Monday, September 10, 2007

Nokia Nseries introduces new range of enhancements!




The Nokia Bluetooth GPS Module LD-4W combines Nseries style in a slim and attractive core with navigation, so you can find your way around easily with your compatible mobile device। Continuing on our mission to bring location based services to even more people, this GPS module is compatible with a wide range of Nokia devices and Nokia


A high quality, sleekly designed stereo headset - the Nokia Bluetooth Headset BH-903 is the complete package for your music enjoyment। The headset is Bluetooth compliant, supporting compatible devices with Bluetooth A2DP, AVRCP, PBAP, HFP and HSP profiles*, so you can conveniently pair it with a compatible mobile device or other music player.
It acts as a state-of-the art remote control with an OLED display, so while you're rocking away you can control your music and your calls. If a call interrupts your favorite tunes, the Nokia Bluetooth Stereo Headset BH-903 will switch automatically to talk mode and return to the music after the call. Weighing in at 32 grams, the headset is a multifunctioning companion to your life on the move. Enjoy up to 15 hours of talk/music time. The Nokia Bluetooth Stereo Headset BH-903 will cost an estimated 200 euro without taxes and will be available globally

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Vibration-compensated mini projectors

Projector technology has improved considerably in the last few years, but although brightness, contrast, and color are better than ever, size still remains an issue for those looking for a truly portable device.

Miniature projectors embedded in our cell phones, handheld game consoles and other personal electronics appear very likely to play a major role in the future of information display.

Projecting a large screen display on a wall appears the most effective way we can currently envisage having a large screen inside a small form factor. One of the problems will of course be that a handheld device projecting a large screen might not lead to a stable, vibration-free and easily readable display.

Projecting a large screen display on a wall appears the most effective way we can currently envisage having a large screen inside a small form factor. One of the problems will of course be that a handheld device projecting a large screen might not lead to a stable, vibration-free and easily readable display.

Now German scientists from the Institute for Photonic Microsystems in Dresden have combined a compact laser projector system with inertia and yaw rate sensors to project vibration-compensated images. The sensor system detects the slightest motion and rotates the image to compensate for it, ensuring a steady picture, even in a moving vehicle. The system could be commercially available within two years.

The new development from the Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Microsystems IPMS can be integrated into any mobile handheld device and used to project the display onto any flat surface in A3 format. And the great thing is, the image always remains steady – even if the user holding the device is shaking or the whole car is vibrating.

The car journey has been going on for hours, and back-seat passengers often have nothing better than the view from the window to divert them. Playing ‘sudoku’ on the cell phone gets tiring after a while, as the display is too small and keeps shaking with the motion of the car. A new development by the Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Microsystems IPMS in Dresden could soon help: A novel miniature laser projector can be integrated into any mobile handheld device and used to project the display onto any flat surface in A3 format. And the great thing is, the image always remains steady – even if the user holding the device is shaking or the whole car is vibrating.

Researchers at the IPMS, who developed the miniature projector jointly with their colleagues at the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering IOF, have now succeeded in making it insensitive to small movements. “We have combined our compact laser projector system with inertia and yaw rate sensors,” explains Dr Michael Scholles, business unit manager at the IPMS. “This sensor system is capable of detecting any kind of motion. The information is then sent to the image processing unit, which rotates the image to compensate for the motion and ensures a steady picture.” In future handheld devices, which could for instance combine a cell phone, a PDA and a games console, the system can be used for projecting a conveniently sized, vibration-compensated image of any application. “The system could be commercially available a year or two,” estimates Scholles.

The projection system is fitted with a micromechanical scanning mirror, also developed by the IPMS, that constructs the image by deflecting the light beam into rows and columns. The projector has a size of only 17 x 7 x 5 millimeters. The researchers achieved this level of miniaturization by employing laser diodes instead of conventional lamps.

