Isorock :: Mobile Worlds

MobileWorld for ALL Information on Mobile Phones, Advice, Stats, Technical Information, Secrets, Pictures, Articles, Reviews and More.

Limitless Powerfull Computers And Laptops

Networking hardware typically refers to equipment facilitating the use of a computer network. Typically, this includes routers, switches, hubs, gateways etc.

Website Templates And Admin Skins

Web templates can be used to set up any type of website. In its simplest sense, a web template operates similarly to a form letter for use in setting up a website.

New Releases :: Technology

Mobile application development is the process by which application software is developed for small low-power handheld devices such as personal digital assistants, enterprise digital assistants or mobile phones.

Fashion Show held at France

HTML5 is a language for structuring and presenting content for the World Wide Web, a core technology of the Internet.

Release 275 Graphic Driver

A fashion show is an event put on by a fashion designer to showcase his or her upcoming line of clothing during Fashion Week. Fashion shows debut every season, particularly the Spring/Summer and Fall/Winter seasons.

Isorock :: Mobile Worlds

isorock! Mobile World, Mizaro Fast-track, in 2010 in the Tanjore City, It peaked at thanjavur, india,

Efficient Performance

isorock! Mobile World, Mizaro Fast-track, in 2010 in the Tanjore City, It peaked at thanjavur, india,

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Counter Strike: Global Offensive trailer is out, looks seriously impressive [VIDEO]

It’s been a long wait for all the fans of Counter Strike out there since the last release of the popular shooter. Today, we have the first trailers of the upcoming Counter Strike: Global Offensive, which is due for release in Q1 of 2012 and, dare I say, the latest CS looks more than promising.

gsmarena 001 Counter Strike: Global Offensive trailer is out, looks seriously impressive [VIDEO]

The new video game will stay true to the franchise’s nature, while offering a number of pleasant novelties including new maps and weapons, as well as cross-platform gameplay. It is needless to say that the graphics have been seriously improved, putting them on par with the best shooters currently on the market.

You can see the trailer and a short gameplay video below. As always, you are welcome to tell us how you like it in the comments section below.

Source 1|Source 2|Via

[IFA 2011]Sony announces HMZ-T1 Head Mounted 3D Display, makes 3D officially cool again

Sony has announced the HMZ-T1, a new Head Mounted 3D Display, which they like to call “Personal 3D Viewer”. It’s basically the equivalent of watching a 750-inch 3D TV from a distance of 20m, along with a pair of surround sound headphones, except this time it’s personal.

gsmarena 001 [IFA 2011]Sony announces HMZ T1 Head Mounted 3D Display, makes 3D officially cool again

The crux of the HMZ-T1 are the two OLED panels. Each of these panels is only 0.7-inch in size and have a resolution of 1280 x 720, which gives them a mind-blowing pixel density of 2098-PPI. Each of these displays on the HMZ-T1 are positioned in a way that they recreate the experience of watching a 750-inch 3D TV from 20m. Also, since these are two separate displays, it takes care of the cross-talk and the headache of watching a single display creating two images, as each eye is shown a different image, making the 3D experience more natural.

gsmarena 002 [IFA 2011]Sony announces HMZ T1 Head Mounted 3D Display, makes 3D officially cool again

The HMZ-T1 has its own pair of headphones on the side as well that create a 5.1 surround sound effect, so you don’t have to worry about the sound. The HMZ-T1 connects to a separate box from which it gets its signal. The box has HDMI input on the back for connecting your source and an HDMI out for through output. The HMZ-T1 can work with sources such as 3D Blu-ray as well as PlayStation 3 3D games.

gsmarena 003 [IFA 2011]Sony announces HMZ T1 Head Mounted 3D Display, makes 3D officially cool again

All this comes at a cost though and that cost is 60,000 Japanese yen, which is approximately US $779. Still, it is not prohibitively expensive and about the same as what you’d pay for a 3D TV. Except, the experience on this would be more personal but a lot better. The Sony HMZ-T1 will be launched in November 2011.

