2008年10月30日星期四

Changjiang A618 wholesale quadband tv phone china supplier from www.soundasia.com


This tv phone is quadband phone, can work well in everywhere, with the best built-in advanced tv chip, 2.8" QVGA screen, high resolution camera, transform with shake,16 icons to choose, support network video, long standby 2.0 pure dual bluetooth, stereo radio, support GPRS, WAP, MMS, 12 languages, 512MB TF card as gift.

from www.soundasia.com

2008年10月29日星期三

NOKIA 8800 ARTE 1:1 Copy Phone NOKIA 8800 china supplier


Product ID:P088754465
Product Brand:NOKIA

One kind phone always can appear the taste of one person.
Nokia N8800 brings us clear lines, bringht sight, noble appearance. Let the person who like fashion and show enjoy good feeling again.
Golden, classically black, brown is the noble symbel forever.

Ferrari 8600 Clone NOKIA 8600 Ferrari Gold VERTU china suppliers


Product ID:P0872859481
Product Brand:NOKIA
Succesivor of Luna Ferrari 8600 is golden cover by soundasia supplies as a china supplier. More delicate making and design follow the icool8600. Specially, the sign of Ferrari on the cover shows its nobility greatly. The 8600 ferrari supports twelve languages which can cater for the need of many foreign friends. Soundasia welcome all ebay seller and dropshipping.

Halloween


Halloween, or Hallowe’en, is an international holiday celebrated on October 31. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, ghost tours, bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o'-lanterns, reading scary stories and watching horror movies. Irish immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America in the nineteenth century. Other western countries embraced the holiday in the late twentieth century. Halloween is celebrated in several countries of the Western world, most commonly in the United States, Canada, Ireland, Puerto Rico, Japan, New Zealand, United Kingdom and occasionally in parts of Australia. In Sweden the All Saints' official holiday takes place on the first Saturday of November.

History
Halloween has its origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain (Irish pronunciation: [ˈsˠaunʲ]; from the Old Irish samain). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the "Celtic New Year". Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient pagans to take stock of supplies and slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Gaels believed that on October 31, now known as Halloween, the boundary between the alive and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve bonfires, into which bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks were also worn at the festivals in an attempt to mimic the evil spirits or placate them.


History of name
The term Halloween is shortened from All Hallows' Even (both "even" and "eve" are abbreviations of "evening", but "Halloween" gets its "n" from "even") as it is the eve of "All Hallows' Day",[6] which is now also known as All Saints' Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various northern European Pagan traditions,[3] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian feast of All Saints' Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of the Lemures) to November 1. In the ninth century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints' Day is now considered to occur one day after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day. Liturgically, the Church traditionally celebrated that day as the Vigil of All Saints, and, until 1970, a day of fasting as well. Like other vigils, it was celebrated on the previous day if it fell on a Sunday, although secular celebrations of the holiday remained on the 31st. The Vigil was suppressed in 1955, but was later restored in the post-Vatican II calendar.

10 Mid-priced Phones To Suit Your Taste


1.Trustfund Techie



Phone: Motorola Aura ($1,999.99, available Dec. 4), Nokia N79 (From $300 to $999.999 online, available unlocked)

Gift givers with cash to burn and fine tastes will appreciate Motorola's new high-end phone. Inspired by luxury watches, the Aura features a 16 million color circular display that Motorola dubs a "world's first", a sapphire crystal lens and Swiss craftsmanship. While not as dazzling, Nokia's N79 is solidly engineered, and--because no U.S. carrier subsidizes it--nearly as expensive, with some online sites hawking it for $999.99.



2.Work Warrior


Phones: Samsung Epix ($199.99, AT&T), BlackBerry Bold ($299.99, AT&T, available Nov. 4), Motorola Q11 (Price not set, available in December)

BlackBerry addicts will gain several new options this winter, including the 3G Bold and the touchscreen Storm. Those who prefer their e-mail-centric phones BrickBreaker-free can choose from the Samsung Epix or Motorola's newest Q, the Q11.



3.Text-Happy



Phones: Pantech Matrix ($79.99, AT&T), Samsung Rant ($49.99, Sprint)

Teens love to text and recent surveys indicate that parents like to text their teens. A new batch of affordable texting phones should keep everyone in the family in touch affordably. AT&T will have four such phones, from Samsung and Pantech, on sale for less than $100 by the holidays. Sprint has its own version, the $49.99 Rant.


