Tag Archive | "Symbian"

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Nokia unveils 41 megapixel phone

Posted on 28 February 2012 by Tea Server

Nokia has unveiled a 41 megapixel camera-phone – designed so phone users can ‘zoom in’ without a bulky lens.

The 41-megapixel sensor is around three times more powerful than the ones in any existing handsets.

A Nokia executive says, ‘It shows what we can do.’

The phone will be launched in May and cost 480 Euros.

Nokia says the technology is designed so users can zoom in quickly and easily without losing picture quality.

Most smartphones use digital zoom functions where the picture quality drops when users ‘zoom in’ – in practice, the zoom functions are rarely used.

PureView’s huge 41-megapixel sensor lets users zoom in up to six times simply by ‘selecting’ an area – and because of the super-high resolution of the PureView, images still come out at five megapixels, the same as many normal smartphone cameras.

beast image

With video, users can zoom in up to four times and still shoot in 1080p Full HD.

‘When you zoom with the Nokia 808 PureView, in effect you are just selecting the relevant area of the sensor,’ says the Finnish company. ‘With no zoom, you simply use the full area of the sensor.’

The phone is bulkier than normal camera phones, according to reports from Barcelona’s Mobile World Congress, where it was unveiled, but even on full resolution, it shoots instantly.

 

The phone has been in development for years, Nokia said, and produces pictures that can be blown up to ‘poster size’.

Tech site Pocket-Lint said, ‘What it shows us though is that Nokia can create amazing technology in a device that is small and compact – relatively speaking.

‘We’re also told it will come to other handsets in the future. The reason you don’t want it is that, beside the amazing camera tech, it runs the company’s Symbian operating system, which is basically winding down.’

Syndicated from: Engrmuh’s Blog

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Nokia Launches Three Symbian Belle Powered Smart Phones in Pakistan

Posted on 21 February 2012 by Tea Server

Nokia has launched three smart phones in Pakistan featuring the latest Symbian Belle OS which were unveiled back in August 2011. With the launch of these mass-market smart phones, Nokia is aiming to shift the focus of the masses from feature phones to something most compelling and stylish i.e. smart phones.

The current price of Nokia 603 is approximately Rs. 22,500
The current price of Nokia 700 is approximately Rs. 28,800
The current price of Nokia 701 is approximately Rs. 30,900

Ilari Nurmi, Vice President at Nokia said:

After bringing exciting new features to the Symbian user experience only two months ago with Symbian Anna, we are now driving the platform even further with our most competitive Symbian user experience ever, Symbian Belle and the three new handsets we are launching today show our commitment to continue delivering Symbian products that allow people to choose what is most important to them in terms of user experience, design, functionality and price.  These will not be last products or updates we will deliver on Symbian.

Nick McQuire IDC added:

With this announcement Nokia has made it clear that Symbian will continue to play an important role in its product portfolio along side Windows Phone 7. “There is a sense of urgency in the way improvements and innovations are being delivered to the platform that demonstrates how committed Nokia is to make Symbian products a competitive smartphone choice.

 

Nokia 700: Nokia’s Smallest Smart Phone

At only 50 cubic centimetres, weighing 96gm and at 110 x 50.7 x 9.7 mm the Nokia 700 not only becomes Nokia’s most compact smartphone in the Symbian range, it is also the most compact touch-based monoblock smart phone in the world.

Nokia 700′s features include:

  • Single-tap NFC sharing and pairing capabilities
  • 1Ghz processor
  • 3.2 inch AMOLED ClearBlack display
  • 2GB of internal memory (with the option of using a 32GB microSD card for a total of 34GB),
  • HD video capture and 5MP full focus camera with LED flash.

 

Nokia 701: The brightest by Nokia

The Nokia 701 is a sleek, slim smartphone incorporating the world’s brightest ever mobile phone display, based on a 3.5 inch ClearBlack display that makes it perfect for indoor and outdoor use.

Based on the popular Nokia C7 design, the Nokia 701 also features:

  • A 1GHz processor
  • 8MP full focus camera with dual LED flash and 2 X digital zoom,
  • 2nd front-facing camera
  • HD video capture

The phone comes with 8GB internal memory and the possibility to increase to 40GB by installing a 32GB microSD card

 

Nokia 600: Fast & Bright

The Nokia 600 delivers a big sound and a big personality in a small package and is Nokia’s loudest smartphone at 106 Phons.


Features include:

  • Built-in FM radio antenna for listening to radio without headphones
  • An FM transmitter that makes it possible to broadcast music from your phone to any FM radio
  • 1 GHz processor
  • 5MP full focus camera with LED flash
  • HD video capture,
  • 2GB of internal memory with ability to increase to 34GB using a 32GB microSD card.

The Nokia 600 as features an amazing 60 hours of music playback time, an incredibly powerful external loudspeaker and the ability to also stream music wirelessly to NFC-enabled accessories, it is the perfect smartphone to get the party started.

