Monday, September 12, 2011

Pro Evolution Soccer 2011 review

Tom and Jerry. Norman Wisdom and Jerry Desmond. Muhammed Ali and Joe Frazier. Konami’s Pro Evolution Soccer and Electronic Art’s FIFA series. Yes the world is awash with competitors, and that’s what makes it interesting. So how does Konami's football game measure up in its first season on Symbian? Let's kick off and find out.


PES 2011


Now available in the Ovi Store, Pro Evolution Soccer (PES) puts a modern console football game into your Symbian smartphone and does it really well. Many might think of it as “the other football game” and pass it over, but that would be a mistake. In terms of graphics, of depth, of presentation and of having fun, PES 2011 belongs in the back of the net (that means it’s good!)


So let’s get my one big issue with PES out of the way first. Two of the three control systems provided by Konami in this game are basically useless. The pair of options that ask you to use a virtual joystick on the screen, to be precise. When so much of the game is about vision, seeing where your free players are and making successful passes, covering up the bottom half of one side of the pitch makes for a horribly frustrating game.


PES 2011


The fact that I can hear Jimmy Hill preaching “and in my day we went to the sides because we had wingers” in my head as I try to avoid passing into the great unknown under my thumb is not something a Scotsman reviewing a football game wants to hear.


What does make this easier is that while the first system is the traditional two buttons (one to pass and do stuff, the other to shoot), the alternative is a one touch “computer decides what the best thing to do is when you tap to do something” that is intelligent enough to allow you to play a pretty smart game. A short tap sets up passes, tackles and changes the defending player you control. A longer tap for lobs, crosses and passes means you can mix it up and not have your other thumb hovering over the screen.


And then there’s the accelerometer option. At first, I thought this would be a bit of a gimmick, but using this option is the one way to make PES playable on your phone (especially the smaller screened Symbian^3 devices). Tilting the phone acts like a joystick in that direction, and because of the size of your device, you can be incredibly accurate in setting up a direction to move in. Retain the intelligent single tap option to do the actions, and not only are you free to move around in a much more accurate fashion, but lo and behold, you can see the whole screen!


PES 2011


Playing PES shows up the almost strategic need to understand the formation of your team (e.g. the 4-4-2, 4-3-3 or 5-1-3-1 line up of men on the pitch) because you will be passing the ball around a lot and making the occasional run. Patience is the key to winning here – don’t even attempt to play 'route one' football (loft the ball into the air down the centre of the park and chase it down with all your players) because it’s not going to work. You need to think yourself into a winning position to attempt to score a goal.


PES 2011


You will need to work at that, because even on the regular skill level the computer AI is pretty strong (perhaps because it has no digital fingers blocking the pitch - ha!) so the game, while it gives you opportunities and you can see what you should have done, provides a stiff challenge to the casual game player and can be tweaked to give the hardcore fan a significant obstacle to winning.


PES 2011


The graphics are some of the clearest that I’ve seen for a football game on Symbian, right down to seeing individual limbs moving, and that’s important because balance is one of the factors that are considered when you move your players. You can’t just shoot off in a certain direction, you need to take a few moments so you don’t fall over. The same with the ball, it is not stuck to your feet, it moves around independently.


While this is an arcade like game, it’s highly simulated, providing a steeper learning curve, but a much longer lifespan if you can get into the game.


PES 2011


In terms of options available when actually playing, everything is based around a game of football (well, duh - Ed) – yes, you can select a quick game (everything selected at random so you can just get on and play); set up that single game yourself (the exhibition game); and take part in both national leagues, cup competitions,  or the “International Cup”.


PES 2011


With no licence from FIFA (that belongs to EA, who do the FIFA games) names like “The World Cup” are out, and neither can actual team names be used - Everton or Manchester are nowhere to be seen in this game – but Man Red and Mersey Blue are at your disposal. I understand the legalities involved, but it can’t help make it look and feel a bit of a cheat on the player.


I’d give good odds that if you can stick with PES for a few days and get used to the playing style needed, you’ll be playing the game for months. Not because of one match, but because of the depth of play on offer, the different tactics needed in every match, and the longer challenge provided by knockout competition runs and (simulated) year long league campaigns.


PES 2011


I always get the feeling that PES is seen as the lower division game when compared to the FIFA series, and perhaps that’s not fair. Okay, presentation is let down with no “real” names on offer, but it provides a great challenge, has a long shelf life, is genuinely enjoyable to play and provides you with a great diversion that rewards practice and hard work. I’m not sure you could ask for more in a sports game.


-- Ewan Spence, March 2011.

