Nokia, Symbian and WP 8
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#Nokia? #apps, rewiews,#Symbian^3,+#WP 8
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The mechanical drawings of Nokia Lumia 820 back panel for 3D printing (all parts)

Releasing the 3D printing files for Lumia 820: Nokia’s 3D printing community project is a simple concept with exciting potential. Our Lumia 820 has a removable shell that users can replace with Nokia-made shells in different colors, special ruggedized shells with extra shock and dust protection, and shells that add wireless charging capabilities found in the high-end Lumia 920 to the mid-range 820. Those are fantastic cases, and a great option for the vast majority of Nokia’s Lumia 820 customers. But in addition to that, we are going to release 3D templates, case specs, recommended materials and best practices—everything someone versed in 3D printing needs to print their own custom Lumia 820 case. We refer to these files and documents collectively as a 3D-printing Development Kit, or 3DK for short. This can be viewed as the spiritual successor to the great granddaddy of customizable phones, the Nokia 5110 and its rainbow collection of removable faceplates. To think, it’s been 15 years since the 5110 launched!

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Windows Phone 8 Unleashed developer resource now available on Amazon | Windows Phone Central

Windows Phone 8 Unleashed developer resource now available on Amazon | Windows Phone Central | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
We previously touched on Microsoft MVP for Client Application Development, Daniel Vaughan's latest Windows Phone book back in February, but now the title is available to purchase on Amazon.
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Jolla revealed

Jolla's first product revealed. jolla.com
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WhatsApp for Symbian updated once again | SymbianTweet

WhatsApp for Symbian updated once again | SymbianTweet | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
Updated few days ago, Whatsapp has released another updated to its Symbian client, the latest version is now 2.9.7211. As always no official changelog has
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Belle Extra Taskbars & Start Menu for Symbian updated | SymbianTweet

Belle Extra Taskbars & Start Menu for Symbian updated | SymbianTweet | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it

Recently released Symbian utility app Belle Extra Taskbars and Start Menu is updated to v1.1.0. The latest version brings couple of new functions, fixes an...

 

Changelog v1.1.0:

User has an option to select the Swipe area to launch the Extra Taskbar:-All the area of the bottom ToolbarLeft side of the bottom ToolbarRight side of the bottom Toolbar

* This option is helpful / requested by customers to avoid showing the Extra Taskbar accidentally when using a web browser in full screen mode; Where user can select to show the Extra Taskbar when swiping upwards starting from the most left / right of the bottom toolbar.

Fixed Aero Peek functionalityFixed Show ‘Home screen / Idle’ functionalityFixed the layout of the Extra Taskbar on Lock Screen when mobile is in Landscape modeChanged application iconInternal enhancementsAuto-hide extra taskbar’ option has been deprecated.To hide the Extra Taskbar after showing it, tap away from the Extra Taskbar.
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Soundwave update for Nokia N9 - Bojan Komljenovic

Soundwave update for Nokia N9 - Bojan Komljenovic | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
Bojan Komljenovic | Support site for applications developed by Bojan Komljenovic also known as Knobtviker.
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Navifirm Locked Down; No More Unauthorized Access to Early Software

Navifirm Locked Down; No More Unauthorized Access to Early Software | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it

Navifirm is Nokia’s online storage/testing location for upcoming softwares for their devices (regardless of the OS); and its loved by many users as it gives us a glimpse into upcoming updates and fixes for our devices (plus it was a must have for Symbian flashers). Unfortunately as of today navifirm is no longer accessible by the general public; and instead requires an authorized Nokia login to gain access to them, this is of course an attempt to clamp down on early software leaks; or upcoming devices that appear under RM-XXX.

Hopefully we’ll still be able to get our hands on those yummy updates oneway or another.

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Nokia no longer bothering with holograms on most batteries?

Nokia no longer bothering with holograms on most batteries? | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
Sitting in my office, taking the backs of a number of Nokia phones (as you do), it struck me that something was missing - holograms.
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Gravity for Symbian updated to v2.82 build 7289 (Beta) | SymbianTweet

Gravity for Symbian updated to v2.82 build 7289 (Beta) | SymbianTweet | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
The popular twitter social client 'Gravity' for Symbian smartphones is updated to v2.82 build 7289 (Beta). The latest version brings ''hotfix'' for the
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qooWeather Widget for Symbian smartphones updated to v4.3.0 | SymbianTweet

qooWeather Widget for Symbian smartphones updated to v4.3.0 | SymbianTweet | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
'qooWeather' weather widget for Symbian^3 smartphones is updated to v4.3.0. The latest version brings new white widget, new windows style and couple
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Here’s How Nokia Could Have Saved Symbian : Nokia Innovation