4.Music Maven



Phone: Samsung Highnote ($99.99, Sprint)

The king of music phones is, of course, the iPhone, which essentially has a built-in iPod. But those looking for a cheaper, fresher option may like the Highnote, which sports a large scroll wheel and stereo speakers under its sliding cover.



5.Game Boy



Phones: Nokia N85 (From $260 to $999.99 online, available unlocked), T-Mobile G1 with Google ($179, T-Mobile)

With its easy-to-access App Store, the iPhone is also probably the world's most popular gaming phone. But Google's G1 and Nokia's N85 are vying to swipe that crown. Like the iPhone, the G1 has a touchscreen and built-in accelerometer, which players can use for game play. The N85 is compatible with NGage, Nokia's gaming platform and comes pre-loaded with 10 game demos.


6.Fashion Cop



Phone: LG Lotus ($149.99, Sprint)

Fashionistas will likely snap up the LG Lotus, which resembles a makeup compact and is dressed in rich colors. It's one of several new Sprint phones with software that gives users one-touch access to text messaging, news and weather.


7.Color-ific



Phones: Palm Centro ($79.99, Sprint), BlackBerry Pearl 8110 ($99.99, AT&T)

Palm already offers its Centro in a rainbow of colors. For the holidays, it added two more: olive green and "vibrant rose"--two shades the Pantone Color Institute predicts will be popular through next spring. AT&T has started selling a BlackBerry Pearl in "sandstone pink" with swirling designs on its back cover.


8.Flips



Phones: Moto Krave ZN4 ($149.99, Verizon), BlackBerry Pearl Flip ($149.99, T-Mobile)

For reasons no one quite understands, flip phones are exceeding popular in the U.S. Fans have a few new designs to--heh--"flip" over this season, including Motorola's Krave ZN4 and Research in Motion's BlackBerry Pearl Flip. Like other BlackBerrys, the Pearl Flip is a messaging phone, while the multimedia-packed ZN4 allows users to "touch through" the clear screen to view photos and TV and listen to music.

9.Touchscreen



Phone: BlackBerry Storm (Price not set, Verizon, available later this year), HTC Touch Diamond ($249.99, Sprint)

Previous launches, like the iPhone 3G and Samsung Instinct, have set a high bar for touchscreen phones. New and upcoming releases, such as the BlackBerry Storm and HTC Touch Diamond, offer their own takes on the technology. The Storm's screen "clicks" when depressed. The Touch Diamond's software makes images look three-dimensional.


10.Touch + keyboard



Phone: HTC Touch Pro ($299.99, Sprint, available in late October/early November)

Those looking for a "best of both worlds" combination of a touchscreen and full keyboard can get the G1 or its cousin, the Touch Pro. HTC makes both but the Pro runs on Windows Mobile software instead of Google's Android platform. That means less Googley fun but more seamless access to popular Microsoft applications like Exchange e-mail.

2008年10月27日星期一

The Most Overhyped Gadgets--from www.yahoo.com



Blogs gush about them. PR campaigns blow millions on them. News anchors announce their arrival like they're members of state. And the rest of us suffer when they utterly fail to deliver. They're overhyped tech products, and unfortunately, we've run across quite a few of them through the years. Here are a few of our favorites ... or at least, the ones we most bitterly remember.


Segway Personal Transporter


By the way its inventor Dean Kamen and folks like Steve Jobs (who seems to have a blessing for hyperbole) talked this thing up, you would have believed it was the solution to all the world's problems. And some people did. But instead of defying gravity, producing limitless energy or any of the other things people had dreamed up for "IT," the thing basically moved like an electric wheelchair. But standing up. Guess we'll have to wait a few years for Kamen's fusion reactor.


Palm Foleo





Before the Asus Eee hit the states and shook up the market for ultra-portable, low-cost PCs, Palm was building up the same concept with its Foleo PC. In theory, it had a number of concrete features that push it to the front of the pack, including zero boot time, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and a full QWERTY keyboard. We say in theory, because the Foleo went off radar during the summer it was supposed to debut, then finally slipped beneath the waves for good when Palm formally announced its death in September. Thanks for getting our hopes up.