Source

Angry Birds Seasons Mooncake Festival update now available for iOS devices

Angry Birds Seasons has just got another update called Mooncake Festival. It brings more than 33 Chinese-themed levels, this time all available to play at launch.

gsmarena 001 Angry Birds Seasons Mooncake Festival update now available for iOS devices

There are also 8 hidden pieces of mooncake unlocking a bonus level, plus another bonus one when you complete all the levels with three stars.

The recently released Mighty Eagle update for Angry Birds Seasons works on the new levels too, so when you finish them you will have even more challenges ahead.

gsmarena 002 Angry Birds Seasons Mooncake Festival update now available for iOS devices

Currently the update is available for the iOS devices, but I guess it should be released (if not already) for more platforms soon.

iSWiFTER lets you play Flash games on your iPad, like a boss

One complaint that is always made about the iPad (and iOS devices in general) is the lack of Flash support. But after Apple loosened the restrictions on the App Store guidelines, we started seeing browsers that would let you play Flash videos on the iPad. However, Flash-based games, such as ones found on Facebook, were still a no go.

gsmarena 001 iSWiFTER lets you play Flash games on your iPad, like a boss

Not anymore though. iSWiFTER lets you play all those Flash games that you love on the iPad. Whether it is Facebook, Google+ or any other site that offers Flash-based games, you can now play them on the iPad through this nifty little browser. Of course, you can also view other Flash content in iSWiFTER, such as videos.

gsmarena 002 iSWiFTER lets you play Flash games on your iPad, like a boss

iSWiFTER is free to download but offers only 30 minutes of play time, enough to give you a feel of how it works. If you want to continue using it, you can use the in-app purchasing option to purchase the full version of the app for $4.99.

So now if you were holding out on buying an iPad only because of the lack of Flash support, you don’t have to do that anymore.

iTunes link

Source

Sony Ericsson Nozomi leaks again, dual-core processor and 720p display confirmed

The Sony Ericsson Nozomi is still happily living in rumorland, but we keep getting more information about it. The latest bit of online gossip has it that the future Sony Ericsson flagship will feature a dual-core processor -and one that’s clocked at 1.5GHz. Previous rumors suggested otherwise, but the new CPU seems more worthy of a flagship device.

gsmarena 001 Sony Ericsson Nozomi leaks again, dual core processor and 720p display confirmed

The rest of the Nozomi specs include Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, a 4.3″ 1280×720 resolution display with the amazing 342 ppi (pixels per inch), which is more than the one on the Retina display, 12 MP camera, 1 gig or RAM, a 1750 mAh battery and a microSIM slot.

According to the source, the Nozomi should be announced January 2012 and ship as early as March next year.

Keep in mind, though, that these are just preliminary specs of a yet unannounced device – taking them all with a pinch of salt is the right thing to do.

Source | Via

Verizon DROID Bionic now on sale, will set you back by $299

After many months of waiting, Verizon has finally started selling the DROID Bionic. The handset is now available throughout the carrier’s retail network and will set you back by $299 on a 2-year contract.

gsmarena 002 Verizon DROID Bionic now on sale, will set you back by $299

The DROID Bionic has a 4.3-inch qHD display, TI OMAP4430 SoC with 1GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 CPU and PowerVR SGX540 GPU, 1GB RAM, 32GB storage space (16GB internal + 16GB microSD card), expandable up to 48GB, 8 megapixel camera with auto-focus and LED flash, 1080p video recording, HDMI out and Android 2.3.4. It will be powered by a 1,735mAh battery.(more…)

Eric Schmidt: Ice Cream Sandwich coming October/November

At a recent Dreamforce conference in San Francisco Eric Schmidt (Google Executive chairman and “droid daddy”) has confirmed that Ice Cream Sandwich, the next Android version, will debut this October or November.

gsmarena 001 Eric Schmidt: Ice Cream Sandwich coming October/November

The next droid OS is said to combine Honeycomb (Android for tablets) with Gingerbread, with no home-brewed UIs and with a unified look (which was said about Honeycomb but turned out untrue) and more. (more…)

A quad-core Windows 8-running tablet from Samsung coming next week?

As far as news from the electronics business go, it doesn’t get much more exciting than this. If the latest bit of online rumor is true (and given that it comes from Korea Economic Daily that’s quite probable) we are just a week away from seeing the first Windows 8-running tablet. And the first tablet with a quad-core CPU. And the first Windows device with an ARM processor. And the best bit is, those aren’t three different devices.

gsmarena 001 A quad core Windows 8 running tablet from Samsung coming next week?

