Giving a 100% - Keeping it 100

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Friday, December 24, 2010

Some developers unhappy with the new Android Market

I’ll admit that I have some mixed feelings about the new Android Market that is being slowly pushed, but it seems that some developers are also unhappy with the changes. One of the biggest complaints right now is the Developer Console, which seems to be very buggy and not properly displaying apps. Here are some examples:

http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/Android+Market/thread?tid=0b5f17afe5d62453&hl=en&fid=0b5f17afe5d62453000497db592c0d3a

http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/Android+Market/thread?tid=203ea78c4a3df851&hl=en

http://groups.google.com/group/android-developers/browse_thread/thread/5021e56209d101fd/21fea6fa41f0b245?#21fea6fa41f0b245

I’m sure as the new Market hits more and more devices, we may start seeing some additional complaints from both users and developers alike. Are you a developer and are having issues with the new Android Market? Leave us a comment below and share your thoughts and experiences.

[via AndroidGuys]

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Playstation Phone Likely to be Called “Xperia Play,” Expected in Stores April 2011.

It’s always fun seeing the details come trickling out on a new phone — especially a phone as highly-anticipated as the upcoming “Playstation phone.” Well, some pieces of the puzzle are starting to fall into place. A European trademark was granted on the “Xperia Play” on December 1st. Also, the domain names “XperiaPlay.com,” “XperiaPlay.net,” and “XperiaPlay.org” have been registered. These factors lend a lot of credence to the rumor of the name. Pocket-Lint is also reporting on rumors that the device will be formally announced at Mobile World Congress this upcoming February, and will be available in stores in April.

Stay tuned, we’ll bring you more information as things become official!

[via Android Central]

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Facebook Touch as WRT Widget

Published by David Gilson at 14:06 UTC, December 17th 2010

Asri Al Baker from i-symbian.com and friend of All About Symbian has been at it again with his Web Run-Time Widgets! This time, he has broken away from the Google world and treated us to a launcher for Facebook Touch. For those who don't know, http://touch.facebook.com offers a variant of Facebook optmised for finger-driven mobile browsers. As said previously, there's nothing stopping users from just adding a bookmark to their browser, but these WRT Widgets offer the benefit of an identifiable icon in both the application menu and home screen shortcuts.

To read more from Asri about this launcher to to download, click here.

As ever, Asri is looking for feedback, so please let him know your findings via the comments on i-symbian.com or here at All About Symbian. Asri reports that he hasn't tested this widget on a non-touch device. However, I have tested the widget on both a C7 and the quite definitely non-touch E72 and the widget works as it should on both devices.

David Gilson for All About Symbian, 17th December 2010

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Pixelpipe hosted at Nokia Beta Labs

Published by David Gilson at 12:03 UTC, December 17th 2010

Anyone who is interested in testing the latest features of Pixelpipe Share Online should now direct their browser towards Nokia Beta Labs. Pixelpipe is the latest third party application to be invited into Nokia Beta Labs for users to get the latest bleeding edge features, and more importantly, provide useful feedback to the developers! To announce their invitation to Beta Labs, Pixepipe CEO Brett Butterfield has written a guest blog post, to introduce the social media sharing agent to the uninitiated.

This comes shortly after Pixelpipe reached something of a milestone with version 1.03, with features like image scaling and automatic uploads. Until then, Pixelpipe had relied on Symbian beta testers via an exclusive mailing list where development builds had been sent out in rapid succession. Although, at the release of v1.03, Butterfield announced that would be the last build sent out for some time, at least until a new release was imminent.

In his guest post at Nokia Beta Labs, Butterfield said:

"This is part of a series in which Nokia is inviting the coolest application developers to showcase and pilot their apps at Nokia Beta Labs.

If you've ever captured a great photo or video on your Nokia & wanted to upload & share it to your favorite online services you'll quickly understand the purpose of Pixelpipe. We provide a solution that simply allows you to upload Photos, Video, Audio & Documents directly from your Nokia phone & up to over 75 of the most popular web services. We connect to everything from Facebook, Picasa, Flickr & Dropbox to Hyves, Jaiku & Staus.net & many others, we allow you to select & upload to one or as many of your services you'd like at the time of upload.

You may be familiar with Pixelpipe since we've been providing plug-ins for Nokia Share on Symbian & Maemo for years now. We've recently released our first native Symbian/Qt application & are looking for feedback from the Nokia Beta Labs community on new features we plan in upcoming releases to the Ovi Store."

David Gilson for All About Symbian, 17th December 2010.

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Verizon Galaxy Tab Drops to $499 at Best Buy

vzw galaxy tab

Prices keep on dropping for the Samsung Galaxy Tab running Android 2.2, and Best Buy is showing the Verizon Galaxy Tab dropping $100 off the no contract price from $599 to $499!

“What’s the catch?” you say…well, you do have to sign up for your first month, then after that, you’re free to leave and go on without a contract from one of the monthly price points listed below;

$20/month for 1GB$35/month for 3GB$50/month for 5GB$80/month for 8GB

Seems like a pretty good deal for the Galaxy Tab considering it hasn’t been out just over a month. Will this new price convince you to grab one?

[via AndroidCentral]

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Posted in Android Carriers, Android Sales, Android Tablets | Tags: Android, android 2.2, Android Tablets, Best Buy, froyo, galaxy tab, Sale, Samsung, Samsung Galaxy, Verizon

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Nokia N8 shoots commercial photography magazine cover and pro BMX video

Published by Steve Litchfield at 19:00 UTC, December 20th 2010

Sorry, I couldn't resist another link of interest to a couple of stunning Nokia N8 camera projects: in this case PiX, the (South) African Photo Journal documenting in detail how they got on using the N8 to shoot the cover of their publication, replacing a dedicated DSLR. The video report is embedded below, and you can see their cover here on the PiX web site. And LMVisual, which used the N8 exclusively to produce a very professional video showing the art of BMX stunts, also embedded below.

And another one important formulated N8-art work is the cover page of South African PiX magazine for the month of December. The N8 boldly captured the model as the subject making a top-notch photo quality.

