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LG Prada Phone Looks Like An iPhone Knock-Off, Or Is It Vice Versa?
Information Week ^ | W. David Gardner

Posted on 01/19/2007 11:06:08 AM PST by TC Rider

LG Prada Phone Looks Like An iPhone Knock-Off, Or Is It Vice Versa?

Both phones feature touch screens, use the slow Edge wireless data network, play music and videos, have digital cameras, and can check e-mail and access the Internet.

By W. David Gardner
InformationWeek

Jan 19, 2007 12:46 PM

Barely a week old, Apple's iPhone already has a knock-off -- a slim, buttonless, touch-screen cell phone from LG Electronics and fashion house Prada Group. Or, is the iPhone a knock-off of the LG Prada Phone?

Announced Thursday for delivery in Europe next month, the $780 Prada Phone features touch-screen technology that is similar to the $500 iPhone, which is scheduled for delivery in the U.S. in June.

The two phones have other things in common: both operate on the slow Edge wireless data network, both play music and videos, both have digital cameras, and users of both can check e-mail and access the Internet. The iPhone will have Wi-Fi capability, which the Prada Phone lacks.

(Excerpt) Read more at informationweek.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS:
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To: AFreeBird

We former electronics industry employees always said LG = Little Guys (aka "The 38th parallel boys")


21 posted on 01/19/2007 11:43:06 AM PST by Chi-townChief
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To: TC Rider

Pros prefer Prada


22 posted on 01/19/2007 11:43:21 AM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: Cicero
Apple for hippies, Prada for wealthy urban sophisticates and metrosexuals.

If the iPod hits a niche market, it's one hell of a niche.

23 posted on 01/19/2007 11:44:18 AM PST by Alter Kaker ("Whatever tears one sheds, in the end one always blows one's nose." - Heine)
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To: Chi-townChief

Yea, Goldstar sucks. I always hated their monitors back in the early days on PC's.


24 posted on 01/19/2007 11:47:49 AM PST by AFreeBird (If American "cowboy diplomacy" did not exist, it would be necessary to invent it.)
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To: Larry Lucido

Same guy sold me a bunch of "Couch" leather bags.


25 posted on 01/19/2007 11:48:29 AM PST by Holicheese (Beerfest could be the greatest movie ever made!)
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To: TC Rider

"Apple has a history of lifting technology from other's efforts, witness the mouse and GUI interface that Apple borrowed from Xerox PARC, OSX borrrows heavily from Unix."

Sounds like you're confusing Microsoft with Apple. And, OSX actually IS BSD Unix.


26 posted on 01/19/2007 11:50:32 AM PST by RegulatorCountry
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To: TC Rider

I guess that I can't see having either one

life is too short to be 'hooked up' to something 12/7, let alone 24/7


27 posted on 01/19/2007 11:53:17 AM PST by sure_fine (*not one to over kill the thought process*)
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To: XeniaSt
"OS X is BSD *nix."

Actually, not only is OS X BSD-based, but it is based on the old NeXTSTEP OS from the NeXT computer, which was a BSD derivative built on top of the Mach microkernel.

"BSD is the most secure *nix based on the DARPA contract for internet security."

I don't know if this is accurate. If you are referring to DARPA's Composable High Assurance Trusted Systems project, that was canceled back in 2003:

DARPA pulls funding for OpenBSD, leader says

28 posted on 01/19/2007 11:53:55 AM PST by magellan
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To: TC Rider

If you look at the back of the iPhone, notice the removable battery enclosure.


29 posted on 01/19/2007 12:30:42 PM PST by WallStsk8r (Ready to rock)
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To: sanchmo
What Apple has done (again) is bring it together into a better product. So now let the battle between Apple, LG and Samsung begin.

Yup. It'll be interesting to see how the touchscreen keyboard flys.

30 posted on 01/19/2007 12:36:24 PM PST by Aquinasfan (When you find "Sola Scriptura" in the Bible, let me know)
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To: Larry Lucido; TC Rider; MotleyGirl70; Cagey
I bought a bunch from a guy off the street and gave them away. Turned out to be "Pravda" phones. I'm ruined!

"Bought it from my good friend Bob Sacamento."

31 posted on 01/19/2007 12:58:59 PM PST by Mr. Brightside
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To: WallStsk8r
If you look at the back of the iPhone, notice the removable battery enclosure.

