ChatDD Blog

July 12, 2008

How To Upload Games, Wallpapers, Ringtones in Cell phone

Filed under: Mobile Phones — Tags: , , , , , , — Aatish @ 6:23 pm

This topic is not for gizmo geeks, but useful for starters who have just bought a new mobile phone and dont know on how to upload stuffs in their cell phone. Its not a tough task to upload ring tones, wallpapers and mobile games in your new cell phone.

1) Mobile to Mobile Transfer : If you have a friend/relative who has a cell phone with bluetooth or infrared, and your mobile supports bluetooth/infrared, then you can transfer the content between each other. Just select bluetooth while sending a file. You can also share each others mobile data card to transfer the content - from memory card to phone memory.

2) Computer to Mobile Transfer : Other option is to download ringtones, games and wallpapers first on your computer from various internet sites or CDs. Then you can transfer this content from your computer into your mobile using
- Inbuilt bluetooth (usually comes in a laptop nowadays) or Bluetooth dongle
- Infrared - not much famous now
- Data cable (remember, you have a supported data cable, every cell phone requires specific data cable depending on the model. But nowadays, most of the phone supports mini-USB cable )
- Data Card - If you have a removable memory card, then insert your card in a data card reader and transfer the content. Similar to writing on a floppy disk. Data card reader is available in the market, many latest laptops have inbuilt card reader.

3) Mobile Internet : One more option is via mobile GPRS services. If you have GPRS services activated on your mobile phone, you can download content from mobile sites (usually beginning with http://wap. ). Some sites are chargeable while some are free - so take care here.

G8 aims its guns at ‘cellphone piracy’

Filed under: Mobile Phones, News, Technology — Tags: , , — Aatish @ 6:10 pm

G8 aims its guns at ‘cellphone piracy’

How would you feel if your cellphone network wrote to you on behalf of sports governing bodies demanding you quit sharing video clips of goals, home runs and slam dunks? It seems it could happen: file sharing on cellphones and the distribution of sports video clips look like becoming the latest forms of digital content to come under the scope of the onerous global copyright clampdown the G8 heads of government discussed in Japan this week.
As we revealed last week, the G8 is pushing its member states - and their fellow travellers - to enshrine a high level treaty called the Anti Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) in their national laws. Among many other measures, ACTA-based legislation will ensure that Internet Service Providers around the world are held liable for the downloading and uploading actions of their customers ??? forcing the ISPs to disconnect the broadband lines of people who use music and video P2P networks for fear of facing criminal sanctions themselves.
But one communique issued from the midst of the G8 hints at a fresh raft of terribly smart brainwaves. The G8 Intellectual Property Experts Group on 8 July admits that in addition to focusing on copyright enforcement for ???recorded music, motion pictures, software, books and journals??? the group is, alongside the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, studying the use of the humble cellphone in copyright infringement.
“The study will focus on digital piracy…through such methods as internet piracy, direct computer to computer transfers, LAN file sharing and mobile phone sharing. The study may also incorporate a case study of digital piracy in the sports broadcasting industry,” it says.
Join a few dots and you can see where this is heading: it’s not only ISPs that will be monitoring their users for copyright infringement, but also cellphone networks. There won’t be single digital thing you can do that someone, somewhere won’t be monitoring. When will copyright holders realise that getting companies to attack their own customers is very, very bad business?
The visionary computer scientist Jaron Lanier once said: “The internet perceives censorship as damage and routes around it”.
People attacked by their own internet and cellphone providers will be routing around them, too.
Paul Marks, Technology Correspondent, New Scientist

July 3, 2008

LG Viewty - Talking more colors

Filed under: Mobile Phones — Tags: , , , , , — Aatish @ 5:46 pm

The LG Viewty is quite a talk of the town and now its adding more colors to your life. LG is out with a Pink version of its viewty, soon to be launched. This new LG Viewty pink body is a nice addition to the range. Black and silver are still available.

LG Viewty Pink

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Wrist Watch Cell Phone now with Dedicated Keypad

Filed under: Mobile Phones — Tags: , , , , — Aatish @ 5:42 pm

A lot of Wrist Watch Cell Phones have been launched in the past, many failed, many flopped! Any reasons? Well one of the most important and basic reason is a missing Dedicated Keypad.

That should not be a problem anymore! CECT WRIST Wrist Watch Cell Phone is an amazing Wrist Watch Cell Phone features a Dedicated Keypad in its strip.

