GooPhone and LG to offer first tri-SIM smartphones using MediaTek chips

GooPhone, LG roll out first triSIM smartphones based on MediaTek chips

Dual-SIM phones are handy in regions where international travel and prepaid service are common, but even those devices aren't always enough for jetsetters. Thankfully, GooPhone and LG have come to those customers' rescue by launching the first smartphones based on a new MediaTek Triple-SIM chip. Both the leaked GooPhone X1+ (shown above) and a just-shipped variant of the Optimus L4 II (after the break) can juggle three phone lines without a big hit to battery life. Neither tri-SIM phone is high-end: the X1+ reportedly carries a 5-inch FWVGA display and a dual-core MT6572 processor, while the L4 II sports a 3.8-inch HVGA screen and an unnamed 1GHz chip. Despite those limitations, we suspect the handsets will be vital to anyone who'd rather not switch SIMs when crossing the border. LG's phone is already on sale in Brazil, while the GooPhone X1+ should ship to multiple countries within the next several days.

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Via: TechKiddy, CNXSoft

Source: PConline (translated), Webfones (translated)

Motorola doesn’t think two SIMs are enough, launches Motokey 3-Chip in Brazil

Motorola doesn't think two SIMs are enough, launches Motokey 3-Chip in Brazil

Nope, it's definitely not the first handset we've seen that allows to be paired alongside a trifecta of SIM cards all at once. Nonetheless, Motorola's introduced a triple-SIM slab of its own: the Brazil-bound Motokey 3-Chip. Aside from the aforementioned feature, the Motokey also packs a set of physical QWERTY keys, two gigs of internal storage which can be expanded via microSD, an MP3 player / FM radio for tunes and a 2-megapixel rear shooter. Moto's 3-Chip is expected to be up for grabs next week in Pelé's country, with pricing being set at R$349,00, or around $170 in US cash.

Motorola doesn't think two SIMs are enough, launches Motokey 3-Chip in Brazil originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 01 Jun 2012 18:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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