Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Bahasa Melayu 2 SPM tidak bocor

Bahasa Melayu 2 tidak bocor



CALON SPM 2010 tidak perlu risau tentang khabar angin bahawa mereka akan menduduki semula subjek Bahasa Melayu Kertas 2 yang didakwa bocor. - Gambar hiasan


KUALA LUMPUR – Kementerian Pelajaran meminta semua pelajar yang menduduki peperiksaan Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) ketika ini supaya tidak melayan khabar angin di Internet bahawa mereka mungkin perlu menduduki semula subjek Bahasa Melayu Kertas 2 atas dakwaan ia bocor.

Timbalan Menteri Pelajaran, Dr. Mohd. Puad Zarkashi berkata, dakwaan bahawa kebocoran soalan bagi subjek tersebut berlaku di sebuah sekolah menengah di Kedah pada 23 November lalu adalah tidak benar sama sekali.

Beliau berkata, berita tersebut sengaja disebarkan oleh pihak yang tidak bertanggungjawab tanpa motif yang jelas.

“Tidak timbul langsung persoalan bagi kita untuk mengadakan semula peperiksaan kertas tersebut sebagaimana tersebar di Internet ketika ini.

“Siasatan ke atas sekolah yang dikatakan terlibat di Kedah telah dijalankan namun kita mendapati ia khabar angin semata-mata,” katanya ketika dihubungi Kosmo! semalam.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Mereka yang tewas

 Ke Kepala Batas?

menjamah makanan terakhir

Mee basah pon ok

posing macho

Ke Shah Alam

Masih ada yang perlu dibereskan


Ke Convent?


Balik ke Sabah

Pengetua masih sayang anda


  
Sedih hilang rakan-rakan


SELAMAT BERTUGAS
DI TEMPAT BARU

Friday, November 26, 2010

10 Ponsel (Handphone) futuristik yang tak pernah dipasarkan

Maaf! Bahasa indonesia

Jum'at, 26 November 2010 00:08

Bisnis ponsel barangkali adalah bisnis yang berkembang paling cepat belakangan ini. Kalau Anda masih ingat, satu dasawarsa yang lalu ponsel hanya bisa digunakan untuk melakukan voice call dan SMS saja. Setelah itu ponsel mulai menawarkan berbagai macam fitur yang membuatnya jadi lebih serbaguna. Bukan hanya soal fitur, desain ponsel yang ditawarkan pun semakin beragam. Ponsel tak lagi hanya berbentuk candybar, clamshell, atau slider saja. Berikut adalah sepuluh ponsel konsep dengan desain futuristik yang sayangnya tak pernah masuk masa produksi.


LG Flutter Concept Phone
LG Flutter Concept Phone Desain ponsel buatan LG ini memang sangat futuristik. Malahan kalau mau jujur mungkin tak akan ada yang mengira kalau barang ini adalah ponsel. Dalam keadaan tertutup saja ponsel ini sudah termasuk aneh, apalagi saat dibuka. Dalam keadaan terbuka LG Flutter Concept Phone ini berbentuk mirip kipas dengan layar OLED fleksibel yang ada di tengahnya.

 
NEC Tag Phone Concept
NEC Tag Phone Concept Konsep dasar yang ditawarkan NEC kali ini adalah fleksibilitas. Desain ponsel ini memang lebih mirip lembaran karet dengan beberapa tonjolan yang berfungsi sebagai keypad. Kalau mau, Anda juga bisa menjadikan NEC Tag Phone Concept ini sebagai gelang.

 
Bracelet Phone Concept
Bracelet Phone Concept Yang satu ini memang sama sekali tidak mirip ponsel. Maklum, sang perancang adalah seorang desainer bernama Tao Ma. Yang jelas, Bracelet Phone Concept ini memang lebih condong ke arah perhiasan ketimbang sebagai alat komunikasi. Bayangkan saja betapa rumitnya proses yang harus Anda lewati sebelum bisa menelepon atau menerima SMS.

 
Nokia 888 Mobile Phone
Nokia 888 Mobile Phone Seperti juga desain yang ditawarkan NEC, Nokia 888 Mobile Phone ini menawarkan fleksibilitas. Anda bisa melipat ponsel ini menjadi berbagai macam bentuk karena ponsel ini memang fleksibel.

