Just like the iPhone it runs on 3G but only supports T-Mobile's 3G in the US as it only runs on UMTS Band 1/4 and 8 (2100/AWS/900) and GSM/EDGE (850, 900, 1800 and 1900 Mhz), meaning you may be able to run the phone on other networks but won't have access to their 3G (sorry AT&T). It will soon be available to Verizon Wireless subscribers (sorry again AT&T). More features include Wi-Fi 802.11N, digital compass, GPS, stereo bluetooth, 3.5mm headphone jack, a camera with LED flash, and a microSD card slot, comes with a 4GB microSD card and is expandable up to 32GB of storage. It's got 1400mAH batteries, that promises 5 hrs of browsing and 7 hrs of talk time.
The coming killer iPhone app will be Flash 10.1 running on the browser. Google and Adobe is already working together in bringing Flash 10.1 to the Nexus One, something lacking on the iPhone.
No comments:
Post a Comment