hi_Tech_Kid August 21, 2008
Bluetooth is a word we hear more and more over the past few years. Bluetooth is a wireless technology used to create a small wireless network between two pieces of hardware using short-range radio signals and eliminating the number of cables needed to stay connected. Swedish telecommunications company Ericsson conceived the original idea for this technology, and companies such as Ericsson, Nokia, IBM, Intel and Toshiba continued its development. For the last ten years, Bluetooth has been evolving into the market as a method to connect devices such as keyboards with PCs and headsets with cell phones.
Connecting cell phones with headsets is probably the most visible application of Bluetooth technology on the market—many people are walking around with a Motorola Bluetooth headset in their ear. After Bluetooth technology is configured and set up for two compatible devices, they will have the capability to sustain a signal that is less likely to absorb interference from other radio transmissions in the area.