Here’s How Nokia Could Have Saved Symbian : Nokia Innovation | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it

When the “burning platform” memo went out it was clear that Nokia needed to change and do something big to turn their fortunes around.  All the options that were brought to table were new OS’s. (MeeGo, Android andWindows Phone)  The question remains why?  What if there was a way that Nokia could have kept Symbian and even expanded it’s base while making huge profits?  Well there was another Symbian saving option that no one ever even discussed. This option would be making Symbian available to all handset manufacturers for free!  If this card would have been played right and early enough Symbian could have been saved.  Let me show you.

In the 2nd qtr of 2010 according to Gartner Symbian still had a whopping 40.9% of total worldwide smartphone sales with Android in a distant second with at 17.2%.    In that time frame Nokia was starting to realize they had an issue and it would have been the perfect time to go from simply a hardware manufacturer to a OS’s provider and hardware manufacture. ...

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Mines is free, fun and challenging

Mines is free, fun and challenging | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
I've lost count of the number of versions of Minesweeper for Symbian now, but I'm not going to let another decent incarnation slip by without comment because this one's both well programmed and totally free, without even any in-game ads to endure.
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Lock Buster – Lockscreen app for Lumia smartphones updated | SymbianTweet

Lock Buster – Lockscreen app for Lumia smartphones updated | SymbianTweet | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
Lock Buster the popular lockscreen app for Nokia Lumia smartphones is updated to v3.0. The latest version brings support for more customization
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The outrageous way many Americans rewrite mobile phone history

The outrageous way many Americans rewrite mobile phone history | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it

The first mobile phone call was placed 40 years ago. So on Wednesday, we were treated to several “History of the Mobile Phone” articles by American journalists, most of them orgies of chauvinism and astonishing nationalistic bias. One pure product of this navel-gazing genre is the Wired magazine piece called “The 12 Cellphones That Changed Our World Forever.” In the revisionist history of the mobile phone, the actual nature of the device is obscured completely.

The mobile phone happens to be the only consumer electronics product of the past 20 years that actually had a huge impact in everyday lives of consumers in emerging markets from Brazil to Nigeria to Malaysia. Yet from the perspective of many American tech writers, the history of the cellphone runs from Motorola to Sidekick to Treo to BlackBerry (BBRY) to Apple (AAPL). Only the North American market exists. This is like a Korean car industry observer rewriting the history of the automobile by erasing the roles of Ford and General Motors.

Unlike with the personal computer or the video game console, you simply cannot review the history of the mobile phone without a global perspective. There are 6 billion mobile subscribers in the world. In The Telegraph list of top-selling mobile phones of all time, the top 5 models are the Nokia (NOK) 1100, Nokia 3210, Nokia 1200,  Nokia 5230 and Nokia 3310. In the Wired piece of most influential mobile phones of history, only one of these models is mentioned: the 3210. Yet the list includes no fewer than four (4) Motorola models, including the obscure Motorola ROKR and the Motorola RAZR, which happened to be an evolutionary dead end from the industry point of view. According to Wired, the Sidekick and Treo are each as influential as Nokia in the mobile phone history, since each are given one slot out of 12.

To pick just one example of a truly revolutionary model that reshaped the industry, let’s look at the Nokia 1100. This phone debuted in 2003 and went on to sell more than 200 million units. It was a landmark model because it packed a remarkable combination of functionality into a 93-gram phone that cost around $80. The 1100 featured 400 hours of standby time despite its tiny size, a hugely important factor for households with spotty access to electricity. It offered  advanced messaging features, ringtone composing and games. This was a device that helped turn the mobile phone into the most important consumer electronics product in the world by making it affordable, extremely durable and useful beyond voice calls.

And this best-selling, arguably the most important phone in the industry history does not even make the top 12 list of Wired? It is deemed less important than the Sidekick? What is this “Our World” that the article title refers to? Does it only extend from Beverly Hills to Upper West Side? Ignoring the most pivotal, world-changing models of Nokia isn’t insulting only to Nokia and Finns. It is insulting to 80% of the world that experienced the mobile phone revolution in 1990-2010.

The history of the mobile phone is not the history of Sidekick, Treo and BlackBerry. It is the history of the devices that actually pulled South America, Africa and Asia into the mobile revolution. That is “Our World.” And most of these break-through models were created by Nokia, the company that popularized the internal antenna, modern SMS features, extended battery life, mobile games and other key technologies. This is more than a footnote: It is the core narrative.

