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Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Mobile number portability (MNP) Service In India


 Few things which you must know about MNP:
  • You can switch to CDMA to GSM with MNP services.
  • MNP for broadband is not available right now.
  • Telecom Operators which are providing MNP services Aircel, BSNL, Airtel, BPL Mobile, Idea Cellular, MTNL, Reliance Telecom LTD, Spice, Virgin, Vodafone, Tata Teleservices.
  • The Maximum charge of transfer is RS. 19 and it is to be paid to new operator.
  • When you are switching from one operator to another, the process generally takes 2 hours so your cell phone will be dead for 2 hours and the process takes place between 10 PM to 5 AM.
  • If you switch to another operator then you can switch to next operator after 90 days.
  • You need to clear all your dues for your bills from old operator if you want to switch to new one.
 How to change the telecom operator via MNP services:
  • You need to send SMS to 1900, PORT < Your Mobile Number >
  • You will get an SMS with unique porting code. You need to provide this number to the new operator with a specific time because the code has a expiry time.
  • The new operator will check out with existing operator and if existing operator gives you the permission then the process of switching will start.
  • Now new operator will claim the number and you can enjoy using the new service provider.
  • The process seems to be simple but then also its better that you must get all the reviews about new telecom operator before switching otherwise you again need to wait for 90 days to switch the operator next time.

HTC to enter Tablet Arena with HTC Flyer


HTC is all set to step into the Tablet Arena and show off with a trio of tablets that they’re supposed to launch by mid 2011. The first one of the trio is called as the HTC Flyer, which according to sources will hit stores in March 2011. The tablet will most probably be revealed at the MWC next month, but unfortunately the specifications of this new tablet has already been leaked before the event.  The Flyer is not a very high-end tablet so don’t expect it be running on the new Nvidia Tegra 2 processors and have 120GB of storage. Flyer will most probably feature Android 2.3 with a tweaked Sense UI

  


specification list
  • A 7-inch display with a resolution of 1024 x 600
  • The Qualcomm MSM8255 1GHz Snapdragon processor same as the one used in HTC Desire HD
  • Android Gingerbread 2.3, upgradable to Honeycomb 3.0 when it is released
  • 5 megapixel rear camera with face recognition and LED flash and a front 1.3 megapixel camera for Skype Video Calling
  • HDMI port with DLNA technology for easy and fast streaming of videos and music
  • HSPA enabled, download speeds of up to 14.4Mbps and uploads of 5.76Mbps
  • Probably a new version of the HTC Sense UI Interface

Sunday, January 23, 2011

sleek Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-TX100V


Sony in March will begin shipping a bunch of new Cyber-Shot digital camera, all quality but the camera in this post is the most special. Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-TX100V is the name of the incoming special digital camera. Now the TX100V looks great –Sony has outfitted the camera with their cool sliding front-panel design– but it’s looks aren’t what make it special, it’s the features.

The TX100V boosts a 16.2 MP Exmor R CMOS image sensor (back side illuminated sensor), 4x optical zoom wide-angle lens, a large 3.5-inch OLED touchscreen rear-display, Full HD 1080p and 1080i video capture, Stereo microphone, on-camera HDMI output, SDXC memory card support, 2D and 3D Sweep Panorama shooting. To simplify all of that, this camera has everything you could put into a point-and-shoot camera of this size, the TX100V measures 17.8mm thin and weights just 147g.

Sony will be launching the Cyber-Shot DSC-TX100V in three color options Black, Red and Silver.