(via Symbian World)

And here's the LMVisual video shoot on the N8, featuring some stunning use of lighting and a steadicam mount for the phone:

Find out more here at N8 Edit.

Finally, a reminder of my own verdict on the Nokia N8's camera and camcorder capabilities.

Steve Litchfield

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Thursday, December 23, 2010

Macro photography with 'Full Focus' phones

Published by David Gilson at 12:48 UTC, December 21st 2010

Extended Depth of Field (EDoF) cameras, also known as Full Focus, have enabled Nokia to make ever thinner smartphones. Rather than relying on the larger actuating auto-focus lens system to produce a sharp image, EDoF exploits image processing algorithms to create an image that is universally sharp. The trade off here is that capturing fine details (like text) is often not possible, and there is a minimum focal distance of 50cm. Well, Jade Bryan over at SymbianWorld.org has come up with a method to get around this limitation, and like all the best ideas, it is remarkably simple. Read on to find out more.

Jade's method is to simply use a magnifying glass! Then, the minimum focal distance of an EDoF camera is effectively reduced by external optical means. In the post at Symbian World, there are some example photos of flowers as a demonstration (see below), and the results are remarkably good. Upon closer inspection, what can be seen is that the depth of field is reduced in line with the characteristics of the magnifying glass (which will be of little surprise to anyone with an appreciation of optics). This isn't a problem though, as the whole point of macro photography is to only capture the nearest objects!


Jade also says that this method can be applied to enhance the N8's macro mode, and presumably any other auto-focus camera phone.

What isn't reported in the post is whether this magnifying glass trick can be used to help EDoF cameras capture documents. Admittedly, this is a specialised use case, but there are some people out there (myself included) who have dumped their flatbed scanners in favour of using their digital cameras. Nokia units like the N97 and E72, etc, are quite capable of this, but because of the fine fuzziness in EDoF image processing, capturing documents has been near impossible on phones like the E55 and C7.

With that in mind, I shall be procuring a magnifying glass for myself to see how well I can reproduce Jade's results with my C7!


"Magnifying Glass plus Nokia C7 (full focus) combo
The only key to somehow reduced the focusing distance is to magnify your subject. Of course by using a magnifying glass that you could purchase in school supply stores or hardware tools section in a mall. For just a couple of quid you could have a fine clear magnifying glass. And the play is to attached by rubber band or manually hold the magnifier and the phone itself.

For the product of this  combination you would get up to 50% less of the minimum full focus distance (10-36cm from 50cm min) required by Full Focus camera modules on these Nokia devices. You just need a little effort by adjusting the best position on getting closer focus to the subject. And since you are on the magnifying glass the flash will be not suitable for this event."

David Gilson for All About Symbian, 21st December 2010

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Nokia E7 delayed, now shipping early Q1 2011

Published by Rafe Blandford at 20:15 UTC, December 15th 2010

The shipping date for Nokia's fourth Symbian^3 device, the communicator form-factor Nokia E7-00, has been pushed back by around a month in order to "ensure the best possible user experience". Originally the E7 was expected to ship in the last week of December. Nokia has not specified an exact new shipping date, but it is likely to be in late January or early February. 

Nokia's full statement on the delay:

"To ensure the best possible user experience on the Nokia E7, we have decided to begin shipping it in early 2011."

Such delays are typically the result of a minor problem in the final quality control checks. In general, a fix will be made to existing stock (at this point the E7 will have already started production) and applied to new stock. 

While a delay is unfortunate, especially in the light of earlier Nokia N8 delays, it is unlikely to have a major impact on the rollout or success of the E7. Shipping dates generate a great deal of interest, but their timing usually has little impact on overall sales.

Once the first review units are available we will be bringing you a full run down on the Nokia E7-00.

Nokia E7

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HTC set to launch HTC Desire HD in Saudi Arabia

At a press conference in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, HTC announced that they will launch the HTC Desire HD in Saudi Arabia.

The HTC Desire HD, which is an overseas version of the HTC EVO 4G, is packed with great specs:

Android 2.2 (Froyo) with HTC Sense UI1 GHz processor8 megapixel camera720p HD video recording3G/WiFi connectivity

Mohamed Kais Zribi, Regional Manager of HTC Middle East and North Africa commented:

“Customers in Saudi Arabia have been eagerly awaiting the launch of these new models. As far as the HTC Desire HD is concerned, I am confident that they will fully appreciate the new features and applications that we have introduced, especially its more engaging, intuitive, user-friendly design. We have likewise retained the attention-grabbing features of the phone, taking advantage of the powerful Android platform and the latest version of HTC Sense2.0, which has become a major hit among smartphone users.”

HTC has been incredibly successful in the smartphone market in Saudi Arabia. The HTC Desire HD should be well received by Saudia Arabian smartphone users.

[via ameinfo]

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Tron Tanks

Published by Ewan Spence at 10:51 UTC, December 20th 2010

This weekend I finally managed to see Tron Legacy in 2D (sorry, but the 3D hurts my eyes and I’m Scottish so why would I spend more money to watch something that causes me pain?). Anyway, as the film opens, Sam Flynn is pimping the Nokia N8 as a virus-uploading magic door-opening tool. That’s product placement for you (all Psion managed was the Series 3a as the bomb timer in Executive Decision). To go along with all the advertising, Nokia has rolled out a bundle of Tron goodies on the Ovi Store, and one of them caught my eye: Tron Tanks.

Tron Tanks

But hold on a moment – where were the tanks in Tron Legacy? Well they are in the new film if you keep your eyes peeled, but there’s no tank on tank action, there’s no sneaking around and shooting up other tanks… so where did all this happen?

Well you could go with the simple answer of someone responsible for this app inside Disney or Nokia just wanted a good tank game and used the opportunity – personally I’m going with the theory that this is a tribute harkening back to the first film, where there was tank-on-tank, and very exciting it was too.