 
Relexer Cellphone
Relexer Cellphone Relexer Cellphone ini adalah hasil karya seorang desainer bernama Lu Yin. Kabarnya, selain bisa berfungsi sebagai ponsel, Relexer Cellphone ini bisa jadi alat bantu untuk memeriksa kondisi kesehatan. Bila disambungkan dengan sebuah termometer, ponsel konsep ini bisa mengukur suhu tubuh dan mungkin juga menampilkan informasi lain yang berhubungan dengan kesehatan.

 
Nokia Morph Cell Phone Concept
Nokia Morph Cell Phone Concept Masih menawarkan konsep fleksibel, Nokia Morph Cell Phone Concept ini malah mencoba membuktikan kalau gadget masa depan tak akan lagi terikat pada bentuk. Anda bisa membentuknya sesuai keinginan Anda. Selain itu, komponen dari ponsel ini juga dibuat transparan dan permukaannya menggunakan bahan yang sanggup membersihkan dirinya sendiri.

 
LG Folding Phone
LG Folding Phone Bisa jadi ponsel, bisa juga jadi headphone. Menarik kan. Di kedua ujungnya ada layar sentuh untuk mengakses fungsi-fungsi dari ponsel konsep ini sementara di balik layar tadi ada sepasang speaker yang bisa digunakan untuk mendengarkan lagu saat Anda memfungsikan LG Folding Phone ini sebagai headphone.

 
Philips Fluid Flexible Concept
Philips Fluid Flexible Concept Seorang desainer asal Brazil bernama Dinard da Mata memimpikan sebuah smartphone yang juga bisa berfungsi sebagai perhiasan dan hasilnya adalah Philips Fluid Flexible Concept ini. Permukaan dari gelang ini adalah layar fleksibel yang bisa digunakan untuk mengakses fitur smartphone sekaligus menjadi perhiasan.

 
Glass Phone Concept
Glass Phone Concept Tak banyak yang bisa dibahas dari ponsel hasil rancangan Mac Funamizu ini. Yang pasti, seperti namanya, Glass Phone Concept ini memang tembus pandang layaknya kaca.

 
DYA Phone: A New Concept
DYA Phone: A New Concept Entah apa maksudnya, tapi ponsel konsep buatan DYA bisa digeser ke atas secara diagonal. Tak jelas maksudnya namun yang pasti desain yang ditawarkannya sangat revolusioner. Mungkin masih banyak lagi desain ponsel revolusioner yang sempat dipamerkan para desainer maupun pabrikan ponsel itu sendiri namun sayangnya sebagian besar, kalau tak bisa dibilang semua, ponsel itu tak pernah masuk masa produksi. Entah karena kesulitan mengaplikasikan teknologi yang ada atau malah ketakutan bahwa ponsel ini terlalu aneh sehingga tak ada yang mau membelinya. Anda sendiri bagaimana? (kpl/hkt/roc)

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Pokok mati akibat WiFi

Pokok mati akibat WiFi


GAMBAR menunjukkan pokok ash.


ALPHEN AAN DEN RIJN, Belanda - Satu kajian oleh sekumpulan penyelidik dari Universiti Wageningen, Belanda mendapati radiasi daripada rangkaian gelombang tanpa wayar (Wifi) mungkin boleh menyebabkan pokok yang terdapat berdekatan dengan peranti penghala Internet tanpa wayar mati, lapor sebuah akhbar semalam.

Para saintis itu memperoleh hasil kajian tersebut selepas melakukan kajian ke atas 20 batang pokok ash yang daunnya menjadi kuning.
Hasil kajian itu menimbulkan kebimbangan bahawa radiasi Wifi boleh memberi kesan terhadap tubuh manusia.

Ia turut menyebabkan ibu bapa dan guru-guru berkempen agar peranti Wifi tidak dipasang di sekolah.

Bandar Alphen aan den Rijn yang terletak di barat Belanda mengarahkan kajian itu dilakukan sejak lima tahun lalu selepas mendapati pokok-pokok di kawasan itu mengalami situasi yang tidak normal.

Kajian itu mendapati pokok yang diletakkan paling hampir dengan radio Wifi mempunyai daun berwarna kuning berikutan lapisan kulit luar pokok mulai mati.