Buy Link | Download / Information Link

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Sunday, September 11, 2011

PhoneTorch for N8

Published by Steve Litchfield at 10:29 UTC, March 2nd 2011

As you may know, I'm a fan of Xenon flash on a camera phone, turning social evening shots into proper photos rather than blurry messes. However, Xenon illumination lasts only a few microseconds and the unit takes five seconds to recharge, making it totally unsuitable for constant lighting. With LED torch mode rightly becoming a useful feature of many smartphones these days, can anything be done on the Xenon-equipped Nokia N8? Can it help you find your way to the car door or dustbins late at night? PhoneTorch N8 attempts to help...

The absence of a LED flash unit on the Nokia N8 has so far meant that using your phone as an emergency torch was restricted to the unsatisfactory QTorch utility - this lights up the OLED screen with full white, but it turns off with the usual screen auto-dim and also tends to blind your night vision when it starts up, since you'll be facing the screen at the time.

PhoneTorch N8, rather innovatively, latches onto the N8's red auto-focus assist LED, producing an effect similar to that used by a cinema usher with subdued red torch (the idea being that red has least effect on your night vision). Here's PhoneTorch N8 in action, you'll get the idea:

PhoneTorch N8

Before going any further, a few caveats need to be noted. Firstly, the red LED beam isn't continuous - it flashes off and then back on again on about a one second cycle. Secondly, it's not that bright - it'll let you find your way to something in the pitch dark (as in the photo above - making my way to the fuse box after a power failure), but it's not going to light the way for anyone else and probably isn't enough to stop you falling a ditch on the way home down the lane from the country pub (especially after a few beers).

Having said that, PhoneTorch N8 does work and is terrifically customisable, as you'll see from the screenshots. Rather impressively, it even manages to (optionally) bypass the usual Symbian keylock, so you can set a Camera key press as the shortcut key and lock your N8 as usual. When needed, just press the Camera shutter key quickly and the red LED is instantly on. No unlocking, no finding the application shortcut, all very convenient.

PhoneTorch N8 PhoneTorch N8 

Unfortunately, the lack of other trigger hardware keys on the N8 mean that setting PhoneTorch N8 up in this manner also stops Symbian's own Camera startup key shortcut from working, so you have to start the N8's camera using the on-screen icon instead (though camera operation is then as normal and works fine - PhoneTorch doesn't seem to interfere).

In case you're wondering, 'Af LED Mode 2' offers a different flashing pattern and I found it less reliable, while 'VideoLED' mode is so dim as to not be worth activating'. 'Screen' mode mimics previous 'torch' utilities by lighting up the screen in white, though it then has the same disadvantages as QTorch, mentioned above. 

Curiously, despite PhoneTorch N8 being written for a Symbian^3 device, the dialog uses the old S60 5th Edition 'double-tap' method of selection and action, which I found a touch annoying (no pun intended).

Looking through the reviews for PhoneTorch N8 on the Ovi Store, it seems that most buyers are disappointed. Maybe they were expecting a magical transformation of the red LED to white? Maybe they were expecting a little alchemic transmutation of the Xenon flash to a LED version? I think the reviewers are being unfair. Harald Meyer, the developer, has been wringing everything he can out of our Symbian phones' flash units for years now and PhoneTorch N8 does at least bring another function to the table for the popular camera-centric smartphone.

In short, you can head out for the night with your N8, with PhoneTorch running and your keylock on. Kick off the camera when needed using a homescreen shortcut and snap your friends and the occasion, then lock the phone again. Heading out into the dark afterwards to find your car and its door lock, press the Camera button on your keylocked N8 and you've got a gentle (albeit blinking) red flashlight with almost zero night vision loss since the main screen doesn't light up at all.

PhoneTorch N8 certainly isn't perfect and the N8 certainly isn't 'built' for this sort of functionality. But it adds another string to this smartphone's bow and for the sake of £1.50 is a handy addition for emergency winter use.

Steve Litchfield, AAS, 2 Mar 2011

PS. Note that there are in fact two entries for PhoneTorch N8 in the Ovi Store. These are the exact same app and the duplicate entry (one with 'Special' added to the name) is a historical quirk. Don't worry about it!

Buy Link | Download / Information Link

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Saturday, September 10, 2011

LG Optimus 2X – Worlds first dual-core smartphone comes to Europe this month

LG Optimus 2X

LG Electronics marks another milestone with the interna-tional launch of the world’s first dual-core smartphone, the LG Optimus 2X, in key European markets. The Optimus 2X, which launched in Korea in January, will be rolled-out in Europe this month.

High-Speed, High-Tech Dual-Core Experience
Powered by the NVIDIA Tegra™ 2 mobile dual-core CPU, the LG Optimus 2X offers clear performance improvements in web browsing and gaming over single-core smartphones running at the same clock speed. Users get all the advantages of seamless multitasking between applications and instantaneous touch response, along with vivid graphics and console-like gaming experience.