Samsung ST6500 digital camera



Samsung intends to break new ground with their ST6500 digital camera, where it will sport a design which is not only pleasing to the eyes, but ergonomic to hold as well. Sure, you won’t be able to get carpal tunnel syndrome from using a digital camera, but anything that fits into the palm of your hand in an easier fashion or manner is definitely worth looking at, don’t you think so?
The ST6500 takes an unconventional approach as it has an angled design, where the camera’s body is curved around the lens and angled at 7 degrees to make for a more ergonomic fit in the hand. This is certainly innovative thinking, taking a good step away from the conventionally designed models that currently flood the market. In essence, the overall design helps ensure that creative images are perfectly captured, and you are guaranteed to make a style statement at any social event whenever you pull this puppy out from your bag.
Samsung also makes sure that you aren’t left behind in the megapixel race, with the ST6500 sporting a high-quality 16-megapixel sensor which is touted to guarantee crisp and clear images. Of course, megapixels aren’t everything as consumers have found out, so the ability to capture images under difficult and challenging conditions are also important.
Ever tried to shoot photos in low light conditions? You’ll know what we’re talking about, so hopefully the Samsung ST6500 is capable of doing so without too much noise. Other hardware specifications include a powerful 5x zoom lens, a new Smart Touch 3.0 User Interface, a 3.0” multi-purpose LCD touchscreen display, intelligent Smart Auto feature, HD video recording, Magic Frame capability, and advanced Smart Filter 2.0 among others.
You won’t be able to get it anytime soon though, as the Samsung ST6500 will only hit the markets this coming March.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Motorola’s Atrix 4G


Not to get all gushy or anything, but I think one of Harry’s best opinion columns was the one from March 2009 about how smartphones are destined to replace the PC, and how the comforts of full-sized computing — keyboard, mouse, monitor — will become dumb shells for our powerful handsets.

Motorola’s Atrix 4G is an indication that he’s right. The phone itself marks a technological leap, as one of several new Android handsets with dual-core processors, but the real revolution is an optional dock that acts like a laptop when the phone is plugged in. There’s also a separate HD dock for televisions and external monitors, with USB ports for full-sized keyboards and mouses. Ladies and gentlemen: your dumb shells.

When the smartphone is docked, it launches desktop software on the 11.6-inch laptop screen, with a full version of Mozilla’s Firefox browser and Adobe Flash 10.1. If you believe Google’s claim that we spend 90 percent of our computing time in the web browser, the Atrix dock is pretty close to being a complete laptop, and it can use Citrix’s virtualization services to access PC apps through the Internet. The dock software can also access the Android OS, so you can run apps in full screen.

The HD dock feeds 720p video to TVs or external monitors, and while it can access the laptop dock’s software and Web browser, it also has its own multimedia interface for quickly launching movies, music and photos.

Motorola’s Atrix is a potentially harmful development for wireless carriers, because while they’re trying to push more data plans on their users for laptops and tablets, the Atrix is the start of consolidation back to a single device. Why get a 3G netbook if your smartphone’s dumb shell performs almost all the same tasks?

And yet, AT&T will carry the Atrix when it launches this quarter. If AT&T doesn’t muck up the data pricing or charge a fortune for the docks, we might just get a little taste of the future in the next few months.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Micromax Andro A60


The new Micromax Andro A60 is the first Android mobile phone from Micromax . It is a full 2.8-inch touchscreen display mobile phone running the older version , Android v2.1 , of the Android OS . Android is one of the fastest growing mobile OS in the world , thanks to its open source nature and Google tag . The Android OS is made by Google and now distributed as an open source in which mobile vendors can customize it according to their needs . The new Micromax A60 supports high speed 3G connectivity and Wireless LAN WiFi support .The Android OS version is not upgradeable to the latest Android v2.2 for this mobile .

Micromax A60 price :

The new Micromax A60 price is Rs.6,600

Micromax A60 mobile phone key features :

    * Android 2.1 Eclair
    * Full Touch Screen
    * 3.2 mega-pixel Auto Focus Camera
    * Voice Assisted GPS Navigation
    * Android Market
    * Wi-Fi
    * Accelerator Sensor
    * High speed 3G connectivity

Micromax A60 mobile phone specifications :

    * Operating System : Android v2.1 OS
    * 600MHz CPU
    * Band : GSM 900&1800MHz – WCDMA 900/2100MHz
    * Weight : 105gms
    * Dimensions : 106.8×59.2x14mm
    * Large 2.8-inch touchscreen display , 320×240 pixel resolution
    * Gravity Sensors
    * Digital compass
    * 3G HSDPA/HSUPA
    * WiFi
    * Bluetooth
    * miniUSB
    * 150MB Internal memory
    * Expandable memory up to 32GB
    * FM Radio
    * Music Player
    * Video Player and recorder
    * Google services – GMail,Google Maps,Google Search
    * GPS
    * 3.5mm headphone jack
    * Battery Type : 1280 mAh Li-ion Battery
          o Talk Time : Up to 4 hours
          o Standby Time : Up to 10 days