Para penyelidik juga mendapati radiasi Wifi boleh menyebabkan pertumbuhan jagung menjadi perlahan. - Agensi

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Android phone yg murah 2


Vodafone 845
Android OS version 2.1 Eclair
RM 640 c/w 8GB microSD

General 
  • 2G Network GSM 900 / 1800 / 1900
  • 3G Network HSDPA 900 / 2100
  • Announced 2010, April
  • Status Available. Released 2010, May
Size 
  • Dimensions - n/a
  • Weight - n/a
Display 
  • Type TFT resistive touchscreen, 256K colors
  • Size 240 x 320 pixels, 2.8 inches
  • - Accelerometer sensor for UI auto-rotate
Sound
  • Alert types Vibration; MP3 ringtones
  • Speakerphone Yes
Memory
  • Phonebook Practically unlimited entries, Photocall
  • Call records Practically unlimited
  • Internal 512 MB storage, 128 MB RAM
  • Card slot microSD, up to 16GB, buy memory
Data
  • GPRS Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
  • EDGE No
  • 3G HSDPA 3.6 Mbps
  • WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g
  • Bluetooth Yes v2.1 with A2DP
  • Infrared port No
  • USB Yes v2.0
Camera
  • Primary 3.15 MP, 2048x1536 pixels, autofocus
  • Video Yes
  • Secondary No
Features
  • OS Android OS, v2.1
  • Messaging SMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, IM
  • Browser HTML
  • Radio No
  • Games Yes
  • Colors Black
  • GPS Yes, with A-GPS support
  • Java Yes, MIDP 2.0
  • - MP3/WAV/eAAC+/WMA player
  • - MP4/H.263/H.264 player
  • - Document viewer (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, PDF)
  • - Organizer
  • - Photo/video editor
  • - Voice memo
  • - T9
Battery
  • Standard battery, Li-Ion 1200 mAh
  • Stand-by n/a
  • Talk time n/a

Android phone yg murah 1

Samsung Galaxy i7500 
Android OS version 1.5
RM 670 c/w 2GB microSD

General 

  • 2G Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
  • 3G Network HSDPA 900 / 1700 / 2100
  • Announced 2009, April
  • Status Available. Released 2009, June

Size 

  • Dimensions  115.9 x 56 x 11.9 mm
  • Weight 116.7 g

Display 

  • Type AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors (65K effective)
  • Size 320 x 480 pixels, 3.2 inches
  • - Accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate

Sound 

  • Alert types Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
  • Speakerphone Yes
  • - 3.5 mm audio jack

Memory

  • Phonebook Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall
  • Call records Practically unlimited
  • Internal 8 GB storage, 128 MB RAM
  • Card slot microSD, up to 16 GB, buy memory

Data 

  • GPRS Class 12 (4+1/3+2/2+3/1+4 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
  • EDGE Class 12
  • 3G HSDPA, 7.2 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps
  • WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g
  • Bluetooth Yes v2.0 with A2DP, headset support only
  • Infrared port No
  • USB Yes, microUSB v2.0

Camera 

  • Primary 5 MP, 2592 x 1944 pixels, autofocus, LED flash
  • Features Geo-tagging
  • Video Yes
  • Secondary No

Features

  • OS Android OS, v1.5 (Cupcake)
  • CPU Qualcomm MSM7200A 528 MHz processor
  • Messaging SMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, IM
  • Browser HTML
  • Radio No
  • Games Yes
  • Colors Black, White
  • GPS Yes
  • Java
  • - MP4/ H.263/ H.264/ WMV player
  • - MP3/ e-AAC+/ WMA/ RA player
  • - Google Search, Maps, Gmail, YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk, Picasa integration
  • - Voice memo

Battery 

  • Standard battery, Li-Ion 1500 mAh
  • Stand-by Up to 450 h (2G) / Up to 340 h (3G)
  • Talk time Up to 9 h 20 min (2G) / Up to 6 h 10 min (3G)

Misc 

  • SAR US 0.38 W/kg (head) 0.24 W/kg (body)
  • SAR EU 0.61 W/kg (head)

10 Things Android Does Better Than iPhone OS



When Android first debuted on the HTC Dream (also known as the G1) back in October of 2008, it was deemed an "iPhone Killer." While it didn't quite slay Apple's handset, it was the first step in a revolution against the tyrannous iPhone. The initial Android platform bested the iPhone OS on several levels, but lacked some key functionalities that the iPhone could provide. Since then, Android has grown - not only meeting all of the functionalities of the iPhone, but besting it in nearly all aspects from an extensive list of devices to a growing Android Marketplace. Here is our list of the top 10 things Android does better than the iPhone.

