
El fabricante LG nos trae otro modelo de sus teléfonos móviles, que cuenta con soporte para redes de tercera generación, siendo este el LG CB630.
Este producto, se esconde tras un modesto diseño, mientras que sus características lo ubican entre los productos de media/alta gama, como veremos a continuación:
- Dimensiones: 103 x 53 x 12 mm
- Peso: 81 gramos
- GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
- GPRS/EDGE
- HSDPA (sin especificar)
- Pantalla LCD QVGA de 2.2” con hasta 262 mil colores y resolución de 240 x 320px
- Cámara de 1.3 Megapíxeles
- Reproductor de audio en MP3, eAAC+, WMA
- Reproductor de vídeos en MPEG4
- Grabador de voz
- Memoria interna de 128MB
- Ranura microSD
- USB 2.0
- Bluetooth 2.0
- Batería de Ion Litio de 900 mAh
- Autonomía de 3 horas en uso, 250 horas en espera
Está disponible por medio de la operadora AT&T en los Estados Unidos, a un precio de 69 euros aproximadamente, con contrato.
De momento se desconoce si el producto será lanzado en otros países.
Salvo su diseño y su modesta cámara, lo veo como una buena alternativa para quienes quieren entrar en el mundo 3G sin gastarse una fortuna.
Visto en Generation NT
Tags: 3g, bluetooth 2.0, cámara, cb630, edge, gprs, GSM, hsdpa, Invision, lcd, lg, microsd, qvga, usb 2.0


CortBlurl
First-time investor
“I want to invest, but I dont know where and how to start. Help me choose the best funds with quick returns.
- Jane Mozingo, Chicago
If you are looking for -quick returns-, then mutual funds are not the investment to make. I don’t know what’s the investment to make, but let me stick to what I know, which is mutual funds
The rationale for equities established, let’s put in place some ground rules for you as a first-time investor:
-Not all your savings should go into equities. Consult your financial planner on how much should.
- Take the help of a good investment advisor, again with a good track record. If you want to do it yourself, go through performance rankings of independent fund-tracking agencies like SOIC , and pick funds that have consistently done well.
-About 60-65 per cent of your investment should be in funds with a large-cap bias, 25-35 per cent with a mid-cap objective, the balance in theme funds.
-Spread your risk. Don’t put all your money in just one scheme. Instead, for each objective of yours, divide your investment across three schemes, across three fund houses. That way, even if one scheme stumbles because of bad money management, the others give you a chance to make up.
-Track your schemes periodically to make sure they stay performers. Earning returns and preserving your capital is as tough, if not tougher, than earning it.
Matthew Barry, “Seven Oceans Investments Club”.