Accessories :

    * Transreceiver
    * Standard Charger
    * Standard Battery
    * Handsfree Kit
    * Data Cable
    * User Guide
    * Service Guide
    * Warranty Card

Samsung's New Galaxy series

Here are two leaked pictures of the Samsung Galaxy Ace S5830 and Galaxy Suit S5670.
Samsung Galaxy Ace


The Galaxy Ace features a HVGA (480 x 320 pixels) touchscreen display, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 3.0 and a 5MP camera

Samsung Galaxy Suit S5670
 While the Galaxy Suit S5670 is a mid-end Android handset. Both the Samsung Galaxy Ace and the Galaxy Suit should be officially unveiled by Samsung at MWC 2011 next month

Evolve

The Maestro is another upcoming triple-boot tablet from Evolve III. Due to be out in Q2, 2011, the device is packed with a 10.1-inch touchscreen display, an Intel Atom N475 processor, a 2GB RAM, a 32GB SSD, a microSD card slot, a 1.3-megapixel webcam, 3G, WiFi, a G-Sensor, built-in speakers and can handle Windows 7, Google Android and MeeGo Linux operating systems.


Thursday, January 13, 2011

Universal charger for Mobiles



Last week European Commission (EU) standardized the Mobile phone charger to be common from all the major brands. Down the line this is spreading to the mobile world. All Major brands  including Nokia, Apple, LG, Motorola, NEC, Qualcomm, Research in Motion (RIM), Samsung, SonyEricsson, TCT Mobile (ALCATEL mobile phones), Emblaze Mobile, Huawei, Texas Instruments and Atmel signed an MOU in June 2009. Now they would like to implement the same as initiated by EU.

EU says the common charger will make life easier for consumers, reduce waste and benefit businesses. It is a true win-win situation. The new chargers will use the micro-USB connector. However, many smartphones and mobile phones from Nokia, Samsung, and LG etc released in the recent times were capable of charging with their own charge pin and through the USB port as-well. Nokia clarified that "Nokia’s standard 2mm charger will continue to be supported, so standard Nokia chargers will still be useable as well." Anticipating the same with all the other major brands.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Motorola Xoom tablet

The legions of CES tablet wannabes can give up now: Motorola just killed it with their much-rumored Xoom tablet, an iPad-sized black slab whose beauty is within, in its Android 3.0 Honeycomb OS. Designed by Google from the ground-up with touchscreen tablets in mind, it's the first software experience that looks like it can go toe-to-toe with Apple's iOS.








There weren't any fully working models for us to play with here at Motorola's press event, but several hardware-final tablets were on hand playing demo videos of Honeycomb's interface and features

Specs wise, the Xoom sports a 10.1-inch 1280x800 screen, Verizon 3G onboard (which is actually upgradeable to 4G LTE later in the year), 1080p HD video playback and streaming, front and rear cameras for videochatting, and an SD card slot for additional storage.

Razer Switchblade Gaming Netbook


From the annals of goofy might-or-might-not-happen CES concepts comes the Razer Switchblade, a 7-inch gaming netbook from venerable gaming accessory maker Razer. A 7-inch screen is a distinctly small size for a Windows 7 computer, and for gaming it seems particularly problematic. Razer has an interesting way of dealing with the problem of an undersized keyboard: Pop OLED screens under every single one, so you can totally change the configuration of the keyboard at will.

The Switchblade is sort of a conceptual combination of the Toshiba Libretto (with its dual 7-inch screens) and the Optimus Prime keyboard (the first keyboard to push the individual-OLED idea). The Switchblade's keyboard is of standard size for 7-inch netbooks, which means fairly small keys (and not a whole lot of them). To compensate, Razer used keys that are actually tiny OLED screens, which means you can put any image you want on them.

The possibilities for gaming are pretty obvious: You can map any shortcut to any key, and give it a nice logo to keep track. You can cut the keys you don't use, or change the configuration so it's easier to use on such a small keyboard.

