We just registered.
www.shanzhai-mobile-phone.com
and
www.dual-sim-mobile-phone.com
we can sell it if anyone is interested in.
:)
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Monday, April 20, 2009
First Watch Mobile Phone (Mobile Phone Watch) that looks like a real Wrist Watch on you hand -Babiken MQ08
Watch Mobile Phone
Cell Phone Watch MQ08
Mobile Phone Watch MQ08
Babiken Watch Mobile Phone MQ08
China phone makers have already made dozens of watch mobile phones. but due to technical difficulties, most of them does not look like a real watch on your wrist. But now Babiken has this MQ08 and you can see it is surely like a real watch comparing to other models.
Features:
* GSM900/1800/1900 Triband
* Very cute design
* Mp3 player built in for music
* mp4 player built in for video
* Stereo bluetooth
* 1GB memory card as gift
* Memory card slot for microSD to expand
* GPRS, WAP
* Languages: English, French, Spanish, Italian, German, Portuguese
Cell Phone Watch MQ08
Mobile Phone Watch MQ08
Babiken Watch Mobile Phone MQ08
China phone makers have already made dozens of watch mobile phones. but due to technical difficulties, most of them does not look like a real watch on your wrist. But now Babiken has this MQ08 and you can see it is surely like a real watch comparing to other models.
Features:
* GSM900/1800/1900 Triband
* Very cute design
* Mp3 player built in for music
* mp4 player built in for video
* Stereo bluetooth
* 1GB memory card as gift
* Memory card slot for microSD to expand
* GPRS, WAP
* Languages: English, French, Spanish, Italian, German, Portuguese
Details are on www.babiken.com and www.babikenshop.com
Monday, April 13, 2009
True 10 MP Camera Mobile Phone -Mobile Phone with real 10 megapixel camera-Babiken Ferrari F1
Ferrari F1 Style Mobile Phone
Real 10 Megapixel Camera Mobile Phone
Babiken Babiken Multimedia Mobile Phone F1
At the very beginning, China phone makers made T200 with a zoomable camera. Someone claims it was 5MP but after my test, I found it was just 2MP. Then not long time later, C702 came out and beat the pixels on T200 because C702 has a 3.2MP camera. Then there was one model I forgot the model number, which had a real 5 megapixel camera but it was very very expensive. The phone disappeared quickly probably due to the expensiveness. Now we have this astonishing model Babiken Ferrari F1 and it has a real 10MP camera built in and the maximum photo it can shoot is 3648*2736. I like this one is because it has a real 10 MP camera, but the price is affordable for those who are interested in high megapixel camera phones.
* GSM900/1800
* Display: 2.8 inch touch screen
* MP3 music player
* Mp4 3GP video player
* FM Radio tuner
* Digital Camera: 10 Megapixels (photo size:3648*2736)
* Video recorder
* Memory card slot for MicroSD to expand
* Data transfer: USB cable, card reader, bluetooth, WAP, GPRS
* 10 MP camera with auto focus, JAVA 2.0
* incoming call blacklist, touch keyboard
* Phone contacts: 500
* 2 simple games
* Java 2.0
Real 10 Megapixel Camera Mobile Phone
Babiken Babiken Multimedia Mobile Phone F1
At the very beginning, China phone makers made T200 with a zoomable camera. Someone claims it was 5MP but after my test, I found it was just 2MP. Then not long time later, C702 came out and beat the pixels on T200 because C702 has a 3.2MP camera. Then there was one model I forgot the model number, which had a real 5 megapixel camera but it was very very expensive. The phone disappeared quickly probably due to the expensiveness. Now we have this astonishing model Babiken Ferrari F1 and it has a real 10MP camera built in and the maximum photo it can shoot is 3648*2736. I like this one is because it has a real 10 MP camera, but the price is affordable for those who are interested in high megapixel camera phones.
* GSM900/1800
* Display: 2.8 inch touch screen
* MP3 music player
* Mp4 3GP video player
* FM Radio tuner
* Digital Camera: 10 Megapixels (photo size:3648*2736)
* Video recorder
* Memory card slot for MicroSD to expand
* Data transfer: USB cable, card reader, bluetooth, WAP, GPRS
* 10 MP camera with auto focus, JAVA 2.0
* incoming call blacklist, touch keyboard
* Phone contacts: 500
* 2 simple games
* Java 2.0
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Shanzhai report from forbes
below article is from Forbes.com just for your refrence and information
China's Black Market Boom
Gady Epstein, 01.29.09, 05:00 PM EST Forbes Magazine dated February 16, 2009
Who needs Nokia? The spirit of shanzhai rules the phone-pirate's cove in Shenzhen.
