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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Midnight Bowling Game for Windows Mobile

Midnight Bowling Game for Windows Mobile

Whether or not you’re familiar with the first game, prepare for ultra fun gaming thanks to a new physics engine that lets you control your throws with more spectacular special effects and realistically simulates the impact of your ball on pins. Whatever your level, train in practice mode and travel the world to confront opponents of all levels in the most glamorous cities. Bring your A game and stack strikes to the hit tune “Call on Me” to electrify the audience and become the star of Midnight Bowling 2!

Midnight Bowling 2 Midnight Bowling 2
Midnight Bowling 2 Midnight Bowling 2

Features:

  • The sequel to Midnight Bowling full of innovations that completely reinvent the gaming experience.
  • An easy-to-learn throwing system and advanced spin effects for bowling pros.
  • New Career Mode full of challenging opponents at all skill levels.
  • New Practice Mode allows you to improve your precision, your speed, your effects, etc.
  • 6 trendy locations that will immerse of you in the ultra fashionable universe of Midnight Bowling.

Official site: http://www.gameloft.com
Application version: 1.0

http://rapidshare.com/files/258391903/MNB2_i900.jar
http://www.ziddu.com/download/5711646/MNB2_i900.zip.html

Golden Balls Game for Your Windows Mobile

Golden Balls Game for Windows Mobile

Welcome to Golden Balls! Immerse yourself into the set of the popular TV show and meet famous host Jasper Carrott just by downloading the official mobile game of the hit series onto your phone. Gather the biggest possible amount of pounds by kicking out the killer balls and saving the cash. Guess who’s lying while you decide whether to tell the truth or to lie…and in the end, choose to split or steal the final jackpot! You’ll have to trust your instincts and pay special attention to the hints that you can acquire from your opponent’s dialog.

Golen Balls Game Golen Balls Game
Golen Balls Game Golen Balls Game

Features:

  • Play the mobile game of the hit TV show with all the official rules!
  • Relive the tension of the original game: 3 different rounds, dismissals, bin or win, split or steal, etc.
  • Choose to be a barefaced liar or a truthful person and find out who is bluffing to stay in the game!
  • Faithfully rendered set for a total immersion into the show’s specific atmosphere.
  • Features the popular host of the TV show: Jasper Carrott as along with his famous, humorous quotes!
  • An infinite lifespan, as every game is different and depends on you and your opponents’ attitudes.

Official site: http://www.gameloft.co.uk
Application version: 1.0

http://rapidshare.com/files/259397101/Golbi900.zip
http://www.ziddu.com/download/5748714/Golbi900.zip.html

Sunday, July 26, 2009

FIRST TAKE: Samsung Omnia Pro

FIRST TAKE: Samsung Omnia Pro

Samsung slaps a keyboard onto the Windows Mobile Omnia and sends it to work. Check out our hands on look at the Samsung Omnia Pro.


At Samsung Mobile headquarters, we recently had the opportunity to get a hands-on look at some of the manufacturers newest high-end, touchscreen phones, including the Samsung Jet and the Samsung Omnia 2. Rounding out the bunch was the Samsung Omnia Pro, a phone we reported on last month when it was originally launched. In following with current smartphone naming traditions (a la HTC's Touch Pro), the Omnia Pro takes the basic Omnia design and adds a keyboard to it. But in our hands-on time with the Omnia Pro, we found changes far deeper than the simple full QWERTY keyboard.


The Samsung Omnia Pro uses an interface that is dramatically different from the fun and widget-happy TouchWIZ 2.0 interface on the Samsung Jet. The Pro's interface is all business. Underneath, the Samsung Omnia Pro is running Windows Mobile 6.1, and the company says buyers will be able to upgrade to Windows Mobile 6.5 when it becomes available, probably this September, if Microsoft hits their release target.


