Affle, a UK-based mobile media company, is looking to redefine the "service" in SMS to "search". Its new application for Nokia's Series S60 phones will enable a new search function within the familiar text messaging interface.
According to the press release, SMS2.0 is currently compatible with the Nokia N70, N72, 6680, 6681 and 6630 models. However, Nokia has said the application will work with the Series S60 2nd edition (or higher) handsets.
When installed, SMS2.0 will become the phone's default text messaging program. The beauty of it is that everything remains the same except there's now an additional search menu within the options. The company is in talks with various online search engines but there are no firm plans on which engine will power the new search function.
Affle is also working with local telco MobileOne (M1) to bring targeted advertising to the SMS2.0 platform. Ticker-roll advertisements will appear on the bottom portion of the screen as the user types a text message and turns full screen when the message is sent, or when he clicks on it.
According to Neil Montefiore, CEO of M1, these content are updated via a backend system to maintain relevancy. Users will not be charged for the data traffic for SMS2.0 content due to a tie-up with Affle. They will, however, be prompted if a fee is to be levied.
The company claims to be Singapore's first mobile phone brand and one with the latest technology at CommunicAsia. How true is it? You'll have to decide for yourself.
According to its Web site, SEVO is a "new-generation company of mobile phones, offering the latest models with fruitful features, better quality and cheaper products". Some of the handsets the company is showing at this year's CommunicAsia are the P809 and the P888.
What's interesting about the latter is its dual SIM card slots and a 3-inch touchscreen display. It comes also with a 1.3-megapixel camera, Bluetooth with A2DP support, microSD expansion card slot and functions as a USB drive.
The SEVO P809 is a Windows Mobile 5 PDA-phone with also a 3-inch touchscreen LCD plus a 2-megapixel camera. Both handsets, however, work only on the GSM 900/1800 network, which is really quite unheard of these days.
Our roving reporters at CommunicAsia spotted another brand called Scud, a China-based company offering strikingly similar products except for a few cosmetic differences. We suspect the phones come from the same OEM, but we can't say for sure. You'll have to decide for yourself.
If you think speakers with the Sony Ericsson label are the only ones decent enough to own for your phone, think again. The Pivot Bluetooth Speaker SR 204BT is one speaker that looks as good as the A2DP phones and MP3 players that can sync with it.
The SR 204BT has a pleasant and simple design flanked with several buttons on the top such as volume controls and Bluetooth sync. It uses Bluetooth 2.0 Class 2 technology so it has a wireless range of up to 10m. Users can also activate bass enhancement and surround sound effects, but we were unable to test out its capability as Pivot could not seem to synchronize the Sony Ericsson K610i we had on hand.
The speakers are powered by four AA batteries, but strangely enough the power adapter will not included with the set.
The speakers are expected to launch within the next two months at US$230 (S$354) in selected locations around Asia.
In a video interview with CNET Asia, LG revealed that it will be launching a PDA-phone. This will run Windows Mobile 6 Professional and be available by the end of the year in Asia.
The move does not come as a surprise as LG has a wide range of mobile phone devices, including those meant for more serious users. For example, one of its most recent handsets is the KS10, a slider which uses the Symbian OS.
The company would also have benefited from the experience of making the Prada phone, a touchscreen device that looks very much like a PDA, though it doesn't run a standard OS. See our interview with LG's Samuel Loi, senior manager of the Mobile Group here.
Additional reporting and video interview by Edvarcl Heng.
Apple's made it official: The iPhone will have full-blown YouTube integration.
According to the iPhone Web site, the much-anticipated handset will include "a special YouTube player that you can launch right from the home screen." iPhone owners can now load and browse videos from the video-sharing site as well as email them to their friends.
This comes less than a month after Steve Jobs announced that the company's Apple TV set-top box would also have built-in integration for the wildly popular YouTube.
The iPhone, as we all know by now, hits stores at 6 PM Eastern Time on June 29. That's next Friday!