Mobile Phones w/ Support for Chinese Characters? 68
antifoidulus asks: "I am learning both Chinese and Japanese(well, I can converse in Japanese, but I can only say that I want to eat stuff in Chinese!) and I was curious if there were any phones available in the US which I can use to read/write Chinese/Japanese characters. I frequently communicate with friends in Japan, and I would like be able to send Japanese mail on my phone. I have a
Japanese phone, but it seems Verizon says that it will not work on their network. I would prefer to have something that I can upload Java programs to, so I can customize my language practice."
Nokia Series 90 (Score:2, Informative)
Zircon Z3 / G88 (Score:1)
Seriously. Very similar to the Treo in functionality (I know, I have the Z3, a colleague has the Treo). Runs PalmOS and has chinese character support natively, without needing to install anything. The handwriting recognition is also an advantage in inputting the characters.
Very nice, VERY small, very capable phone.
Java is right out... (Score:4, Interesting)
...on Verizon phones if you intend to download them across their network. They only support Brew applications, and the SDK is like $1500. Verizon only allows App downloads from their for-pay Get It Now service. (You can use a cable and gagin to load apps directly into the phone). There is talk of a Brew JRE, but I haven't seen it and I'd guess it'd be too big and too slow.
I'm going to re-research carriers when my current contract is up - I want my Java phone!
Speaking Chinese (Score:5, Funny)
twentyseven with fortythree, is thirtysix spicey?, ok a side of twelve, and a can of coke.
Sorry.
Re:Speaking Chinese (Score:1)
Re:Speaking Chinese (Score:2)
Loads of issues (Score:4, Informative)
Since at least Japanese users often prefer to send e-mail over their phones rather than text messages, it would be feasible to make a Java e-mail app that supported a few input methods and encoding conversions, as well as a rendering engine for Asian characters. However, I wouldn't hold my breath. It's a good thing if Nokia's trying to address this.
Re:Loads of issues (Score:5, Interesting)
The basic way to so it, with only the ~12 buttons or so on a mobile phone, is to mark the keys with the different types of strokes that make up the chacters. Chinese charaters (and therfore at least some of japanise, but i don't know how to write 'any' japanise) are written in a particular order from a finite set of strokes, so it you know how to write chineese properly (i.e. know the stroke order rules not just the 'pretty pictures') this system is VERY usable.
In fact I can use a chineese phone to type better than i can use a full keyboard, because the system makes more sense to me.
Also for the chineese, getting a chineese font ain't that hard, and if your using java to build and app, then its unicode anyway.
If you could be bothered to code an app, all you'd need is a java phone, and a marker to add the stokes to the keys.
Re:Loads of issues (Score:3, Interesting)
It's interesting how Java uses Unicode internally, though... The encoding conversion necessary to send the e-mails off to an Asian phone might not be that hard, and if the current Java-capable phones (like the Nokia 3510i) are already capable of correctly rendering Asian text, then it's more or less just a matter of
Re:Loads of issues (Score:1)
As for unicode in Ja
Re:Loads of issues (Score:5, Informative)
I'm not sure exactly how Korean works, the Hangul I know is phonetic, but they can also use Chinese characters. Though, from what I understand, the Chinese characters are usually for show(when writing the proper names of people or places etc) and serve very little grammatical function in day to day writing anymore, but I could be wrong.
Re:Loads of issues (Score:2)
That's right. The basic Japanese phonetic alphabet is called hiragana. They actually have another one called katakana, which is used for describing "foreign" things like the menu at McDonalds. A lot of the time when you see Japanese writing on CD covers or t-shirts (I think a recent Madonna, for example) it's in this alphabet.
Anyways, more on-topic, you said that it's "quite easy, if a bit slow, to enter them on the phone". Having owned a cell phone in Japan for the past year, I have to disagree about the
Re:Loads of issues (Score:1)
Re:Loads of issues (Score:1)
The young kids are pretty quick with those keypads. But they tend to keep a list of standard phrases handy, as well, which shortens typing considerably when they mostly speak in idiom.
My wife prefers my iBook to her cell phone.
Now, if we wanted to do this sort of thing with English on a regular keyboard, we would have an input filter, so that when you had typed two or three keys and the list of likely candidates was narrowed down a bit, a menu of candidates would pop up. I think several word processors
Re:Loads of issues (Score:2)
As for the Japanese input methods, they need to use the Japanese kana alphabets, not kanji, since you can't write Japanese using kanji alone.
Re:Loads of issues (Score:2)
Re:Loads of issues (Score:1)
Well, if you want to someone currently living to read it, you will use kana.
The problem is your network (Score:5, Informative)
All you need to do is find out the requirements for your network, and then buy a phone from hong kong, that has chineese input, and works with you carriers network.
Thats what my friends do, and they can then send each other SMS, over the UK networks, in chinese, using the 12 key input system i described in another post, and it 'just works'(tm).
So my recomendation would be find a phone from hong kong that works with a US network, and buy the phone and switch networks, you can even use the phone in 'english' and have the chinese as a possible option.
