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Nokia N9 Use OS MeeGo & Processors Intel Atom?

Nokia is reportedly poised released anyarnya whiz, N9. On the N9 is the Finnish handset manufacturer will showcase the new operating system which they till with Intel, which MeeGo.

From the leaked pictures are actually in circulation long enough, Nokia N9 has a stylish sliding qwerty keyboard. And besides presenting MeeGo, there are more surprises presented by Nokia on this smartphone.

According to tech site Engadget who claims to have info from reliable sources, Nokia N9 didayai with Intel Atom 1.2 GHz processor. If the leak is accurate, then the N9 will be Nokia phones with powerful processors so far.

Just like N8, N9 rumored to have a powerful 12-megapixel camera. As reported by Cnet and quoted on Monday (1/24/2011), Nokia N9 expected to slide on the event Mobile World Conggres (MWC) in Barcelona, which took place next month.

Nokia new CEO, Stephen Elop, predicted would unveil the N9 in the MWC. There are even rumors that Nokia will also be exhibiting at the event-based tablet MeeGo prestigious technology exhibition.

Minor Update Nokia Presents 3 Free Games

Nokia merilis minor update bagi ketiga handset Symbian 3 terbarunya, Nokia N8, Nokia C7, dan Nokia C6. Ada tiga game gratis yang siap menghibur pengguna.

Seperti dikutip detikINET dari Techradar, Minggu (6/2/2011), pembaharuan juga dilakukan pada Ovi Maps. Alhasil kini pengguna bisa mengirim langsung alamat ke email atau SMS, pada peta Ovi yang dibuka. Fitur ini sebelumnya telah ada di Nokia E7.

Nah, yang paling menarik, update minor ini membawa tiga game gratis. Mereka adalah: Need for Speed Shift, Real Golf, dan Galaxy on Fire.

Bagi pengguna Quick Office, mereka kini juga bisa melakukan editing atau zooming pada dokumen yang tengah dikerjakan.

Selain menghadirkan update tersebut, Nokia juga memperbaiki beberapa bug agar ketiga ponsel tersebut bisa berjalan lebih mulus.

N8 Camera Test Outside

good light

Let's start right at the 'easy' end - a photo of a brightly coloured scene in mid morning sunlight. Click the photo below to enlarge it or to download the full 12 megapixel original:



It's an unambitious photo, but still worth analysing. The N8, unsurprisingly, nails this photo perfectly, from the light and shade to the details and colours, even to the colour of the sky.

One thing that intrigued many people, including me, was whether the photo quality would suffer at all in the move to 12mp from the 8mp in the N86. Given identical lens and sensor sizes, I'd say that was likely, but the N8's sensor is 30% or so bigger than that in the N86, which should nicely compensate for the increase in megapixels - and keep the pixel density similar.

To check results, in line with my chosen detail-centric methodology(!), I took the same scene on the N86 and then blew up a central detail (the side of the truck) by a factor of about 10, so that we can see differences with the naked eye:



The N86's version is on the left, the N8's on the right. Aside from the differences in scale and angle, look at the extra consistency and detail in the N8 image: the sunken bolts to the left of the guard on the left side of the crop show the difference most clearly - on the N86 version, they're almost smudges - on the N8 version, you can make out exactly what they are. In addition, look at the mirror-ball hemispherical trim on the right - the N86 version is over-gaudy and way over-sharpened, while the N8 version shows the trim more or less as the naked eye sees it, up close.

In short, very impressive. Remember that I'm not just comparing the N8's stills camera to any old 5 megapixel HTC or budget Nokia unit - I just compared its results to the previous imaging pinnacle in the Symbian world - and the N8 bested it with ease.

Let's take something more challenging - same light conditions, but wide range in subject distance and masses of greenery - traditionally a big failing of Nokia's JPG encoding algorithms. Here's the raw photo from the N8 - again, click to enlarge or download:



Let's pick out a detail that's interesting - say, the ducks standing on the beam. As with the example above, I took the same scene on the N86 and then blew up this detail (the left hand duck), so that we can see differences more easily:



Again, the N86's version is on the left, the N8's on the right. Aside from the differences in scale and angle, the N86's edge enhancement is very evident - almost every camera in every phone does this, to create images which look like they have more detail than is actually there in real life. The N8 photo, on the other hand, shows no sharpening at all. At first glance the N8 version looks worse as a result, but look again and you should be able to appreciate that you're seeing the detail that's actually there rather than what has been put in camera algorithms.

And again I'll emphasise both that I'm using extreme blow-ups here to make my point and that the N86 was previously top dog in the Symbian camera phone world, not some no-hoper drafted in to make the N8 look good.

Talking of extreme close-ups, let's zoom in on a smaller detail in the image - the bench beyond the pond - this is a tiny portion of the photo and will expose the raw pixels:



The difference in detail between the N86 image (admittedly this device has a wider angle lens than the N8, but even so.....) and the N8 image is striking. On the left, you can just about make out that the object is a bench. On the right, you can clearly see the individual slats that make up the bench's back.

BlinkedTV v1.25 S60v3 SymbianOS9.x Signed



Blinked.TV allows you to broadcast LIVE video, audio or text from your phone in one application.

You can:

* Add individual captions to each broadcast.
* Give each broadcast it's own privacy setting.
* Build up your own social network by broadcasting to your own channel areas on the Blinked.TV web site in collaboration with others.
* Embed your live or archived video or audio into your own web pages.
* Broadcast at a range of quality depending on your connection - low latency means the application works well even over slow GPRS connections.
* Edit or delete your archived broadcasts on the Blinked.TV web site.
* Share your archived broadcasts with others and allow others to comment on them.
* Integrate your broadcasts with Twitter.

Download here

hack fw200 and 210 on Nokia E71 using helloOX1.03

If you want to hack fw200 and 210, could use helloOX1.03

Helloox be installed in cellphone (must be the sign using signsis)>> install on mmc>>> then open the installation folder>> click hello>> until there are papers applying patching>> after waiting two minutes, then cancel it>> open back hello>> follow the step till then there had message you can uninstalll me>> the hacking process mean a successful>> then see the installation folder>> click rompatcher>> option>> open4all on SMEs and on the set add to the auto>> then exit> > uninstall hello unless rompatcher>> restart cellphone if necessary ...
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