In our time with the Samsung Omnia Pro, we found the interface to be useful for business users. It sacrificed flash and fun for useful information, bringing new messages, appointments and more to the top level for easy viewing. In landscape mode, the phone starts by offering up a simple shortcut menu to key business applications. Samsung is still using a multi-page interface for a main menu, but these were more static than on the Samsung Jet, with less customization and more solid productivity options.


The star of the show will obviously be the slide-out keyboard. In our time with the Samsung Omnia Pro, we found the keyboard to be large and comfortable. The phone uses an ample 3.5-inch, AMOLED screen, at a WVGA resolution of 800 by 480 pixels, and that gives a large keyboard plenty of room to hide when it's not needed. Keys on the Samsung Omnia Pro were flat, contiguous squares, more reminiscent of older HTC Touch Pro designs than the discrete keys on other side-sliding Samsung phones like the ill-fated <>Samsung Glyde. Like the Nokia E71, the Samsung Omnia Pro has a dedicated switch for 'business' or 'pleasure' modes. Press the button and the phone will switch to a personal mode, giving more attention to apps, shortcuts and sound profiles befitting a day off, rather than a day's work. For serious business users, it's a nice feature, and it acknowledges that more business users are using their smartphones for multimedia and other fun capabilities, and not just scheduling appointments and editing Word documents.

To that end, the Samsung Omnia Pro comes with a 5-megapixel camera with auto focus and an LED flash. The phone will ship with 1GB of internal memory, which seems like just enough for saving attachments in business mode, so music lovers will probably want to spring for an external card. The Omnia Pro can handle microSD cards up to 32GB. The phone will be able to integrate with a DLNA living room, and will have TV output capabilities for showing movies and pictures on a larger screen.


Pricing and availability for the Samsung Omnia Pro has yet to be determined. Rumors suggest the phone will be available late this summer for about 500 Euros. American versions of this phone haven't been announced, which is too bad, since Samsung has already made official the Samsung Omnia 2 on Verizon Wireless. Of course, like the HTC Touch Diamond and HTC Touch Pro, the Omnia and Omnia Pro would make a logical pair, but we're not ones to divine the will of the U.S. carriers.

FIRST TAKE: Samsung JET

FIRST TAKE: Samsung JET

Samsung fires the first shot in the mobile processor wars with their new 800Mhz feature phone. Check out our hands-on impressions of the Samsung Jet.


At Samsung Mobile headquarters, company reps gave us a hands-on look at their newest flagship feature phone, the Samsung Jet. The Jet is not a smartphone. It runs a proprietary OS instead of Windows Mobile, like the Samsung Omnia 2. Still, with its 800 MHz processor and advanced capabilities, this has got to be the smartest 'dumbphone' on the market. With companies beefing up their mobile processor offerings, we expect to see a new MHz war open up in the mobile phone world soon.


The Samsung Jet is a bit smaller than the Samsung Omnia 2, thanks mostly to the smaller display. The Omnia 2 uses an AMOLED touchscreen that is 3.7-inches diagonal. The Samsung Jet uses the same AMOLED technology, but the screen comes in more than a half inch smaller, at a still-respectable 3.1-inches. The AMOLED screen on the Jet looks fantastic, and users are going to enjoy the new technology as it trickles down into more and more phones. Colors look bright and fresh, and the phone is capable of much deeper blacks, lending a deeper contrast to the display. Also, the AMOLED technology uses 40% less energy than a comparably sized TFT LCD screen, according to Samsung. In our hands-on time, we took a look at the 180-degree viewing angle, and there was hardly a point where the screen didn't look crisp and legible.


Meet the new TouchWIZ, same as the old TouchWIZ?
The Samsung Jet uses an updated version of the Samsung TouchWIZ interface (to read about more TouchWIZ phones, click here). We were never big fans of TouchWIZ. The widgets seemed to require more screen real estate than the phone would allow. The same is true for the new TouchWIZ interface, at least what we saw in our hands-on look. On the new TouchWIZ 2.0, widgets can update live over the Internet, which should add more functionality to the phone, and to make up for the lack of screen space Samsung has endowed the interface with 3 separate homescreens, much like the Apple iPhone and T-Mobile G1 use multiple home screens. Just flick your finger to see more widgets, along with a separate wallpaper and other customizable options. This was a nice compromise for the UI, so we're curious to take a longer look at a new TouchWIZ phone and see if this solves the problem.