“The LG Optimus 2X’s enhanced speed, advanced graphics and high-end features such as HDMI mirroring are the kind of high-end features that appeal to European consumers,” said Dr. Jong-seok Park, president and CEO of LG Mobile Communications Company. “With the Optimus 2X, we’re setting the tone for what will be a huge year for LG’s smartphones in Europe and worldwide.”

Full HD Entertainment Package
The LG Optimus 2X offers a Full HD multimedia experience with 1080p video recording and playback. Optimized for connectivity and file sharing, the device features HDMI mirroring, which allows content on the phone to be easily viewed on larger TVs or PC monitors with a single cable. And with its gyro sensor, HDMI mirroring lets users play motion-sensitive games on larger screens that rival the quality of today’s game consoles.

“The LG Optimus 2X with the Tegra 2 mobile super chip is ushering in a new era of mobile computing,” said Michael Rayfield, general manager of NVIDIA’s mobile business. “We’re proud of partnering with LG, one of the world’s leading mobile brands, to create a device that consumers look to as their computer first and phone second.”

The first mobile device to feature 7.1 multi-channel virtual surround sound, the LG Optimus 2X provides the closest thing to theater-quality entertainment on a mobile device. Furthermore, file-sharing is made even easier with DLNA connectivity, which lets users transfer stored content to and from compatible digital devices.

Key Features of LG Optimus 2X

* NVIDIA Tegra 2 Processor with 1GHz Dual-core Processor
* 1080p MPEG-4/H.264 Recording and Playback
* HDMI mirroring
* 4-inch WVGA screen
* 8-megapixel rear camera / 1.3-megapixel front camera
* 7.1 multi-channel virtual surround sound
* 8GB memory
* microSD memory expandability (up to 32GB)
* Micro-USB connectivity
* 1,500 mAh battery
* Supports Adobe Flash Player 10.1

The LG Optimus 2X will be released initially with Android 2.2 (Froyo) and will be upgradeable to 2.3 Gingerbread. The upgrade schedule will be announced in local markets in the near future.



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Friday, September 9, 2011

Android app: Air Attack HD – Review

Android app: Air Attack HD Review Android app: Air Attack HD Review

Air Attack HD -- is Award Winning next-generation top down air combat shooter with stunning 3D graphics alongside great audio, effects and awesome gameplay. If you like games like 1942, 1943, Siberian Strike, iFighter, Air Strike, Flying Shark, DoDonPachi, Espgaluda, Swiv, Sky Force, Warblade, this game is for you.

Features in Lite version:

2 Great Missions16 Different Enemy Types2 Unique PlanesNumerous Upgrades and Special WeaponsAmazing Lighting and Special EffectsOrchestral Music3 Difficulty ModesRealtime PhysicsDestructible Bridges and BuildingsShmup with Amazing 3D environments enhanced with LightMaps and SpecularMaps2 Huge End Level Bosses4 Control Types: Touch, Relative, Tilt, Joypad

Download: Use your barcode scanner to scan this barcode below to get the download link directly on your phone. You can also download the app directly from Android Market.

Android app: Air Attack HD Review



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Android app: Megavideo

android megavideo

This is a demo for the newly released Megavideo application for Android devices. This application lets you download and stream any Megavideo video, together with nice UI and advanced features.



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Thursday, September 8, 2011

Vodafone Germany CEO says Microsoft / Nokia deal a good thing

Vodafone Germany CEO says Microsoft / Nokia deal a good thing

Nokia’s decision to adopt Microsoft’s Windows Phone operating system is good for the smartphone market, Vodafone Germany’s CEO said Monday during an interview at the Cebit trade show in Hanover.

[Via]



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Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Nokia Developers Weigh in on the Microsoft / Nokia Partnership

Nokia Developers Weigh in on the Microsoft / Nokia Partnership

At Mobile World Congress 2011 in Barcelona, developers weigh in on the planned Nokia/Microsoft Partnership giving their honest opinions on the recent news. Developers further explain what exactly the news means for them, and how it will effect their immediate and long term future.



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Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Firmware PR 2.0 demoed on Nokia N8 (Preview)

nokia n8

Heres another preview of the PR 2.0 firmware for the Nokia N8 (the firmware havent been released yet). Check it out after the break.

[Via]



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Tippy – Tip calculator app for Nokia N8 / C7 / E7

Tippy Tip calculator app for Nokia N8 / C7 / E7

The guys at the Nokia Blog reviews the Tippy app for the Symbian^3 devices such as the Nokia N8 / E7 / C7.

Trying to figure out how much tip to give when dining out shouldn’t be hard. I just purchased Tippy for my Nokia N8 from the Ovi Store to do that job. It’s only 99 cents. Take a look at the video demo so you can check if it’s worth downloading (I’d say it is worth it).