Pictures of the back of the iPhone do not seem to be widely available. Perhaps you could post one.

I was going on published reports that the battery was not a user installed option, ala iPod.

32 posted on 01/19/2007 1:07:12 PM PST by TC Rider (The United States Constitution © 1791. All Rights Reserved.)
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To: RegulatorCountry
"Apple has a history of lifting technology from other's efforts, witness the mouse and GUI interface that Apple borrowed from Xerox PARC, OSX borrrows heavily from Unix."

Sounds like you're confusing Microsoft with Apple. And, OSX actually IS BSD Unix.

No confusion at all, it was Apple that visited the PARC lab on that fateful day.

Like millions of others, I could be easily confused by all the permutations of Unix, which I consider a difference without a distinction.

33 posted on 01/19/2007 1:09:53 PM PST by TC Rider (The United States Constitution © 1791. All Rights Reserved.)
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To: WallStsk8r

Touchscreen pros:
1. Doesn't require a hardwired set of extremely small buttons. Instead, you just present the buttons that are needed for the current task, at the most appropriate size, configuration and position for that task.
2. The multi-touch concept is pretty powerful. Design the UI so I can use my fingers as if they were fingers, not just a mouse attached to my hand.

Touchscreen cons:
3. You have to look & aim carefully. You can't let your fingers just feel your way to a specific letter of button.
4. Touchscreens are prone to damage and to physical degradation from dirty fingers.

#4 is prob the biggest problem. Spend $500 on a phone that won't last as long?


34 posted on 01/19/2007 1:29:21 PM PST by sanchmo (If we wish to learn what was going on in Europe in 1938, just look around - V.D. Hanson)
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To: TC Rider
Apple has a history of lifting technology from other's efforts, witness the mouse

Douglas Engelbart of the Stanford Research Institute invented the mouse in 1964

The first mouse to be shipped as a part of a computer and was intended
for personal computer navigation was Apple's Macintosh I Mouse.


35 posted on 01/19/2007 1:32:06 PM PST by Uri’el-2012 (Psalm 144:1 Praise be to YHvH, my Rock, who trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle.)
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To: TC Rider

36 posted on 01/19/2007 1:32:47 PM PST by BurbankKarl
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To: magellan
XS>"OS X is BSD *nix."

Actually, not only is OS X BSD-based, but it is based on the old NeXTSTEP OS from the NeXT computer, which was a BSD derivative built on top of the Mach microkernel.

XS> "BSD is the most secure *nix based on the DARPA contract for internet security."

I don't know if this is accurate. If you are referring to DARPA's Composable High Assurance Trusted Systems project, that was canceled back in 2003:

DARPA pulls funding for OpenBSD, leader says

28 posted on 01/19/2007 12:53:55 PM MST by magellan

The DARPA funding for computer security with BSD started in the late 1970s.

A *nix geek would know

4.3 > V

BSD v4.3 *nix is greater then ATT System V Unix(R)


37 posted on 01/19/2007 1:44:06 PM PST by Uri’el-2012 (Psalm 144:1 Praise be to YHvH, my Rock, who trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle.)
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To: XeniaSt

Your citation is wrong, the first mouse shipped as part of a personal computer system would have been the Lisa.

TC


38 posted on 01/19/2007 2:14:14 PM PST by TC Rider (The United States Constitution © 1791. All Rights Reserved.)
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To: TC Rider
TC>Your citation is wrong, the first mouse shipped as part of a personal computer system would have been the Lisa.

The Lisa was first introduced in January 1983 (announced on January 19) at a cost of $9,995 US ($20,600 in Nov. 2006 dollars).

One would be hardpressed to call $20,000 computer a personal computer.

39 posted on 01/19/2007 2:34:20 PM PST by Uri’el-2012 (Psalm 144:1 Praise be to YHvH, my Rock, who trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle.)
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To: TC Rider
In 1945 Vanaver Bush conceived and published a paper describing
a time when users would interact with a machine with a GUI.
If anybody was the father of the GUI
it was Bush but then Bush never did anything with it. Engelbart did.

40 posted on 01/19/2007 2:45:55 PM PST by Uri’el-2012 (Psalm 144:1 Praise be to YHvH, my Rock, who trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle.)
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