(Credit: CBSi) Forking out several hundred dollars for a new mobile phone isn’t an experience a lot of Australians are likely to have had until this point. Google’s recent direct-to-customer play in the US with its Nexus One handset bucks the trend of the carrier-subsidised mobile phone, which could open doors for other manufacturers to …
Read More »Masonry Layout
Photoshop app: Now with video
The good news: Adobe’s Photoshop.com Mobile app (iTunes link) can now do video. The bad …
Read More »Motorola to offer direct
During last week’s quarterly earnings call, Motorola CEO Sanjay Jha indicated that Moto would release …
Read More »VZ Navigator 5.0 hits the streets
On Monday, Verizon Wireless released VZ Navigator 5.0, a new version of its location-based service …
Read More »T
T-Mobile is promising to sort out the heaving, steaming morass that is mobile phone tariffs …
Read More »This iPhone app personalizes your robot massage
Wellness company Human Touch says HT-Connect, an application slated for release in May as a …
Read More »HTC’s next super phones waiting in the wings
Hardware specifications and details surrounding upcoming HTC Google Android handsets are coming to light. Two …
Read More »Three nagging questions about the Nexus One
We’ve now had three weeks to play with the Nexus One, aka the “Google phone.” …
Read More »Study: Distractions, not phones, cause car crashes
A new study suggests that laws banning talking on or sending text messages with cell …
Read More »3 and Samsung in talks to put 3G in every kind of gadget imaginable
Samsung is in talks with 3 about adding built-in 3G Web connection to devices other …
Read More »