[Via]



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Monday, September 5, 2011

Guide: How to sync your Nokia phone with iTunes using iTunes Agent

nokia itunes

My buddy CJ has written a guide on how to sync your Nokia phone with iTunes using the iTunes Agent app. The iTunes Agent is a project started by Jaran Nilsen which enables MP3 players to be used with iTunes almost the same way as iPods..  Head over to this post to read the guide. Enjoy!



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Sunday, September 4, 2011

Nokia Battery Monitor updated to v1.3

Nokia Battery Monitor updated to v1.3 Nokia Battery Monitor updated to v1.3

The Nokia Battery Monitor got today updated to v1.3. The Nokia Battery Monitor shows you the battery charge level with estimates of remaining usage time and charging time. It also provides statistics of your recent energy usage. Information can be viewed in full screen application or homescreen widget.

You can download the Nokia Battery Monitor 1.3 for free from Ovi Store.

[Thx Daniel, eva, trasher and Gurra]



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Stupid Zombies – Todays free iPhone app

Stupid Zombies Todays free iPhone app

Those stupid zombies are back, and you are humanity’s last hope to keep them brainless. One man, one shotgun and lots of stupid zombies. Stupid Zombies is todays free iPhone / iPod app of the day so hurry up and download it while its free.

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If you want more iPhone / iPod Touch / iPad apps, wallpapers, rumors, details and info, take a look at the Daily iPhone Blog! -- Your iPhone, Your way.



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Saturday, September 3, 2011

Android: Desert Winds demo

Desert Winds

This is a demo video of Desert Wings from Southern Interactive on Android (+ Snapdragon). Impressive stuff so check it out!

[Via]



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Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Tepilo

How about buying or selling a house on your phone? Or renting out a room? That's what Tepilo promises, and while the property market is a little bit scary (and please remember we are definitely not lawyers), this application looks to make the process as simple as possible for those looking to do some property work on their own.


Tepilo is a new application in the Ovi Store that promises to help you find a house to buy or rent from your smartphone’s screen. And it’s almost a personal promise, as founder Sarah Beeny’s face is prominently there (as it is on the companion website and her Channel 4 appearances in shows like Property Ladder). Having a founder so readily identified with a product is an interesting move, but she and her partners are proud of their business, so why not?


Just above Beeny is a simple tabbed dialog box – pop in your postcode and let the application know if you are looking to Buy a House, Rent a House,or just looking for a Flat Share. In fact, you don't even need to do that much, because you can go for the tab and “use your current location” through the GPS and other methods available on your handset.


Tepilo Tepilo 


Quick, slick, and easy to use. The hallmarks of any good application are here. I’ve not had the app crash on me (it's written in Qt), it has stayed responsive, and the scrolling lists, tapping through to properties and general searching show a nice UI that keeps it simple, just like the idea behind the business. There are areas for improvement though, and the gallery/image viewer is one. With the application locked in portrait mode, and most pictures presented in landscape orientation, there is a lot of wasted space on offer, and the lack of any sort of zoom is disappointing.


Registering for a My Tepilo account allows you to not only save searches (including the advanced searches which narrow down your options to the size, cost and type of property you are looking for), but also, if you head back to the main website, allows you to see the searches there and also list a house for sale or rent (this can only be done on the main website).


Tepilo Tepilo


It’s important to note that this application provides the same information as the Tepilo website, and I’m sure they’ll feed on each other as the business grows.


What makes Tepilo interesting is that it is a place you can upload properties to without the use of a solicitor or estate agent – by cutting out the middleman and without charges or commission.


Of course Tepilo, being based on the housing market, needs to work out where the data is coming from and how to present it. Right now, the properties on offer are a bit sparse. Hit “Buy based on current location” (which would be North Edinburgh for me) and Tepilo returns eight results. A similar search (also without any filters for minimum and maximum price, distance, property type, rooms, etc) on the ESPC website returns 3406 properties. Of course, that’s data from many agents, solicitors and listings companies, Tepilo is just one. But if you understand that, then Tepilo might still be useful.


Anyone who’s been looking at the housing market recently (be it renting or buying) will know that you never rely on one single source. You look at newspapers, classified, groups of solicitors banding together, estate agent windows, online searches, the works. Given that, adding Tepilo in the mix if you are looking is a smart idea, but not one you would rely on.


Tepilo Tepilo


It's interesting that the third tab, looking for a "single room / flat share" isn't actually powered by Tepilo, but by third party company SpareRoom. Click on this and your search parameters are passed over to a mobile website of SpareRoom and away you go. It's clearly labelled once you jump there, and the hand-off to the mobile website looks seamless and provides more functionality to the application.


