Saturday, July 24, 2010

Friday, July 16, 2010

Bulk Download 103

This folder contains 28 files mixed of games, themes, apps, widgets etc.

Download Bulk 103

Mobile Tip 8: How to Speed up your S60 device!

highspeed How to: Speed up your S60 device!


I think all of you S60-users out there know that devices with this Symbian S60 OS can be very slowly. Sometimes you need to wait many seconds until an application or a folder opens. This can be very annoying, especially in the gallery when you want to show some pictures or videos to your friends very quickly.

Now there is a trick to make your S60 mobile phone faster, this trick is so crazy that you won’t believe it until you tested it. But don’t think I am joking, just test it by yourself. So let’s start with the tutorial:

1.) Change your phones’ date to the 01.05.2005


2.) Go to the calendar


3.) Now we need to create two new to-do’s (Options > New entry > To-do)


4.) These two to-do’s need to have the following information:

- 1. To-do:

* Subject: Speed
* Due date: 04.08.2005
* Priority: High

- 2. To-do:

* Subject: Qoukie
* Due date: 04.08.2005
* Priority: Low

5.) Confirm the both to-do notes with “Done”, but don’t close the calendar application.

6.) Choose: Options > To-do view

7.) Mark “Speed” as done, after that mark “Qoukie” as done.

8.) Now you can close the calendar.

9.) Change the phones’ date back to the actual day.

10.) Enjoy your faster device!

This tutorial is unbelivable, huh? But it really works! Is this an easter-egg built into the S60 OS? To be honest we don’t know, but it works and this is the only important thing…

Source: Telefon-Treff forums

Monday, July 12, 2010

Java App: Opera Mini v5.1

Download Opera Mini

Symbian App: Silverlight for Symbian

Download Silverlight for S60 5th Edition devices

Silverlight is Microsoft’s development platform that promises to make things easier for developers to create and integrate applications, and it’s on its way to Nokia and Symbian handsets. To find out more about Silverlight on your Nokia, join us after the break…

Microsoft’s Silverlight platform promises to make it easier for developers to create and work with applications. Even though Microsoft has ignored its older Windows Mobile platforms, it will be offering Silverlight support for existing Nokia smartphones, such as the Nokia 5800.

This means you’ll be able to get much better applications, with Silverlight offering an online experience somewhat similar to Flash, with engaging and interesting interactive content available.

On Symbian compatibility, the Sliverlight website states: “Nokia Symbian is one of the mobile popular mobile operating systems in the world”, highlighting the reason that support has been made available.

The website goes on to state: “The Silverlight team has been hard at work ensuring that Symbian users can run Silverlight applications in-browser on their mobile devices”.

Want to see Silverlight in action on a Nokia? Check out the video below:


Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Firefox 1.1 for Nokia N900

Nokia has released its brand new Nokia N900 for which Mozilla has launched Firefox 1.1. This new version Firefox has enhancements to its older versions so that users can enjoy new features and surf the browse much more efficiently.

The new added features of Firefox 1.1 include portrait mode, free form zooming and personalized start page. Personalized Start page is a feature that enables the users to select and go back to the page on which they left out.

From the following link users can download Firefox 1.1 directly on their Nokia N900.

http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/m/

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

News: Apple iPhones overstating AT&T's network strength


The iPhone 4 is Apple's fourth version of the popular smartphone that shook up the mobile device industry upon its release in 2007. More than 1.7 million iPhones were sold within the first three days of its release on June 24, making it Apple's most successful product launch in history.

But the company has been catching a lot of criticism in technology news outlets and blogs for what some believe is a faulty antenna design. Videos have sprouted across the Internet (see above) that show people gripping the phone and, moments later, noting how it loses signal strength.

And two Baltimore residents -- Kevin McCaffrey of Nottingham and Linda Wrinn of Baltimore -- are at the forefront of a class-action lawsuit filed last week against Apple over the antenna reception issue. (Neither McCaffrey or Wrinn could be reached for comment for this article.)

Apple promoted the phone's new antenna design -- which wraps around the steel frame of the phone -- as a feature that would improve reception, and not potentially hamper it.

Apple has tried to dismiss the chatter by saying that all cell phones lose signal strength, by one or more bars, when gripped. And, in a news statement last week, the company also said that its investigation of the issue unearthed another problem: the iPhone's miscalculation of signal strength.

Essentially, iPhones have been generously overstating the signal strength that AT&T -- Apple's exclusive wireless carrier for the phone -- offers on its network to iPhone users.

“Upon investigation,” Apple disclosed last week, “we were stunned to find that the formula we use to calculate how many bars of signal strength to display is totally wrong. Our formula, in many instances, mistakenly displays 2 more bars than it should for a given signal strength. For example, we sometimes display 4 bars when we should be displaying as few as 2 bars.”

This disclosure is surprising because anytime a company admits to overstating anything, consumers should take note. Basically, Apple's iPhone has erroneously -- and as far as we know, inadvertently -- given AT&T's network more signal strength than it deserves to show on the iPhone.

In short, Apple's iPhones have been exaggerating the strength of AT&T's 3G network.

So, Apple will soon release a software fix that enables the iPhone 4 (and the 3Gs and the 3G versions) to more accurately read AT&T signal strength. The upshot: iPhone users will get a better reading of the strength of AT&T's network -- one that will jibe with a prevailing consumer sentiment that AT&T's 3G network can’t handle iPhones, at least with voice calls, especially in big cities such as New York and San Francisco.

I own an iPhone 4 and I have definitely noticed that when the phone has five full bars, and I grip it firmly in my left hand, it drops by two or three bars. When I release the phone, about five to 10 seconds later, the bars return.

But my ultimate conclusion is that my call quality thus far has not been affected, and my connection to the Internet -- for checking email and surfing the Web -- also works the same as past versions of the iPhone I've owned. At least for me.

So, for now, I'll wait to see if Apple's upcoming software fix – which will also be available for its previous 3Gs and 3G iPhone versions -- will have an impact before I decide whether to return it.

Cool App of the Week:

Fans of National Public Radio will likely enjoy its new iPhone app: NPR Music. The app, which is a free download, gives the user access to the broadcaster’s written stories about music, plus a huge library of interviews and musical performances from both new and established artists available for on-demand listening. A version of the app for the Android mobile phone platform is in the works.

Monday, July 5, 2010

Friday, July 2, 2010

Bulk Download 101

To all my visitors,

Thanks for always visiting my blogsite. Starting this month I will provide you bulk downloads which means I will just zip all downloads in just one file so that you can just get my latest downloads in just one go.

Download Bulk101.

This file contains 33 games, apps, themes etc.

Siargao Adventure! Siargao is more than just a perfect surfing spot but also a life-changing place packed with adventures and picturesque c...