 It's such a cool idea that we hope it gets picked up like  say, an Alienware gaming laptop.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Microsoft's Kinect camera based controller for the Xbox 360

Xbox 360 4GB Console with Kinect
Microsoft's Kinect camera based controller for the Xbox 360 has surpassed all its sales estimates. We had carried a report earlier about 2.5 million Kinects flying off the shelves within a month of its launch. But it's not just the sales, even the modding community and other entities are interested in developing content for the motion controller. Microsoft had upped its sales estimates to 5 million units after the first sales reports, but the Kinect has surpassed even those lofty expectations by pushing 8 million units in just two months.

Microsoft CEO, Steve Ballmer dedicated much of his Consumer Electronics Show (CES) keynote presentation time advertising the reach and appeal of the Xbox 360 console and ancillaries like Live online community and Kinect. Kinects 8 million sales are especially impressive in this time frame considering there are about 50 million Xbox consoles worldwide.

Speaking on the online appeal of the Xbox Live Ballmer informed, "A new member joins Xbox Live every two seconds." Microsoft's keynote speech gives a clear indication that gaming will be a core area of interest for Microsoft this year. This is no surprise when you note the enormous success the Xbox 360, Kinect and Xbox Live have managed to achieve.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Pigs Run For You Life Angry Birds are Here on Netbook & notebook

Pigs Run For You Life Angry Birds are Here on Netbook & notebook

After charming mobile gamers with its crazy concept and sharp physics engine, Angry Birds is flying over to Intel’s AppUp app store, which offers software downloads for devices running on Intel’s chips.
Angry Birds

The AppUp store launched in at the Intel Developer’s Forum in September. It took off pretty quickly and had around 450,000 users and 23,000 program members when it launched. But it has, for the most part, sat in the shadows of Apple’s App Store for iPhones, iPod Touches and iPads, and the Android Market for devices running Google’s mobile operating system.

Now it has one of the most popular mobile games of 2010. In Angry Birds, players take control of a batch of birds and fling them with a slingshot across the screen to blow up pigs and their fortresses. The gameplay is pretty simple and quite addictive. So much so that the game broke all of the records on the Apple App Store in its first 10 months after release, selling more than 6.5 million copies.
Rovio Angry Birds 8" Original Red Bird Stuffed Animal Plush Toy
Angry Birds made its way over to other smartphones and the iPad, where it also saw a rather absurd amount of success — forcing independent app marketplace GetJar to shut down temporarily due to demand for the Android version. More than 77 percent of Angry Birds players update the game as new levels become available. New updates with new levels come out every three or four weeks.

The game is supposed to run on any computer using an Intel chip — including netbooks and typical notebook computers. It expands to support the resolution of each device, and can be streamed out to an HD television at 1080p, according to Intel.

Either way, this should give Intel’s app store a little bit of a boost. The AppUp store has a good number of developers, and Intel also offers some incentives for developing top-of-the-line apps. But porting insanely popular applications over to a new app distribution channel isn’t necessarily the secret to success. Winning the App Store game isn’t necessarily a numbers game — it’s about having access to good applications and some great exclusives.

Notebook at Netbook Price: HP Pavilion dm1

The netbook is all but dead. Instead, we now have the ultraportable notebook. HP’s new Pavilion dm1 takes some cues from the latest MacBook Air, squeezing almost-notebook performance into an almost-netbook sized body.

The 3.2-pound dm1 has one of AMD’s brand new Fusion APUs (Accelerated Processing Units), a system-on-a-chip which combines multicore CPU, video-”card” and dedicated hardware hi-def video decoding into a single chip of silicon. This lets the 1.6GHz machine play movies without braking a sweat, something that most Intel Atom-powered netbooks have difficulty doing. But like the Atom, the Fusion processor consumes very little power. In fact, HP claims a battery life of 9.5 hours with a hard drive, and 10.75 hours with the optional solid-state hard drive.

The screen measures 11.6 inches and packs in 1366 x 768 pixels, and the body holds three USB ports, VGA, a card-reader, HDMI-out and Altec Lansing speakers with Dolby Advanced Audio. Finally, the dm1 has “CoolSense”, which is what HP calls its adaptive cooling tech. This detects when the notebook is mobile using accelerometers, and adjusts the interior air-flow to keep the base of the machine cool and lap-friendly.

