Showing posts with label Symbian OS for Mobile Development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Symbian OS for Mobile Development. Show all posts

Netfront's Widgets Player v2.00 (30606) Beta Chinese Version

Netfront's Widgets Player v2.00 (30606) Beta Chinese Version

NetFront Widgets player designed specifically for the S60, but does not support the touch screen.

Through the NetFront? Widgets main program to enable Widgets gadgets, which are very useful tools.

These tools let us think of Yahoo Widget tools, we will be better to complete the NetFront? Widgets, will be more than Yahoo or Opera Mobile Widgets better.
Currently tools calculator calculator, calendar calendar, digitalclock electronic clock, gmap map positioning, memo memo, numplace Sudoku, photos network photos, twitter chat, worldclock World Clock, worldweather World Weather (Note: Please enter Pinyin).

Some tools need to connect to the network to use.

"This is a web-based, exists in the desktop, ultra-cool applications. It is a platform that is composed by a group of thousands of widget. The future, as China's Internet users to join, the size of this group will be continued rapid expansion. "

Support for distribution and duplication of the layout of the list allows users to set up encryption support for desktop backlight, the system font settings to support icon size, position, brightness settings


BUG: Desktop image set can not, original also, the reasons for the non-localization.

PS: About ACCESS ACCESS is a dedicated mobile and non-PC market-leading international software technology company.With the worldwide research and development, engineering centers, and vigorously promoting and nurturing the corporate culture of creativity, ACCESS able to unique and excellent solutions for customers and partners to create value and make people's lives much more relaxed and happy, productive forces have been greatly ACCESS The main technologies include: worldwide popular Garnet? OS ─ ─'s history, one of the most successful mobile operating systems; ACCESS Linux Platform ─ ─ kinds of Linux-core software platform, at the same time Garnet OS has a simple and easy to use features and a rich variety of features; NF Mobile Client Suite ─ ─ applicable to mobile terminals and a complete client-side software suite; NF browser ─ ─ models advanced in performance, and powerful Internet browser, was recognized as the world's most advanced browsers.

Compressed package that contains all the Widgets widget, open the program selection system - gadgets - Installation - the local file-WGT file on it.


Attached Files:

  1. aikexinbofangqi_7680.part1.rar

  2. aikexinbofangqi_7680.part2.rar

  3. aikexinbofangqi_7680.part3.rar


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Source: noeman.org

Wikipedia Mobile: Get The Answers You Need Wherever You Are

<br />wikipedia mobile

Where do you turn for answers to common reference questions? If you are like millions of others you might most often refer to the Wikipedia website. This is full of all kinds of helpful information, links, media and more. Now it is available for mobile device users too through the Wikipedia Mobile app.


The Wikipedia Mobile app is intended to be the official platform for Wikipedia enthusiasts, and as such it is shaping up to function in the same ways as the popular website. For example, the source code is open and community built, which means all users will be able to participate and add information when possible. The app itself functions exactly as the site – the user begins by opening the home page on the interface and inputting their search terms.


This is the exclusive platform for the site and it works with Android, Blackberry, Nokia, Palm, Symbian, Windows Mobile, iPhone and iPod Touch devices.


There is no charge for the Wikipedia Mobile app, and the developers encourage others to contribute to the development of the app by participating in the programming work.


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Source: smokinapps.com

You are now friends with Android

Having worked at Symbian a few years ago and gotten to learn about mobile operating systems, I believe that Symbian have the best mobile OS kernel in terms of performance, responsiveness and robustness. Unfortunately almost the opposite can be said for the S60 UI layer (which Nokia makes) that sits on top of it. The end result being that a lot of Symbian phones (a lot of which are Nokias) tend to feel slow and buggy more often than they should. Nevertheless, they do pack a lot of features and thus for the last 3 years I’ve happily moved around with a Nokia N73, running S60v3 on Symbian 9.1. Over the last year Symbian got bought outright by Nokia and they’ve now turned it into the Symbian Foundation, essentially mirroring what Google, LiMo and others have done. Symbian (and consequentially Nokia) have a huge task ahead of them if they wish to remain competitive in the smartphone market.


After leaving Symbian I went to work a mobile software startup whose primary concern was a mobile social networking app written in Java MIDP. Now, if you want to stay as true as you can to the “write once, run anywhere” principle for mobiles then Java is really the only choice since almost every phone out there has some sort of Java support, albeit each with its own various inconsistencies and quirks. Writing a mobile Java app was also a whole lot easier than writing one in Symbian C++. The availability of great development tools (Eclipse, JUnit, ProGuard, etc.) didn’t hurt either! Having worked on a mobile Java client I decided that if I was to build my own mobile app I’d have to do it in Java.


Then iPhone came along and 2 years later it’s now obvious that if you have a good idea for a mobile app and don’t mind learning to develop on the Mac then you might as well as write your app for the iPhone, thus giving yourself a real chance to earn a decent income from it. Many of my fellow engineers have had iPhones for a while and some of them are even starting to write apps for it, some lured by the prospect of making a killing, others just wanting to do something cool for what is hailed as the “Jesus phone”.


My T-Mobile contract is about to expire and I started seriously thinking about whether to upgrade to an iPhone or an Android handset. After much deliberation, I bought myself a lovely little T-Mobile G2 Touch instead (also known as HTC Hero). It runs Android 1.5, the latest stable release of Google’s mobile OS. Android development is essentially done in Java (the bytecode format and VM varies) using APIs which are different to the MIDP ones. You can use Eclipse to code, test and debug your apps. It’s an open source OS, which means you’ll be able to find deployable versions of the OS on the web which even include features from the upcoming 2.0 release of Android (e.g. multi-touch) folded into the current stable release.


If you read around you’ll find that the Android Market and consequent ecosystem for paid apps is almost miniscule compared to the AppStore (see article and comments and follow-up), but I’m hoping that this will improve in the near future. And anyway, if the Android app platform doesn’t really take off then atleast I’ll already have some mobile app development experience by the time I get my iPhone

Source: hiddentao.com"