Syndicated from: TelecomPK

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Nokia Launches Three No-Compromise Mass-Market Smartphones Powered by Symbian Belle

Posted on 20 February 2012 by Tea Server

Nokia 700, Nokia 701 and Nokia 603 smartphones introduce latest Symbian software update while new NFC-enabled stereo Bluetooth headset takes advantage of NFC pairing and sharing functionality

Related posts:

  1. Adobe confirms Flash Player 10 beta version for Smartphones
  2. Nokia N8 Now Available in Pakistan
  3. Nokia X1 Review and Specifications in Pakistan
  4. LG Launches LG Optimus – Android Powered Smartphone
  5. Nokia Most Afforadable QWERTY Phone –The Nokia C3



Syndicated from: GeoTauAisay Pakistan

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Buy & sell software portal launched by wi-tribe

Posted on 03 February 2012 by Tea Server

News for software developers who want to sell their software locally online! Wi-tribe has just announced the beta launch of wi-tribe Bazaar – Pakistan’s first Buy and Sell software portal – as a platform where Pakistani software developers can sell and monetize their software. The portal, as all things wi-tribe, is slick and the User Interface is very simple to use. This is in beta so developers are warned that there might be a few bugs – and these should be reported so that they can be fixed.

The basic categories that they have defined in the portal include:

  • Anti-virus & anti-spam
  • Business
  • Communication
  • Games
  • Graphics
  • Internet & Networking
  • Mobile Applications
  • PC Widgets
  • Systems Utilities

So all a software developer has to do is fill in the details in the online application form, mention the price, provide a description, the OS the app runs on and send it to w-tribe alongwith a sign up fee of Rs. 1000. According to the information on the portal, wi-tribe will get a contract to the developer within 7 days. In accordance with the contract, the developer will get 65% of all revenues minus taxes. There are some pre-requisites though. The software must have had a minimum of 100 downloads and should have been on the portal for at least 3 months. The shopping experience for buyers is very simple – add to shopping cart, use the scratch card and download! You can also create a wish list if you are not sure how many products you want to end up buying.

According to Ali Fahd, Director Marketing wi-tribe, the wi-tribe Bazaar is powered by wi-tribe scratch cards, allowing the purchase of software through scratch cards available at over 600 locations throughout Karachi, Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Lahore and Faisalabad. There is no hassle or requirement of credit cards or other e-commerce payment methods. Understanding the Pakistani market, they are aware of the fact that consumers in Pakistan are familiar with scratch cards and use them frequently for various services. So why not software?

“wi-tribe Bazaar is our effort to support, encourage and proliferate the local IT industry and software developers in particular,” says Ali Fahd. “We understand that there are a lot of developers with products that they would like to sell in the local market. We are also aware of the challenges in monetizing software and applications (apps) in Pakistan. With wi-tribe Bazaar, software developers will enjoy a significant portion of the revenue share as the main beneficiary. The software and apps can be priced at Rs.100, Rs.250, Rs.500 or Rs.1,000 by the developer. wi-tribe Bazaar also offers hundreds of free applications, which will support developers in building and reaching a larger market.”

Currently, wi-tribe Bazaar supports Windows Desktop and Mobile Apps for Android, Blackberry and Symbian. It is a robust platform for selling any windows software and mobile applications such as games, system utilities, wallpapers and customized themes. The platform is open to all types of developers who would like to bring either their commercial product or even a final year university project to their target market, says Ali Fahd.

wi-tribe state that they are only acting as a catalyst by providing the platform. To help build a local ecosystem of software and apps, wi-tribe has taken a conscious decision to open the platform to all – not just to wi-tribe users. They will aggressively market the wi-tribe bazaar in Pakistan.

Test drive the beta version at http://bazaar.wi-tribe.pk.

Provide feedback on the Bazaar to support.bazaar@wi-tribe.pk.

Syndicated from: In the Line of Wire

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iPad

Posted on 15 January 2012 by Tea Server

I own a Nokia E72 mobile phone. While I have not owned mobile phones longer than five years, I have in that time span been through two mobile brands. My very first mobile phone, gifted to me by father when I was early on in the University, properly convinced that I didn’t need a mobile phone, was a Sony Ericsson. It was a small mobile phone, the name of which escapes me now. I may still have it, somewhere, in some drawers, lost but not forgotten. I used it until it nearly died out. The engravings on the buttons grew muddled, colour on the handset faded out, the battery dead, replaced and dead again, etc. It would be safe to say, in hindsight, that I used it heavily.

My second mobile phone was another Sony Ericsson. It was the first mobile phone I bought. I was immensely excited the night I bought it, on way from work. The excitement of buying a new gadget is one that doesn’t ever diminish in its intensity, never goes away, no matter how many gadgets you buy. It is there right around the time you decide to buy a new gadget, and lasts well until after you’ve bought it. That was my second Sony Ericsson phone, and would be my last.