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Soft-reset y Hard-reset en Symbian S60v3

Soft-reset y Hard-reset en Symbian S60v3 | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
Soft Reset: *#7780# Hard Reset: *#7370# El password por defecto para proceder es: 12345, si no nos resulta es porque lo ha sido cambiado.
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Video Promo: Jolla Revealled - looks a bit like a Nokia N9 from the front

Video Promo: Jolla Revealled - looks a bit like a Nokia N9 from the front | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
Here's a little promo for the new Jolla Phone. In the renders, the front especially reminds me of the Nokia N9. The colourful matte back is also kinda N9-like in a way. All the comments in the YouT...
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New App: AndroTaskman for Symbian smartphones | SymbianTweet

New App: AndroTaskman for Symbian smartphones | SymbianTweet | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
New in store, AndroTaskman is nice utility app for Symbian smartphones developed by SnakeSoft. The app display up to 20 tasks on one Screen, allows users
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Doing Facebook OAuth with Nokia Symbian40

Doing Facebook OAuth with Nokia Symbian40 | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
Doing Facbook OAuth on Nokia S40 and J2ME devices is the biggest challenge while creating the social Apps for this platform because of unavailability of the Facebook J2ME SDK and inapp browser limitation of J2ME devices.
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Uniquely Symbian: BUILT-IN File Manager: Files

Uniquely Symbian: BUILT-IN File Manager: Files | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it

Dear MNB Readers,

Symbian. A lot of us have been using Symbian for years now and have become accustomed to its features and while some of those features have been duplicated on other platforms, their implementation may be different from on Symbian. For this article, I would like to talk about Symbian’s standard file manager called Files.

File managers are not exclusive to Symbian and have been and are present in some form on other mobile OSes such as Android, Windows MOBILE, Maemo, Meego and the like. The main difference is that the availability of a file manager may vary from device to device using the SAME OS. For example, on Android, manufacturers (Samsung, HTC..)have picked up the slack and now include a file manager in their custom builds of Android but to my knowledge*, (*correct me if Google has now included a file manager in stock Android) Android still lacks a default, built-in, user accessible file manager.

What that means for users of other OSes is that there isn’t a guarantee that they will have a file manager on every device that they buy. The user may have to search and download any of the free or paid file managers. Some people know how to do this and are willing to do this, others are not, while others see no use for a file manager on a phone in the first place. The other scenario is that an OS (iOS, Windows Phone, others) may not have a file manager in the OS at all or have one with so many restrictions that it barely allows you to manage your files. This brings us back to Files, the standard built-in Symbian file manager:

 

 

Files is a part of Symbian:

Included on every Symbian phone from the 808 PureView back to the beginning of time (or close to it ), excluding some odd firmware decisions that I am not aware of, Files can be found in the application menu or it can be placed on the home screen as a shortcut. What this means for the user is that no matter how old the device, the cost, form factor, display resolution, qwerty, touchscreen, hardware generation, UI, Symbian version, updated or not, still supported or not, there is a file manager on the device.

The Files UI should be familiar to anyone that has used a file manager or folder system/explorer on a computer and it behaves the same as well. Pictured to the left is the standard view when you open Files. It shows several “drives”, C:, E: and F: with F: being your memory card if your Symbian device has a memory card (SD, Mini/Micro SD) slot. Pictured to the right, you can see additional drives that are shown when you connect external devices via USB On-The-Go (if your device has USB-OTG) such as flash drives, hard drives or other phones. G: and H: represent the Mass Memory and Memory card on my Nokia N8 that is connected to my 808 PureView via USB OTG….that’s a LOT of GBs to manage!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Once in Files, you can long press (equivalent of the right mouse click on a computer) to see the details of the selected drive and access other options to modify the content as pictured below. Clicking Format allows you to erase the contents of the drive and it then automatically recreates the standard Symbian folders. This is useful if you switch memory cards, firmware or if you are having issues with the drive and you want a fresh start. Clicking Details shows what is consuming the memory on the drive. Looking at my memory card pictured on the right, I have over 5GBs in Videos, showing as using 5178MB. You can also set a password for a particular drive to ensure spying eyes won’t have access to your sensitive and personal files.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Once you select the drive that you want to access, all of your folders are displayed just as they are located in the file system, minus and hidden/system folders but there is an app for that . You can browse files, get details, open compatible files if you have the software installed on your phone (Office apps, PDF, Zip managers) or simply Move, Copy, Paste, Cut and otherwise manager your files.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You can also Mark files to select multiple files. There is even a Mark All in the event that you need a mass move or deletion or to send files via email, Bluetooth or other methods.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Your options may vary by file type or storage location but generally, if you can see it, you can select it and therefore you may have additional options. Please note that this article is only about the built-in file manager and not the downloadable file managers that may have more options and deeper/secured folder access.
Files does a great job at standard file management and access. Functionally, all user-created content is accessible and able to be managed, such as pictures, video, music, documents and other file types without the need of a computer or separate app. It is a wonderful thing to have a USB OTG enabled device and cables and have the ability to assist friends in getting pictures or other documents to and from their device just by accessing their file system. There is almost something secret agent 007 like around the “oooooh… my phone can read your phone’s file system” feeling when helping others but then again, that person trusts you with accessing their files so let’s be on our best behavior. That pretty much covers the basics of Files.