1: Android can Run Multiple Apps at the Same Time

Starting with version 1.0, Android has been able to run multiple applications at the same time regardless of whether they are system apps or apps from the Android Marketplace. The current version of iPhone OS does offer limited multitasking, but only allows native applications such as Mail, iPod and Phone to run in the background. Android users benefit greatly from this discrepancy, as they can receive notifications, listen to music, or even record GPS data without keeping the application open. Apple will try to level the playing field with iPhone OS 4, granting developers access to a small and limiting list of APIs that can run certain services in the background, but it's a long way from the true multitasking that Android has.

2: Android Keeps Information Visible on Your Home Screen

One of the key features Android has is a customizable home screen keeps active widgets right at your fingertips, always accesible and always visible - without having to launch an application first. There are widgets for just about every app in the Android Marketplace from playing music to checking the weather and keeping up to date on Facebook. Meanwhile iPhone users are force to flip through their app list to locate and launch each app. If you wanted to check the forecast, for example, you would have to find the app, launch it, and then wait for it to load. With Android, all of that information can be displayed directly on your home screen, never more than a finger swipe away.

3: Android Has a Better App Market

It's true that Apple's App Store has over 180,000 applications, while the Android Marketplace has only just broken the 50,000 mark but Android's rapid growth and adoption give it the potential to catch up to the iPhone App Store. Android also has another advantage: a completely open market. Apple receives around 10,000 app submissions per week, yet many apps are overlooked because they appear too simple or denied because a similar app already exists. The Android Marketplace is driven entirely by its consumers, so the best app is the one that succeeds - not the first one to reach the market. In addition, the Android Marketplace doesn't censor its apps, so the possibilities are truly endless.

4: Android Gives You Better Notifications

The iPhone has some trouble with notifications. Because it's restricted to pop-up notifications, it can only handle one at a time and because it lacks multitasking, applications must be open in order for them to make notifications. Android, on the other hand, has a convenient notification bar which displays an icon for every notification you have waiting. The notification bar can also be pulled downward to reveal more detail about each notification. Android also allows app developers to make notification details viewable from the lock screen, something the iPhone can only do with native applications.

5: Android Lets You Choose Your Hardware

Apple users are encouraged to "Think Different" but when it comes to the actual hardware, they don't get much choice. You can pick the color, either black or white, and you get to choose between the 16GB or the pricier 32GB version. Other than that, you're stuck with the 3.5-inch, 320x480 pixel display, 256MB of RAM, and 600MHz processor. Because Android is an open platform, manufacturers have the freedom to pair it with any hardware they want, like the Nexus One (with 3.7-inch, 480x800 pixel display, 512MB of RAM, and 1GHz Snapdragon processor) or the Motorola Droid which has a physical keypad. Obviously, available selections will vary by carrier - speaking of which....

6: Android Lets You Choose Your Carrier

AT&T truly is the iPhone's weakest link. The iPhone's success turned the country's fastest 3G network into a staggering mess of dropped calls and dodgy data connections. If you lust after an iPhone and live in an area with poor AT&T coverage, you're stuck struggling with low signal quality, slow data speeds, and missed calls. Android devices are available on every major cellular carrier (although AT&T only offers a single, somewhat underpowered, Android phone). Verizon has the Motorola Droid, Droid Eris, and Droid Incredible to start. T-Mobile has the Nexus One, MyTouch 3G, Behold II, and will soon carry the MyTouch Slide. And Sprint has the Hero, Moment, and plans for the very promising Evo 4G. No matter where you live, Android lets you pick the carrier that's best for you.

7: Android Lets You Install Custom ROMs

The iPhone can be Jailbroken for some additional functionality, like installing apps that aren't available in the App Store, but the overall experience is the same. You're still stuck with the same exact interface. Similar to the Jailbreaking movement, Android has a small community dedicated to building custom ROMs for Android devices. Not only do Custom ROMs bring the same functionality Jailbreaking does, but they also bring an additional level of customization to your phone. There are ROMs that port custom UIs from one device to another. Other ROMs strip down bulky features and optimize for speed. With Android, nothing is out of reach.