The lack of volume in the buying and selling inventory might cause some issues for the other side of the equation, people looking to sell or rent their property. They’ll want to make sure that their property is seen by as many people as possible (also, if you are selling through a third party and want to list on Tepilo, check your contract carefully – we’re not lawyers and phrases like multiple agency fees could be scary and rack up fees for the selling party). If Tepilo can keep the growth of buyers and sellers in balance and on an upward trend, it becomes exponentially more useful each day.


Because this success is tied to the database that drives both the mobile application and the website, I think Tepilo has a good chance of becoming a successful little combination of web and mobile. It’s never going to be a 100% solution to the property market, but it doesn’t need to be. It just needs to be a solution that (a) works and (b) pulls in the content.


Tepilo is mostly there with the first part, and the second part is now its main challenge. Yes, this is niche, but it’s not only potentially profitable for Tepilo, it’s also may be just what you need.


-- Ewan Spence, Feb 2011.

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Monday, March 7, 2011

Pimping the Nokia N97

You may remember a piece from me almost a year ago in which I gave six reasons why the Nokia N97 sucked and nine reasons why it still 'ruled'? In this followup piece, I extend, for the first time, my popular 'Pimping' tutorial series to a touchscreen Symbian phone - and not just any old smartphone, but the one that everyone loves to hate, the flawed flagship that for many people epitomises some of the decisions that sealed Symbian's fate. However, I'm a geek, you're a geek, and the N97, now available second-hand for under £100, is about to get 'pimped'...


Retail Nokia N97 - from the rear


First things first though. Summarising my earlier article, the Nokia N97 sucked because:

there's a lot of plastic and relatively little metal (for a flagship).initial hardware had a poorly designed camera glass protector (which scratched the thing it was supposed to protect) and a badly shielded GPS antenna.it's underpowered in terms of CPU, RAM and internal (system disk, C:) flash memory. Hit it hard with running apps and something will break. And if you get download-happy with Nokia-optional 'upgrade' components, you'll run out of room on C: and you'll be facing a backup/re-format/restore cycle to try and recover the situation. has a touch interface that's clearly still first generation and occasionally downright confusing.has a qwerty keyboard that's minimalist at best, with an offset space bar (that you do get used to in seconds, to be fair).has stereo speakers that are just about the tinniest I've heard - and they're not the loudest either. 

And, balancing the above (somewhat damning points) were nine reasons why the device still ruled:

transflective screen means that it's still visible in brightest sunlight (though admittedly not exactly vibrant).'hero' battery life. Powered by the all-conquering BP-4L 1500mAh Li-Poly cell and you can change batteries in a jiffy.built-in FM transmitter is a God-send on long car journeys.camera glass protection not only stops fingerprints building up, it also gives an instant way to load up Camera.talking of which, the N97's Carl Zeiss 5 megapixel stills camera is still decent, even by 2011 standardscavernous 32GB built-in mass memory, plus microSD expansion.surprisingly good QWERTY keyboard (now that long-press symbol insertion and copy/paste are all catered for).the hinge angle makes the N97 perfect for displaying media and generally presenting information to you (e.g. in Web pages - see below).it's a Nokia. And a recent-ish one, so we're talking free Ovi Maps navigation and other goodies.

Quite a tug of war between pros and cons then. But, as with the other 'Pimping' articles in this All About Symbian series, the idea is to take yesterday's 'discarded' hardware and pimp it to something approaching modern standards.


It can be done - because I've done it, with a few compromises along the way. What's needed from a hardware and software perspective and where do you get it all from?


I mentioned above that the N97, possibly because of its flawed repututation, is now available at rock bottom prices on eBay. I know because I bought one, in the interests of researching this piece. I paid a fraction over £100, though others went for just less. Still a steal for a 'flagship' phone that was selling for £450+ two years ago. Incidentally, owning and using a smartphone that can be replaced for such a relatively low amount also makes one rather less 'precious' about dropping it, scratching it or otherwise exposing it to the rigours of daily life without a safety net....


If you fancy doing the same, then there's one huge usability note - get the black one. Having owned the white N97 before, I had often remarked how crazy it was to have the QWERTY key legends light up in white on white keys. In bright light and pitch darkness there's no problem, but in everything in between, you just can't read which key is which. As shown below, the black N97 colour scheme solves this with perfect key legend visibility in all light conditions. 


White vs Black


The black N97 also doesn't (ahem) show the dirt like the white one does - the latter is infamous for developing a discoloured d-pad.


As previously documented on AAS, if you do pick up an N97 second-hand at a knock-down price, watch out for devices made in the first few months after the N97 shipped: camera glass sliders that were mounted too close and which scratched the glass, plus GPS antennae that were badly shielded, were the order of the day. Thankfully, it seems that anything made after about Christmas 2009 had both issues sorted out. Certainly the N97 I purchased was flawless for camera glass and GPS. Just something to be aware of.