Tron Tanks

So what is actually on offer here? It’s a top down “combat/maze” game where you steer your tank around the world, opening gates and eventually finding the exit to the next level. Gates are opened by shooting them, and the final exit on each level opens when you have destroyed all the enemy tanks on the level. You’ve no choice but to engage in combat with everything you see. That at least cuts down on the tactics, but it does rob the game of a potential “sneak around” mode that the 1982 film had.

It also puts a lot of trust into the controls of the game – and they’re not the easiest to get to grips with. Using the touch screen, you have to use both of your thumbs to drive and fire. Under your left thumb are the direction controls to steer the tank, and under the right thumb you have fire – but it’s not a fire button, it’s another directional control, so you push your thumb in the direction you want the tank turret to turn and fire.

Tron Tanks

While it’s nice to have these two features decoupled, it takes a lot of co-ordination to get to the point where you can do both at the same time. Unless you’re a drummer or can work your hands separately (for example, if you’ve played Smash TV in the arcades of your youth), I suspect that you’ll end up playing this like general infantry... sprinting your tank to a suitable firing position, stopping, doing the firing, then moving again. Run and cover, fire and move, rinse, repeat.

I’m struggling to think of a better way to implement this on a touch-screen, and I think the problem for me is not the co-ordination, but the lack of feedback from the screen. With a game controller this would be a cinch for me to play - on the N8’s large screen, I’ve having to spend a fair amount of time looking at my thumb, and not my tank. There’s not much that can be done to sort this, so I’ll spin this as an increased challenge to the user looking for a game of skill.

Tron Tanks

What’s not in doubt is that this game looks the part. Lots of black highlighted with the trademark glowing neon, and snappy electronic sound effect and music. It’s clearly part of the same world as Tron Legacy - which makes the decision to lift a scene from the first movie and essentially make a top down version of Space Paranoids all the more interesting.

You’ve got the usual arcade essentials in here, from a choice of cannon shells or grenade launcher from your main tank gun, tokens to find that upgrade the weapons, extra energy for your tank, speed ups, extra lives... someone knows their gaming shorthand and has made sure everything is in this free download.

Normally movie tie-ins can be a bit hit or miss. Anyone growing up in the 80s will probably agree that they are more miss than anything, but Tron Tanks is a hit for me. It takes the subject matter and doesn’t slavishly follow a film, but sets out to be inspired by a few scenes and then build a game that works around that starting spark. Tron Tanks does have a control system that takes time, but once you get that rhythm sorted out, this is a blast.

-- Ewan Spence, Dec 2010.

Buy Link | Download / Information Link

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Google TV vs. Apple TV - Side-By-Side Comparison

Google TV vs. Apple TV – A Side-By-Side Comparison – What’s What?

Mark thought it would be cool to have a resource article about Google TV. I thought it would be cool to have one about the Apple TV (no, not really). So we compromised (or rather, I snuck off and wrote this instead). Instead of just limiting the scope of the article to one new TV product, I thought I would make it two in one since both Apple and Google are expected to announce new TV products soon. Of course, I can’t write anything thing without putting my own thoughts in.

The upcoming iteration of Apple’s TV is rumored to be $99 with 99 cent content available from iTunes. Google TV is taking the web to your television screen either pre-installed on new Sony TVs later this year or via a new settop box from Logitech (no pricing yet). It’ll pretty much let you get any video you want from television or web.

Well, they’re quite different products, so to remove any potential confusion, here’s a side-by-side comparison for you to decide which is best for you. Hopefully, over time Google TV will get incorporated into every satellite and cable box, because it’s just that damned cool. There, I said it.

Will be available but also will be pre-installed on some new Sony TVs and Blu-Ray Players. Probably more deals in the future. Will be available at Best Buy.It is only a settop box with several jacks on the back. Only available from AppleThat’s the whole purpose via built-in Google Chrome and integration of web and TV.You would need to hack it and then not do software upgrades. Could void warranty.You can search for and find individual shows and channels on broadcast TV as well as web. Google Listen & Watch also features Explore for video podcasts.Movie browsing by actor and director rented or purchased via iTunes.Can find a show, record it and then browse them later.Not unless you hook the unit up to a computer and do all your scheduling, recording there and then import it to iTunes.If it’s web-accessible, like Amazon, Shoutcast, Rhapsody, Hulu, Vevo, whatever, it’s accessible on Google TV. YouTube is also going to offer pay-per-view films if Google has its way.Well, you’ve got iTunes. iTunes U and audible.com are not compatible even. YouTube is, but I wonder for how long.Subtitles, Closed captioning and (as mentioned below) closed caption Google Translations (uber-cool!).Close captioning is supported. Subtitles are not supported for most Apple TV or iTunes content. Would probably have to merge the subtitles with the video to view.Photos, music, websites, games and Google Android Apps oh, and FLASH.Audio in AIFF or WAV, Photos (JPEG, BMP, GIF, TIFF, PNG).If you can play it in a browser or Flash, it can be played on your Google TV. Bet it will do Silverlight eventually also.H.264 but not H.264 Sample Aspect Ratio (at present). Up to 720p (1080i and 1080p support is removed in the new version). Not strong enough to do Silverlight.Fully HD compatible, if your TV supports it (the new ones with Google TV built-in surely will).Max resolution is 720p at 24 frames per second or MPEG-4 at 432p and 30 frames/sec. Audio encoded in AAC, MP3, Apple Lossless, AIFF or WAV.HDMI and other options to be available when necessary.HDMI, Component video, (cables not included)Personalized TV experience via the home screen which can be setup how you like. Edit and access favorite channels, shows and websites.Front Row software for Max OS X 10.5. Organized in six groups – Movies, TV Shows, Music, YouTube, Podcasts, and PhotosNo word yet on backward compatibility.Cannot be used with older televisions unless 480i is supported with component video capabilities. RCA/composite and F/RF connectors are not included.Sony (TV and Blu-Ray), Logitech (Universal Remotes, companion boxes), Intel (CPU power)Wi-Fi,Ethernet, HDMI from cable/satellite box, special DishTV integration, Strong CPU and separate GPU and dedicated DSP, keyboard and pointing device. No word on storage capacity yet.802.11 b/g/n, Airport, 10/100 Ethernet – New Apple TV rumored to only have 16GB internal solid state memory.Full (as seen at the Google I/O announcement).Remote, Android Smartphone (can push web page from phone to TV), IP remote control protocol will be open sourced for apps on multiple platforms. [laughs at the thought of a Google TV remote app on an iPhone]Standard Remote Control – volume control for music only. Standard infrared remotes can be paired to device. Remote App Wi-fi-based on iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad.Android 2.1 (upgradeable), Google Chrome, Flash 10.1 plugin, Android Apps (can push from Web to TV). Android market and Google TV SDK to follow launch. Web and TV APIs that will let you access TV content from Web. Youtube Leanback, Google Listen and WatchiTunes syncing capabilities and iPhone Remote app.Merged Google Translate with closed captioning feed on TV for multi-language subtitles [totally awesome!]It has a closed Caption Option but subtitles aren’t available for most iTunes content.Will be Open Sourced to both Android and Chrome Dev trees.App creation and usage? Coming soon they say.Whatever the hardware can handle and the video offers. Depends on your home theater setup.The chipset supports 7.1 Surround and some rentals have Dolby Digital 5.1 surround. Digital optical audio, RCA analog.I need a Google Engineer to come expand my meter so I can rate it properly, or I’ll just scratch the 13 over the 10.

