AllegroTechie
Apple, Android, Microsoft
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Yup! I've been working for weeks sketching and using my trusty and most favorite photo editing editing app ( Pixelmator in case you...
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
We are Moving!
It has been a long time coming, but we have started our moving process to wordpress. The official domain allegro techie.com will be our new domain, but won't be ready for two or three days. In the meantime, you guys should probably bookmark allegrotechie.wordpress.com. Thanks for your patience and loyalty!
T-Mobile and Nokia Event Dec. 14
T-Mobile has announced they will be hosting an event on December 14 in association with Nokia. At first glance, my guess is they will announce some sort of windows phone device, most likely the Lumia 710 (i mean just look at the tiles for the invites). Stay tuned for more information.
iPhone 4s now being listed as a 4G phone
HSPA+? Maybe. Maybe not. But AT&T sure thinks that the iPhone 4s is a 4G phone. As you can see in the picture above, the 4s has the "4G" logo next to it as the 3Gs and 4 has the "3G" logos next to them. Will Apple push out an update to replace the 3G to a 4G on the iPhone for AT&T? Only time will tell....
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Blackberry Bold 9900 Review
By Alex Allegro
"This is definitely the best Blackberry yet, Playbook included."
Said to be the best Blackberry yet, the Bold 9900 (9930 as a CDMA model) is the first member of the Bold family to feature a gorgeous touchscreen, and trackpad. Clocking it’s Snapdragon processor at a modest 1.2GHz, the Bold treads into territories RIM has never gone into before. Regardless of this phone featuring a tiny 2.4 inch screen that has something RIM is calling “Liquid Graphics”, this phone actually does have a really nice display that you just can’t stop staring at when viewing a nice image. Could this phone really be a contender in the wild smartphone race? Is it really the best Blackberry yet? Or is its screen and lack of intriguing apps going to handicap it just too much? Read on past the break to find out!
Motorola goes a selling spree, announces an array of Droids
As we finish reading Motorola's PR, we tell you about it here. Moto has just announced a bunch of new products. First up is the XYBOARD 8.2. As you can guess, it's an 8.2 inch tablet that looks just like an 8.2 inch Xoom 2. It boasts a 1.2GHz dual core processor, 1GB of RAM and an IPS display. It'll have LTE, but only if you sign a new 2 year agreement. It comes with 16GB and 32GB of on board memory with no slot for more. The next tablet is the same exact tablet, just with a 10.1 inch screen. This one though has a 64GB option. The 16GB 10.1 will run at 529.99, 32GB for 629.99 and the 64GB for 729.99, respectively. Each claim to be 'very thin' and were promised to get the Android 4.0 ICS update. They also each have two cameras, rear one at 5MP and front one at 1.3MP.
The final thing in the PR was a product that we already had was the Droid RAZR. This time though in white. It'll run for 299.99 on a 2 year contract.
All products available this month.
The final thing in the PR was a product that we already had was the Droid RAZR. This time though in white. It'll run for 299.99 on a 2 year contract.
All products available this month.
PR and more pictures after the break!
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Galaxy S II Skyrocket Review
Galaxy S II Skyrocket Review:
By: Sam
Savitt
“This is probably the
best LTE offering from AT&T of the Year…and yes, that includes the LG
Nitro"
As the legacy of the Galaxy S II
line lives on, AT&T has added the Skyrocket as one of their first two LTE
devices, alongside the HTC Vivid. This device packs some pretty hefty specs,
and being the part of Sammy’s flagship line, we have come to expect high things
from this type of device. Running Android 2.3.5 along with Touchwiz 4.0, the
Skyrocket measures at 129.8x.68.8x9.5. The Skyrocket has great hardware, and
LTE, but is it enough to keep up with the competition from Verizon?
Design:
This
device has the classic Samsung setup: Left side volume rocker, right side
lock/power switch, headphone jack at the top and micro USB port at the bottom.
It is a relatively slim device, and it has pretty decent ergonomics, a bit
shorter and wider than most 4.5-inch displays. The back, unlike all the
previous GSII models, is not texturized, and is a smooth back plate (it
attracts plenty of fingerprints). There is a small hump where the speaker is at
the bottom, but it is not very pronounced, and you don’t really feel it when
you hold the phone.
Hardware:
This
bad boy packs a large 1850mAh Li-Ion battery to provide for all that LTE use. Inside
we have the Snapdragon S3 Dual-Core Chip, clocked at 1.5 gHz, and the Adreno
220 GPU chip. Additionally, it provides 1024MB of RAM to ensure a snappy and
speedy performance—and it does. After heavy use of this phone, it has proved
itself to be consistently fast, and I have rarely encountered lag. It comes
with 16 GB of internal storage, but it is expandable via a microSD card slot,
and it does support SDHC cards. NFC (Near Field Communication) is in the
device, but unfortunately, AT&T does not have it activated on the device.
Word is that they may activate it with ICS, so user can enjoy features like
Android Beam and Google Wallet. The Skyrocket comes with all the classic
goodies: Wifi
does not have it activated on the device. Word
is that they may activate it with ICS, so user can enjoy features like Android
Beam and Google Wallet. The Skyrocket comes with all the classic goodies: Wifi
802.11b/g/n, Bluetooth 3.O, and GPS. It also includes an accelerometer,
Gyroscope, compass, and proximity sensor.
Display:
The
display is gorgeous. Samsung’s sAMOLED+ display technology has made its mark
once again. It provides beautiful, bright and vivid colors on the large 4.5”
display. On black screens, you can see text with incredible clarity, and
although the resolution is lower than phones like the HTC Rezound, the Super
Amoled Plus technology is very impressive and conservative.
Software/Battery Life:
Right
off the bat, this device is running android 2.3.5 Gingerbread and, on top of
that, Touchwiz 4.0, which really isn’t so bad. Battery life on this thing was
good, it lasted me throughout the day, and this is in Manhattan, where I am
getting an LTE signal. In my opinion, TouchWiz is really a pro, it makes it
easier for you to customize your home screens, and is a very minimal, discrete
and good looking skin. It doesn’t create any lag either. For the record,
AT&T has promised the Ice Cream Sandwich upgrade sometime in Q1, 2012.
LTE:
This
Thursday, AT&T, unofficially, launched LTE in New York. Because it has not
really been announced, these results are not 100% true, and the coverage is not
final at all. My Skyrocket was getting a strong LTE signal throughout Manhattan
and Brooklyn. The closer to the Bronx you get, the lower your signal gets.
Regardless, AT&T hasn’t said anything yet, so there will presumably be
service throughout the city when made official. The network is still new, but I
got some very promising results:
Like
the rest of the Galaxy S II line, the Skyrocket has two great cameras. A front
facing 2-Megapixel camera, for video chat (or personal entertainment), and a
8-Megapixel LED flash rear shooter. The back camera features auto focus, touch
to focus, image stabilization, smile detection, and lots of amusing features
like panorama mode. It can film 1080p video, at 30fps, and like the photo
quality, the video quality is stunning.
The Verdict:
The
Skyrocket is a great device, but it there are plenty of variables that come in
to play when choosing a phone. AT&T Customers, listen up. If you live in an
LTE city, or/and if you have an unlimited data plan, don’t give it up to get the
Galaxy Nexus. This phone is a beast of a device, and the specs it packs are
great. Hopefully, with ICS, this will get access to NFC, and personally, I think
the device as a whole can compete with the Galaxy Nexus.
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