Here is a short video walkthrough of the new handsets presented and other insight at the GSMA Mobile World Congress today:
Garnim Nuvifone … the Smartphone mixed with a personal GPS navigation device.
Nokia N96 … their new flagship product to compete with the iPhone: The Finnish leader in worldwide handset marketshares included the mobile TV standard DVB-H, a 16 GB of internal storage and a microSD card slot. Symbian S60 is running as the mobile Operating System. So it has a well functioning but oldfashioned userinterface – and there is tons of software out there. You can watch your videos or mobile TV at a glossy 2.8″ QVAG screen and can use nearly every connection you want: quad band GSM (850/900/1800/1900MHz) – with GPRS, HSDPA and EDGE support for high speed data connections, dual band WCDMA (900/2100MHz) – also called UMTS in Europe – and WiFi (802.11b/g). It even has a GPS-receiver built in.
SonyEricsson XPERIA X1 … the SonyEricsson people try to compete with the elegance of the Apple iPhone by using Windows Mobile and refurbishing the user interface. It’s equipped with a slide-out full QWERTY keyboard and a glossy 3″ WVGA display, also a built in GPS-receiver. It works with a variety of GSM HSDPA/HSUPA networks as well as Wifi.
They created a inspiring ad for the XPERIA X1
… BTW … it’s the biggest event in the mobile inustry and everybody is talking about a company which isn’t even exhibiting there – Apple with it’s iPhone

It’s quite interesting to go into the browser / OS marketshare statistics Net Applications is gathering.
Within the last 12 months, the marketshare of Apple Mac OS X powered computers increased from 6.38% in Feb 2007 to 7.57% in Jan 2008 – a growth rate of about 19%. This great news for the Mac community – but what’s really surprising is the significant marketshare of iPhone surfers in the last month. The iPhone was introduced to the US market on June 29th 2007 – and in Jan 2008 it’s internet surfer worldwide market share is 0.13% according to the Net Applications. Focussing only on the US market it’s share is even higher at 0.20%!
It looks like the iPhone really fuels the use of mobile internet.
Source: Net Applications
Steve Jobs presented a new feature of the iPhone – and also the iPod touch. Especially the iPod touch transforms into a new category of devices by adding location based services: By cooperating with Skyhook Wireless it is possible to get the own location by triangulating the signals from different WiFi-hotspots. The iPhone uses also the well known method by using the cell-ids to find the current location. It’s quite interesting, that it seems that Apple is not cooperating with the mobile network operators to get the location by cell ids and triangulation: They realized this feature by cooperating with Google. When I think of the hurdles to realize mobile Location Based Services (LBS) with the different operators … this is not a bad idea.
We really can be curious, whether the iPhone SDK will be the kickoff of a new era in LBS. Maybe Apple will also provide the iPhone web developers with the LBS-SDK Loki SDK for their web applications – that would really roll up the LBS-scene