The phone work with GSM network 850/900/1800/1900mHz. Please check if your local area Network is compatible with this phone. You can Click here to see Network Frequency for your country Please confirm with your carriers or providers before you purchase this item.
Highlights
Dual SIM - Switch easily between two SIM card/phone numbers in the same handset.
Bluetooth - High speed wireless technology.
FM Radio - Pick up your favorite FM radio stations wherever you are.
Gravity Acceleration Sensor Cell phone - Go beyond touchscreen! Lets you navigate your phone's options without having ever to touch a button or screen. Just tilt and shake!
WIFI - you can view video,movie and surfing in the internet
Full Screen View - Crystal clear viewing with our cinematic full-screen mode.
Flat Touch Screen - Easy-to-use and responsive touch screen function for smooth navigating.
Change the wallpaper,song,FM channel,TV channel,video play by shaving the phone
High Def PC Cam - The best quality pictures available from a phone! Connects to your PC for easy picture upload/downloading.
google-Style Menu - Slick and familiar touchscreen menu has everything you need
Specification
Storage
Internal Memory
1M
Packed with Memory Card
N/A
Support Extend Card
2G
Screen
Display Size
3.0"
Screen Resolution
QVGA(240×320 pixels)
Screen Type
TFT
Display Color
256K
Support Format
Ringtones Type
Polyphonic/MP3
Audio File Format
MP3/WAV/AMR/AWB
Video File Format
3GP/MPEG4 (AVI)
Image File Format
JPEG/BMP/GIF
E-book Format
TXT
FM Radio
Yes
Data Transfer & Connectivity
Data Transfer
USB/Bluetooth
GPRS
Yes
Mobile internet
WAP
Camera
Camera Pictrue Resolution
640x480/320x240/240x320/ 160x120/80x60
Battery
Stand-by Time
Up to 400 hours
Talk Time
Up to 4 hours
Power
charger
USB/Travel Charger
Input
Input
Handwrite
General
Announced
2009.Jun
Languages
English,French.Spanish.Portugues.Turkce.Persian
Phone Book
500 Entries
Messaging
SMS/MMS
Color
Black
Dimensions/W*D*H
105*55*13mm
Net Weight
0.105Kg
What's in the Box
1 x Black G2 WiFi Cell phone 1 x Wired stereo earphones with built-in MIC and clip 2 x Rechargeable Li-ion battery 1 x Phone to USB cable 1 x Stylus 1 x 2GB TF Card (Free) 1 x User manual - English
Dear Nowsupplier, I have received the goods from your website,i am very satisfied your service,at the same time thanks you for your beautiful Christmas Card.
Reply by Nowsupplier
Dear Selina, I am very pleased that you are satisfied with my service,you are welcome to enojoy our service.
Maria 12/25/2009
My Product Has A Problem! What Can I Do?
Reply by Nowsupplier
Nowsupplier undertakes the strictest Quality Control of any China supplier you could find. Our factories have their own quality control processes, but we don't only take their word for it! When products come into the Nowsupplier warehouse we have a team of 10 staff who are dedicated to confirming the products are correct, in perfect condition, and working perfectly. But sometimes things can go wrong... that's why we back all our products with a 12-month guarantee. If unfortunately, the product you bought from Nowsupplier.com seems to have a problem, please find below the details of how we can help you. What to do... Always contact us first. Provide your order number and the product code. We can help clarify what the problem is. Often we can solve the problem for you without sending anything back. You're covered by our 12 month guarantee. So if the product doesn't work, we'll help you send it back to us in China to get a repair, replacement, or credit.
Youppie 12/30/2009
Using wifi and dropping phone service?
Reply by Nowsupplier
My phone can connect to wifi. It will connect to my home router, and any other wireless connections available. The area I live in has a lot of available wireless networks, and I don't often travel far out of the area. I'm considering dropping service from my smartphone and using the wifi for free internet instead of the $30 data package each month. If I had to for reliable phone calls I could just use an older phone. I've also heard I could download skype for free onto my phone and make low-cost calls that way. But then I don't know if others can contact me if they don't have skype, not sure how all of that works. I would probably want to keep an older phone active and share a plan with my husband like I do now, but I want to ditch the data package if I can and make use of the wifi. Is it 'wrong' to connect to someone's unsecured network? I don't know if it's the fast food place down the road, the local library or what, but there are several unsecured networks and hubby and I were considering dropping our internet on the computers and jumping into an unsecured network instead. Is that shady or considered acceptable?
