Nokia N900 Rover in springy pics, achievement presently to T-Mobile USA?

Remember that Nokia N900 Rover internet tablet, rumored to effect T-Mobile USA?

It looks aforementioned the amount has foregather passed the FCC, as Nokia RX-51 – which, according to the FCC documentation, supports T-Mobile’s 3G oftenness (1700MHz).

Moreover, lots if images with the RX-51 / Rover effect appeared over at kaskus.us, so we eventually participate what the paper looks like.

And, as you crapper gaming in the pictures below, it looks rattling nice:

Nokia Rover live

Nokia Rover springy closed

Nokia Rover springy 4

Nokia Rover springy 5

The famous features of Nokia Rover include:

  • Wi-Fi
  • GPS
  • 3.5 advancement touchscreen designate with 800 x 480 pixels (not confirmed)
  • Maemo 5 OS (not confirmed)
  • Bluetooth
  • FM Transmitter
  • 5MP Carl Zeiss camera
  • Full QWERTY keyboard

Neither Nokia nor T-Mobile effect declared the N900 Rover, but it belike won’t be daylong until the infant cyberspace Tablet gets to be officially unveiled.

Via Mobile Bulgaria, Engadget

3.5 advancement touchscreen designate with 800 x 480 pixel
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Nokia heads deeper down CDMA path with FCC-outed dual slider

For better or worse, dual sliders are quickly becoming one of Nokia’s trademark form factors — but one thing we’d never really expected out of Espoo was a dual slider equipped with EV-DO Rev. A. Sure enough, FCC documentation has revealed a diminutive black dumbphone that packs CDMA800 / 1900 with 3G and slides two ways: one to reveal a numeric keypad, the other to offer up music controls. Historically, Nokia has “co-ODM’d” its CDMA devices with an unnamed Asian partner, and we suspect this device is no different — but we’ve got to give them credit for crafting a genuinely Nokia-esque device here. The draft user’s manual doesn’t reveal a retail name or model number, but we do see references to UIMs (the CDMA equivalent of SIMs) and British spellings of “organiser,” which leads us to believe North America might not be on the VIP list for this one. Would be a shame, wouldn’t it?

[Via Phone Scoop]

Update: Commenter Kunal points out that this looks an awful lot like the China-bound 8208, which makes us wonder — why the FCC approval? Did that bad boy pique the interest of Verizon or Sprint?

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TomTom DUB1 navigator works in-dash or on-the-go


They’re far from common, but we’ve definitely seen modular GPS concepts before. If this leaked FCC documentation is any gauge of reality, however, TomTom will be making those wild, wild dreams into something entirely more tangible. The DUB1 is an up and coming navigator which is designed to operate in a snap-in portal located in your nearest dashboard or in the palm of your nearest hand. It’s likely that said portal will be a double-DIN aftermarket accessory, but we suppose TomTom could nail down contracts with automakers to provide it from the factory. There’s little left to do but wait and see, but given just how nuts Garmin went at CES 2008, don’t be shocked to see this as one of the many coming from its main rival in just under a month.

[Via NaviGadget]
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