My next Uniquely Symbian topic will cover On Device Backup and Restore which is a part of Files.

Here is the opening paragraph of that article:

Pretty much every modern mobile OS has a device backup feature. Most backups are done via a PC client such as Nokia Suite, iTunes, Zune, Samsung Kies or another branded software suite. On some OSes (example: Android), you can download 3rd party backup software such as Titanium Backup (does a lot more than just backup) or other free or paid software. All of that is great but what do you do when you are not at a computer or you don’t have a 3rd party app installed or even a data connection to download the free app, or you want to back up your content to different destinations? Symbian has you covered!

I originally planned to make one article covering both topics but it looks like I am going to have to split them into separate articles due to technical reasons.

I wanted to point out that the unique aspect of Files is that it is built-in to the OS. That is the important part in my opinion. Sure, there are more capable file managers out there that can be downloaded separately but that isn’t unique to Symbian. It is my hope that this article sheds a little light on a Symbian gem that may be overlooked or taken for granted or long forgotten. I use Files all the time, managing my sound files from Recorder and pictures from other devices.

Do you use Files? If you do, what phone do you use Files on, what version of Symbian? Do you have any screenshots of Files from older versions of Symbian or stories of how Files may have saved the day or helped a friend? If you don’t use a file manager on your phone, what do you do to manage your files? I am always mindful that even though I may already know something, that doesn’t mean everyone else knows because at some point in my life, I had to learn as well.

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WhatsApp and Nokia, an ideal match for the mobile messaging public

WhatsApp and Nokia, an ideal match for the mobile messaging public | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
 Today we celebrate the unveiling of the Nokia Asha 210, the first mobile phone to feature a WhatsApp button right on the front of the phone, making WhatsApp more accessible than ever.
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PhoNetInfo for Symbian smartphones updated to v4.0 | SymbianTweet

PhoNetInfo for Symbian smartphones updated to v4.0 | SymbianTweet | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
'PhoNetInfo' the popular phone tool for Symbian smartphones is updated to v4.0. The latest version brings a new HAL-tab and improvements to the
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Turning the Nokia N8 into a Delight?

Turning the Nokia N8 into a Delight? | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
Although I haven't tried this personally, for a Symbian^3 generation device, I did note the other day that there's a pretty attractive new custom firmware released for the Nokia N8 -
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Nokia Transport v2.5 released for Symbian smartphones | SymbianTweet

Nokia Transport v2.5 released for Symbian smartphones | SymbianTweet | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
After months of testing, Nokia finally released the commercial version of its Nokia Transport app for Symbian. The latest version 2.5 is now available
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Nokia starts rolling out 1308 firmware update for Lumia 620

Nokia starts rolling out 1308 firmware update for Lumia 620 | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
Nokia has started rolling out its 1308 firmware update for the global variant of the Lumia 620, as can be seen in availability information on a number of Nokia support pages.
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WeatherClock – Beautiful widget for Symbian^3 smartphones | SymbianTweet

WeatherClock – Beautiful widget for Symbian^3 smartphones | SymbianTweet | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
New in store, WeatherClock is a beautiful homescreen widget for Symbian^3 smartphones that shows the current time date, and weather in a single widget.
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FilesPlus for Symbian smartphones updated | SymbianTweet

FilesPlus for Symbian smartphones updated | SymbianTweet | Nokia, Symbian and WP 8 | Scoop.it
FilesPlus the feature rich file manager for Symbian^3 smartphones is updated to v1.2.2. The latest version brings couple of  improvements and fixes to the
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