And the winners for Mobile Devices are:

Sony Ericsson C905 Cyber-shot
The good: Dedicated camera controls; equipped with both Xenon and LED flash lights; Bluetooth stereo; Wi-Fi; Cyber-shot interface.
The bad: Stiff buttons; video recording limited to QVGA resolution; no front-facing camera for video calls; Wayfinder navigation software not that intuitive.
The bottom line: The C905 Cyber-shot is a competent camera-phone that won't let you down if you forget your digicam, but it's missing some important features.
» Read full review of the Sony Ericsson C905 Cyber-shot

Samsung Innov8 (i8510)
The good: GPS with support for A-GPS; HSDPA; Wi-Fi; 8GB flash memory; Bluetooth A2DP; 3.5mm audio jack; good image quality.
The bad: Glossy surface attracts fingerprints; software was a little unstable on our review unit; side-mounted 3.5mm audio jack and volume rocker that doubles as zoom lever could be better placed.
The bottom line: The INNOV8 is a high-end handset with almost every feature currently available and could rival any of the Nokia Nseries models.
» Read full review of the Samsung Innov8 (i8510)

Nokia N96
The good: 16GB memory with the option to expand; GPS; HSDPA; 5-megapixel camera; table stand.
The bad: Chunky, plasticky build; some N95 users may have expected more; Web browser not as good as Safari.
The bottom line: The N96 has everything a gadgeteer could want, including vast amounts of memory, a good camera, great video playback quality and built-in GPS. But its build quality is a bit iffy and it's not as easy to use as the iPhone.
» Read full review of the Nokia N96
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