Apple, the most valuable company in the world, has reinvented several industries, including the music, the telecom, and even the tablet, and now it seems ready to go towards a new section.
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Nokia has announced its first 4G LTE enabled smartphone - Nokia Lumia 900. AT&T is expected to release the device on April 8 with a price tag of $99.99. Lumia 900 is going to be Nokia's flagship Windows smartphone. On the other hand, AT&T's wireless rival - Verizon - has been rolling out LG Lucid - a budget 4G smartphone from March 29. This new Android powered smartphone has been priced at $79.99.
The Samsung Galaxy S3 could be launching this Friday, despite Samsung delaying the device at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. UK phone retailer Phones 4u hints that a Samsung device is coming March 30.
As anticipation builds for the new iPhone 5, the crystal ball gazing has begun in earnest. What tantalizing new features could be on the horizon? Of all the rumors out there, these are the ones we'd love to see come to fruition.
Siri, the voice controlled intelligent assistant exclusive to the iPhone 4S, has made the iPhone become the hottest smartphone ever, notching solid sales in over 90 countries worldwide.
The highly anticipated Nokia Lumia 900 will hit the market on April 8 for $99.99 with a two-year contract, AT&T announced Monday.
Over the past four years, Chelsey Lutz, 25, a blogger in New York City, has lost her iPhone seven times. Somehow, the phone always finds its way back. Lady Luck has been on Lutz's side.
Before his death, Apple Inc's Steve Jobs famously promised to go "thermonuclear" against smartphones running Google's Android software, saying they use technology ripped off from the iPhone. The massive legal attack he launched, now in its third year, didn't destroy Android.
Some 100 million cellphones using Near-field Communication (NFC) technology will be sold this year, with sales more than tripling from a year ago, research firm Berg Insight said on Monday.
Apps, apps, apps! That is the main challenge that Microsoft and Nokia, who are trying to claw back market share from Apple Inc's iPhone and Google's Android in the red hot smartphone market, face now.
When Samsung Electronics rushed its first smartphone to market in a panicky response to the smash-hit debut of the Apple iPhone, some customers burned the product on the streets or hammered it to bits in public displays of disaffection.
If you own a smartphone, it might be nearly impossible to discover your device, once lost. Recent studies conducted by security firm Symantec show that more than 89% of smartphone finders will snoop inside the device and search for personal data.
Samsung Electronics Co aims to double its share of the sub-Saharan smartphone market to 20 percent by next year, as it focuses on affordable handsets, the head of its Africa business said on Thursday.