Apple iPhone




Don't get us wrong, it's not a bad product, but the hype that preceded the iPhone's release set the bar impossibly high for the poor thing. Forget about shepherds turning up at a manger, the iPhone had hip Apple fans all over the country camping out for days to get their hands on one. Despite a relatively smooth launch, the original iPhone still had a number of huge disappointments waiting in store for the less-than-faithful who weren't willing to overlook them, like pitifully slow EDGE Internet that rendered the slick browser less than useful, and a clunky abomination of a keyboard that irks us to this day.


One Laptop Per Child XO-1 (OLPC)




It pains us to mention such a well-intentioned project alongside so many products built to empty wallets, but there's no question that the XO-1 has failed to live up to its pre-launch hype. Not only did the original $100 price tag fly out the window well before the machines ever reached reality, they were also off-schedule and failed to really catch hold in many third world countries. Even the concept of putting computers into the hands of children seemed to fall apart at the seams when it turned out kids were using the first OLPC batches to look at inappropriate sites. We'll give Nicholas Negroponte's vision some credit when Ethiopia becomes the next Silicon Valley.


Optimus Maximus Keyboard




Hopefully this monstrosity taught bloggers not to get quite so excited about press photos and mock-ups. Yes, it looked like just about the coolest, most versatile peripheral ever invented when news of it first spread, but as we discovered when we tested it out, the thing is barely usable in real life. The only keyboard we can really think of that's any worse would be the aforementioned iPhone keyboard. There's also the price, which makes us cringe when we think about the poor art students who scrimped and saved for one only to pull it out the box and realize they had accidentally ordered a worthless novelty.


Microsoft Zune




Here's one that really proves that PR alone cannot put a shine on a dud of a product. Microsoft did its damndest to convince every last corner of the Web that it was out to slay the iPod with its vastly superior Wi-Fi-enabled Zune back in 2006, and many outlets accordingly made the Zune out to be a legitimate threat. But when it launched, techies everywhere quickly figured out it was nothing special - just another MP3 player with a big name on the box. We got excited when they hit bargain bins.


PlayStation 3



If the more recent cloud of negativity surrounding the PS3 has erased your memory of the hype surrounding its launch, let us remind you: Some of these things sold for over $2,000 on eBay in the days after they went on sale. A man was shot trying to secure one. It was the ultimate gaming machine, the console to destroy all consoles, the status symbol of November 2006. And it totally flopped. After most gamers discovered that being able to see individual blood droplets from an alien's brain or the glistening sweat on a football player's neck didn't make the games any more fun, the $600 price of admission just didn't seem worth it anymore. Nearly two years later, it's starting to gain some ground, but we're guessing the guys that originally shelled out thousands of them to impress their friends still feel like tools.


Amazon Kindle



Considering that the Kindle was far from the first e-reader on the block, it's totally amazing to us that it gathered the momentum it did thanks the measly inclusion of a wireless data connection for buying books remotely. At $359, the Kindle is still a pricy gadget for buying books that aren't all that much cheaper than their paperback equivalents. You know how many books $359 can get you at a garage sale? At least 359, which is more than we're guessing you'll ever get through on the Kindle. And when you're done, can you hollow out the Kindle with an Xacto knife to hide things inside? That's what we thought.



Apple MacBook Air



Apple's MacBook Air just barely edged out competing notebooks in its quest for thin, and as CNet found out, actually loses its title as "world's thinnest" to a notebook from 1997. Even still, the Apple propaganda machine managed to make this reinvention of the wheel out to be the Earth-shattering king of ultraportables, with signature Apple marketing smugness to match. It's a small notebook, folks. We'll be amazed when it fits into the same envelope your credit card bills come in. (Watch our MacBook Air Review.)

Vertu V9 from www.soundasia.com

2008年10月24日星期五

Who is SoundAsia?