Friday, June 15, 2007

Fuel Cells For Mobile Phones By 2009



STMicroelectrics hopes to be supplying fuel cell batteries for mobile phones by 2009. They are developing this new technology to power both mobile phones and laptop computers, and are aiming to have production underway by 2009.


We are developing micro fuel cells for mobile phones and then for the laptop market,”

Salvatore Coffa, from the R&D department of the industrial and multi-segment sector at ST told the meeting. “We hope to have this in production by 2009.”




The operation of a fuel cell involves the chemical interaction between hydrogen and oxygen to produce water, heat and electrical energy. Typically, a fuel cell consists of a pair of electrodes (the 'anode' and the 'cathode') separated by a membrane that allows protons (hydrogen ions) to pass through the membrane but does not allow an electric current to pass. In addition, catalysts such as platinum are used to increase the rate of the reaction and therefore the amount of electrical energy produced.

The main problem with applying fuel cell concepts to mobile phones is that the power source (battery or fuel cell) must be able to deliver around 300mA of current at 3.6V and it must not occupy a volume of more than around 12 cubic centimeters. However, the output current of a fuel cell is directly related to the common surface area between the electrodes and the membrane and to obtain 300mA of current using conventional fuel cell technologies would require a surface area of around 60 square centimeters, much larger than is available in a mobile phone.

Java Games and Applications Resizer For Free Download


This simple program, allows running java game developed and optimized for low resolution phones (176*208) like N70 on the high resolution phones (352*416) like N80 or N93 in full screen mode and its native resolution.

All you have to do is to select the select the original and desired screen resolution; select the JAR file from your computer and software will automatically make the necessary changes in the installation file.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Your Mobile Says a Lot about You !

Have you ever noticed how some people and their dogs look alike? This has been the subject of some television clips, magazine articles, and talk show commentaries.

Now, according to a Nielsen Media Research study, the brand of cell phone you use may say a lot about your personality. At least if you're Indian.

the results of the study, which concluded that, if you're carrying a Motorola mobile phone the chances are you are under 24 and fashion conscious.

But if you've got a Nokia in your pocket (or briefcase), it's a fair bet you might be a family-minded, middle-aged manager.


Sony Ericsson handsets are favoured by ambitious young men trying to make their mark; LGs are tops with mums; while Samsungs are wielded by young women focused on their career, a study of mobile phone usage shows.




Nielsen Media Research associate director Mr Jody Loughlin said all makes of mobiles had a wide spread of customer types but some groups were more attracted to certain brands than others.

Anyway, I know that some of my friends change their phones and / or carriers more often than they do their hair styles so don’t take this study seriously, but, still, the statistics tended to bear out the generalizations.

Nokia
Family-minded
Middle aged managers
Balance seekers
Health conscious


Motorola
Fashion conscious
Under 24
Fun seekers
Individualistic

Sony Ericsson
Ambitious young men
Professionals
Success driven
Individualistic

Samsung
Young women
Career focused
Success drivers
Fun seekers

LG
Stay at home parents
Favourite of moms
Harmony seekers
Success driven .


Saturday, March 24, 2007

ClassifEye Secure Biometric Solution Joins the Symbian Smartphone


ClassifEye, Ltd, a developer of fingerprint recognition and m-commerce
solutions, today announced that it has joined the Symbian Platinum Program to support the growing market for Symbian smartphones by extending ClassifEye?s solution to the Symbian ecosystem.
ClassifEye unique, software-only, technology leverages the on-board camera for secure authentication and non-repudiation necessary for mobile commerce and other customer verification challenges.
ClassifEye software eliminates the necessity for costly biometric hardware integration and is downloadable to existing camera smartphones.
Symbian develops and licenses Symbian OS?, the market leading operatingsystem for smartphones. Symbian OS is licensed by the world?s leadingmobile phone manufacturers and to date, over 110 million Symbian smartphones have shipped worldwide to over 250 major network operators.
Smartphones represent the fastest growing segment within mobile, growing
at 46.6% compared to mobile at 21% year on year growth Q305 to Q306
reported analyst firm IDC. With IDC?s forecast of cumulative global shipments of smartphones due to pass the one billion mark by 2011,
Symbian OS represents one of the biggest commercial opportunities in mobile.


