we love our gadget packed mobiles. But there tends to be one big problem – these feature packed handsets are all, well, rather big when it comes to size. Sometimes you don’t want to carry a big phone, especially if you are carrying a tiny-but-oh-so-chic handbag, or perhaps you’re wearing an inadvisably tight pair of Click to Read More >
This unusual looking handset is the JCB TOUGHPHONE (yes, it really is spelled all in capitals). There are no prizes for guessing what the TOUGHPHONE’s main sales proposition is – but in case you haven’t guessed it, the clue is in the TOUGHPHONE’s name.The TOUGHPHONE is rated to at least IP52 specifications* which doesn’t mean Click to Read More >
The D750i has a 262K color TFT screen, 2 Megapixel camera, MP3 player, FM radio and a foreign language translation program in one easy-to-use device. It comes equipped with technical features that are common in stand-alone digital cameras such as Autofocus, 4x digital zoom, preflash with red-eye reduction, an intuitive digital still camera user interface Click to Read More >
We haven’t seen a handset from Sharp in a little while, but the Sharp GX33 is the latest handset to hit Europe from this Japanese giant. Looking a little like last year’s GX40, the GX33 is a fairly compact clamshell phone. This particular handset is aimed at the value end of the market.And here is Click to Read More >
The Pirelli Discus DP-M30 is a dual-mode VOIP / GSM phone designed to be used either with a SIM card or on a home or business WiFi network. Following on from last year’s DP-L10 which was also launched in the UK as the Tovo t450g, the Pirelli Discuss DP-M30 is an enormous improvement.Probably the biggest Click to Read More >
There are quite a few people out there who want a mobile phone for making phone calls. I mean just for making phone calls. And maybe for the odd text message. Nothing more. I know people in this group and they ask me whether such a phone exists. They grumble that when they go into Click to Read More >
There are few devices that impress me enough to consider buying one for myself, but when I first looked at the HTC’s follow up to its original keyboard sliding smart phone – the TyTN II – in the late summer I was well and truly bowled over. Here was a phone that did absolutely everything Click to Read More >