CTIA 2009: AT&T Sends a Message
But AT&T is trying to broaden the its smartphone reach to beyond the corporate world with its five other messaging phones. Most interesting might be two handsets from LG--the Xenon (top right) and the Neon (bottom right)--which both have touchscreen displays and slide-out QWERTY keyboards. The Xenon is the more upscale of the two (and AT&T says it's to be featured in MTV's upcoming reality/adventure series, The Phone, which was filming around Seattle a few months ago), and it has a widget-style touchscreen interface and its 4-row chiclet keyboard mimics standard PC keyboard layouts. It also runs on AT&T's 3G network (with access to its various broadband multimedia services) and provides GPS functionality for use with AT&T Navigator turn-by-turn directions. The more youthfully colorful Neon features a 3-row button-style keyboard and it lacks the 3G speeds, but it also shares the Xenon's other features--2-megapixel camera, Bluetooth stereo music streaming, and MicroSD memory expansion. The Xenon is expected on April 8 (hands-on at Laptop Mag), with the Neon's arrival date still to be determined (hands-on at CNet).
The rather iPhone-like Samsung Impression also includes a slide-out keyboard, and it's one of the first phones to feature an active-matrix organic light emitting diode (AMOLED) screen that offers the best of both worlds--good, vibrant color and less power consumption. Wired's Gadget Lab offers more on this technology:
They draw less power, which means phones can run longer on a single battery charge. OLED-based displays also do not need a backlight so the screens can be thinner than an LCD panel leading to overall slimmer phones.The Impression also boasts a 3-megapixel camera/camcorder, 3G HSDPA connectivity, and GPS functionality, and it will be available starting April 7 (hands-on at Laptop Mag and Gizmodo). AT&T also is releasing the Samsung Propel Pro--a corporate-leaning, Windows Mobile 6.1 version of its Propel A767 slider/QWERTY handset--and the Samsung Magnet, which is aimed at heavy text messaging users who aren't fussed with needing 3G speeds (hands-on at Engadget).
--Agen G.N. Schmitz




Comments