Three will be available later this year. A full line of Sony TVs and Blu-Ray Players. Logitech is building a Companion box probably with keyboards and mice. Intel’s Atom will power everything. Dish Network also partnered with them and will have an enhanced Google TV experience with seamless integration. Best Buy will have all the products available later this year.

0 Google TV vs. Apple TV – A Side By Side Comparison – What’s What?

In early 2011 the Google TV SDK, TV WEB API and Android Market will be available for developers. Summer 2011 it will be open source for Chrome and Android.

Apple’s TV has a lively hacking community that have done both software and hardware hacks to extend the usability of the system. For example, the USB 2.0 port is made for diagnostic purposes only but has been hacked to allow for connection of external storage devices. Operating system hacks have also been made available as the community has been fairly unhappy with the Front Row implementation. XBMC Media Center and Boxee also have been made available through hacks.

It has a 160GB internal hard drive that some have replaced with larger versions. However, the box is not strong enough to power Silverlight so Netflix Watch Instantly is not supported. 1080 content could be also played through a hardware hack that includes adding a PCI-e card to the unit. There’s no PVR support in the unit itself as well as no TV Tuner. Search only covers iTunes, not even local videos (My Movies) and does not even supply daily new releases. All content must be on the local/ drive in order to be played by Apple TV.

If you were asking me to decide what I wanted, I would have to say I want Google TV. No more pulling out the laptop to check something while the TV just plays the show. No more running to get more information from the web on the computer when I can do it right from where I am. Those oh so cool little pop-up web-like banners that broadcast TV has taken to using can suddenly be made interactive and you can picture-in-picture the web and the show you’re watching, or have it auto-pause the show you’re watching as you go surf the web…oh hell yes! Fantasy sports leagues are going to go gangbusters. Or imagine this…you’re watching the latest episode of your favorite NBC show and you realize, “Oh Crap! I didn’t see last week’s show.” Quick! Pause thisr2 android Google TV vs. Apple TV – A Side By Side Comparison – What’s What? one, hop on Hulu (if you’re in their rather small service area), pull up last week’s episode, watch it, then unpause this week’s and bingo-bango-bongo, you’re all caught up. Come on, that’s pretty friggin’ cool, ain’t it?!

In fact, it’s almost the future we’ve been eagerly awaiting with the super smart televisions that can do all sorts of things. I hope someone makes a voice control plugin for it so we can do things like we’ve seen in film. I’d name mine R2 and give it commands like “R2, today’s weather,” and “R2, calendar.” After all, if you’ve got a Google Chrome browser, you will most assuredly be able to see your Google Calendar right? That also means checking your email on your monster TV while sipping your coffee or playing the latest Flash game, on your monster TV or doing just about anything…on your monster TV. I believe a hot diggity is appropriate right there!

R2, end program.

Spread the word: About the Author - Christophor Rick
Christophor Rick is a freelance writer specializing in technology, new media and consumer electronics. He is the CEO at Gamers Daily News (http://www.gamersdailynews.com) and his past work has included press releases, copy-writing, travel writing and journalism. Feel free to email him here at - crick @ reelseo - View All Posts By Christophor Rick

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Google Nexus S gets single click root solution “Superboot”; works on Windows, Mac, Linux [Tutorial]

Stop the presses! It looks like the Google Nexus S has just gotten a one-click root, and we’re here to give you the skinny. Paul O’Brien, Mr. MoDaCo himself, has released a new superboot that lets users flash the image, and – voila! – instant root access. We saw an adb-based root the day the Nexus S was released, but this makes it easier for those who have the Nexus S, but don’t want to get too technical.

For those who do enjoy the technical end of things, it’ll be nice to know that the single click method gives you full adb access to both files and folders, as well as adb remounting. Requirements for the Superboot are simple, only in that you need to check your “about” screen in the phone settings to see what version of Superboot you should be using.

Just a word of warning:

Note: If you are using a retail Nexus S, you may need to unlock the bootloader first, using ‘./fastboot-windows oem unlock’ (or the appropriate version for your PC). Note that the OEM unlock sequence wipes your device (including the internal SD storage!)

Here’s the official instructions from the MoDaCo thread:

Before download, you need to check your device ‘about’ screen to determine which superboot version you need.