Other strong features of this gadget includes:

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June 14, 2008

Nokia N95 Secret Tips & Tricks

Filed under: Mobile Phones — Tags: , , , , , , , , — eXtreme Stormer @ 10:51 pm

1. In the Profiles settings of Nokia, there is an option: speak out the name to be called and choose open. Then go back to the laptop and press clock for seconds. It will succeed in calling wanted person via speaking out the name of his.

This function is realized by the software built in the cell phone itself that can recognize the voice calling. It seems that the function will take up much space.

However, it is not suggested to use the function, since its success rate is very low and always there is the problem like this: call jack but jane appears. If your voice is nearly same as that of computer, it will be good. You can do like this. In addition, you can use these two functions at the same time, 3D ringing and speaking out the name to be called, otherwise, the cell phone system will be halted.

2. If you didnt uninstall the program according to the common method, the cell phone may prompt you that the installation failed when you install the same program once again.

Maybe it is a detailed adjustment to the 3rd generation Nokia S60 for the security. Therefore, it is necessary to be careful for the installation and the uninstallation for the programs.

The important tips for the software installation of N95! Many friends can not run the program after installing *.Jar. Below is the solution:
a. When installing *.Jar program, you must use English to name *.Jar program file and it will work well. Some *Jar runs slowly, but do not worry. It will just take several seconds to run. (Generally less than 10 seconds)
b. If you want to manage *.Jar original installation file well, I suggest that you can create a folder, and put the English files *.Jar into it, as it is convenient to the classification.

By the way, the precious version of handay clock software is not compatible with N95 and when you open the clock function to work for you, then the multi-media button will become invalid. Note: higher than 4.02 version can be installed to work well for this function. As long as the normal JAR program for N95 can run, it just has the differences between full screen and the half screen.

3. N95 can look through the zoom of DOC documents. XLS files can be modified by the ranks of size, translation, the freezing window operation. PPT files can be displayed as the method of the full screen. As the version of FLASH players is a bit lower and larger flash will not be played. So will PPT, word, and excel.

4. If you want to install the theme of Nokia N95 into the cell phone as much as possible. If you install the theme into the card, it will recover automatically to the default theme when you restart the cell phone.

Two methods of the theme installation:

a. Copy the theme installation software (SIS or SISX format) into the cell phone card and use Y–browse to complete the installation.

b. Use card reader or data connection of the data cable to copy the decompressed theme folder into the cell phone card. The path is X:\private\10207114\import\ (suppose X is the memory card).

The comparison between these two installation methods:
a. The process of the installation is very simple but it will auto create a file under the path: C:\sys\install\sisregistry. For example,

C:\sys\install\sisregistry\a00000eb\00000002_0000.ctl. This will take up too much space of hard drive C

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February 16, 2008

Top 10 Smallest Mobile Cell Phones in the World!

Filed under: Mobile Phones — Tags: , , , , , — eXtreme Stormer @ 11:42 am

Take a look at the ten smallest mobile phones that are leading this global competition today:

1. Modu Mobile

modu.jpg

2. Haier Elegance

haier-elegance.jpg

3. NEC N930

nec-n930.jpg

4. Xun Chi 138

xun-chi-138.jpg

5. Cellwatch M500 Watch Phone

cellwatch-m500.jpg

6. Samsung SGH-E888

samsung-shg-e888.jpg

7. UTStarcom Slice

ut-starcom.jpg

8. LG Migo

lg-migo.jpg

9. Pantech C300

pantech-c300.jpg

10. Firefly Mobile

firefly-mobile.jpg

And Finally

Here is size of future mobile phones :)

Mini mobile phone

February 6, 2008

Nokia N81 8GB Specifications

Filed under: Mobile Phones — Tags: , , , , , , — eXtreme Stormer @ 9:01 am

Operating Frequency

  • WCDMA 2100 + E850/900/1800/1900MHz
  • Automatic switching between bands and modes

 Nokia N81 8GB
Dimensions

  • Volume: 86 cc
  • Weight: ~140 g
  • Length: 102 mm
  • Width: 50 mm
  • Thickness (max): 17.9 mm

Memory Functions

  • Up to 8GB internal flash memory for music, games, video, images and applications

Power Management

  • Battery: Nokia Battery (BP-6MT) 1050mAH
  • Talk time: up to 240 minutes GSM / 180 minutes WCDMA
  • Stand-by time: up to 17 days
  • Video playback time: up to 4.5 hours (QVGA)
  • Browsing time (packet data): up to 5 hours
  • Music playback time: up to 11.5 hours
  • Video recording time: up to 3.5 hours with QVGA
  • Gaming time: up to 6 hours

*Operation times may vary depending on radio access technology used, operator network configuration and usage.

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