Bell delivers CFL on TSN and RDS on mobile TV

REVIEWS
KitchenAid Grain and Rice Cooker
KitchenAid Semi-Automatic Espresso Machine with Milk Frother
Microsoft Surface Headphones 2
Shark UltraCyclone Pet Pro+ Hand Vac
ViewSonic M1+ Mini LED Projector
Dyson Hot+Cool purifying fan and heater
Microsoft Surface Go with LTE Advanced
ViewSonic M1 portable projector
Waze navigation app on Apple CarPlay
Rowenta Intense Air Pure Purifier
Bissell CrossWave PetPro Multi-Surface Cleaner
2018 Hyundai Ioniq Electric Plus PHEV Driver
Dyson Pure Cool HEPA Air Purifier and Fan
Sennheiser Ambeo Smart headset
Acer Windows Mixed Reality Headset and Controller
Updated on Tuesday, July 13, 2010 at 8:53AM by
Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla
For once it seems Canadians can be thankful that a hot tech product launch has been delayed. And boy, did we dodge a bullet. We're talking about the iPhone 4, which is expected to be launched "in the coming weeks," by Bell, Rogers, Telus and Virgin Mobile but which has also been caught in an unprecedented whirlwind of bad press and controversy in the US and europe.
By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla
Google Maps navigation app, which is now free to all Android OS devices (version 1.6 upwards) turns any GPS enabled Android phone into a capable and full featured GPS device that's hinged on Google's own formidable Maps technology. Still very much a Beta product, the application gives us a preview of what we can expect from Google once the kinks are ironed out.
By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla
Buying a netbook in 2010 has become an extremely tedious task. Most netbooks offer similar features, run on ideantical Atom powered processors and offer the same lightweight mobile computing options at very similar prices. Samsung's a bit newer to the game than older players like MSI, ASUS, Dell and Toshiba but it can be considered a true contender when you look at their N220 netbook that's got the features everyone else has got but offers twice the battery power in nearly the same size.