In addition to the new TouchWIZ screens, the Samsung Jet gets the new Samsung cube menu, a six-sided multimedia interface where each side is a shortcut. Samsung has a thing for cubes, and we remember the touchable cube from the ill-fated Samsung Glyde home screen. On the Samsung Jet, if you want to access the music side of the cube, you can either move the 3D model with your finger, or you can set the phone to recognize gestures. Flick the phone in the right direction and the cube will move, revealing the shortcut you need.


In our hands-on time with the Samsung Jet, we weren't very impressed by the cube design. While it was a cool idea, for sure, it didn't seem to add any real feature advantage, and it wasn't easier to use than a simple homescreen shortcut. We could see ourselves showing off the cube to jealous onlookers, but never really using it on a daily basis.


With great power comes great responsiveness


With its high-end processor, Samsung is promising that using the Samsung Jet will be a much more responsive experience. The company even claims an instant response from a 3D interface that will match the speed of touch. In our hands-on with the Samsung Jet, the phone certainly seemed plenty responsive, but we're still skeptical of these broad claims. The phone had the trademark feel of a resistive touchscreen, a technology that works very well with a stylus, but not so much with fingers. We'd like to see Samsung try their hand at a capacitive screen, like the screen on the Apple iPhone or the new Palm Pre. Capacitive screens work much better with fingers, and the Samsung TouchWIZ UI is definitely built for finger control.


Besides the interface, Samsung is putting that power behind the multimedia features on the Samsung Jet. The phone will be able to play DivX videos and a range of codecs, like the Samsung Omnia, but Samsung claims the phone will have no trouble adapting and resizing videos to the WVGA, 800 by 480 pixel screen. To store all those videos, along with music and photos, the Jet will come in 3 storage configurations, ranging from 2GB up to 16GB of internal memory. All models will expandable with a microSD card slot capable of holding a 16GB card, for up to 32GB total capacity.


If you build it . . .

For the Samsung Jet, the company built their own proprietary mobile browser, called the Dolfin browser. Though Dolfin is a strictly Samsung design, the browser is based on WebKit technology, which means it should render pages similar to other high-end Web browsing phones, like the iPhone and Nokia's Nseries devices, all of which use a WebKit browser. Instead of multi-touch, the Web browser, along with the photo gallery app, will use a one finger zoom. We've seen similar controls on HTC TouchFLO devices, and it works nicely as a compromise for a resistive screen. In addition to the one-handed zooming, the Jet's Dolfin browser will also use an ad-blocker, and will be capable of multiple downloads in the background.
The Samsung Jet will also be among the rare feature phones (non-smartphones) to have built-in Exchange ActiveSync access. Instead of using a separate app for e-mail and contacts synchronization, the Samsung Jet will have Exchange built-in at its core, so even without a smartphone OS the Jet will still be useful for business customers who use an Exchange account.


The 5-megapixel camera on the Samsung Jet will feature plenty of advanced options for picture taking, many of which we've seen on compact cameras, and are now seeing on cameraphones. The Jet will use auto focus and two LED flash lights to help keep shots sharp. The phone will also get face detection, smile detection and even blink detection to make sure the shutter snaps at just the right moment. Of course, with onboard aGPS, the phone will also be able to geo-tag photos.


Samsung has yet to announce an official release date for the Samsung Jet. The company was fairly certain the Jet would not be sold in the U.S., and pointed us instead to the Samsung Omnia 2, which has already been confirmed for a Verizon Wireless launch some time in the future. Pricing and availability have also yet to be determined.