Acer unveils beTouch E120 and beTouch E130

Author: admin  //  Category: Acer, Android, Touch Ul

Acer presented two new Android-based smartphones today - the candybar beTouch E120 and the QWERTY-bar beTouch E130.

Both devices run on Android v1.6 Donut, have 3.2 megapixel snappers, ST Ericsson 416MHz processors, 256MB RAM, 512MB ROM, and full connectivity package - Wi-Fi, 3G, GPS, Bluetooth, FM radio and 3.5mm audio jack. The common specs sheets end with an accelerometer for auto-rotate and a microSD card slot.

Acer beTouch E120 sports 2.8-inch QVGA touchscreen, while beTouch E130 uses 2.6-inch landscape QVGA touchscreen and full-QWERTY keyboard below it. The QWERTY bar form factor is definitely a novelty in the Android world.

We are already familiar with E130, since it was recently showcased at Computex 2010.


Acer beTouch E120 • Acer beTocuh E130

Both beTouch devices run on Android OS v1.6 Donut and will feature additional software such as Acer Spinlets (for accessing or sharing media content) and UrFooz (for social networking).

Both phones will be released in Q3 this year in black and white versions. Acer beTouch E120 will hit the shelves in mid-July, while its QWERTY sibling E130 is expected in August. There is no word on pricing yet.

Acer Liquid review: Android breed

Author: admin  //  Category: Android

Introduction

The Android meter is ticking. Acer want a piece of the pie. We all add two and two together. Yesterday, Acer didn’t know the first thing about phones (if you can say that for a household name in notebooks), today they’re betting on two horses in the mobile OS race. After their neoTouch running on Windows Mobile 6.5, Acer decided to dip their toe into another kind of water - the free and open source world of Android. This time attention goes to the Liquid - the company’s second Snapdragon powered device.

We have to admit we weren’t as impressed as we wished by the neoTouch and its almost naked Windows Mobile OS. It was less the price and more the really strong competition that drew our attention away from it.

Acer Liquid Acer Liquid Acer Liquid
Acer Liquid official photos

We’re certain it’s not how Acer planned it to be and their answer was immediate - the sexy Liquid powered by Android 1.6. Just like the neoTouch, a Snapdragon core is ticking inside the Liquid and does all it can to run the OS flawlessly despite the slightly lower clock rates.

Key features

  • Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support
  • 3G with HSDPA 7.2 Mbps and HSUPA 2Mbps
  • Android OS v1.6 with Acer UI 3.0
  • 3.5″ capacitive touchscreen of WVGA resolution
  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 8250 768 MHz CPU, 256 MB RAM
  • 5 megapixel autofocus camera with video recording
  • Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g and GPS receiver
  • Accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate and turn-to-mute
  • Digital compass
  • Standard miniUSB port for charging and data
  • Stereo Bluetooth (A2DP)
  • microSD card slot with support for up to 16GB cards (2GB one included)
  • Standard 3.5mm audio jack
  • Direct access to the official Android Market

Main disadvantages

  • Camera lacks flash or lens cover, has outdated features
  • No smart dialing, no voice dialing, no video calling
  • No web Flash support
  • Acer UI 3.0 offers only minor changes to the original interface
  • Somewhat limited 3rd party software availability
  • No DivX or XviD video support or a third-party application to play that
  • Poor MP4 playback performance - any videos over QVGA res are barely watchable
  • No proper file manager out of the box
  • No TV-out port
  • No FM radio

Both lists give us a sense of deja-vu. It was a similar case with the neoTouch, but this time the situation is a bit different. Some of the Liquid’s weaknesses are inherent to the Android OS (especially its first iteration, the Donut). It’s not that they won’t count against, but it’s at least fair to note most of those are not Acer’s fault.


Acer Liquid live photos

Anyway, the Liquid will be measured against the likes of HTC Magic, HTC Hero, Samsung Galaxy and Samsung Galaxy Spica and it sure has a few things to offer that they won’t. WVGA resolution and sky-high processing speeds are enough of an edge against competitors. The excellent capacitive screen and all-round connectivity are perhaps no news for the Android species.

So, Acer are newcomers but they’re keen to bring value. Let’s see how their Android fits in that plan.

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