Superboot for XXJK8 – Superboot - DOWNLOAD (ROMraid Load Balancing) – MD5: 809a8e41ae8f0bb88b870cf1865aedff

How to use Superboot – Windows, Linux and OSX

- Download the Superboot zip file above and extract to a directory
- Put your device in bootloader mode – Turn off the phone then turn on with the ‘volume up’ button pressed to enter the bootloader
- WINDOWS – double click ‘install-superboot-windows.bat’
- MAC – Open a terminal window to the directory containing the files, and type ‘chmod +x install-superboot-mac.sh’ followed by ‘./install-superboot-mac.sh’
- LINUX – Open a terminal window to the directory containing the files, and type ‘chmod +x install-superboot-linux.sh’ followed by ‘./install-superboot-linux.sh’

So, if you’re ready to get rooted in just a couple easy steps, go ahead! You can hit the source link for the full thread, and, as always, TalkAndroid cannot be held responsible for any damage to your device. Be sure to let us know how it goes in the comments! Cheers Ali!

[via modaco]

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Posted in Android Development, Android Hacks, Android News, Android Software, rooted | Tags: adb, Android, click, Google, modaco, Mount, nexus, one, recovery, remount, Root, S, Samsung, single, superboot

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Dvd Catalyst 3 : Dvd to iPod iPhone PocketPC Psp Zen Zune and more

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Making a movie on the Nokia N8, from the pros

Published by Steve Litchfield at 18:29 UTC, December 17th 2010

I couldn't resist embedding the interview below for aspiring Nokia N8 film-makers (like me?!), shot by Nokia with the McHenry brothers - the guys who did the short film 'The Commuter', which aired last month, every frame of which was shot on the N8 (though they cheated with the sound, which I'm a little disappointed with!). With some nicely techy tips and questions thrown in, it's worth 17 minutes of your time to sit down and watch.

Nokia N8 - The Commuter is a film shot entirely on a Nokia N8 smartphone starring Pamela Anderson, Dev Patel and Ed Westwick, who all took part in breaking the boundaries of film making as we know it.

A few weeks ago, Nokia UK invited our viewers to ask the directors (The McHenry brothers) of The Commuter any question they wanted. The McHenry brothers have now replied with a selection in this video. 

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Mobile Monopoly - The Biggest Opportunity For Affiliates Ever

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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Gps maps for Indian Himalayas, Sri Lanka, Maldives,..

Very detailed maps (pdf and Gps enabled) for the adventurous: Indian Himalaya (Ladakh, Himachal Pradesh), Sri Lanka, Maldives, Oman, and more. No Competition for these exotic places as no other good maps are available


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Mobbler updated for Symbian^3 and Scrobbling 2.0

Published by David Gilson at 10:56 UTC, December 20th 2010

Mobbler, Symbian's Last.fm client, has a new beta version for Symbian^3 users. The new beta supports the new Scrobbling API and menu items for the radio stations recently discontinued by Last.fm have been removed. There is a long list of new features too, like Twitter sharing, artist biography pages, and improved lyrics pages. Also added is support for the new mix radio station created by Last.fm to replace discontinued stations. The Mobbler project is also asking people to install an error reporting agent (ErrRd.SIS) which will help the developers capture bugs in the new beta version.

If you want to try the new beta version you can download here.


From the Mobbler Wiki:

We've added a few things (along with some bug fixes) that we'd specifically like you to test.

Fix for radio on Nokia N8/Symbian^3 Subscriber-only radio Share on Twitter Signup Biography Local events based on cell ID Better lyrics display Username limit increased from 15 -> 32 chars Better equaliser support Japanese, Korean, Portuguese and Ukrainian added and other languages updated Old scrobbles warning Play Mix Radio station Play Last.fm group radio station Play a custom lastfm:// radio station Removed discontinued Loved Tracks and Playlists radio station 20 volume steps where available (Symbian^3) Display subscriber's prestigious black icon Rejigged the Start a station menu

David Gilson for All About Symbian, 20th December 2010.

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Pimping the Nokia N96

I just can't resist the challenge of taking something old and unloved and making it useful. And my latest target is the much misunderstood Nokia N96, from 2008, still one of the largest-screened non-touch Nokia smartphones and with more gadgets than you can count - yet a device that was panned on release, plagued with performance problems and never sold as well as it should have done. In the latest in my series of 'pimping' articles, I look back at the Nokia N96 and what's needed to keep it topped up and current.

As I mused earlier this week, there are some Nokia form factors which really shouldn't have been ditched - and the N95 8GB/N96 stands at the top of the list, with a lovely large and clear 2.8" transflective display, dual slide with sets of hardware multimedia controls, nice loud stereo speakers and, in the N96's case, kick stand, dual LED flash, hardware video decoder, 16GB internal flash memory plus microSD expansion and all the gadgets that many 2010 smartphones are only now coming with as standard.

Nokia N96

For 2008, the N96's specification was outstanding. And yet it sold only moderately and played to the tech press even worse. And even Nokia seemed to forget all about its existence remarkably quickly. Why? Here are some of the reasons, at least:

the processor was underclocked, in a bid to keep battery life on the supplied 950mAh cell decent. It would have been far, far better to keep the processor speed up and simply put in one of Nokia's ever-so-slightly-thicker 1200mAh cells instead. the launch firmware was slow and buggy. Updates gradually appeared, but only improved the speed slightly. The last update was v30 in June 2009 and Nokia seems to have forgotten this device completely.as the very first S60 3rd Edition FP2 device, it had feet in both the FP1 and FP2 camp and some of the OS sub-systems have since proven to be incompatible with software that runs on other FP2 devices. Problems range from hardware issues to browser and font oddities.the camera software was messed up. Seemingly coming with the exact same star unit as in the N95, N82 and N95 8GB, videos were universally blurry and disappointing. A firmware update restored the preset focus of these previous models, but it's clear that it was a kludge and capture quality was never really as good.build materials. Everything about the N96 screams plastic - not necessarily a bad thing, but in this case the designers followed the modern trend for shiny black plastic, making the N96 an utter fingerprint magnet and something which always feels like it needs a good wipe-down. Far better was the matt, textured plastic used on the N95 8GB, N86 and other designs.

But, on the plus side, you can now pick up the N96 for £100 on eBay if you're careful, making it something of a Symbian 'retro' bargain. If you can live with its foibles - it's certainly tempting, especially if you can use all its multimedia features.

