Thursday, August 20, 2009
CECT K530i, an overview of the features and specifications.
comes out with another style compared to the previous Iphone clone series. It
gives you a feeling of Sony Ericsson K530, actually it looks really like a clone.
But CECT K530i combines the big touch screen touch control and the design interface
of Sony’s k530, to make it a features rich cell phone.
The great differences for K530i compared to the previous CECT cell phones, is
that it has keypad, like what other normal cell phone has, so it’s not a “one
button phone” again. This can make it widely accepted by most customers as the
keypad interface is user friendly. And K530i has dual 1.3 Mega pixel cameras,
3 inch big touch screen, dual SIM card, dual mode of Bluetooth, MP3/MP4 playback
and GPRS supported. The price for the CECT K530i is not expensive and is around
USD 160 something, so it has a great competitive value on the market with all
its features presented.
Here is the features for CECT K530i
Features:
-- Operating Frequency: GSM
-- Network Frequency: 900,1800,1900MHz
-- Language: English , French ,Spanish, Dutch , Vietnam, Turkey, Russian ,Arabic,
Thai, Simplified Chinese
-- Dimensions (width × high × thick): 117x57x16 mm
-- LCD Size: 2.8 inch, 240x320 pixels, 262K color TFT LCD
-- Weight,Package:120g
Specification:
-- Camera: 1.3 mega + 0.3 mega pixels double Camera
-- SIM card: Dual card; Dual working (GSM1+GSM2 can standby & working simultaneously.)
-- Unlocked: It’s Carrier free, not only limited to T-Mobile or AT&T.
-- Touch screen with handwriting: Yes
-- Multimedia: MP3/MP4 file playback, up to 2GB Micro SD (TF) card extension
support.
-- FM Radio receiving: Yes
-- GPRS support: Yes
-- Bluetooth support: Yes, dual mode support
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Nokia E52 review: E as in Exceptional

Introduction
Eseries seem to have been around forever: grown-up, confident and reliable. It's a small but solid lineup that's gone a long way from a fairly late start. Perhaps they've got a point: the business Finns are not running against the clock to discover, but look always on the spot to deliver. Eseries are less likely to obsess fans really - they're more into serving customers. And here they go again: the Nokia E52 looks well set to reward that once an Eseries, always an Eseries user attitude.
We've come to take the lethal dress code for granted, and the E52 brings a welcome speed and stamina boost to the family. The 600 MHz CPU couldn't have been more at home in that razor sharp stainless steel outfit.
Compelling exterior and strong performance are the textbook definition of the business range of handsets where Nokia are clearly the standard-setters. The E52 in turn, appears to be the standard measure for business value - you pay for an entry level Eseries and get top-of-the-line smartphone treatment. Did anybody say bestseller?
Key features
- Compact metallic body and extra slim girth (9.90mm)
- Quad-band GSM support
- 3G with HSDPA 10.2 Mbps and HSUPA 2 Mbps
- 2.4" 16M-color display of QVGA resolution
- Symbian OS, S60 UI with FP2
- 600 MHz ARM 11 CPU and 128 MB RAM
- Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g, UPnP technology, DLNA support
- Built-in GPS receiver, A-GPS support, digital compass
- Accelerometer for screen auto-rotation and turn-to-mute
- One-touch shortcut keys mean "business"
- 3 megapixel enhanced fixed focus camera with LED flash
- Secondary videocall camera
- 60 MB of internal memory, microSD expansion, ships with a 1GB card
- microUSB v2.0
- Standard 3.5mm audio jack
- Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP
- FM radio with RDS
- Class-leading audio output quality
- N-Gage gaming support
- Ovi Maps preinstalled with trial turn-by-turn navigation license (10 days)
- User-friendly Mode Switch for swapping two homescreen setups
- Office document editor (with free MS Office 2007 update)
- Remote lock/wipe over-the-air
- Comfortable keypad
- Smart dialing
- Great battery life
Main disadvantages
- Disappointing camera features and performance
- Video recording maxes out at VGA@15fps
- No DivX or XviD support (can be installed, possibly requiring a purchase)
- No TV-out functionality
We guess you know what to expect from the Eseries and, in a way, the Nokia E52 is the most predictable of them business smartphones. It is a 3rd generation handset so to speak, and the straightforward linear progression from E50 and E51 should tell the whole story. Screen size, FP 2, GPS and system speed make the E52 a done deal for upgraders. But even users who consider it overqualified will find it hard to ignore.
Think big, act fast and look sharp is what Eseries have always stood for but there's something about the E52 that seemed to make our knees weak. It's the traditional Eseries styling - bold, confident but conservative enough to safely rule out uncontrollable displays of emotion. Still, the E52 must've hit the right spot and its commanding appeal is hard to define but hard to deny. So we'd better move on before we got too soft, and see if the ergonomics are on par or if they have been sacrificed for looks.