CorbyPRO B5310
The Samsung Corby Pro screams out youth, vibrancy and chic style. The phone comes with a whole bunch of widgets and apps for connecting to social networksand web services such as Flickr and Facebook. It has a 2.8-inch display that performs decently for a resistive touchscreen. However be prepared to encounter several mistaps and unintended application launches in normal usage. The highlight of the phone is the slide out QWERTY keypad. We found it to be quite good, with adequately bevelled keys that provide just the right amount of tactile feedback. The 3.15 megapixel camera produces sharp pictures in normal Lighting conditions and that’s it. As for build quality, despite being almost entirely plastic, thephone gives the impression of being sturdy — even the slide out keypad. There are several enhancements in this phone over predecessors in the Corby series, namely Wi-Fi, 3.5G connectivity, and in built GPS. All things considered it’s a ‘cute’ bundle of features and until QWERTY Android devices breach this price point, we’d say go for it if Touch is a mustand QWERTY is what you were always looking for.
Display: 2.8-inch touchscreenTFT, 240 x 320pixels, 16M coloursNetwork: GSM/ EDGE / GPRS850/900/1800/1900 MHzMemory: 100MB,microSD up to 16 GBWeight: 135 gmsConnectivity: Wi-Fi,Micro USB, Bluetoothv2.1, 3.5 mm audio
VOTED 7 OUT OF 10 STARS
Dell Inspiron Mini 10
Specifications
CPU: Intel Atom N270,
RAM: 1 GB DDR2 667
MHz, HDD: 2.5”, 160 GB,
5400 rpm, Display: 10.1-
Inches, 1024 x 600 pixels
MRP: RS. 17,400
VOTED 8 OUT OF 10 STARS
Sony Ericsson Satio
Satio is one of the rarefull screen touch phones from SE. This is a bulky handset, but a good looker. The phone runs on an ARM Cortex-A8 600 MHz and the Symbian S60 OS. It has a resistive touchscreen, which is not very responsive. The user interface is a bit altered fromtypical Symbian style — there are fi ve home screens on the Satio. It supports WiFi and comes with an in-built menu called Locations which has all the GPS functionality. The on-screen QWERTY keypad is quite good thanks to the haptic feedback and large keys which reduces typos. The speaker quality of the phone is very ordinary. The built in earphones give a decent output. The sluggish response kills the internet experience.The USP of the phone is its camera. Dual flash technology gives good results in low light conditions. Video shooting at 30 fps allowslive zooming option. The accelerometer of the phone changes the orientation of images accordingly. At Rs. 36,950, this phone is overpriced, considering it uses a resistive touch (not good for internet usage), but it does sport a very good camera.
Specifications
GSM 850/900/1800/1900,
UMTS 850/1900/2100, Data
Link: CSD, HSCSD, GPRS,
EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA,
HSUPA, OS: Symbian S60
5th edition, Processor: ARM
Cortex A8
MRP:RS. 36,950
VOTED 6.5 OUT OF 10 STARS
NZXT Sentry 2
Specifications
LCD touchscreen, 5x thermal
diodes, 5x fan control, display
backlight controllable
MRP:RS.2,000