Now, this may well be me just being fastidious, but there are practical advantages too, to giving the N97 a good physical spring clean. Take a clean cotton cloth and some light screen polish (e.g. that for LCD monitors) and clean up that relatively delicate resistive touchscreen - you don't want any particles of grit gouging into it. You'll also find that a polished and smooth screen makes the touch interface far more sensitive and pleasurable.


Screen polishing


And clean up the QWERTY keyboard too, you never know where the previous owner's fingers have been! A cotton bud can help you clean up the camera bay's two regions too. It all helps.


Camera bay cleaning


One of the biggest 'pros' above was the N97's use of Nokia's hero battery, the Li-Poly BP-4L rated at 1500mAh. This can power the N97 for a couple of days of normal use and with a spare in your pocket you're good to go for a lot more, in somewhat stark contrast to many 2011 smartphones. Buying up spares on the Internet has always been tricky. Nokia's own site quotes top prices, prohibitively so, while unscrupulous eBay sellers show what appear to be genuine batteries but turn out to be fakes. I recommend Amazon here, with the genuine BP-4L currently on special offer for £5. Avoid third party sellers with less than perfect feedback and examine the holograms with a fine toothcomb to prove their origin etc.


You can charge the BP-4L in the N97, of course, but it's even better to charge up your spares in something like this.


BP-4L in a Momax charger


It goes without saying that you'll need latest firmware on your N97. Various carrier-supplied N97s may be stuck on 'older' versions, but as long as the device is showing (*#0000# on the dialler screen) v21 or higher then you'll be fine. You can update over the air, but if this is part of inheriting an N97 from someone else and you're wiping/starting again anyway then it makes sense to use Ovi Suite to reinstall the firmware from scratch and then do an extra hard reset (*#7370# on the dialler, default lock code 12345) just in case.


And no, the mythical v30 firmware never did get released by Nokia, I'm not even convinced that it ever did exist!


Mainly supplied through 'Sw_update' (in your Applications folder), Nokia tried to push a fairly large number of patches and additions. Here's the first huge tip to pimping the N97 - ignore most of these. The single most critical resource in your N97 is the system disk space (disk C) and many of Nokia's patches and updates insist on spreading themselves on C:.


Updates


In particular, avoid:

Gig finder (non essential)N-Gage (games system, now sadly defunct)Nokia Messaging (run a mile, this will eat your disk C: for breakfast and then return later to mop up the scraps)Ovi Music (non essential for most people)Quickoffice (if you do need the latest version, with full document editing version then get it from the Ovi Store instead, to update in one 6MB fell swoop rather than a half-hearted Sw_update upgrade and subsequent editing patch)

Updates you probably will need include:

MailforExchange (if you plan to use this to integrate with Google etc and feel lucky)Nokia Maps update (v3.4 currently offered, it's unlikely that v3.6 will make it back to the N97. 3.4 brings free navigation and is a worthwhile 10MB install on disk C: in my opinion)Time zone update (hey, it's small)Memory reorganiser (also small and does save a few Megabytes on disk C: though I'm not sure how long its effects last)Here and now (also small)

As a point of reference, with v21 firmware and with Nokia Maps 3.4, with the Quickoffice latest editing version installed (you know it makes sense, this having a full qwerty keyboard), with a realistic web and Messaging cache and with all the apps mentioned positively below, my bought-up black N97 is running with just over 20MB free on disk C:. This isn't a huge amount, but it's hopefully a stable state, given that I don't plan to add any other disk C:-munching monstrosities...


Screenshot


There are two possible approaches to managing the other precious resource on the N97: RAM. And no, this is totally different to disk C: space, even though Nokia confuses the issue by calling them both 'memory'.


Approach one is to let Symbian OS do its thing, closing apps when you run out and generally trying to fit a quart into a pint pot. It works well enough if you're fairly gentle with your apps and 'Exit' the heavy duty ones (Web, Photos, Maps, etc) manually when you're done with them.


Approach two is to install RAMBlow, which runs every so often and 'tidies up', terminating running apps which you haven't used for a set period of time and optionally also compressing and defragmenting RAM to give you the maximum possible free. The system really does work quite well and RAMBlow also doubles as a task manager, as you can see below. 

Screenshot Screenshot


Applications that you need kept running at all times (because you want them instantly available, even a day or so later - Podcasting, Music player, Clock, in my case) can be toggled as 'protected', meaning they won't get terminated as part of a RAM clean-up. 


The only catch is that RAMBlow is relatively expensive, at $15 - but there's a free trial version so you can justify it to yourself (or not) after a week of actual use. With RAMBlow installed you should never see an 'Out of memory' error again. In theory!


Third party applications to make a beeline for - and to avoid


Some of the most recent third party Symbian applications are built on Qt - involving the installation of the Qt libraries on your device. Up to 20MB worth, depending on configuration, also on disk C: of the target device, making the N97 extremely unsuitable for these Qt apps. Although this does mean that, for the N97, the software world is virtually frozen in terms of new apps, there are still plenty of great third party applications that you should indeed make a beeline for.