SoundAsia--- China New Technology Explorer!
We are: China new Product reporter, China wholesaler, China mobile phone distributor, China mobile phone reseller, China mobile phone manufacturers, China mobile phone wholesale,China mobile wholesale China wholesale cell phones, China phone distributor, China unlocked wholesale,Shenzhen mobile phone wholesaler:
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Firm name: SounAsia
We are a professional Mobile Phone supplier in China. We provide a lots of phones: dual sim phone, tv phones, iphone copy, triband phone, triband watch phones, dual sim tv phone. etc.China CECT JINPeng Brand from CECT factory or manufacturers who cooeprate with CECT and use CECT Brand China mobile Phone cell phone and triband quadband golden phone tv phone watch mobile phones

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Queues for Google's first phone

Queues for Google's first phone

US gadget fans have been queueing for hours to get their hands on the new Google G1 mobile phone.
Like its main market rival, Apple's web-enabled iPhone, the handset is controlled by a touch-screen system.
But unlike Apple's latest offering, the G1 also boasts a qwerty keyboard and a 3.2 megapixel camera as well as an internet browser and music player.
Eric Holland, the manager at T-Mobile's shop in Times Square, New York, said: "You know, when you hold it in your hand, it feels really great in your hand, it feels great when you're talking into it.
"It's also just a great little slide phone with a keyboard hidden underneath.
"I think really the cell phone industry is transitioning away from form and more into function and this phone has a whole lot of function. It does pretty much everything you want it to do, other than, you know, cook you dinner."
The G1 is on sale in the US for $179.99 with a two-year plan from T-Mobile.

© Independent Television News Limited 2008. All rights reserved.

2008年10月23日星期四

Prisons search yields 13 more cell phones

Prisons search yields 13 more cell phones
Original inmate who had smuggled device transferred to psychiatric unit
By LISA SANDBERG Copyright 2008 Houston Chronicle Austin Bureau

AUSTIN — The death row inmate who ignited a growing scandal on prison contraband after he was caught talking on a smuggled cell phone was transferred Wednesday to a prison psychiatric unit after guards discovered a 3-foot strip of sheet tied to a fixture in his cell.
Richard Tabler was restrained and taken in for evaluation after guards also noticed red marks on his neck. No serious injuries were noted. Tabler was later transferred to Jester IV in Richmond from the Livingston prison.
"We don't know if he was going to make a noose. It's a precaution," prison spokesman Jason Clark said of Tabler, 29.
Tabler's threatening calls from a smuggled cell phone to state Sen. John Whitmire, D-Houston, and a reporter prompted the governor this week to order a systemwide lockdown so guards could sweep all 112 prisons for contraband.
The massive search through Texas prisons has turned up 13 more smuggled cell phones and 12 more cell phone chargers in the past 24 hours, including another phone and charger found on death row, Clark said.
The cell phone and charger discovered on death row were found above the ceiling in the men's shower area. That brings the number of cell phones found since Monday on Texas' death row to four. Another 19 cell phones or cell phone parts have been discovered on death row since January.
The prison system remains locked down, with inmates assigned to their cells as correctional officers sweep all prison units for contraband, a process that could take three weeks.
So far, no employees have been arrested in connection with any of the smuggled cell phones found this week.
But felony charges were filed Wednesday against Tabler's 36-year-old sister, Kristina Martinez, of Salado, in connection with carrying a prohibited item into a correctional facility.
John Moriarty, the prison system's inspector general, said Martinez and her mother, Lorraine Tabler, are suspected of paying the minutes on the cell phone Tabler used and apparently lent his prison buddies to make nearly 2,800 calls over the past month.
Lorraine Tabler is similarly charged. Neither woman could be reached for comment.
On Tuesday, an angry Sen. Whitmire called on prison officials to take steps to combat the apparently ubiquitous presence of cell phones, including jamming cell phone frequencies and patting down guards.
Top prison officials countered they weren't sure if such measures were entirely legal. Clark said Wednesday that prison officials were coordinating with federal authorities in an effort to find a way around an obscure Federal Communications Act rule from the 1930s that prohibits states from interfering with federal airways.
Clark said that the FCC gives federal agencies the authority to use jammers but not states or local law enforcement.
Clark said the prison is using patdown searches only in cases where there's suspicion of criminal activity. He added that the prison system was now prohibiting correctional staff from bringing food into units.

About SoundAsia

About SoundAsia

SoundAsia was founded in 2005, and owns two companies in HongKong and China. SoundAsia has become one of leading China suppliers for China mobile phones and other electronic products.

We buy directly from China factory and manufacturers with special lowest discounted price, and sell to the worldwide distributors, importers, dropshippers. Everything we buy and sell is made in China and you can buy these products directly from China supplier with a wide range selection and China factory wholesale price.

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