Faster Wi-Fi standard gets draft approval

A faster Wi-Fi standard appears to be about a year away, after a task group unanimously approved a proposal for an update to the 802.11g standard.

Latest Rumors on Apple's Smartphone Plans

A trademark filing made by Apple, Inc. has set off another round of speculation that it plans to put out a mobile phone bearing its own brand. After the company trademarked the term "Mobile Me," some were quick to point out that the filing included possible uses that would allow it to cover a phone with digital music capabilities.

Digital Television: Making Sense of it All

Engadget has two great articles (Part I & Part II) on Digital Television (mobile and normal). However, if all these new standards and acronyms were not enough, Sprint is trying to push one more on us.

REVIEWS: Anycom's Bluetooth headset and USB adapter

ANYCOM sent us in two of their newest Bluetooth products for a review: the "Headset HS-890" and the "Adapter USB-200". Read more for a complete introduction of the gadgets.

Headset HS-890

This headset is the third generation of Anycom's bluetooth phone headsets. It comes in three colors: black, white and pink-ish. The retail box comes either with a car charger, lanyard, USB cable or just an AC adapter, our version came only with the latter. The headset has a very elegant design and it looks very modern. I was surprised to see that it had a perfect fit on both my ear(s), something that was not so for the other similar products I have tried in the past. In addition to the perfect fit, the headset proved very light and comfortable, after a few minutes I had completely forgotten I was wearing it!

The ANYCOM Blue Headset HS-890 supports both the Headset and the Handsfree profiles and it worked without any problems with both the phones I tried it with. Incoming sound was crystal clear while the sound I was transmitting from my side was equally good due to the intergrated noise cancellation feature coming from its DSP chip. The range was not too bad either, I was able to move around the room up to 6 meters away from the phone before it started breaking up. The device has 3 buttons: volume up/down while the Power On/Off button also does call answered/end, redial and mute. For some special phones there is also support for auto-answering, Voice Dialing and Last-Number-Redial. It's very easy to locate the correct buttons while wearing the device.

Overall, this is a great headset, maybe one of the best on the market. However, battery life could have been better. Just 5 hours of talk time and 140 hours of stand-by is a bit too low.

Rating: 9/10

Blue USB Adapter USB-200 (2.0)

You might ask why review a Bluetooth USB adapter as there are so many of these out there. Well, this one is special. Not only is a Bluetooth 2.0 version, but it also supports the Enhanced Data Rate (EDR) which allows for file transfering between Bluetooth devices at hundrends of kilobytes per second. Secondly, this adapter comes with the latest Broadcom software which has a lot of useful profiles in it: GAP, SDP, SPP, DUN, LAP, FAX, ObexFT, ObjectPush, HCRP, PAN, Headset, Sync, HID, Audio Gateway, BIP, BIP Camera, A2DP, AVRCP.

The only profiles missing are pretty much just VDP and BPP, but realistically only the BPP profile would have been useful at this time because there are no devices that support VDP yet. The BPP profile allows you to print to a printer via Bluetooth without the need of special drivers (the included HCRP printing profile requires special drivers for each printer).

Installation was very fast and went without an incident. In fact, no reboot was even needed. I tested the adapter with two A2DP/AVRCP headphones and worked perfectly, while sending files from and to my mobile phone also worked well. ActiveSync my PDA through Bluetooth also worked. Walking around the building never disrupted the connection and it seems that the 60-meter (200ft) range is for real.

Overall, this is a great little gadget. In any case, don't even think staying put with your existing Bluetooth 1.1 or 1.2 usb adapters! Speed, range, power consumption and profile support will obsolete them soon enough. If you need more range get the USB-250 model from Anycom (120 meters, 400ft), or if 200ft is enough for you, get the reviewed USB-200 one.

Rating: 9/10

Opera 8.5 Beta for Windows Mobile Pocket PC 2003/SE/5

Opera 8.5 Pocket PC beta version is based on the same core as the Opera 8.5 desktop browser and brings the full internet to mobile Pocket PCs. The version is available for both WM 2003 and WM 5.0.

Sony Ericsson k800i is the Wilma?

Looks like SE-World already landed some pics of what's supposedly the "k800i," or what we saw earlier today as the "Wilma." Not that we have any additional information, but you know we'll keep you posted.

BenQ-Siemens EF81, S68, S88 handset trio unveiled

A trio of fully featured handsets debut as BenQ-Siemens unveils its new brand; the EF81, S68 and S88 boast among other traits 2 Megapixel cameras, 3G and audio playback.

Pocket Loox T8xx Info Leaked

Looks like the LOOX T800 series (including the T810 and T830) will be shipping in July. Both have UMTS, 802.11g, Bluetooth 2.0, 128MB flash memory, 64MB RAM, Windows Mobile 5.0 AKU2, GPS; the only difference is that the T830 has a 2 MP camera and a VGA video camera, while the T810 has none. Only things missing are an FM radio, DVB-H TV viewing, UPnP, USB-host and a higher resolution/bigger screen.

Motorola to buy Linux set-top box specialist

Motorola plans to acquire Kreatel Communications, a Swedish developer of television set-top boxes that use Linux and Internet Protocol-based services, the company said Tuesday.

Trolltech Expands Qtopia Embedded Technology Products with Qtopia Core

Trolltech today launched Qtopia Core, a development platform for single-application products built on embedded Linux. Qtopia Core brings the benefits of Trolltech's proven software for the desktop to developers of a broad range of equipment, such as automotive automation, medical devices, point-of-sale, office equipment and image processing machines.

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