Skype, in its pure Symbian form, is well worth grabbing from m.skype.com, as it works brilliantly and, for this AAS staffer at least, enables the mobile office to function even when I'm mobile.


Much has been said about Symbian's S60 5th Edition Web browser, so I won't repeat that all here, except to say that it's still crippled on the N97 because of the relative lack of free RAM. Instead, install the new '5.1 beta 2' version of Opera Mini 'for Symbian/S60' from m.opera.com. This works just as well as the old Java-based version, with the advantages that it uses less RAM, runs faster, starts faster and is better integrated into the N97's hybrid touch/qwerty interface.


Key Lock Clock


PhoneTorch works well to turn the N97 into a dual LED torch, for those forays into the back yard after dark, though the camera glass shutter does cover the LEDs in normal use, so you have to go through the added steps of opening the shutter and then Exiting the Camera app first. Ah well.


One of the biggest losses to day to day usability on the N97 is that of telling the time - the keylock screen just pops up a 'how to unlock' message - the underlying display may or may not show a clock. Make a beeline for the excellent Key Lock Clock. Once installed (and the device restarted), this utility acts to pop up a clock at normal brightness whenever you press the main N97 menu button - without disturbing the keylock itself.


Screenshot Key Lock Clock


I mentioned above that Nokia Messaging/Email is certified death to the N97. But what can replace it, that doesn't cripple the limited system disk in the same way? I'm a Gmail die-hard and have made the existing Gmail Java-based client work for me (hint: go into Settings/Application manager/Gmail/Suite settings and turn off the virtual d-pad and function keys!) - this works (almost) completely in the cloud and so there's no system disk impact at all. For other email systems I'd probably turn (as I have in the past) to the ultra-quirky but also ultra-configurable Profimail - you'll hate it for the first hour, then the penny will drop and you'll love it for the rest of your life.


Other S60 5th Edition favourites which made their way onto the editorial pimped N97 were Nokia Internet Radio, a bundle of Offscreen utilities, including Egg Timer and Converter, the official Facebook client, the popular Gravity Twitter client, and the ubiquitous Google Maps (from m.google.com, even though it's put in the shade to some degree by Nokia Maps these days).


In addition, with the N97's tilted screen being perfect for video watching, must downloads are Google's YouTube client (even though the streams this uses aren't as high quality as on other non-Symbian phones, sadly), and (if you're in the UK) BBC iPlayer, letting you watch live and catch-up TV, including downloads for watching programmes on journeys with intermittent connectivity.


I mentioned brightness and keylocking above. The N97's screen is transflective LCD and the impact of running the screen 'frontlight' on full brightness is quite a bit less than if the same were done with (say) a white theme on a modern AMOLED device. Thus, there's no real reason not to go into Settings/Phone/Display and crank the 'Light sensor' up to full. Your N97's display will almost look modern. Almost!


Screenshot 


On the keylocking front, I find all the S60 5th Edition devices to be rather annoying in that with the screen off, it's not clear whether the screen's just powered down and waiting for a keypress or whether the device is actually keylocked. So you toggle the keylock and... it turns that the screen was just off, so congratulations, you just locked it for real. And now you've got to wait a second and toggle it again to bring the device back on again. 


I avoid this scenario by going into Settings/Phone/Phone management/Auto keyguard and turning the 'Keypad autolock period' 'Off'. Thus, the only time the N97 will be keylocked is when I've done it explicitly. If the screen is then off under normal circumstances I know the device isn't keylocked and can just press the main front-face menu button to bring it back to life.

 Screenshot Screenshot


The N97's variant of S60 5th Edition (in)famously introduced the widgetised homescreen. I say 'infamously' because the default selection included two huge RAM guzzlers: Facebook and Accuweather. Delete these two widgets and the N97 starts to sing. Well, hum at least, with well over 10MB more free RAM. 


Modern Symbian^3 phones now have up to three such homescreens, but you may recall that I'm not so sure having more than one is a good idea from a conceptual point of view. In which case the single homescreen of the N97 is perfectly good enough. My pimped N97 ended up with Calendar, Music player, Favourite contacts and application shortcuts on its homescreen. All offline content, you'll note, but this has RAM and battery life benefits. Besides which, every online widget I've tried, whether email or social or weather, has required me to tap it anyway, to bring up the full app for any serious use - so why not simply have that application as a 'shortcut' and save lots of homescreen real estate?


Also a help with RAM is to use a simple theme for your homescreen and menu: a suitable selection are built into the N97, thankfully. Try to resist the temptation to install that pretty 3MB theme from your favourite novelties site - it'll slow the N97 down and will decrease usability.


