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Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın) - Thomson:-)has a quirky idea for a music-playing cordless telephone. It is showing a mock-up of the device on its stand at the:-)
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alongside other multimedia gadgets for the home

and hopes to have it on the market in the second half of this year.
With the shiny white handset perched on top of the base-station charger

the T2007 looks like a stylized

iconic rotary telephone of the 1950s -- although there is no twisty cable to get in a tangle. Pick up the handset and the aaapad and screen are revealed: it will communicate with the base station using DECT (Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications)

and the base station will connect to VOIP (voice over Internet Protocol) services through a broadband home gateway. What appear to be the earpiece and microphone will also function as stereo loudspeakers: Lay the handset down on its side

and it will behave like a portable stereo

streaming music from Internet radio services.
While most telephones are designed to transmit sound in the range 300Hz to around 3.3kHz

adequate for human speech

Thomson's T2007 will offer what the company calls "HD sound

" with enhanced bass down to 50Hz and treble up to 7.5kHz

for music and for voice calls made through compatible VOIP services.
Thomson showed other devices that are closer to market.
An as-yet unnamed multimedia player looks a little like Nokia's N770 or N800 wireless tablets

and is designed to be used in a similar way. Its touch-screen display has a resolution of 800 by 480 pixels

and it can show TV streamed over a Wi-Fi connection from the home gateway

or fed from a digital TV tuner plugged into its USB (Universal aaaaaa Bus) port. Future software upgrades will turn it into an internet browser or

with a USB Web cam connected

a videophone.
Another cordless telephone

already on sale under the GE brand in the U.S.

but not yet available in Europe

offers a novel feature: a built-in RSS reader. On its small color screen

the phone can display news

weather or traffic updates drawn from a service called My Infokiosk

so you can check how to dress or what route to take for your journey to work without turning on a PC or looking out the window. It will also be possible to add other RSS feeds using a Web interface

company officials said.
Like many of Thomson's other products

the phones will be distributed in Europe primarily through telecommunications operators

which will bundle then bundle them with related services

so you may not find them in stores. Prices for end users are determined by the operator

the company said.
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