Jason 12/30/2009
No clue about the phones.
I do know though that logging on to an unsecured network for your computers is risky. For one, you will be broadcasting any financial info, if you, say, do online banking. I think you can also catch viruses and malicious spyware from unsecured sources. Supposedly it's really easy for hackers to hack into computers connected into the network.
Your Name 12/30/2009
We have iPhones (first generation with different requirements and costs than current generations). I've had a few conversations with AT&T over the data package. DH was willing to drop his data package ($20/mo on our plan). The rep told me his phone wouldn't work for most of what he does with it. (She said she was looking at his usage.) I don't know if she was telling the whole truth or not. However, she did save us from having to reconnect it at the new, higher rate if what she said was true because I had called the month before the rates jumped and her info made me keep his data plan.
I am somewhat ambivalent about unsecured networks. If people don't secure there network, then they should know anyone can/will use it. We use our own secured network by default. However, our computers (laptops) automatically connect to the unsecured networks in our area if our network is down for whatever reason. I don't even know when it does that unless I purposely click on my airport icon. Certain things on my computer do NOT work when this happens, just to let you know. I don't recall right now, but it is either outgoing emails or incoming emails that do not go through when the computer switches to the unsecured network. If you were planning that route, there might be something you could reconfigure. However, you should also know that unsecured networks change frequently. At one time, we showed at least four. At this very minute, I show one. Earlier this week, when I was having network challenges, there were none. I certainly would not rely on that for internet access in our area for practical reasons. I have no ethical issue with using an unsecured network short-term (an hour here or there), but to purposely drop one's paid access with the intent to use someone else's paid unsecured network full-time feels "wrong" to me. Just my gut feeling....
There are other options for phone service and internet access. Leta has given several ideas in this forum, as have others. Maybe tr
Your Name 12/30/2009
Interesting, Ami! I am glad I don't conduct financial biz on my laptop! We use our desktop for financial business and it has an ethernet connection (wired)....
12/30/2009
Many unsecured networks are simply ones set up by people who are not that familiar with computers. So in that situation you would be taking advantage of their lack of knowledge to get free internet. I'll admit I've used an unsecured network in our area once or twice when our service provider had an outage but I try to avoid it. One because it's shady, and two, as someone said they can potentially see all the information you are sending using their connection (passwords, emails, etc.).
Your Name 12/31/2009
We've been using our smartphones for years without a data plan and just using wifi... we have t-mobile and as of a few months ago they changed their policy and are requiring a data plan with smartphone purchases, argh! I was hoping to get a new phone so I could get windows mobile 6 and also because mine is completely falling apart. I opted to get a netbook instead (much cheaper than paying for a new phone and a useless data plan and it has many more features) and just use my phone as a phone. Anyways, I know a lot of people that share a wi-fi network, and also a couple towns around us actually have free wi-fi and that is all most people use and I haven't heard any complaints or issues with that. I suspect that even if you are able to access someone else's network at this point that won't last long, more and more people are becoming aware of this and a lot of updates will warn you someone is logging on and then people will just shut it off, so unless it's a city wide service or something of that nature I would not count on it... that's my guess anyways.
8 Reviews
Dear Nowsupplier,
I have received the goods from your website,i am very satisfied your service,at the same time thanks you for your beautiful Christmas Card.
Dear Selina,
I am very pleased that you are satisfied with my service,you are welcome to enojoy our service.
My Product Has A Problem! What Can I Do?
Nowsupplier undertakes the strictest Quality Control of any China supplier you could find. Our factories have their own quality control processes, but we don't only take their word for it! When products come into the Nowsupplier warehouse we have a team of 10 staff who are dedicated to confirming the products are correct, in perfect condition, and working perfectly.
But sometimes things can go wrong... that's why we back all our products with a 12-month guarantee.
If unfortunately, the product you bought from Nowsupplier.com seems to have a problem, please find below the details of how we can help you.