8: Android Lets You Change Your Settings Faster

Smartphones have been gaining more and more functionality over the past few years: Wi-Fi, GPS, 4G, Bluetooth, etc. While these are all great and necessary additions, they have very adverse affects on battery life. In attempts to counter poor battery life, users have taken to toggling system settings like turning on Wi-Fi or 3G on only when they are needed. iPhone users are stuck digging around in the system settings every time they want to use the internet or a Bluetooth device. Android lets you use widgets to manage your settings directly from your home screen - and for those lesser-used settings that might not have dedicated widgets, you can also create shortcuts on your home screen to take you directly to the setting you want to change.

9: Android Does Google and Social Integration

With Smartphones giving us constant connectivity, it's not surprising that the majority of our computerized lives are moving online. We have email for our messages, Flickr for our photos, Google Docs for our documents, and Facebook and Twitter for our social lives. Android offers the ability to integrate all of this natively. Your Gmail account can be automatically synchronized with your phone. Photos taken with your phone can be automatically uploaded to Flickr. Your phone can even be linked to your Facebook account and can sync your phone contacts with your Facebook friends - complete with profile images, email addresses, and phone numbers. The iPhone can do this only through use of third party apps, and is nowhere near as seamless to use as the Android alternative.

10: Android Gives You More Options to Fit Your Budget

If you've ever thought about buying an iPhone, you have probably noticed the price tag. The older iPhone 3G costs $99 with a two-year commitment and performs sluggishly with the latest OS updates when compared to the 3GS (which will run you a whopping $199 with two-year agreement). Because Android is an open source platform, it is very cost effective to implement which means savings for the end user. Every major cellular carrier (except for AT&T) has at least one Android phone available free with two-year agreement. Of course these are lower end Android devices, but they are still comparable in performance to the iPhone 3GS. The most expensive Android phones (which significantly outperform the iPhone 3GS) are  $199 with two-year contract.

ANDROID Operating System

Android official logo


Android OS usage share


Data collected during two weeks ending on 1 November 2010
Other: 0.1% of devices running obsolete versions[141]

Platform
↓
API Level↓ Distribution↓
Android 2.2 (Froyo) 8 36.2%
Android 2.1 (Eclair) 7 40.8%
Android 1.6 (Donut) 4 15.0%
Android 1.5 (Cupcake) 3 7.9%



1.1
Released 9 February 2009


1.5 (Cupcake)
Based on Linux Kernel 2.6.27
On 30 April 2009, the official 1.5 (Cupcake) update for Android was released.[36][37]
There were several new features and UI updates included in the 1.5 update:[38]
  • Ability to record and watch videos through camcorder mode
  • Uploading videos to YouTube and pictures to Picasa directly from the phone
  • A new soft-keyboard with text-prediction
  • Bluetooth A2DP and AVRCP support
  • Ability to automatically connect to a Bluetooth headset within a certain distance
  • New widgets and folders that can populate the Home screens
  • Animated screen transitions

1.6 (Donut)
Based on Linux Kernel 2.6.29[39]
On 15 September 2009, the 1.6 (Donut) SDK was released.[40][41]
Included in the update were:[39]
  • An improved Android Market experience
  • An integrated camera, camcorder, and gallery interface
  • Gallery now enables users to select multiple photos for deletion
  • Updated Voice Search, with faster response and deeper integration with native applications, including the ability to dial contacts
  • Updated search experience to allow searching bookmarks, history, contacts, and the web from the home screen
  • Updated technology support for CDMA/EVDO, 802.1x, VPNs, and a text-to-speech engine
  • Support for WVGA screen resolutions
  • Speed improvements in searching and camera applications
  • Gesture framework and GestureBuilder development tool
  • Google free turn-by-turn navigation