Before going any further, make sure that your acquired N96 has the last firmware, v30. You can check over the air, since this was one of the N96's star attributes (it was one of the very first to support this) - so type *#0000# on the standby screen and then use 'Options>Check for updates' in the usual way. The N96 does have User Data Preservation, so your data shouldn't be affected.

Capacity

With 16GB microSD cards now very cheap, it makes sense to stick one of these in the card slot, although the 16GB also built in means that storage will never be a problem with the N96. And it's worth noting that the N96 was also one of the very first Symbian devices to use fast USB access, so if you were traumatised by transfer speeds on the N95/N82 you can relax - the N96's USB speeds for transferring media are right up with modern 2010 devices.

The N96 is, of course, black. Shiny black, but black nevertheless. Which means that you can at least make some use of the colour scheme by picking a matching theme. The jet black of the case merges well with the jet black of Tehkseven's Just Black theme, as shown in the photo at the top of this feature. Go download now - it's small and free.

Maps, maps, maps

Mapping is an area that has come on hugely in the last couple of years. v30 firmware for the N82 came with a mature version of Nokia Maps 2 and works very well indeed for basic satellite navigation, with the only minor caveat being that real time voice guidance still costs real money, albeit not a lot - about 9 Euros per year. You also obviously don't get the latest 'added services' from Ovi Maps 3.4 upwards, but for navigation use this really isn't a problem.

It was tempting to try pimping the N96 with a more recent version of Ovi Maps, but as with my experiments on the N82, I found Ovi Maps 3.1 unstable - your mileage may vary, but be warned that I ended up having to hard reset the device and then rebuild - Ovi Maps isn't your standard standalone Symbian application and it gets its tentacles well and truly into the OS. My advice? Stay with the mature, working version of Nokia Maps in the firmware. 

Nokia Maps 2 Screenshot

Also much updated since the N96 was launched has been the totally free Google Maps, which made it to v4.1.1 before Google turned their focus to the Symbian-competing Android (will Google ever update Maps for Symbian again? Here's hoping!) The current version has Latitude support, built-in voice searching, Street View, Google Buzz integration and other 'layers' and works perfectly on the N96. See m.google.com in Web to get this installed.

App Store

The rise and rise of the app store has been a feature of the last couple of years, of course. Nokia's Ovi Store didn't even exist when the N96 was launched, but a launcher for it appears in the latest firmware in terms of a redirect from the built-in Download! client. Of course, Download! itself is an app store and predated the iPhone's App Store by a couple of years, but Nokia didn't put anywhere near enough investment in it and it rather withered on the vine. The phone will lead you through the (somewhat time consuming - about 5 mins!) Download!-to-Ovi Store replacement process, as depicted here, but the upshot is that after a few minutes of installation time and after a restart, Download! will have vanished and the Ovi Store icon will have taken its place.

The Ovi Store client works pretty well on the N96, though you're limited to just the applications that work on non-touch S60 3rd Edition devices, of course. Still, that's a healthy few thousand and worth browsing round. Skype, shown here, is just one of the many cross-platform software stars now available for all versions of S60/Symbian.

  Screenshot Screenshot Screenshot

People often talk of the way the S60 interface looks dated in comparison to the mobile OS opposition. But one of the biggest software limitations has been the way email is handled. In fairness, Nokia recognised the limitations of S60's built-in email client ("Messaging") a while ago and have been phasing in their cloud-based take on the concept ("Nokia Messaging"), in which an always online, push-based client syncs neatly to all your traditional and webmail inboxes. Well, that's the theory anyway. It's a complex piece of software and the journey from beta to full stable product is still not over.

Regardless, I threw caution to the wind and stuck the latest 2010 build of "Email for Nokia - 10 Accounts" (as it's billed in the Ovi Store) on the N96 - and after a lengthy install (which involves a restart of the phone!), it works pretty well. It even handles the small QVGA screen well, without too many limitations.

Screenshot Screenshot Screenshot 

Screenshot Screenshot Screenshot

If, like me, your email needs are (day to day) very simple - just Gmail, then you may prefer the tiny but ultra-powerful Java-based Gmail client - if only because you can interact with the full range of Gmail functions, including starring email, adding emailed contacts and searching through four years of email - almost a hundred thousand emails - in a couple of seconds. You can get this, of course, at the usual m.google.com

The N96 came in at the same time as the second (and final) age of N-Gage, now sadly defunct (again). If you see a reference to N-Gage in the box or in a corner of the software, best ignore it. In addition, the N96 didn't have the general purpose TI OMAP 2420 graphics acceleration chip that powered the N95/N95 8GB and N82, meaning that it couldn't run the 2007/2008 generation of games which needed the chip. So no Oval Racer, no Virtual Pool Mobile and you'll have to resort to less demanding games. There are plenty of less strenuous action games in the Ovi Store, of which my favourite is still the super Micropool, which works really well on the N96.

It's fair to say that the N96 won't ever challenge the new breed of large screened smartphones and their 'HD' games though!

N96 review photos, (C) AAS

The N96 was the phone that launched "with BBC iPlayer" and remains excellent at playing back almost any kind of video file (DivX excepted) - just plonking video on the mass memory is usually enough, provided the file doesn't have very high resolution or bitrate. Most importantly of all, don't forget the 'kickstand' that's built into the camera surround (shown above) - it's still unusual in the smartphone world and makes a huge difference for casual (breakfast table?) video watching while you get on with other things.

Music playback

Also really notable - well, about all of Nokia's phones, really, is that they work with the various multimedia headsets, as shown above, with play/pause/stop/back/forwards/volume controls, which means that you can be in complete control of your music and podcasts while your phone stays tucked in a pocket, away from harm. This is a bit of a generic rant, I know, but I never feel that Nokia gets enough credit for this incredibly useful (and not that commonly copied) feature.

Such multimedia controls don't ship with every Nokia phone - presumably they cost a few more Euros each to make - but they do come with the N96 and most other media-centric models - and you can buy them separately on eBay for not a lot, if needed. See a set out if you don't already own any!