According to the industry source that went all chatty in front of the Korean newspaper, Samsung will manufacture the slate that will be given to developers at the upcoming Microsoft BUILD event next week. It will be running the software giant’s newest OS and will rely on NVIDIA’s Kal-El chipset.

Now, the unnamed Samsung slate probably won’t make it to the market as the Windows 8 OS is still some way off completion and by the time Microsoft is done with the i-dotting and t-crossing, Samsung will probably have better hardware to offer. So developers attending the event will be the only lucky guys and gals to get a taste of the described awesomeness this year.

Your thoughts? Would you be willing to sacrifice the great number of available Windows apps for the superior battery life provided by the ARM CPUs? Or will you be waiting for a slate with Intel-made internals instead?

Source | Via

BlackBerry Bold Touch 9900 comes round for a review, we’ve already got a video to show you

The BlackBerry Bold Touch 9900 is the latest in a line of all-you-can-eat business-minded berry flagships and, certainly among the best-looking messengers to date.

gsmarena 001 BlackBerry Bold Touch 9900 comes round for a review, weve already got a video to show you

The Bold Touch 9900 is trying to stay smart by adding a capacitive multi-touch display to its recognizable full-QWERTY and trackpad. The new BlackBerry Bold tries to win some fans among the younger audience, while making sure to retain its corporate focus along the way.

The Bold Touch 9900 has twice the CPU power of its predecessor – 1.2 GHz, a good 256MB RAM more than the Bold 9780 (a total of 768MB), a bigger 16M-colored 2.8-incher (the 9780 had a 65K-color 2.44″ LCD) – with touch functionality, higher resolution resulting in a higher pixel density (around 286 ppi) for a great viewing experience. The Touch also packs some good 8GB of storage and BlackBerry OS 7 at the front, which might not be the minimized QNX everyone was hoping for, but is still a major improvement over its predecessor.

Here’s our unboxing video with a pinch of user interface for you guys to check out.

The Bold Touch 9900 seems to be so much better than its predecessor at first glance and we are really hoping that we won’t be disappointed when the review is complete. It’s already in the works so stay tuned!

Leaving Anna for Belle – we take an up-close look at Symbian’s latest version [REVIEW]

We had our first encounter with Symbian Belle when we previewed Nokia 701, but this one was major enough to deserve its own review. So, we decided to take some time and look at Belle all by itself – after all, it would power all of Nokia’s smartphones sooner or later (including the previous-gen N8, E7, C7, C6-01).

gsmarena 001 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]

We’ll try to cover the changes in the general user interface and the changes to Symbian’s native apps, but also take a spare a moment to talk about what is still lacking in Belle.

We’ll be using the Nokia 701 as the platform for our Symbian Belle exploration, so we’re borrowing our impressions of the software from its preview. Considering that the 600 and 700 models have very similar hardware, everything here should be true about them too.

Just what the doctor ordered

It’s been a regular one on our list of Cons that Symbian is lagging behind Android and iOS in user experience, but that’s about to change. The key elements in Belle are the new homescreen and menu, the updated native apps and overall polish of the interface.

gsmarena 001 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 004 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 002 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 003 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
Symbian Belle has a shiny new look

Here’s an extensive video demo of the interface (starring the Nokia 701), so you can get a good feel of Belle before we start.

The widget system introduced by Symbian^3 was incomplete to say the least. Now however, you get up to six homescreens (up from three) and you can delete unneeded ones. Each homescreen has its own individual wallpaper, rather than one for all to share.

gsmarena 005 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 006 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 007 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
Symbian Belle homescreen in portrait and landscape modes

Widgets themselves have dropped the one-size-fits-all philosophy and now come in up to five sizes. In addition to widgets, you can also put shortcuts on the homescreen – the end of the silly shortcut widgets.

A tap and hold on a widget or shortcut activates edit mode, but only for that widget/shortcut. You can’t touch the others – there’s no mode where you can edit everything at once (which is a bit inconvenient to us). You can move, delete or (where available) access the settings of the selected one.

gsmarena 011 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 008 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 009 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 010 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
Moving widgets around • Adding a widget to the homescreen.

