Korea sex
Sharpcontinues to innundate the Korean market with electronicdictionaries, all the while adding m... Sharp's latest e-dicti
Sharpcontinues to innundate the Korean market with electronicdictionaries, all the while adding more features borrowed from the world of PDAs, cellphones and PCs. The latest,the RD-CMP1000, includes an MP3 player, touchscreen display, 1.3 megapixel still/video camera, FM tuner and voicerecorder to the usual range of translation features, and ability to display English, Chinese, Japanese and Koreantext. At about $365, it still seems a little steep for a glorified Websters, but at least you can still groove to BoAwhile you're hunting down some translations (such as "lame pop music still knows no borders").
?, I thought K-pop are much better than American pop. There aren't anything good in American pop since BoyzIIMen ceased to exist. Only corrupt, depraved, offensive, disgusting lyrics in American pop culture as wel as America itself.
While I myself did defend dedicated e-dictionaries during engadgets last tirade (relax, I'm just funin'...:) ) about them, I must say, it does seem as if Sharp is release well...rather a LOT of them.
Though personally, I'd just like to see them port their Zaurus C-3000 dictionary so I can run it on my C-1000. I'm too heavily invested in PDA's at this point to drop $350+ on another device...
4. if you havent noticed already, koreans are obsessed with new gadget withs buldging features and study... also, nearly every korean international student, here in australia, seems to carry those electronic dictionaries...
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