Something was wrong with Zhao Shengli's order of 200 Nokia phones at a wholesale market in Shenzhen--the phones were missing one of the languages he needed, Thai. The good news, though, was that the phones were fakes, and in China, counterfeits come with enterprising customer service. "We have factories right here," the stall owner, Xie Qiuqing, assured Zhao. "Come back at four this afternoon and the phones will be ready. It's fast."Regardless of the state of the global economy, one robust sector that adjusts as efficiently as any other in the world is the Chinese black market. Despite years of official rhetoric about cracking down on pirated products, the urge to make a quick buck through imitation remains so entrenched in China that it has matured into a celebrated culture of its own.
That culture now has a name, shanzhai. The phrase literally means "mountain fortress" and figuratively conjures a romantic notion of bandits in a mountain hideaway taking potshots at the established giants.
"Shanzhai culture is a rebellion against the monopoly sectors," Li Zonggui, a philosophy professor with Zhongshan University in Guangzhou, wrote in a pro-shanzhai manifesto. Shanzhai, he explained, "shows the desire by poor people for a better life and fashionable things."Shanzhai has undoubtedly broadened the availability of modern technology to many in Asia who previously might not have been able to afford "the real thing." Mobile phones in particular represent the far-reaching influence of shanzhai. Stroll through either of Shenzhen's two sprawling multilevel wholesale phone markets and it is quickly apparent why shanzhai phones appeal both to Chinese consumers--who buy 150 million mobile phones a year--and to retailers planning to resell their hauls in places like India, Thailand or, in middleman Zhao's case, Laos.Bandits supply these markets with phones that come with the superficial look and feel of brand-name handsets but at a fraction of the price. The posters for iPhone look-alikes invariably superimpose their product name on a screen shot of an actual iPhone, without bothering to change the cell signal in the upper left of the screen that reads "AT&T 3G." These smart phones sell for as little as $100, where a real name-brand version might sell for three to six times that much.
Is it a recession-proof business model? Not quite. Sellers say business is down 30% from a year ago, and Chinese media reports say that slowdown has been reflected recently in factory shutdowns on a similar scale. But shanzhai will survive, because in a global market racing to the bottom, shanzhai products--unencumbered by taxes and all sorts of legal registrations--rate as fastest and cheapest.
Shanzhai mobile phones, please check
www.babiken.com
www.babikenshop.com
China's Black Market Boom
Gady Epstein, 01.29.09, 05:00 PM EST Forbes Magazine dated February 16, 2009
Who needs Nokia? The spirit of shanzhai rules the phone-pirate's cove in Shenzhen.
Something was wrong with Zhao Shengli's order of 200 Nokia phones at a wholesale market in Shenzhen--the phones were missing one of the languages he needed, Thai. The good news, though, was that the phones were fakes, and in China, counterfeits come with enterprising customer service. "We have factories right here," the stall owner, Xie Qiuqing, assured Zhao. "Come back at four this afternoon and the phones will be ready. It's fast."Regardless of the state of the global economy, one robust sector that adjusts as efficiently as any other in the world is the Chinese black market. Despite years of official rhetoric about cracking down on pirated products, the urge to make a quick buck through imitation remains so entrenched in China that it has matured into a celebrated culture of its own.
That culture now has a name, shanzhai. The phrase literally means "mountain fortress" and figuratively conjures a romantic notion of bandits in a mountain hideaway taking potshots at the established giants.
"Shanzhai culture is a rebellion against the monopoly sectors," Li Zonggui, a philosophy professor with Zhongshan University in Guangzhou, wrote in a pro-shanzhai manifesto. Shanzhai, he explained, "shows the desire by poor people for a better life and fashionable things."Shanzhai has undoubtedly broadened the availability of modern technology to many in Asia who previously might not have been able to afford "the real thing." Mobile phones in particular represent the far-reaching influence of shanzhai. Stroll through either of Shenzhen's two sprawling multilevel wholesale phone markets and it is quickly apparent why shanzhai phones appeal both to Chinese consumers--who buy 150 million mobile phones a year--and to retailers planning to resell their hauls in places like India, Thailand or, in middleman Zhao's case, Laos.Bandits supply these markets with phones that come with the superficial look and feel of brand-name handsets but at a fraction of the price. The posters for iPhone look-alikes invariably superimpose their product name on a screen shot of an actual iPhone, without bothering to change the cell signal in the upper left of the screen that reads "AT&T 3G." These smart phones sell for as little as $100, where a real name-brand version might sell for three to six times that much.
Is it a recession-proof business model? Not quite. Sellers say business is down 30% from a year ago, and Chinese media reports say that slowdown has been reflected recently in factory shutdowns on a similar scale. But shanzhai will survive, because in a global market racing to the bottom, shanzhai products--unencumbered by taxes and all sorts of legal registrations--rate as fastest and cheapest.
Shanzhai mobile phones, please check
www.babiken.com
www.babikenshop.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)