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PC Magazine October 26, 2004 Craig Ellison |
Portable GPS: Get There from Here We tested four of the latest portable GPS offerings to see which could get us there from here and back again.  |
PC Magazine October 18, 2004 Sascha Segan |
Kyocera SoHo/KX1 If you're all talk, the Kyocera SoHo is the phone for you. The SoHo doesn't have any of the features we often celebrate. But it's attractive, it's solid, and it makes quality phone calls. For many people, that will be enough.  |
PC Magazine October 15, 2004 Sascha Segan |
Nokia 3205 The Nokia 3205 is a fun, tough, and inexpensive phone that's a good choice for 'tweens and teens: They'll lose it before they break it.  |
PC Magazine October 13, 2004 Sascha Segan |
Sony Ericsson K700i The Sony Ericsson K700i is a fun little phone that delivers a few extra features that take it beyond the basics.  |
PC Magazine October 12, 2004 Sascha Segan |
Audiovox SMT 5600 The first phone to use Windows Media Player 10, the Audiovox SMT 5600 phone is your best option for taking many kinds of music and video and Outlook PIM data on the go.  |
InternetNews November 12, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
Microsoft Now Leads in PDA, Embedded OS According to a pair of new studies, Redmond has unseated PalmOne and WindRiver in the PDA and embedded space.  |
PC World December 2004 Grace Aquino |
Cell Phones Do Broadband New phones and PC Cards take advantage of faster networks.  |
PC World December 2004 Aquino & Arar |
Cell Phones for E-Mail Fans Tapping out messages on a cell phone can be taxing; these hybrids claim to make it easier.  |
PC World December 2004 Tom Mainelli |
OQO Handheld Disappoints Who wouldn't want a full-featured PC the size of a PDA? That's the promise of OQO's $1999 Model 01 Ultra PC with Windows XP. Unfortunately, the Model 01 is better in concept than as a product.  |
PC World December 2004 Andrew Brandt |
Privacy Watch: Cell Phones Get Chatty With Hackers Earlier this year, two security researchers, Adam Laurie and Martin Herfurt, created a collection of hacks they call BlueSnarfing that enabled them to stealthily duplicate the address book, call records, photos, and text messages from certain phone models.  |
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