As you might imagine, browsing in S60 Web is slow enough at the best of times, with modern bandwidth-hungry sites - it's even slower on the N96, with its more anaemic processor. Which is why Opera Mini is an instant install, especially now there's a native Symbian version - there's not even the overhead of a Java runtime anymore. Opera Mini reduces even the largest pages to a 70 or 80kb download and makes even the N96 a competent web browsing device. Highly recommended. Get it from m.opera.com and pick 'Opera Mini for Symbian'.

As hinted previously, Nokia were a little concerned by the N96's battery life even at launch - the BL-5F is rated at just 950mAh - and the processor is definitely hamstrung by design. In practice, the N96 struggles to make it through a day of heavy-ish use, which is why I can heartily recommend a spare BL-5F or two. They're only £5 or so on Amazon - though do watch out for seller ratings, as there are some fakes as well as Nokia originals!

On devices with battery capacity to spare (think Nokia E61i, E71, E72, E52 or E55), I'm used to leaving Bluetooth turned on all the time even though I only use it a couple of times a day. On the N96, I leave Bluetooth turned off by default and keep a shortcut to turn this on from my homescreen if needed. In addition, from 'Settings>Connection>Wireless LAN', I keep Wi-Fi scanning turned off too. In other words, the phone connects to Wi-Fi only when needed - it's not regularly 'sniffing' the airwaves. This seems to me, to be a much forgotten power saving measure!

With these two radio measures in place, I've been quite happy with N96 battery life. As with other smartphones, when travelling into rural areas, I'd also be tempted to dive into 'Settings>Phone>Network' and set network mode to 'GSM' - the hunting for, and connection to weak 3G cell towers is a major, major source of power drain when you're away from the city, in my experience.

Homescreen widgets? You've got to be kidding

The modern trend (in 2010) seems to be to bring as much online information as possible to the phone homescreen. Typically, there would be your latest Twitter feed tweets, the subjects of the last few emails received, the day's weather forecast and any news headlines. Some of this information is present in the S60 3rd Edition FP2 homescreen in embryonic form - for example, the summary of Share online media updates, but things are otherwise quite static.

For the other functions mentioned, I have a shortcut to BBC Mobile set up as one of the homescreen shortcuts - the BBC site remembers my location and so this is a one-click way into both local weather and breaking news - plus there's TV and radio information as a bonus, never far away. Social networking is represented by a shortcut to Trill, the Twitter client that works best on the N96 (Gravity struggles in terms of font size compatibility).

 Screenshot Screenshot Screenshot 

Screenshot Screenshot

One of the incompatibilities with general FP2 software is that of control of the dual LED flash - meaning that the standard version of PhoneTorch won't work. But fear not, for 'PhoneTorch N95' works just fine. With the slight caveat that it does have to genuinely dark (or with your finger over the light sensor!) to trigger use and with the other note that the LEDs blink occasionally, it's still a usable solution to find your way home from the pub along icy pavements.

Using a multi-hundred pound smartphone as an LED torch may seem completely over the top, but it's actually a terrific tool - your phone will always be with you, for that 20 second dash to the dustbins in the dark!

_______

Comments welcome if you have your own N96 story - how do you use this smartphone in 2010?

Steve Litchfield, All About Symbian, 16 Dec 2010


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Motorola puts up CES teaser site with countdown

CES is rapidly approaching, and while some of our staff begins mentally (and physically) preparing, Motorola has taken the liberty of putting up a little teaser page complete with a countdown. The caption reads “ready to skip a generation?” and features a link to a tablet video about the evolution of tablets.

We know that Android tablets are going to be big news at CES this year, and Motorola will also be in on the action with several devices, including the heavily covered Honeycomb tablet. You can check out the new Motorola page here, and in case you missed the CES teaser video, we’ve included it after the break.

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Tech Radar puts Nokia in the "never write them off" category for 2011

Published by Ewan Spence at 16:45 UTC, December 15th 2010

It’s the first of many articles for the end of the year, but Tech Radar’s look forward into 2011 covers both familiar ground (more Android devices, iPhone 5, Windows Mobile 7 getting a bit of stability) but the comments on Nokia and Symbian at the close of the article are interesting. “Whether Nokia will come up with a true competitor to the iPhone or a high-end Android handset remains to be seen, but deep down, we kind of hope it does.” How many more end of year posts will crack open the media door for a Symbian success in 2011?

Yes, there’s always the scope to argue about whether Nokia need to have a high-end competitor when they’re “not that kind of company” but given the coverage online since the launch of Symbian^3, mainstream acknowledgment of any kind is nice to see, especially given the 2011 plans that we already know of.

To be fair they still managed to damn Symbian with faint praise (“The main difficulty for Nokia has been its insistence on using Symbian to drive its hardware”) and you could argue this is a smart editor covering the bases so in 2012 they can say “we told you so” no matter what happens – there’s a lot of that in end of year lists, but they’ve spotted the trend of updates to the OS and new hardware that could open the door for Nokia.

Time will tell, although I think they’re on the right track!

Tech Radar’s thoughts can be found here.

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Symbian Foundation websites close, transition continues

Published by Rafe Blandford at 19:58 UTC, December 17th 2010

As part of the Symbian Foundation's transition to a licensing only organisation the majority of the Symbian Foundation websites closed today. Together with the departure of the majority of the remaining staff, today marks the end of major operations by the Symbian Foundation. Of course, the Symbian platform will continue under the guidance of Nokia, who have committed to make the future development of the platform available via an alternative 'direct and open model'. Some comments below.

While the main Symbian Foundation websites have now closed, the transition team will be making key data available via an FTP site. It will include current platform source code, platform development kits, documentation (HTML source) and a number of databases (Bugzilla, Wiki, Forums, Ideas, Symbian Horizon). You can request access to the FTP site by emailing contact@symbian.org. The FTP site will be available until March 31st 2011.

Additionally, the Symbian Foundation blog will be retained as a communication channel during the transition period.

