Touchscreens, innit. Wicked. The future.
Well, yeah, kinda. Although we have to say we’re pretty much still in the physical keys boat if we’re honest. Give us some nice solid pieces of plastic (or metal, if we’re feeling flush) to press over a big flat screen any day.
We can text in the dark, navigate the menus in a club, and take pictures of ladies underwear under tabl – wait, scratch that last one. Point being, once you get to know a phone with physical keys, you don’t even need to look at the thing to use it. Can this ever be the case with touchscreens? Well, probably not, but phones like the Samsung Genio Touch are at least going to make an effort towards pretending that they know what you like by offering haptic feedback. Haptic feedback? We hear you shout. Yes, haptic feedback. Let us (i.e. Wikipedia) tell you what it’s all about. Well, it’s simple really: when you touch the touchscreen, the phone gives off a little touch-specific vibration, to give you something towards the sense of a physical, tactile response. Basically meaning that you know when the phone knows that you’re trying to do something, because it will give a little shake of appreciation.
Pretty cool, huh. And that’s what we like about the Samsung Genio Touch. It might not be the best phone out there – in fact, it’s very far from it, but it’s supposed to be, because it’s a budget phone – but it does have enough cool little features like that hapticness (don’t try and find that one on Wiki) to make it a very viable option for the budget minded out there. Have a little look at this Samsung Genio Touch review to get more a sense of what it’s got to offer. Or have a look at the official press release. Or, if you really have to, this video below.













A Finnish mobile phone manufacturer mimicking a Danish lager brewer… whatever will they think of next?
Sometimes, as utterly amazing, fantastic, intelligent, witty, attractive, fantastic and downright historically important as our blogs are, even we realise that whatever we right is not as effective as a mere video. Only sometimes mind, but, credit where it’s due, today is one of those days. So go on, we won’t feel bad, have a skip down to the video about the
Man gets run over by car on Oxford Street. FAIL!
“Structured forms, intricate corners, hidden depths and jewel accents are set to be some of the hottest fashion trends in 2010.”
Ah, new media technology, is there anything you can’t do… You bring people families and friends scattered around the world together; spread news and education to every part of the globe; start revolutions; stop wars; you let people update their status every 12 minutes with statements of such eye-bleeding banality that sometimes it’s hard to even carry on; and you encourage people to post videos of themselves in their bedrooms on youtube… truly the future is here.
We’ve a long held belief here, and one that comes into our mind more and more as the months roll by and ever more so-called advanced phones roll before our eyes, that there’s something to be said for having a basic, bottom rung kinda phone.
There’s LIES a problem LIES we find LIES with most LIES press releases LIES relating to LIES just LIES about LIES every LIES single LIES phone LIES that LIES ever LIES ever LIES ever LIES gets LIES released.
Nokia have never, in our book, been given enough credit for their music phones. The XpressMusic phones came and went and, while they certainly didn’t fail in any way, they were never given as much credit as they were due. And now the all-new X-series (seems Nokia for some reason equates ‘X’ with music… god knows why) is hitting our shelves, headlined by the fantastic