2.0 / 2.1 (Eclair)
Based on Linux Kernel 2.6.29[42]
On 26 October 2009, the 2.0 (Eclair) SDK was released.[43]
Among the changes were:[44]
  • Optimized hardware speed
  • Support for more screen sizes and resolutions
  • Revamped UI
  • New Browser UI and HTML5 support
  • New contact lists
  • Better contrast ratio for backgrounds
  • Improved Google Maps 3.1.2
  • Microsoft Exchange support
  • Built in flash support for Camera
  • Digital Zoom
  • MotionEvent class enhanced to track multi-touch events[45]
  • Improved virtual keyboard
  • Bluetooth 2.1
  • Live Wallpapers
The 2.0.1 SDK was released on 3 December 2009.[46]
The 2.1 SDK was released on 12 January 2010.[47]


2.2 (Froyo)[48]
Based on Linux Kernel 2.6.32[49]
On 20 May 2010, the 2.2 (Froyo - Frozen Yogurt) SDK was released.[50]
Changes included:[51]
  • General Android OS speed, memory, and performance optimizations[52]
  • Additional application speed improvements courtesy of JIT implementation[53]
  • Integration of Chrome's V8 JavaScript engine into the Browser application
  • Increased Microsoft Exchange support (security policies, auto-discovery, GAL look-up, calendar synchronization, remote wipe)
  • Improved application launcher with shortcuts to Phone and Browser applications
  • USB tethering and Wi-Fi hotspot functionality
  • Added an option to disable data access over mobile network
  • Updated Market application with batch and automatic update features[52]
  • Quick switching between multiple keyboard languages and their dictionaries
  • Voice dialing and contact sharing over Bluetooth
  • Support for numeric and alphanumeric passwords
  • Support for file upload fields in the Browser application[54]
  • Browser can now display animated GIFs (instead of just the first frame)
  • Support for installing applications to the expandable memory[55]
  • Adobe Flash 10.1 support[56]

2.3 (Gingerbread)[57]
Based on Linux Kernel 2.6.33 or .34[49]
Confirmed new features of 2.3 (Gingerbread):
Unconfirmed new features:
  • Improved copy–paste functionalities[60]
  • Improved social networking features[61]
  • Android Market music store[62]
  • Media streaming from PC library[62]
  • Revamped UI[63]
  • Support for bigger screens with up to Wide XGA (1366×768) resolution[64]
  • New 3D Games support including new Marketplace area for gaming
  • Use of mksh for /system/bin/sh[65]
  • Support for video calls
  • Support for WebP image files
  • Support for Google TV

3.0 (Honeycomb)[66][67]
  • Scheduled for early 2011 launch. 
  • Feature list started with features that won't make the cut-off for Gingerbread  ? (Ice Cream)[68]
  • Supposed mid 2011 launch.[68]

ANDROID phone




Do more on the go with the GALAXY Tab. Exceptionally designed for reading, watching movies and playing games, the GALAXY Tab is packed with features and enriched content experience from its Android™ OS v2.2 (Froyo).
  • 16GB
  • 1Ghz Hummingbird chip from the Galaxy S
  • 7" TFT-LCD
  • 3G connectivity, Wi-Fi & Bluetooth® 3.0
  • Access to Android™ Marketplace & Google Mobile Services
  • Rear facing 3MP camera (with LED flash) & 1.3MP front-facing camera

  • Android™ v2.1 (Éclair) with Flash Lite browsing
  • 3MP fixed focus camera with digital zoom
  • 2.8" TFT touchscreen display with QWERTY keyboard



  • Android™ v2.1 (Éclair) with Flash Lite browsing
  • 3MP fixed focus camera with digital zoom
  • 2.8" TFT touchscreen display with QWERTY keyboard



  • 5MP Camera with 4X digital zoom and LED flash
  • Reverse flip design with BACKTRACK™ navigation pad
  • 3.1" 320 x 480 TFT capacitive touchscreen



  • Android OS v2.1 (Éclair) with Sense UI
  • 3.2" capacitive touchscreen of QVGA resolution
  • 3G with 7.2 Mbps HSDPA



  • 4-inch Super AMOLED screen with touch-sensitive controls
  • 5MP AF Camera with HD Recording
  • Swype text input lets you type on the touch screen without lifting your finger

  • Customized Android OS v1.6 with Timescape UI
  • Qualcomm MSM7227 600 MHz CPU
  • 2.55" capacitive touchscreen of QVGA resolution


Macam cantek!
JOM TUKAR
Goodbye Symbian