Besides widgets and app shortcuts you can also add a contact shortcut to the homescreen – you have to go into the Options menu of the contact’s details to do that, but all that is worth it as it’s a very convenient way to access the contacts you call most often.

The bottom of the homescreen has three virtual buttons – menu, dialer and homescreen settings. With these buttons, Nokia can go button-free at the front if they want to, just like they did with MeeGo.

The other big addition to the homescreen is the pull-down status bar at the top of the screen – think Android’s notification area or the similar menu available in iOS 5. This area is where notifications and status info await in line for your attention, but you also get toggles for mobile data, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and Silent mode.

gsmarena 014 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 015 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 016 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
Pull-down menu is always accessible, helpful

This pull-down status bar is available on any screen so you can also quickly change a setting and look up new events.

Moving on, the main menu has changed as well – it’s now completely flat, no level upon level of subfolders nonsense any more. Or at least not by default – you could still manually create folders, if you like. You can’t put folders in folders though (not that you’d want to do that anyway).

gsmarena 017 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 018 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
The new main menu

You sort icons alphabetically or manually, by choosing the Arrange option and moving menu items around. You can’t drop a shortcut in a folder while arranging them though. To do that, you have to press and hold on a shortcut, choose Move to folder and then select the desired folder. There are also Add to homescreen and delete options here.

gsmarena 019 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 020 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 021 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 022 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
Arranging the menu • Creating a new folder

This arrangement isn’t as convenient as in other OSes and it contrasts with how the homescreen works. On the homescreen you press and hold to move an item, while a tap and hold on a menu item pulls out a menu. To move items around you have to hit the Options key and choose Arrange.

gsmarena 048 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 049 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 050 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 051 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
Managing folders

It’s a bit odd how folders on the homescreen work – you can only add a folder to the homescreen by first creating it in the menu. After you add it, it remains visible in the menu.

To help you deal with the much busier initial screen of the main menu, the magnifying glass shortcut at the bottom of the screen lets you easily search through the installed apps.

gsmarena 046 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
Searching the main menu

The task manager in Symbian Belle is virtually unchanged – press and hold the Menu key and it pops up. It fits a bunch of side-scrollable thumbnails, one for each of the currently open apps. It’s worth noting that hitting the End key will terminate an app, while pressing the Menu key just goes to the homescreen with the app active in the background.

gsmarena 023 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 025 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 024 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
The task manager is unchanged

Some changes to the native apps

Besides the changes to the base user interface, Symbian’s native apps were improved too – we’ll take a quick look at them now.

The user interface of the camera has changed since Anna, but the changes are mostly cosmetic.

At the bottom of the screen, you get a row of shortcuts: Back, Flash mode, Scenes, Extended options and Menu. On the right, there’s a the virtual shutter key and a toggle for the still/video modes. On the left, there’s a digital zoom lever that auto-hides.

gsmarena 026 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 027 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
gsmarena 028 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 030 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
Camera interface in Symbian Belle

In the extended options you get more goodies like face detection, self timer, image settings (ISO, white balance, sharpness, etc.) and a shortcut to one last group of settings where you have geo-tagging and capture tone options.

We were sorely disappointed when we tried to change the ISO setting – it’s a list (Auto, Low, Med, High) and you tap once to select and once again to activate. The Sharpness setting works the same way.

The browser interface has been shuffled a bit, resulting in improved usability, but you shouldn’t expect miracles. On top you have the URL bar, which auto-hides ones you start navigating the page. At the bottom you have a fixed row with five shortcuts – Back, Forward, Bookmarks, Tabs and Menu.

gsmarena 035 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 036 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 037 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 038 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
Symbian Belle brings refined browser UI

The addition of the Tabs shortcut makes managing multiple pages easier – in earlier versions you had to go through the popup menu, adding a few extra clicks. The popup menu itself is pretty much the same – you get RSS feeds, find on page, Most visited and other options, along with a “More” option, which brings the final set of options.

We missed the full Flash support, however – while Flash Lite 4.0 is adequate most of the time, there are cases when it just doesn’t cut it.

