Emblaze Mobile, an Israel-based mobile phone manufacturer, has announced plans to bring out a cutting edge device that it purports would transform the mobile experience to a great extent.
Showcased at an event in London on Tuesday, the new handset, dubbed as “First Else”, is incorporating Else Intuition, a breakthrough Linux-based mobile phone operating system collaboratively developed by Emblaze Mobile and Access Software.
The device, pricing details of which are yet to be revealed, is expected to hit the shelves in the first quarter of the next year.
About its hardware, the device seems to be well-equipped with 854x480 capacitive screen, along with a 5-megapixel camera, and a considerably scraggy casing.
First demoed in Japan last month, the handset boasts of features which will function rather autonomously to each other.
For instance, if a user gets a call while using the GPS service, then the device flashes a small notification to make the user aware of the waiting call. That’s not just it, as it allows the user to send a notification to the caller to check out if the call is urgent without closing the running application.
Extolling the capabilities of this promising device, Amir Kupervas, chief executive of Emblaze, told V3.co.uk that "We are not a phone. When you're using an application, the entire device becomes that application, so it delivers the same experience as best-of-breed dedicated devices. If you play music, you get the experience comparable to an iPod. For email you get the experience of a BlackBerry, and for navigation the experience of TomTom”.
Continued on next page Tags: Emblaze Mobile, Linux, smartphone
Hot Topics

Office web is the latest addition to Microsoft's Office business suite and is set to be the company's most revolutionary version.

Microsoft's 14th version of its award winning, multi-billion dollar cash cow business suite, is the company's most ambitious to date.

Spotify is certainly one of the most popular online music websites in the world which is a feat for a service that was officially launched only in February 2009


















Comments