Fingerprint recognition plays an important role in enabling smartphones to be used in many different ways,? said Craig Heath, Senior Product Manager, Symbian. ?Making secure mobile payments, and accessing corporate networks or personal bank accounts from smartphones are becoming increasingly popular around the world, and ClassifEye?s innovative, biometric developments have contributed significantly to this. The addition of ClassifEye to the Symbian Platinum Program underscores our joint vision that strong authentication technology will help lead to the future success of smartphones.


Sunday, March 4, 2007

How to Create Subfolders in Menu

s1-Open your phone's menu and highlight the folder you want to put inside another folder
2-Press Options-Move and press 1 to move the folder to the first position in menu
3-Open some file explorer, and go to !:\system\apps\, where ! is the drive you have some application installed: C for the phone or E for the card
4-highlight a folder, and rename it to anything else than its original name.
5-IMMEDIATELLY perform this sequence as fast as you can:

press Menu key, highlight any application or game (not a fold

6-Don't do anything else, but wait until Menu is refreshed.After that, you'll see the cursor appears over the folder you want to move.
7-Select Move to folder, choose the destination folder and the folder will be where you moved it

Notes:

-The application or game you must highlight at step 5 should be in the same folder than the folder you want to move
-Steps 3 and 4 explain a fast and simple action that causes Menu to be refreshed.If you like it better, both steps can be replaced with install a application that's already installed or remove some application using phone's App Manager.Anyway, remember the step 5 has to be done immediatelly after the previous action
-Before trying this trick, make sure that you have at least one item that's not a folder in your phone's menu.It may be a game or a application
-After renaming a application folder located at !:/system/apps/, don't forget to rename it back to its default name.Otherwise, it won't appear at phone's menu and you can't use it



Nokia E90 FCC Approved..!

The FCC approved the Nokia E90 phone,Just a few weeks after the introduction the latest Nokia Eseries wave at the 3GSM show in Barcelona, the most attractive Nokia bussiness phone, famous Nokai E90 is showing up on the FCC website.
The Nokia E90 Communicator sets the standard for an uncompromised "mobile office" experience. The latest technologies at the core of the device bring business necessities and personal amenities to the hands of people independent of time and place. Fast and inexpensive connections over WLAN and HSDPA-enhanced 3G accelerate the mobile use of data- and transmission-rich applications.
The interface to business and leisure applications and the Internet, the stunning Nokia S60 browser, with 16 million colors, is capable of displaying the full width of a web page at once.
Nokia E90 Communicator is equipped with an FM radio, a music player, a video player and two cameras -- a 3.2Mpix auto focus camera with flash and a second camera for videoconferencing.

Thursday, March 1, 2007

Interview with Gregg Sauter and Peter Nielsen



The great hardware base on the latest N-series device and 3D hardware accelerated graphic on Nokia N93 and Nokia N95 as well as something interesting about Quake III on Nokia N93 and finally yeterday we posted tha Finnish customers will test the Nokia's next generation mobile gaming platform.


The last but not the less important we've also took the video of SystemRush game running on Nokia N95
Now, Stefan from the RingNokia pointed me to a quite intresting in-depth interview with Nokia's third party publishing boss Gregg Sauter and SDK product manager Peter Nielsen about Nokia's new N-Gage platform over the Develop Mag.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Wireless Sony Bluetooth Headphones!


As the more and more Symbian phones come with the A2DP/AVRCP support these days, it is only natural that the wireless BT headset becomes more and more popular all over the world as well.

A2DP for short, is just one of the many standardized applications of Bluetooth.