The dm1 does inherit one thing from netbooks: looks. The chunky, plastic wedge shape is more MSI Wind than MacBook Air. The dm1 will begin at $450

Dual-Core Mobile Devices: Motorola Olympus, LG Optimus 2x

Motorola in 2009 took aim at the iPhone in its ad campaign for the Droid smartphone. Motorola emphasized what “Droid does” to call out what the iPhone couldn’t do (video below) — a message that resonated with many consumers.
At CES 2011, Motorola and other handset makers are expected to flex a key muscle: dual-core processor



“Dual-core is going to be the key marketing,” said Tero Kuittinen, a telecom analyst at MKM Partners. “Why buy a single-core phone?”
Details already seem to be leaking about Motorola’s plans. Rumor has it that Motorola will unveil a smartphone codenamed Olympus, which may include a dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2 processor, an 8-megapixel camera, an HDMI port and a front-facing camera.



Similarly, LG has already announced the Optimus 2x , also a Tegra 2-powered smartphone, which is launching first in Korea. At CES, we might hear big news about a similar LG device for U.S. customers as well.

Less visible will be the under-the-hood battle between Nvidia and Intel for dual-core mobile-processor supremacy. Nvidia has positioned itself well for big gains in 2011, having reportedly racked up orders from Android-focused outfits like Samsung, Motorola and LG for its Tegra 2 chipset. (Nvidia’s Michael Rayfield prefers to dabble in jargon like “superphone” rather than “tablet,” but his point of reference is clear.)

Intel, as you might expect, hasn’t raised anything resembling a white flag, since it’s expecting approximately 35 new Atom-based tablets in the coming year from such companies as Lenovo, Dell and Toshiba. Especially intriguing is the chipmaker’s Oak Trail line, which could make huge inroads when Microsoft decides to debut a truly native, tablet-optimized OS.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Android catching on iPhone

While the iPhone is still the most popular smartphone operating system in the United States, Android is hot on its trail and closing in fast.


According to the latest data from Nielsen, the iPhone OS has captured 28.6% of the U.S. smartphone market share, followed closely by Research in Motion's BlackBerry OS (26.1%) and Google's Android (25.8%).


While Apple's market share over the past six months has remained steady in the 27% to 28% range, the market shares of BlackBerry OS and
Android have been going in opposite directions. RIM was still the dominant mobile operating system just this past June, as it accounted
for nearly one third of all U.S. smartphones at the time. Android, meanwhile, accounted for a mere 15% of U.S. smartphones in June 2010 before seeing its market share nearly double over the span of five months.


Android also has a lot of the momentum heading into 2011. According to Nielsen, 40.8% of customers who reported buying a new
smartphone over the past six months purchased Android-based phonesGoogle Nexus S Cell Phone Black Factory Unlocked. iPhones accounted for 26.9% of new devices purchased over
the past six months while BlackBerry devices accounted for 19.2% of new devices purchased over the last six months.


Nielsen also says that the share of smartphones in the overall mobile phone market has continued to grow steadily over the
past year, since smartphones accounted for 24% of all mobile phones in use in June 2010 vs. 31% of all mobile phones in use
in November 2010. Among users who had purchased new phones within the last six months, smartphones accounted for 34% of new
devices in June 2010 vs. 45% of new devices in November 2010.


Since last January, Android has doubled its total market share in the mobile operating system market, and devices based on
Android accounted for 44% of smartphones purchased in the third quarter of 2010, according to research firm ChangeWave. Research
firm Gartner has projected that by the end of the year sales of Android devices will exceed those based on the BlackBerry
OS and the iPhone OS, meaning that Android will trail only Symbian as the world's most-used mobile operating system.


Ever since its debut in the fall of 2007, Android has appeared on numerous popular smartphones for several carriers including
Verizon's Motorola Droid and Sprint's HTC Evo 4G. Next year Google plans on releasing a new version of the Android OS that
is catered specifically to tablet computers.

