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May 11, 2009 5:35 PM PDT

The 411: Dumb phones and calendar syncing

by Nicole Lee
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Welcome to the 411, my new Q&A column answering all your questions about cell phones and cell phone accessories. I receive plenty of questions about these subjects via e-mail, so I figured many of you might have the same questions, too. At times, I might solicit answers from readers if I'm stumped. Send your questions and comments to me at nicole.lee@cnet.com. If you prefer to remain anonymous, let me know in the e-mail.

LG Vu

Does the LG Vu offer calendar syncing?

(Credit: Corinne Schulze/CNET)

Maybe you can help. I'm not supertechy. I'm a mom who loves her Palm Pilot, but it's dying on me. I recently bought an LG Vu, and I love it. Problem: I simply want to phase out my Palm and put my calendar and phone book into my LG Vu. I would like to store it in the computer, just in case I lose or break my phone, then I won't lose my whole calendar. Can this be done? I'm reading conflicting things. I'm a working mom, so I'm too busy to use the I phone and get e-mails all day. I just want one device to use as a phone, store about 300 numbers, and use as a calendar...and I want to back it up on the computer. Please offer any words of wisdom if you could. -- Shirley, via e-mail

I already answered this on Dialed In, our weekly cell phone podcast, but I wanted to repost it here in case anyone has a solution to Shirley's question. As far as I know, there's no way to sync up the calendar on the LG Vu with the calendar on the computer--the LG Vu is not a smartphone, and is just not meant for that kind of personal information management. The only thing I can think of is to get a new phone with calendar syncing capabilities--since you're already a Palm Pilot user, you might be comfortable with the Palm Centro, which has the same operating system as the Pilot. If any of our readers have a better solution, please let us know. Thanks!

Hi, is there a Verizon phone with e-mail that has a low SAR? The RIM Blackberry Curve 8830 is 1.46 - pretty high! Thanks -- Bill, via e-mail

Yes, there are a few e-mail-enabled Verizon phones with a lower SAR (Specific Absorption Rate). Bear in mind that the effects of cell phone radiation aren't conclusive just yet, but if you're concerned, you can check out our cell phone radiation chart for the SARs of all the phones we've reviewed. For Verizon, the Samsung Saga is a Windows Mobile handheld that only emits 0.687 watts per kilogram, and while the RIM BlackBerry 8830 might have a high SAR, the RIM BlackBerry Storm only emits 0.87.

The T-Mobile G1 is e-mail-friendly

The T-Mobile G1 is e-mail-friendly

(Credit: Corinne Schulze/CNET)

I read your comparison about the G1 and iPhone. I do have some questions about the G1 as I am a T-Mobile user. I now have the Blackberry 8900. I like it but wanted something with a bigger screen for Internet access. Currently I have the "grandfathered" $10 unlimited blackberry e-mail...and love that. If I get the G1 is there a plan that includes unlimited e-mailing, and internet and additional texting. I know that a lot of the T-Mobile plans will say "unlimited e-mails" but it ends up that the e-mails are counted at texts and if you only have 400 texts a month and get a lot of e-mail...then you basically have a bad plan. Also, how easy is this phone to sync with my AOL e-mail address? I was told by our local T-Mobile store representative that it's easy and if I wanted to check my work e-mail, I could easily go online to my work site and get my e-mails. I live on AOL so I really need the e-mail to work for me on this phone. Any advice would be great! -- Stacey, via e-mail

I'm not sure where you heard that e-mails are counted as texts. If you're sending an e-mail via a text message, then yes, it's counted as a text. But if you're using the T-Mobile G1, you would presumably be using a regular e-mail client to send out e-mails, which will affect your data usage, but not your text message usage at all. I know the distinction seems confusing, but that's just how the cell phone providers have decided to categorize it.

And yes, it's easy to set up your AOL e-mail on the T-Mobile G1. You can ask your T-Mobile representative for details, but you can do this on your own. Just go through the E-mail Setup tutorial--you'll be prompted to enter your e-mail address and password--and that's it. If you want to get more technical, you can also enter POP3 or IMAP account settings if you know them.

Nicole Lee is an associate editor for CNET, covering cell phones, Bluetooth headsets, and all things mobile. She's also a fan of comic books, video games, and of course, shiny gadgets. E-mail Nicole.
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by whirty May 11, 2009 9:29 PM PDT
Calendar Syncing - It's all in the cloud - you dont need to sync - use your Yahoo, Google, or Live account to manage your e-mail and calendar. All 3G phones have plenty capable internet access. I use a Samsung Access with GMAIL, Google Calendar, Opera Mini - I get Colbert and my e-mail and calendar. There's no need to sync anymore. GMAIL mobile already does this, and Google Calendar is easy to use.

So . . smartphones at this point aren't very smart. It's in the cloud.
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by jskrenes May 12, 2009 7:29 AM PDT
There's a program out there called bitpim, www.bitpim.org that can sync lots of stuff for non-smartphones. I've recommended it to customers who either don't want a data plan or all the bells and whistles that go along with a smartphone, and so far very few people have returned their dumphones, so it usually works.
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by photiczone May 13, 2009 5:02 AM PDT
Dear Shirley,
As a Palm devotee, I'm surprised you never got the Palm Treo (virtually a Palm Pilot/cell phone combo with tons of freeware available). ALL your Palm Pilot data should be easily transferred, and it is still available new and used.

In about three weeks you'll have another choice -- the Palm Pre. Calender, Contacts, Photos, Outlook, Word Docs, etc. all should be able to be recovered from your Palm Desktop onto either device, the Treo or the Pre. The Treo does not require a more expensive data plan to be added to your monthly cellphone bill as required for most smartphones. The Palm Pre requires a data plan. Dataplan will access internet, GPS, etc.
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by ophir May 15, 2009 7:04 AM PDT
Emoze (www.emoze.com) enables PIM (including calendar and contacts) sync, together with push email, on most Java enabled phones.
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by magstudios123 May 22, 2009 12:47 AM PDT
The Palm Treo 755p is a must have for all palm lovers. Its functionality is what is to watch out for.From phone information such as signal strength, new email and message alerts as well as your next appointment alerts. It has other great features like control dialing, call logs, viewing contacts and accessing important shortcut buttons. It has an incorporated Google Maps application within the device. It remains the most powerful and easy-to-use smartphones available.
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