Advanced Audio Distribution Profile is the technology that lets devices stream high-quality sound in stereo to each other via Bluetooth™. Also some of them have a hands-free feature that makes such headphones as the perfect solution for Smartphones users.

Sony has announced 5 new Bluetooth accessories for audio devices, 2 of which are designed to pair with a Bluetooth enabled mobile phones so users can listen to music and answer calls all in one device.


Without sounding too technical, A2DP basically allows stereo sound to be transferred to a headset or even car stereo, wirelessly. Basically all you have to do is to pair an A2DP headset with an A2DP Smartphone, and you can enjoy in your favorite tracks while the you're phone's in the pocket, or across the room.

Monday, January 15, 2007

Microvision's ultra-miniature Mobile phone full colour projector

The miniature projection display prototype, based on Microvision's proprietary Integrated Photonics Module (IPM), has been developed in collaboration with one of the Company's high volume manufacturing partners to position Microvision to deliver mobile users worldwide a large screen viewing experience inside a thin and sleek portable package.



The image produced by Microvision's display is extremely sharp and vivid whether being projected to view an image the size of a laptop screen or further away to view an image the size of a big screen plasma TV. Currently measuring a slim 8 mm this extremely small display package, about the size of a "thin mint" chocolate candy or the generation two iPod(R) shuffle, has been dramatically miniaturized to 1/10 the size of the company's original prototype shown in June 2006 at the Society for Information Display. The Company and its high volume manufacturing partners will continue to develop this exciting technology into products that are expected to meet very aggressive market requirements for size, power, cost, and performance.



"This development represents a major milestone in the company's turnaround and growth strategy set in place in 2006," - concluded Tokman. "Our product development team has done an outstanding job and we believe that our customers and partners will be delighted by what we have to show during CES."

Apple Introduces The iPhone


iPhone combines three products — a revolutionary mobile phone, a widescreen iPod with touch controls, and a breakthrough Internet communications device with desktop-class email, web browsing, maps, and searching — into one small and lightweight handheld device. iPhone also introduces an entirely new user interface based on a large multi-touch display and pioneering new software, letting you control everything with just your fingers. So it ushers in an era of software power and sophistication never before seen in a mobile device, completely redefining what you can do on a mobile phone.


iPhone features the most revolutionary user interface since the mouse. It’s an entirely new interface based on a large multi-touch display and innovative new software that lets you control everything using only your fingers. So you can glide through albums with Cover Flow, flip through photos and email them with a touch, or zoom in and out on a section of a web page — all by simply using iPhone’s multi-touch display.


Technical Specifications
Screen size 3.5 inches
Screen resolution 320 by 480 at 160 ppi
Input method Multi-touch
Operating system OS X
Storage 4GB or 8GB
GSM Quad-band (MHz: 850, 900, 1800, 1900)
Wireless data Wi-Fi (802.11b/g) + EDGE + Bluetooth 2.0
Camera 2.0 megapixels
Battery
  • Up to 5 hours Talk / Video / Browsing
  • Up to 16 hours Audio playback
Dimensions 4.5 x 2.4 x 0.46 inches / 115 x 61 x 11.6mm
Weight 4.8 ounces / 135 grams

Phone’s full QWERTY soft keyboard lets you easily send and receive SMS messages in multiple sessions. And the keyboard is predictive, so it prevents and corrects mistakes, making it easier and more efficient to use than the small plastic keyboards on many smartphones.

Charge your mobile directly from your PC


This piece of accessory, allows you to charge your mobile directly from your PC, save on having to carry bulky mains chargers or worry about available power supplies. Simply plug the USB Charger Lead into any PC or Apple Mac with a USB socket and plug into your phone for charging on the go. Perfect for when your phone is hooked up to your computer or you're at your desk!


It's also very best solution when you go away on a business trip or holidays, as it is a lot less bulky than a standard mobile phone charger, and works with any desktop computer or laptop.