What to do...
Always contact us first. Provide your order number and the product code. We can help clarify what the problem is.
Often we can solve the problem for you without sending anything back.
You're covered by our 12 month guarantee. So if the product doesn't work, we'll help you send it back to us in China to get a repair, replacement, or credit.
Using wifi and dropping phone service?
My phone can connect to wifi. It will connect to my home router, and any other wireless connections available. The area I live in has a lot of available wireless networks, and I don't often travel far out of the area.
I'm considering dropping service from my smartphone and using the wifi for free internet instead of the $30 data package each month. If I had to for reliable phone calls I could just use an older phone. I've also heard I could download skype for free onto my phone and make low-cost calls that way. But then I don't know if others can contact me if they don't have skype, not sure how all of that works.
I would probably want to keep an older phone active and share a plan with my husband like I do now, but I want to ditch the data package if I can and make use of the wifi.
Is it 'wrong' to connect to someone's unsecured network? I don't know if it's the fast food place down the road, the local library or what, but there are several unsecured networks and hubby and I were considering dropping our internet on the computers and jumping into an unsecured network instead. Is that shady or considered acceptable?
No clue about the phones.
I do know though that logging on to an unsecured network for your computers is risky. For one, you will be broadcasting any financial info, if you, say, do online banking. I think you can also catch viruses and malicious spyware from unsecured sources. Supposedly it's really easy for hackers to hack into computers connected into the network.
We have iPhones (first generation with different requirements and costs than current generations). I've had a few conversations with AT&T over the data package. DH was willing to drop his data package ($20/mo on our plan). The rep told me his phone wouldn't work for most of what he does with it. (She said she was looking at his usage.) I don't know if she was telling the whole truth or not. However, she did save us from having to reconnect it at the new, higher rate if what she said was true because I had called the month before the rates jumped and her info made me keep his data plan.
I am somewhat ambivalent about unsecured networks. If people don't secure there network, then they should know anyone can/will use it. We use our own secured network by default. However, our computers (laptops) automatically connect to the unsecured networks in our area if our network is down for whatever reason. I don't even know when it does that unless I purposely click on my airport icon. Certain things on my computer do NOT work when this happens, just to let you know. I don't recall right now, but it is either outgoing emails or incoming emails that do not go through when the computer switches to the unsecured network. If you were planning that route, there might be something you could reconfigure. However, you should also know that unsecured networks change frequently. At one time, we showed at least four. At this very minute, I show one. Earlier this week, when I was having network challenges, there were none. I certainly would not rely on that for internet access in our area for practical reasons. I have no ethical issue with using an unsecured network short-term (an hour here or there), but to purposely drop one's paid access with the intent to use someone else's paid unsecured network full-time feels "wrong" to me. Just my gut feeling....
There are other options for phone service and internet access. Leta has given several ideas in this forum, as have others. Maybe tr
Interesting, Ami! I am glad I don't conduct financial biz on my laptop! We use our desktop for financial business and it has an ethernet connection (wired)....
Many unsecured networks are simply ones set up by people who are not that familiar with computers. So in that situation you would be taking advantage of their lack of knowledge to get free internet. I'll admit I've used an unsecured network in our area once or twice when our service provider had an outage but I try to avoid it. One because it's shady, and two, as someone said they can potentially see all the information you are sending using their connection (passwords, emails, etc.).
We've been using our smartphones for years without a data plan and just using wifi... we have t-mobile and as of a few months ago they changed their policy and are requiring a data plan with smartphone purchases, argh! I was hoping to get a new phone so I could get windows mobile 6 and also because mine is completely falling apart. I opted to get a netbook instead (much cheaper than paying for a new phone and a useless data plan and it has many more features) and just use my phone as a phone.
Anyways, I know a lot of people that share a wi-fi network, and also a couple towns around us actually have free wi-fi and that is all most people use and I haven't heard any complaints or issues with that. I suspect that even if you are able to access someone else's network at this point that won't last long, more and more people are becoming aware of this and a lot of updates will warn you someone is logging on and then people will just shut it off, so unless it's a city wide service or something of that nature I would not count on it... that's my guess anyways.