New Games for iPhone

The technology behind hit videogames such as “Batman: Arkham Asylum” and “Gears of War 3″ is coming to iPhone and iPad game developers this week, in another sign that mobile gaming is booming on Apple’s platforms.

Epic Games is planning to release an updated version of its game-development tools, known as the Unreal Development Kit, to the public Thursday. The kit, which is free to download, will include new tools to create high-quality graphics and animations on iOS, effectively simplifying and speeding up the development processes for games. Epic doesn’t charge license fees to tinker with the kit nor to make free games. But, if developers want to sell their apps, they have to pay a $99 licensing fee and 25% royalties after the first $5,000 in sales.
“Apple’s App Store is the most vibrant market for mobile gaming,” said Epic co-founder Mark Rein. “If you’re going to make a game for a mobile device, and you want to make the most money, you’re nuts not to make it for iOS.”
Over the past few years, Apple has added technologies to improve the visual capabilities of the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch. It also has marketed games heavily in both advertising campaigns and in its stores. The Cupertino, Calif.-based electronics maker also hired prominent videogame maker Graeme Devine last year to help manage relationships with top game makers, such as Epic. Devine recently left Apple to create his own games for the company’s mobile devices.
Apple has sold more than 125 million devices using its iOS operating system, strongly competing against the Nintendo DS, which has shipped roughly 135 million units, and the PlayStation Portable, which has sold more than 62 million units.
The results of building on the Apple platform have been good so far for Epic, too.
The company recently released “Infinity Blade,” a fighting game that Mr. Rein said could help usher more games with high-end graphics to iOS. Industry pundits have already pegged Infinity Blade’s sales at more than $1.5 million in its first four days on the market. Apple’s Game Center social network lists more than 300,000 users playing the game at $5.99 a pop.

The best mobile devices for business and personal use

Editor’s Note: The following article is reprinted from InfoWorld.com.

I'm confident that 2010 will go down as the year that personal and professional computing officially merged, as the iPhone finally knocked down the wall that had kept the two separate. Sure, working at home on personal computers had already put holes in the structure, but it was the iPhone that took the barrier out completely.
What is the best mobile device for the new, integrated world? There are many, many options available from Apple, Research in Motion, and Hewlett-Packard's Palm division, as well as Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 and Google's Android hardware partners.

Best touchscreen smartphone: Apple iPhone 4

InfoWorld has tested the iPhone against every business-capable competitor, and no one has come close. The iPhone excels at apps of all sorts, as well as Web surfing, email and other messaging, and media presentation (music, movies, TV, books, and so on). With iOS 4, it offers business-class security and management capabilities, breaking the BlackBerry's stranglehold in this arena. Only the defunct Windows Mobile joins iOS and BlackBerry OS as business-class.

The iPhone's use of iTunes, though disliked by IT, also ensures an easily accessible backup of all apps, media, and even document files. These backups can even be encrypted to comply with government regulations on managing personal information.


The iPhone 4 is not perfect. Its weakest aspect is its phone; users regularly complain of dropped calls and poor audio. It's also tied in the United States to the worst network (AT&T's). Both weaknesses ultimately need to change, and they're barriers for many people to buying an iPhone, as is the lack of a model with a physical keyboard. But no other device comes close to the iPhone 4 when it comes to its ability to serve as a pocket computer—the "smart" in "smartphone."


Runner up: If the AT&T tie-in or phone-quality issues prevent you from going for an iPhone 4, our recommended touch-only runner-up is the HTC Droid Incredible. Note that the device runs Android OS 2.2, which means the Incredible less secure than the iPhone, and it may not be allowed onto many corporate networks—or at least not without a third-party software solution such as NitroDesk TouchDown or Good for Enterprise.


Best keyboard smartphone: RIM BlackBerry Torch

The BlackBerry has long been the de facto smartphone standard, thanks to its messaging capabilities. Many executives use the BlackBerry as their primary device for conducting business via email, but RIM's devices have not been good with apps, the Web, or media presentation. The company's first attempt, the Storm, was a poorly designed iPhone clone, and the Storm 2 was little better.
However, the BlackBerry Torch 9800 is not like a previous BlackBerry—well, it is and it isn't.For messaging, the Torch works very much like a BlackBerry Bold—the executive's BlackBerry of choice—which makes it immediately comfortable for longtime BlackBerry users. Its slideout keyboard is essentially the same as the Bold's, so it's easy to type with.