The Music player has seen some changes, too. The functionality is pretty much the same (but that was good to begin with, so it’s not an issue) but the UI has been nicely polished. You still get equalizer, stereo widening and excellent format support.

gsmarena 053 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 055 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 056 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 057 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
The music player got a slight refresh

While playing, the album art takes the entire top part of the screen (it’s bigger than before), and the track progress bar is bigger, so you can scrub through the song faster. Below is the track info and previous/play/next buttons.

Below them are the repeat and shuffle keys, which used to be hidden in the Options menu. Another handy shortcut is swiping left and right on the album art acts as previous/next track.

NFC is what Belle’s great at

NFC support makes pairing as simple as you could possibly imagine, just put two NFC-enabled gadgets (e.g. a Nokia 701 and headset) together and the two will pair. Hooray, no more PIN codes!

This works great pairing a phone with an NFC-enabled wireless speaker as we’ve already seen. The same goes for pairing your BT headset or headphones.

Sending stuff between NFC-enabled phones works in much the same way – select the files you want to send (one or many) and tap the two phones together. They’ll handle the rest, including switching on the Bluetooth receiver, pairing and transferring – you just need to agree to the transfer.

Check out this promo video for more info:.

NFC is a pretty new technology and while intuitive, you might not find out all its features by yourself – so check out the NFC Tutorial app, which will teach you how to use NFC, offer related news and even list apps and games that support it.

gsmarena 043 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 044 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]gsmarena 045 Leaving Anna for Belle   we take an up close look at Symbians latest version [REVIEW]
The NFC Tutorial app will teach you everything you need to know about using NFC

Some NFC-enabled games have cropped up – like the special edition of Angry Birds and Asphalt 5 HD.

What needs work

Belle is the best Symbian to date, there’s little question about that, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t things that need to be ironed out.

The new homescreen and main menu, for example, are excellent – but the way rearranging things works needs to change into something consistent. If rearranging shortcuts in the main menu worked like it does on the homescreen, we’d be happy.

Adding folders to the homescreen only through the main menu is a bit confusing too.

The task manager also has room for improvement – fitting only 3 thumbnails on the screen, makes switching between apps harder for heavy multitaskers than it needs to be. Smaller icons that require less scrolling are certainly the way to go here.

Another thing – the CPUs in Nokia phones have gotten fast enough and it’s time to bring full Flash support, not just the Lite stuff. Androids with 600MHz CPUs have attempted to run Flash to some degrees of success. 1GHz CPU and 512MB RAM should provide quite a smooth experience if the software is right.

Over time, Symbian has grown a powerful set of preloaded apps – the problem is they are too many and used to be in subfolders of folders so they were generally hard to find. The Search app, for example, does pretty much what the Android and iOS searches do – search for contacts, messages, apps, files and more.

Those, however, are much easier to access. Better access to such great apps that Symbian offers out of the box would unlock a lot of functionality to users who aren’t particularly tech savvy.

One thing in the suggestion category is that the lock screen could use maybe a widget or a shortcut for starting apps directly. The Sleeping Screen app from Nokia Beta Labs is doing interesting things to the screen, so we’d keep an eye on it.

Conclusion

Symbian Belle brings the Symbian closer to Android and iOS than it’s ever been. Like we said, there’re some less than perfect areas, but overall it would do great in day to day usage. The user experience isn’t Symbian’s biggest problem though.

The one big problem that Belle doesn’t (and can’t) solve is apps. The Ovi Store hasn’t grown anywhere close to its iOS and Android counterparts and it’s the huge app selection that drives people to smartphones.

As users (and consequently devs) are switching away from Symbian to other platforms, the Ovi Store might never catch up, which won’t attract new users. It’s a classic chicken and egg problem, but certainly not one that some smart investments cannot solve.

Third party apps aside, Belle puts Symbian back into the ring as a serious contender by plugging a lot of the many holes in usability of the OS.

But its two big opponents have gained such momentum that most people imagine their next smartphone as an iPhone or a droid. And if they want a Nokia, pretty soon they’d be looking at Windows Phone 7 offerings.

In the end, we wouldn’t mind using Belle on a daily basis, especially when you consider that another big update like this could close the usability gap completely. But we’re worried that by then Symbian would be too far gone to make a comeback.

Popular Posts