After I had made heavy use of it, I slowly moved away from it over to Nokia. I had a mammoth but reliable Nokia E61 lying around, which I was using for testing Symbian applications. Yes, this was roughly the time when I worked on Symbian application development. And that is all I am going to say of it.

My fourth and current mobile phone is a successor to E61: Nokia E72. I loved that phone when I bought it. I still love it in some ways. While E61 could be said to be too, E72 is what you would call a proper smart-phone. It features a lot of things that could help you do all sorts of things on the Internet, besides the usual functions of phone. It also has a full QWERTY keyboard. While I had owned an iPod Touch, I’d not been a big fan of touch screen and touch phones. I strongly believed that I could never be able to reliably use a phone with touch screen as the only form of input. This bias was in part due to my reliance on and affinity for physical QWERTY keyboards on phones.

Over the past couple of months, I was growing a little frustrated with my E72. While it worked as anyone would expect of it, I found that as far as applications that let me run wild on the Internet were concerned, it was severely limited. Sure, there were applications to do anything from using Facebook to Twitter to Foursquare. But I felt stifled. There were browsers but I didn’t feel the urge to browse anything on my mobile, unless it was an absolute emergency. I could post tweets on Twitter, but I didn’t enjoy interacting with others’ tweets. The same could be said of my experiences with Facebook (as far as I can tell, there is no native, official application for Facebook from Facebook for Symbian S60) or Foursquare applications. It just wasn’t fun, or even comfortable.

So for the past couple of months, I had been strictly debating getting an iPhone. iPhone 4S was out by then and it made no sense to get anything below that model. Some friends suggested time and again to go for the iPad instead. Where I was almost convinced that iPhone 4S would be my fifth phone, the recommendations for iPad threw my mind back in a state of confusion. Naturally, I compared the pros and contrasted the cons of both devices. Of course, one is a phone, the other a tablet, but when I compared the iPhone to the iPad, I actually compared it with iPad and my E72. That is, if I were to get an iPad, I would continue to use my E72 for the phone needs. There was a big difference in price as well, with a factory unlocked iPhone 4S coming at an exorbitant 67k PKR locally, while an iPad2 with WiFi cost only 48k PKR.

I still remember clearly the night I was at the club on the courts, playing tennis with my partner. He had finally bought the iPhone 4 a day before, after having looked for the white one for under a week. That night, I came home, and finally made up my mind.

The next afternoon, I was at the Apple Store I regularly buy from, purchasing an iPad2 WiFi with 16GB disk space. I had decided it. As I would find out, it was one of the best decisions I had made in my life in a while.

Those familiar with the different iPad2 models available will know that there’s a WiFi + 3G one available. Apart from having to pay under 10k PKR more, the main reason why I decided against getting the 3G model was the unavailability of 3G in the country. I know that you don’t necessarily have to have 3G to be able to use the connection, because any type of data-plan from your provider, such as GPRS or EDGE, will work. However, as I will explain, iPad is a content consumption device. When I say that it is a content consumption device, I mean it in a massive way. It has been designed for consuming a lot of content, including in the form of video, audio, and text. When I decided to buy it, I imagined myself using the iPad like I do my laptop. And I can’t ever imagine using my laptop over EDGE/GPRS in a way that satisfies me. Similarly, I didn’t think the iPad would shine on an EDGE/GPRS connection.

In the next post, I will explain exactly how the arrival of iPad has changed my life, how it has affected it, how I use it, where and when I use it. I will also list down the wonderful apps I use frequently, and make an argument for iPad being an awesome device for reading books/content in particular.

Syndicated from: Libel

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Android and iOS, A Nokia Perspective

Posted on 14 December 2011 by Tea Server

Here’s something interesting. Nokia finally presented their views on Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android. One of Nokia’s directors was talking to Niels Munksgaard of Pocket Lint and he managed to explain how the young of today are already bored of Android and iOS devices. Direct Quote: “What we see is that youth are pretty much [...]



Syndicated from: Telecom News Bulletin

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Use free internet on Mobilink

Posted on 13 December 2011 by Tea Server

Use free internet

Use free Internet on Mobilink.

Included Mobile Phones

All Symbian Nokia Phones s60v1 s60v2 s60v3….s60v5
e.g. nokia 6600, nokia 6630, nokia n70, nokia n72, nokia n73, nokia n95, nokia e series,
Nokia e5, nokia 6680 etc

Procedure.

Go To Menu=>Tools=>settings=>Connections=>access points=>New Access Point=>

1-Connection Name: yours
2-Data Bearer: GPRS For Nokia 6600 and packet data for all other cell phones
3-Access Point Name: jazzconnect.mobilinkworld.com
4-Username: none
5-Prompt Password: No
6-Password: Dont Edit This Field
7-Authentication: Secure
8-Homepage: None

After That Press Option and then go to Advance Settings
in this menu only edit

1-Proxy Serv. Address: 087.237.062.174
2-Proxy Port Number: 3128
Note: Except Nokia 6600 All Other Symbian Mobiles Has To Choose An Option Named ipv4 in advanced settings menu

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