The Bellperre Nero Gold

Bellperre has continued its lineup of luxury handsets through the launch of its tailor-made NERO GOLD ‘Brushed Steel, Precious Buttons’ mobile phone. The Bellperre Nero Gold (100 x 44 x 15,5mm) is now available in high polished solid silver or gold buttons.

The shiny buttons are meant to capture the light, to create a great design with the unique combination of black crocodile shiny patent leather combined with brush steel metal and shiny gold buttons.

According to Bellperre, the handset includes only luxury leather, pure steel, hard wood, sapphire crystal, precious gold and diamonds.

There is also a 2-inch TFT display made of sapphire crystal that can offer a 176 x 220 pixel resolution. In addition, the Bellperre Nero Gold also features Windows Mobile as its operating platform and includes Bluetooth 2.0 capabilities, as well as a camcorder and a video player.

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Constellation C design phone by Vertu has a length of 109 mm, a width of 45 mm, a depth of 15.7 mm and a weight that starts from 140 to 142 grams.

There are models with different combinations: 1) white gold with black ceramic keys, diamond trim and black leather, 2) yellow gold with black ceramic keys, diamond trim and black leather, and 3) yellow gold with black ceramic keys, double diamond trim and black leather.

Providing you a talk time of 5.5 hours and a standby time of around 400 hours, the phone also comes with a 20mm hands free loudspeaker. The keypad is laser etched + back-illuminated and the display of the phone is high resolution and dynamic with sapphire crystal.

Packed with a gamut of features, the constellation C Design phone has certainly met the standards of the present day market. There is Bluetooth and USB, PC and Mac synchronization and modem support!

You can also chose your own leather case pink leather case with lizard print collar and stainless steel clasp, a black one with lizard print detailing, a burgundy one with crocodile print, or a brown one with lizard print detailing.

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Mobiles, protests and pundits

“Until recently, killers in Burundi found it easy to cover their traces; they just tossed the bodies into a river where crocodiles would eat them up. But in August residents of Muyinga province acted fast when they saw fresh corpses drifting downstream; they used their mobile phones to contact NGOs, who in turn tipped off the United Nations, whose soldiers got to the scene fast enough to recover some forensic evidence.

The use of mobiles as a tool of “empowerment”, even in the poorest and worst-governed parts of the world, is not always so grisly. The cruder kinds of electoral fraud, relying on poor communications between the capital and the boondocks, are now much harder.

Even with minimal resources, monitors can count the voters and conduct exit polls—and then phone their findings to a radio station before the authorities stuff the ballot boxes. Such methods have helped make elections a bit cleaner in places like Ghana and Kenya. ”

Meanwhile, in Europe’s darkest corner, Belarus, text messages call youngsters to surreal acts of resistance, such as (to take a recent example) gathering to eat ice cream.

Chroniclers of cellular people power identify two big landmarks:

“The rallies that toppled President Joseph Estrada of the Philippines in 2001, and South Korea’s presidential election a year later, when text messages among the young brought a surge of support for President Roh Moo-hyun. In both those countries protests are still convened by text message not just at critical times, when national leadership is at stake, but to highlight almost any sort of grievance.

For Europeans mobile democracy??? came of age with the Spanish election of March 2004, immediately after a terrorist attack in Madrid: the Socialists rode to power on a wave of text-driven anger with the ruling conservatives. In America some claim the same happened at the Republican convention in 2004, when text messages helped protesters play cat-and-mouse with the New York police.”

Source- http://www.textually.org

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