Music fill-ups


The N97 comes with 32 glorious Gigabytes to fill up, of course. Not counting whatever you also add to the microSD slot. By all means drag across your 20GB music collection, but be warned that thousands of tracks will take hours to index when you next 'Refresh' the N97's Music library.


Music refresh


Instead, I'd suggest copying on music a few hundred tracks at a time, stopping to refresh after each batch and testing performance and response as you go. Yes, the N97's mass memory and processor (and Music application) should all be faster, but we have to work with what we've got - and as flaws go, this limitation is relatively minor.


Once in place, having a huge music library 'on tap' is just superb, especially as it's all accessible via multimedia headset (each N97 shipped with one) or FM transmitter to your car's stereo.


_____________________________________


A year ago, I wrote this, about the N97:



There is absolutely nothing it does which is better than every other phone in the world. But there's also (almost) nothing it can't do.


This still largely holds true. It's a horribly flawed device, possibly one of the biggest screw-ups in terms of hardware specifications in Nokia's history, and it attracted terrible blame as a result. But for the Symbian enthusiast, for the convergence fan, for the hardened 'pimper', the N97 still offers a lot of geek fun and a huge amount of mobile functionality in the one body.


Enjoy your Nokia N97, whether as main or backup device in 2011. And comments welcome - perhaps you've picked up an N97 bargain yourself recently?




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Sunday, March 6, 2011

Podcatcher now in the Ovi Store for all Symbian devices

After a year of development, Podcatcher (originally Escarpod) is now in the Ovi Store for all S60 3rd Edition, 5th Edition and Symbian^3 Nokia devices. Of course, it's not necessarily needed for phones with Nokia Podcasting on board, but it's a boon for the increasing number of devices which haven't. Screenshots below. Note that if you've been using the free distribution, at v1.10, this is much the same, but with a few less minor bugs.


Of note is that Podcatcher in Ovi Store form is now commercial, but only at £1, so a nominal cost and long-awaited reward for the programmer.

Screen Screen


Podcatcher comes with some sample feeds, there's a search engine linked from its menus, and there's also full OPML import and export, for moving an existing collection of podcasts into or out of the application.


Recommended.




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Saturday, March 5, 2011

Wooden Labyrinth 3D

While not a stand-out genre in the mobile world, the addition of accelerometers into mobile handsets has brought about the frustrating return of the marble rolling game. If you can recall the little puzzles of your childhood where you rolled a marble around a maze to get to an exit – then this is exactly the same - with even some pseudo 3D thrown in. Just don’t throw your phone against the nearest wall in frustration!


Developed by Elias Pietila of Qvik, this vision of the tilt game is a port from the iOS version (which picked up the Apple Design Award and has shipped millions of copies), and while it has taken some time to make the jump to Symbian, it’s here now and it's very welcome.


First things first, there is only one “funky” thing about Wooden Labyrinth, and it’s not a death laser, or magic doors, teleporters or the like. It’s a simple addition to where your ball can travel. It’s called 'jump'.


Shake your handset, or tap on the screen, and your ball will jump in the air. You can’t get over every wall, only the low slung walls, but you can get over some of them, and this adds a multi level effect to the game design - and this ability is put to good use. You can also use it to jump over holes in the ground, but the co-ordination to accelerate the ball, and jump, and have a safe landing, doesn’t always make this an easy option.


The three dimensional nature of the game is emphasised with a forced perspective trick by Pietila. When you tilt the device, not only does the effect of gravity act on the ball, you also see the walls of the maze appearing to tilt. So if you keep your eye in one place and just tilt the phone, it replicates what you would see on a physical tilting maze. It’s not only a cute touch, but this ‘tricking’ of the brain through an optical illusion means you forget the digital nature of Wooden Labyrinth and concentrate on the game.


Wooden Labyrinth 3D
A nice rendered view of the game grid


But it’s clearly a computer game, with all the benefits this has – it’s incredibly fast to reset - once a ball falls into a trap hole, a new one is rolled in to the start point and you are immediately back in the game (albeit right at the start of the maze, which can be infuriating). It also has a lot of different levels – something that was never available in my 'one level fits all'  childhood.


And once you get past some of the simpler levels (cunningly bundled together under the “tutorial” moniker”), you find some devilish tricks, jumps, twists and turns. The skill in the little touches in the coding have carried through to the level design, and the angel that coded the game has a complimentary devil in laying everything out! If that's not enough, you can switch to an "endless" game, with computer-generated levels.


While it’s taken some time for Wooden Labyrinth to make the jump to Symbian, it’s a late party-crasher that I’m more than happy to accommodate. There’s a lot to like, it’s a simple idea, it’s presented with a lot of love and polish, and it is tremendously good value for money.

Buy Link | Download / Information Link




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