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DISCUSSION FORUM

Wireless

Smartphones

Share your thoughts on the iPhone 3G and its competitors

Last Updated: Friday, July 11, 2008 | 12:54 PM ET

   Smartphones have been around for years, but that term has been wide open to interpretation — and misuse. Many of these phones have been anything but smart, offering clunky controls and limited multimedia features. Not to mention the fact that surfing the web on their small screens, slow connections and primitive browsers has been an experience in frustration.

Now the market is undergoing a renaissance as people realize the productive, creative and entertaining possibilities that arise when a powerful and easy-to-use smartphone is coupled with a fast internet connection. Those on the go are starting to demand the same things that computers offer them on the desktop — readable screens, simple graphical interfaces, fast downloads for images and streamed video. And they want web pages to look like, well, real websites, rather than something that has been "optimized" for a handset by stripping out everything except a few lines of basic text and links.

The latest contenders for the smartphone crown in Canada are the Apple iPhone 3G (launched in Canada July 11 through Rogers Wireless/Fido), the low-cost Samsung Instinct (Bell Mobility), and Research in Motion's yet-to-be-released but much-talked-about 9500 touchscreen phone, dubbed the "Thunder."

Do these phones represent a long-awaited leap forward for the mobile internet? Which one would you consider buying, and why? Have you used one and want to share your experiences? Visit CBCnews.ca's Smartphone Forum to weigh in, offer your views and debate the pros and cons of the latest smartphones.


The smartphone contenders at a glance:

   iPhone 3G

Canadian Carrier: Rogers Wireless/Fido

Weight: 135 grams

Measurements: 2.4 inches wide, 0.7 inches thick, 4.6 inches high

Touchscreen: 3.5 inches, 320-by-480 pixels, and 16,777,216 colours

Features:

  • 2 megapixel digital camera
  • WiFi b, g - Bluetooth
  • Voice recorder
  • Video and audio player (doubles as an iPod)
  • Lots of add-on software available through "App Store"

Wireless:

  • GSM Quad-band phone (850/900/1800/1900 MHz)
  • UMTS tri-band global 3G (850/1900/2100 MHz)
  • GPRS/EDGE/UMTS/HSDPA 1.8 Mbit/s/HSDPA 3.6 Mbit/s

Talk time: Up to 600 minutes (10 hours)

Web Browser: HTML, Safari Browser (supports tabbed browsing)

E-mail/Messaging:

  • POP3, IMAP4, SMTP/Microsoft Exchange
  • Text messaging

Document formats: Reads PDF, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel files

Share your thoughts on this phone.


   Samsung Instinct

Canadian Carrier: Bell Mobility

Weight: 136 grams

Measurements: 2.2 inches wide, 0.5 inches thick, 4.6 inches high

Touchscreen: 3.1 inches, 240-by-432 pixels, and 262,000 colours

Features:

  • Cost is fraction of the iPhone's price tag
  • 2 megapixel digital camera
  • FM radio/Sirius satellite radio Voice recorder
  • GPS-capable
  • Bluetooth
  • Video and audio player (Music downloads through Bell's Full Track Music service)
  • Mobile television service with more than 20 channels, exclusive HBO programming

Wireless:

  • CDMA dual-band phone
  • CDMA2000 1xRTT/1xEV-DO rev.0/1xEV-DO rev.A

Talk time: Up to 345 minutes (5.75 hours)

Web Browser: WAP 2.0, XHTML browser

E-mail/messaging:

  • SMS, Text messages
  • Windows Live Messenger, Windows Live Hotmail embedded

Share your thoughts on this phone.


   BlackBerry 9500/"Thunder"

The Research In Motion phone, referred to widely in media reports as the 9500 or "Thunder," has not been officially announced by RIM. No specifications or official photos of the 9500 have been released by the company, but while RIM remains tight-lipped the telecom industry is alive with speculation. The following list is a selection of rumoured Thunder handset features that have been circulating in media and online reports:

Carrier: Rumoured exclusive deals in works with Verizon, Vodafone

Delivery date: Possible September rollout

Screen: Full colour touchscreen (rumour pegs size at 360-by-480 pixels), virtual keyboard

Features:

  • Video player
  • Music player
  • Digital camera (speculation of upt to 5 megapixels)
  • MicroSD card slot for memory expansion
  • Picture/ring ID
  • Voice recorder

Wireless:

  • GSM Phone working in Europe/Asia (900/1800 MHz)
  • UMTS European/Asian 3G (2100 MHz)
  • Possible CDMA dual band model (800/1900 MHz)
  • hybrid CDMA EV-DO Rev. C / GSM HSPA radio
  • GPRS/EDGE/ HSDPA 1.8 Mbit/s/HSDPA 3.6 Mbit/s/HSUPA
Share your thoughts on RIM and smartphones.
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IN DEPTH: Cellphones

Cellphones in Canada
Incredible changes are happening around mobile technology and services, and the cellphone is quickly evolving into the most personal computer.
FAQ: Why Google's Android cellphone software is making waves
Glossary: Guide to Cellphone terminology
From 2G to World Phones, terminology explained
The real cost of high prices
The economic impact of the level of competition between Canadian cellphone carriers. (Nov. 2007)
Confusion the name of the game
Customers are fed up with cellphone companies benefiting from complex rate plans, bewildering service contracts and uninformed customer service agents (Nov. 2007)
Cutting the cord
Will Canadians' love affair with landlines last? (Nov. 2007)
Dialing for dollars
Your cellphone may soon replace your wallet (Nov. 2007)
Making connections
Social networking goes mobile. (Nov. 27)
Wireless society
Making multitasking a way of life. (Nov. 2007)
Wireless in Ghana
A status symbol in a society largely free of gadgets (Nov. 2007)

Health and medical use

Wireless
Research into radio frequency fields (Nov. 2007)
The medical reach of cellphones
(Nov. 2007)
How wireless technology can affect the body
Researchers are exploring possible effects of long-term exposure to the electromagnetic fields they emit. (Nov. 22, 2007)

Unlocking and portability

The pros and cons of unlocked handsets
Unlocked cellphones are simply handsets that aren't handcuffed to a specific carrier's service package. (April 16, 2007)
Picking locks unwires Africa
Will mobile phone adoption pave the way for a wired Africa? (Nov. 2007)
Picking the locks in Canada
The ins, outs and legalities of unlocking cellphones in Canada. (Nov. 20, 2007)

Q&A:

Martin Cooper, the man who invented the portable phone
Steve Mann, the world's first 'cyborg'

Maps:

The price of staying connected
(Nov. 2007)
Cellphone culture, a global glimpse
(Nov. 2007)

Technology & Science Headlines

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Tech buying bounces back in 2009: NPD
Canadians spent $4.66 billion on computer and information technology products in 2009, up one per cent from 2008.
Google Street View expands across Canada
Google has updated its Street View service with increased coverage to more than 150 cities and towns across Canada.
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