In today's blog post, the Symbian Foundation thanks everyone who has contributed to the platform and notes some of the major milestones achieved:

We would like to extend our deepest thanks to everyone who contributed to the major milestones achieved at the Symbian Foundation. We can all be proud of these accomplishments – some not seen before in the history of computing, such as the completion of the largest transition to open source of any commercial codebase in software history. We would also like to extend warm thanks to the entire member community for their continued commitment to the Symbian platform.

Today was the last day of work for the majority of the remaining Symbian Foundation staff. We wish them all well in their future endeavours. A small transition team remains in place to help oversee and facilitate the final stages of the transition process.

However, it is important to realise there is a distinction between the Symbian Foundation and the Symbian Platform. While the Symbian Foundation is being wound down, the Symbian platform is starting a new chapter in its history. Nokia remains fully committed to the platform and Symbian remains its primary open platform.

Nokia plans to make the platform source code for future versions of the platform available to the Symbian business and technology ecosystem. The exact process for this has not yet been disclosed, but Nokia say they plan to use a 'similarly open license' [to the existing EPL license]. Nokia expects to make a series of announcements in the first quarter of next year. 

We plan to make the platform source code of for future incrementally improved Symbian releases available to the Symbian technology and business ecosystem. You will be able to find the platform code and details of licensing arrangements through these pages during Q1 of 2011. Until then, the Symbian Foundation will deliver historical information and the existing open source platform code via an FTP server until March 31, 2011.

During the first quarter of 2011, Nokia will review the existing platform documentation, wiki content, and platform development tools and publish relevant ones through this website.

You can follow Nokia's plans for the Symbian platform on their Symbian blog.

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Opera shows the smartphone browser is a minefield for developers

Published by Ewan Spence at 12:44 UTC, December 15th 2010

Over on A List Apart, Peter-Paul Koch is taking a closer look at one of the current key elements of the modern smartphone, the web browser. Pulling numbers from the Stat-Counter Service, he not only points out that the leading browser is Opera, but that Nokia’s web-kit effort is sitting nicely on 17% of the global market, compared to Opera and Safari on 22% and Blackberry on 19%. Android, by comparison, is on 11%. What does that mean for website designers?

Koch writes regularly on website design, and the distortion of the actual market share when compared to the media fuelled ‘battles’ is central to this discussion on mobile browsers:

Most web designers and developers (not to mention the entire blogosphere) fall squarely in the high-end market. A cultural bias exists against OSs aimed at any other market. As a result, most people focus on the struggle between iOS and Android, and ignore the rest. This has to change.

The rest of Koch’s thoughts can be found at A List Apart.

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

T-Mobile has Fastest Speeds in Top 100 US Cities

TMobileLogo

T-Mobile has sent out a press release stating the findings from third-party research which states that T-Mobile has the fastest speeds in the top 100 US cities, beating our Verizon’s LTE network of all things. The speeds were shown as hitting 21Mbps, which T-Mobile now states they will double those speeds in 2011!

OK T-Mobile, talk is cheap…let’s see you make 42Mbps happen in 2011. For Reals.

It would be pretty sweet to get speeds like that for some video conferencing as the T-Mobile G2 Android ads have been touting against AT&T’s iPhone facetime lack of usability due to AT&T’s slow network. After CES, and we see a bunch of 4G smartphones and tablets launching for 2011, this will make things even sweeter, which kicks off the argument again, why would we really need home internet when we can get 42Mbps (unless you’re doing that torrenting illegal thingy)?

Let us know what you think!

T-Mobile Offers Fastest Wireless Data Performance in Top 100 Markets

BELLEVUE, Wash. — December 20, 2010 — T-Mobile now delivers the fastest wireless data performance in the top 100 U.S. markets according to results of a new, independent third-party study.1 In the study, T-Mobile’s overall network outperformed all other nationwide networks tested.
“2010 was a banner year for T-Mobile’s network expansion,” said Neville Ray, Chief Technology Officer for T-Mobile USA. “We have deployed fiber backhaul to our cell sites to deliver an industry leading mobile data experience on the latest T-Mobile smartphones and broadband devices. Today, we are delivering the fastest data performance in the top 100 U.S. markets on average, and it’s only going to get faster as we upgrade our network to offer 42Mbps capability in 2011.”
The study results are based on national drive testing conducted between June 2010 and November 2010 by a leading third-party research firm, which downloaded and uploaded files to test data transfer speeds on laptop data sticks for each of the major carriers.
T-Mobile also offers a broad range of 4G products, including handsets, laptop sticks and a 4G-enabled netbook, which enables its customers to reap the benefits of the 4G network. T-Mobile will continue to be at the forefront of wireless innovation, delivering 4G products across a variety of categories in 2011.
4G network coverage is not yet available everywhere. For more information about T-Mobile’s 4G services, see http://www.t-mobile.com/coverage.
###
1 Based on independent, third-party drive test data for Top 100 U.S. Markets(on a population-weighted basis) driven between June 2010 and November 2010.

About T-Mobile USA, Inc.
Based in Bellevue, Wash., T-Mobile USA, Inc. is the U.S. wireless operation of Deutsche Telekom AG. By the end of the third quarter of 2010, approximately 130 million mobile customers were served by the mobile communication segments of the Deutsche Telekom group — 33.8 million by T-Mobile USA — all via a common technology platform based on GSM and UMTS, the world’s most widely-used digital wireless standards. Today, T-Mobile operates America’s largest 4G network, and is delivering a compelling 4G experience across a broad lineup of leading devices in more places than competing 4G services. T-Mobile USA’s innovative wireless products and services help empower people to connect to those who matter most. Multiple independent research studies continue to rank T-Mobile USA among the highest in numerous regions throughout the U.S. in wireless customer care and call quality. For more information, please visit http://www.T-Mobile.com. T-Mobile is a federally registered trademark of Deutsche Telekom AG. For further information on Deutsche Telekom, please visit www.telekom.de/investor-relations.

[Source - T-Mobile]

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