Many new brands of digital telephones have been released lately. A blog that regularly update this information is http://www.digitalphonereviewblog.com/89050/the-new-news-landscape-rise-of-the-internet-pew-research-center/.
"Digital telephone" doesn't usually refer to a device (aside from DECT cordless phones, maybe). Rather "digital phone" refers to a service called voice-over-internet protocol (VOIP) that you buy from your cable company or a seperate vendor. It lets you make regular phone calls over the internet for a flat rate.
Toshiba has manufactured many types of digital telephones in the U.S. Their current offerings can be found at their website here: http://www.telecom.toshiba.com/Products/5000-series_digital_telephones.cfm
5,4546,3545.3 telephones
yes
True
I think they already have been
Many modern digital cameras have HD compatibility and capability, so finding a good one is essential if you want to take the best pictures and videos. In general, top brands will have the best quality when it comes to digital cameras. These brands have been on the market for many years and are respected for a reason; consistent value, great photographs, and lots of features and options. Lower end cameras often produce blurry, poor images.
No telephones were not made before he died. In fact he invented them New models and improvements to the telephone have been made since Bell died
Western Digital had for a long time been a leaderin hard drive technology. You can expect to pay upwards of about $200 good one of these hard drives. The price is worth it got for this product.
no
The original version (GCN) has been released in 2002 but the HD version is being released on October 4, 2013 (September 20, 2013 for the digital version)
As someone who used to service computers for a long time, I can confidently say Seagate is the most reliable hard drive brand for desktop computers. Fujitsu is best for notebooks, with Seagate coming close second. All others (Samsung, Western Digital, Maxtor, Toshiba, Hitachi) have much higher failure and DOA (dead on arrival) rates.
Digital Image Management software first became available in the United Kingdom in the early part of the 21st century. Since then, there have been multiple updated versions released.