Whereas Web browsing was the Achilles' heel of previous BlackBerrys, the Torch's new browser is thoroughly modern, displaying the Web in its full glory. And the Torch's touchscreen is both large enough and touch-responsive enough to handle the Web and iPhone-style apps well. At this point, there are few BlackBerry apps available, and many websites assume that the Torch is as Web-crippled as previous models, so they often autosubstitute a limited WAP version. As Torch adoption grows, both of these external limits should fade.

Although the Torch is tied to AT&T in the United States, that exclusivity will end soon, and you can expect models from all the major carriers this winter.

In a nutshell, the BlackBerry Torch is a good merger of the traditional BlackBerry messaging and security strengths with the modern touch, app, and Web capabilities pioneered by the iPhone.

Runner up: If the BlackBerry Torch feels too old-school for you, our runner-up for a physical-keyboard phone is the Motorola Droid 2. Note that, like the Droid Incredible, the Droid 2 runs Android OS 2.2, which means it's less secure than the iPhone and may not be allowed onto many corporate networks without third-party protection.

Best tablet: Apple iPad

A year ago, some pundits were questioning the viability of the then-unreleased iPad. But it's created a whole new market and proved to be a hit among consumers and businesses alike.

There's a reason for its success: The iPad is an amazingly good device, and one that can act as a surrogate laptop much of the time. Its large screen is quite good for desktop-like Web browsing, as well as for running productivity apps, playing movies, and working with multiple email accounts. With hardware attachments, it can act as a presentation device or pull in photos from digital cameras, for example. Additionally, it's very portable, thanks to its light weight (1.5 pounds) and long battery life (10 to 11 hours is typical).

Plus, because of the iPad's use of iOS 4 and native support for Microsoft Exchange policies, it can be securely used in most businesses.

The iPad is not perfect. Its Safari browser, for example, doesn't work well with many applications-oriented websites such as Google Docs and Microsoft SharePoint, but it is amazingly capable for a first-generation product. None of the competing Android tablets comes close to the iPad in terms of capability or performance. The closest competitor, the Samsung Galaxy Tab, is a weak imitation.

Of course, like the iPhone, 3G-capable iPad is tied to AT&T, whose network is iffy in several cities, such as New York and San Francisco. But AT&T doesn't require a long-term commitment to use its 3G data service with the iPad—you sign up for a month at a time. Apple also offers models without 3G radios (all models have Wi-Fi).

A new iPad this spring will all but certainly add front and rear cameras. It will probably be a bit thinner and perhaps faster, so you may want to wait. But today's model is a joy to use, and it's handy to boot. It's also likely to benefit from further software updates—Apple is very good about ensuring that OS updates run on at least two previous generations of its hardware.

Runner up: If for some reason the iPad doesn't appeal to you, we have no runner-up options. It's an iPad or nothing.

Expect new choices in the new year

In 2010, the Android platform took off, quickly rivaling the iPhone in popularity. RIM finally delivered its first viable iPhone competitor, but has yet to follow up with other models or bring the new BlackBerry OS to its previous hits, the Bold and Curve. I expect Android to get even more competitive in 2011—and perhaps start filling some of its business security gaps. We should also see, this spring, the first tablets running a version of Android. I also expect RIM to make a serious effort with its forthcoming PlayBook tablet and perhaps build on the Torch's momentum with smartphone upgrades.

Also in 2010, Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 crashed and burned, while Hewlett-Packard's acquisition of Palm put the struggling WebOS in deep freeze. On the tablet front, Hewlett-Packard's Windows 7-based Slate tablet proved to be more of a demonstration product than a serious product commitment. Either or both of these companies may get mobile religion in 2011—and may even deliver on it. Nokia's smartphone strategy is in disarray, and it's unlikely to be a serious option in 2011—but you can never know for certain.

You can be sure that Apple will continue to put distance between itself and its competitors with new versions of the iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch. Google's Android has the best shot at keeping up.
But that's next year. For now, if you need a mobile device, you know what to get.