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The battery life was legendary in the worst way. A real PSP lasted 4-6 hours of gaming. The Allfon lasted 2 hours of gaming, or 3 hours of calls, but never both. Playing Bejeweled while on hold drained the battery in 45 minutes. The Allfon’s software was a hall of mirrors. It booted up with a fake “Sony Entertainment” splash screen, but then launched a crude, icon-based menu. The “PSP Games” folder contained not ISO rips of God of War , but 8-bit NES emulators and pre-loaded Java games like Snake 3D and Bubble Bash . The device’s killer app was its ability to play low-resolution AVI files from a microSD card—perfect for pirated episodes of The Simpsons that looked like impressionist paintings.

Under the hood, it was powered by a low-end MediaTek (MTK) chipset—the workhorse of countless knockoff phones. The screen was a resistive LCD, not the PSP’s vibrant TFT. And instead of Sony’s custom graphics processor, the Allfon ran a simple Java 2 Micro Edition (J2ME) environment. It was, essentially, a candy-bar phone stretched into the shape of a gaming handheld. The Allfon’s most absurd feature was its "slide-to-answer" mechanism. You couldn't just tap the screen. To take a call while gaming, you had to physically slide the PSP-like faceplate upward to reveal a numeric keypad. Imagine pausing Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories to answer your boss, your thumbs still greasy from the analog nub. The phone’s dual identity created a bizarre user ritual: gaming was the default state; telephony was an intrusion.

Sony’s real PSP was a masterpiece of focused engineering. The Allfon PSP was a masterpiece of desperate invention. And in the landfill of obsolete tech, it rests as a monument to every gamer who ever looked at their ringing phone and thought, “I wish this had a joystick.”

In the mid-2000s, two devices ruled the commuter’s world: the Sony PlayStation Portable (PSP) for gaming and multimedia, and the ubiquitous feature phone for calls and SMS. They lived in separate pockets, connected only by Bluetooth or a shared charger. But in the chaotic, unregulated bazaars of Shenzhen, a mad scientist’s dream was born: the Allfon PSP . It was not a product from Sony, nor from a major telecom. It was a ghost—a “white-box” special—that tried to do everything and, in doing so, became a perfect fossil of an era when hardware hackers dreamed of one device to rule them all. The Hardware Hodgepodge At first glance, the Allfon PSP was a masterful act of plagiarism. It borrowed the PSP’s iconic chassis: the central 4.3-inch screen flanked by a directional pad on the left and the famous PlayStation face buttons (△, ○, X, □) on the right. But where Sony’s UMD disc drive hummed, the Allfon had a SIM card slot. Where the PSP had Wi-Fi for ad-hoc gaming, the Allfon had an antenna for GSM 850/1900 MHz.

GainTools EDB to PST Converter

An advanced program to convert Exchange mailboxes to PST

Direct Conversion

One can directly convert Exchange mailboxes to PST file format without using any additional program. In a few steps, EDB files are converted to PST file to open in MS Outlook.

Easily operate by non-tech users

This is the best and convenient solution to be easily operated by non-tech users. No prior technical skills are needed to use Exchange to PST Converter.

Free Demo edition

A trial version of the software is available to evaluate the functions of the program. Once users find this program suitable for them, they can simply get the license keys.

Allfon Psp Now

The battery life was legendary in the worst way. A real PSP lasted 4-6 hours of gaming. The Allfon lasted 2 hours of gaming, or 3 hours of calls, but never both. Playing Bejeweled while on hold drained the battery in 45 minutes. The Allfon’s software was a hall of mirrors. It booted up with a fake “Sony Entertainment” splash screen, but then launched a crude, icon-based menu. The “PSP Games” folder contained not ISO rips of God of War , but 8-bit NES emulators and pre-loaded Java games like Snake 3D and Bubble Bash . The device’s killer app was its ability to play low-resolution AVI files from a microSD card—perfect for pirated episodes of The Simpsons that looked like impressionist paintings.

Under the hood, it was powered by a low-end MediaTek (MTK) chipset—the workhorse of countless knockoff phones. The screen was a resistive LCD, not the PSP’s vibrant TFT. And instead of Sony’s custom graphics processor, the Allfon ran a simple Java 2 Micro Edition (J2ME) environment. It was, essentially, a candy-bar phone stretched into the shape of a gaming handheld. The Allfon’s most absurd feature was its "slide-to-answer" mechanism. You couldn't just tap the screen. To take a call while gaming, you had to physically slide the PSP-like faceplate upward to reveal a numeric keypad. Imagine pausing Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories to answer your boss, your thumbs still greasy from the analog nub. The phone’s dual identity created a bizarre user ritual: gaming was the default state; telephony was an intrusion. allfon psp

Sony’s real PSP was a masterpiece of focused engineering. The Allfon PSP was a masterpiece of desperate invention. And in the landfill of obsolete tech, it rests as a monument to every gamer who ever looked at their ringing phone and thought, “I wish this had a joystick.” The battery life was legendary in the worst way

In the mid-2000s, two devices ruled the commuter’s world: the Sony PlayStation Portable (PSP) for gaming and multimedia, and the ubiquitous feature phone for calls and SMS. They lived in separate pockets, connected only by Bluetooth or a shared charger. But in the chaotic, unregulated bazaars of Shenzhen, a mad scientist’s dream was born: the Allfon PSP . It was not a product from Sony, nor from a major telecom. It was a ghost—a “white-box” special—that tried to do everything and, in doing so, became a perfect fossil of an era when hardware hackers dreamed of one device to rule them all. The Hardware Hodgepodge At first glance, the Allfon PSP was a masterful act of plagiarism. It borrowed the PSP’s iconic chassis: the central 4.3-inch screen flanked by a directional pad on the left and the famous PlayStation face buttons (△, ○, X, □) on the right. But where Sony’s UMD disc drive hummed, the Allfon had a SIM card slot. Where the PSP had Wi-Fi for ad-hoc gaming, the Allfon had an antenna for GSM 850/1900 MHz. Playing Bejeweled while on hold drained the battery

EDB to PST Migration Procedure Images

Step-by-step visual guide to Migrate EDB to PST files

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Watch our comprehensive tutorial to learn how to migrate EDB to PST files in just a few simple steps

MBOX Converter Tutorial Video

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EDB to PST Converter Tool Free Download

Software Name
GainTools EDB to PST Converter Software
Version
1.0
File Size
24.01 MB
Operating System
Windows 11/10/8.1/8/7 (64-bit & 32-bit)
Download a Trial

Take the tool to evaluate by converting 10 emails from EDB to PST Converter folder.

Compatibility & Format

Input Formats
EDB
Output Formats
PST, EML, EMLX, MSG
License
TRIAL + FULL
Language
English

System Requirements

Processor
1 GHz or faster
RAM
Minimum 512 MB
Hard Disk
100 MB free space
Display
1024x768 resolution

Client’s Views about EDB to Outlook PST Converter

See what our satisfied customers have to say about their experience with our MBOX conversion tool

"From past few days, I was in search of an effective solution to export my Exchange EDB file to PST file format. I am glad to have this application. Thank you GainTools for this smart and easy handling application."

AJ

Allen Jhonson

"Wow! Truly amazing application to use. It made it possible to export EDB data to PST format in a few simple clicks. Kudos to the developers for such a nice development."

MC

Mark Curran

"Last month, I purchased your software and I am surprised by how well it performed EDB PST Conversion for such a reasonable price. Thank You!"

SM

Sarena Morkel

Business Owner