If you want an exact recomendation, look at Motorola, the one with the circular display, where the key guard 'spins' around the display to show the keys. The chinese ones have the 'stokes' written on the number keys, so they are kinda obvious.
Hope this helps.
Re:The problem is your network (Score:2)
Re:The problem is your network (Score:2)
Re:The problem is your network (Score:2)
Re:The problem is your network (Score:2)
Re:The problem is your network (Score:1)
On the mainland, Hanyu Pinyin is the standard romanization system for Mandarin and all phones support pinyin-based input systems. I've owned several Nokias and they all also do a 5-stroke based system, which I guess could be useful if you run into a character you don't know, but how often does that happen.
In Taiwan I guess they might use Wade Giles, ZhuYin, or
Re:The problem is your network (Score:1)
Re:The problem is your network (Score:1)
Now to invent a handset that purrs when stroked (Score:2)
Re:Now to invent a handset that purrs when stroked (Score:1)
Re:The problem is your network (Score:1)
Oh, yes, and it supports Java, and MMS, and all that jazz. I don't know what the importing situation is in the US, but it shouldn't be too difficult to track down...
Re:The problem is your network (Score:2)
I found the coolest phone you need for this! (Score:1)
http://www.vodafone.jp/english/service/vgs/prod
Re:I found the coolest phone you need for this! (Score:2)
Re:I found the coolest phone you need for this! (Score:2)
Naturally you can't use them when you get back to US/Europe... but they're so cool you'll carry them with you just to show off. (Camera, MP3 etc still works naturally.)
Check out NTTDoCoMo's pages for some really cool stuff.
Re:I found the coolest phone you need for this! (Score:1)
Oh and forget using Verizon with anywhere else (Score:2, Interesting)
GSM service in the United States exists with Cingular, T-Mobile, and the soon tobe defunct ATT. Oddly enough, Vodafone owns a chunk of Verizon,
Re:Oh and forget using Verizon with anywhere else (Score:2)
e28 (Score:1, Interesting)
need a GSM phone? (Score:1)
Re:need a GSM phone? (Score:2)
-psy
Therre is *NO* GSM in Japan (Score:2, Informative)
Japan has a variety of 2.5 and 3G cellular networks. Long before the rest of the world, thus why so little compatibility.
But that all is changing with W-CDMA (not to be confused with plain old CDMA from the USA). Tri-band dual-mode phones that do W-CDMA and GSM are coming out that can be used globally *including* in Japan.
Treo 600 (Score:2)
cheap solution... (Score:1)
T-Mobile makes the sidekick,
You can make sidekick turn Japanese,
Text msg would work!
Get GSM (Score:2)
You need a tri-band GSM phone produced for the Asian market. Chances are, you will have to order it over the internet.
Fortunately, if you get a service provider in the US that has GSM service, you should get a SIM card which can be put into any GSM phone in the world.
You need tri-band because the US operates on a funny frequency (ie. different than Europe and Asia -- or the whole Asian landmass if you think of it that way).
Remember also, that the Chinese cellphone market is the largest in the
Ob King of the Hill quote (Score:3, Funny)
"Actually, I come from a small Southeast Asian country called Laos."
"So are you Chinese or Japanese?"
Hmmmm ... (Score:2)
Doesn't look Japanese to me. Looks Laosian!
Hiptop (Score:2)
... by way of Omaha ... (Score:1)
I was talking with a guy with one of the keitai companies a couple of months back and he said I would have to connect long distance with their network to use their phone in the US.
8-*
no java with verizon (Score:2)
Treo (Score:1, Informative)
Your Japanese phone will NEVER work in the
Not quite correct (Score:1)
As such, a TREO would only be useful outside Japan, and have not nearly the same capabilities as a dedicated 3G phone.
Related question (Score:2)
Re:Related question (Score:1)
Handwriting recog? (Score:1)
I actually own this phone, and it's pretty useful, although I never write messages in Chinese, it's still fun to play with.
K700i (Score:1)
Mine was bought in Hong Kong, so you may need to get the store to install the Hong Kong firmware (R2A041 prgCXC 125882_HONG_KONG_C). Oh, and yes it can do English too.
You use only 8 keys (6 numbers, left, right) to enter the characters, as it uses T9 predictive texting. Basically you enter the strokes as you would write them.
Re:K700i (Score:1)
Most pinyin capable phones can enter by stroke in the way you describe, but why on earth would you want to?
In Malaysia GSM Network (Score:1)
It's pretty simple over here. Just grab a mobilephone that can display and enter chinese chars and off you go.
For chinese chars input, I mostly use T9 PinYing with my Siemens C35i (yeah, it's old but functioning, i m not those kind of swithcing phone every few months).
Have you tried Vodaphone? (Score:1)
one idea might be to look into who makes the phones in japan or china, and find a model that can be used with a US service provider, and just have the model shipped to you... my phone (with video capture, still camera, english, kana, kanji, and texting, cost 1 yen; so price shouldnt be an issue)
alternatively, since texting and email are so popular here, you may not need a phone..
Almost any GSM phone will have Chinese support (Score:1)
japanese (Score:1)