Apple and Samsung essentially own the entire mobile phone market now, leaving nothing but scraps for the rest of the pack.

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Apple, Samsung put hammerlock on smartphone profits
Even our favourite manufacturers have made a doozy or two. Clip a peg to your nose as we take you through a rogue's gallery of our worst phones on CNET Australia.

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Top 10 worst phones of all time
The Xperia Neo shares the same DNA as its Xperia brethren, with the new Exmor R image sensor and Bravia display engine, but it's very much the black sheep of the family.

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Sony Ericsson Xperia Neo
Apple has once again passed estimates, posting record revenues for its most recent fiscal quarter and beating expectations in sales of its products across the board. The company also officially announced that it will launch the next version of Mac OS X tomorrow.

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Apple posts US$28bn quarterly result
LG's the first to offer a 3D smartphone, with a handset that is capable of both recording and displaying the third dimension.

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LG Optimus 3D
Samsung builds well on the success of the original Galaxy with a fast, attractive and fully featured phone, but one that requires a lot of juice to run.

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Samsung Galaxy S II
Like most airline passengers, you probably have serious doubts about those pre-flight announcements asking you to turn off your cellphones, BlackBerries, iPods and anything else electronic.

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Are mobile phones safe to use on flights?
The good Interesting concept 2GB internal storage The bad Poor basic performance Jackets are garbage Expensive for what you get It could be argued that the mobile phone space is growing stale. There's been very little commercial innovations for handsets outside of the standard variations on the common phone design in quite a while.

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Modu phone
The good Excellent build quality Good keypad Improved camera Very responsive Good battery life 3.5mm audio port The bad Optical navi-pad can be annoying at times S60 platform feels dated in light of the competition The Nokia E71 was one of our favourite business smartphones thanks to its attractive design and full range of useful features. More than a year on, is its successor, the E72, just as compelling a smartphone? Let's look at the differences between the two to find out.

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Nokia E72