Companies like Huwei are already refiguring the Android phone equation to suit second-time phone buyers, and bringing prices for unsubsidized touchscreen smartphones well under $200, edging ever closer to $100. Nokia’s C3 series has Wi-Fi, a 2.0MP camera, a full, metal-keyed QWERTY keyboard, microSD storage and an App Store. It comes with Facebook and Twitter access out of the box. Depending on tariffs, it sells for around $100 worldwide. It’s coming to America, soon making an appearance on Wal-Mart’s shelves. The price? $80. It’s the anti-N8: Fairly simple, very cheap, and so far, wildly popular.

This is what the next generation of the mega-selling phone will look like. They’ll be rough facsimiles of the high-end smartphones forged for well-heeled buyers, stripped of fat and excess—an embodiment of compromise. They’ll be 90% of the phone for 20% of the price, with FM radios instead of digital music stores, and flashlights instead of LED flashes

(via The Most Popular Phone in the World)

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The Taliban, once a local militia, took over Afghanistan in the 1990s, perhaps partly because of the mobility that smuggled Toyota trucks brought them. According to The New York Times, Taliban officials subsequently used the vehicles to patrol the streets, enforcing their strict interpretation of Islamic law. (via Pickup Trucks From Warzones Across the Globe – Newsweek)

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