-
Δημοσιεύσεις
12.086 -
Εγγραφή
-
Αξιολογήσεις
0%
Content Type
Προφιλ
Περιοχές Συζητήσεων
Κατάστημα
Αγγελίες
Calendar
Everything posted by Itchrist86
-
Δεν μπορείς να βάλεις τα ελληνικά με τον οδηγό που σου υπέδειξε ο φίλος gvg. Η συσκευή δεν είναι η ίδια με αυτή που κυκλοφορεί στην Ελλάδα (δλδ E63-1 "RM-437") με αποτέλεσμα να μην υπάρχει firmware το οποίο να περιέχει την ελληνική γλώσσα.
-
Εφόσον έκανες αναβάθμιση και δεν έφτιαξε πήγαινε το σε κάποιο Nokia Care ώστε να το ελέγξουν.
-
Ποιο κινητό βγάζει τις καλύτερες φωτογραφίες; (Νο2)
Itchrist86 replied to TN97's topic in Τεχνολογικοί διαξιφισμοί
iPhone 4 camera beats the smartphone competition http://images.macworld.com/images/news/graphics/152314-smartphoentestresults2_original.jpg http://www.macworld.com/article/152314/2010/06/iphonecameratests.html -
Όχι δεν γίνεται. Μόνο με φλασάρισμα με τροποποιημένο firmware.
-
Αν είσαι από Αθήνα πήγαινε στο Nokia Care Κατεχάκης και ρώτα.
-
Για εφαρμογές εδώ: http://www.myphone.gr/forum/showthread.php?t=189726 Έχει αναφερθεί πάρα πολλές φορές... Shazam ID....
-
Είσαι ακόμη εντός εγγύησης; Αν ναι, και εφόσον δεν έχει προκληθεί η ζημιά με δική σου υπαιτιότητα πήγαινε σε ένα Nokia Care (όχι γενικά Nokia Shop/Alpha Copy) και θα στα φτιάξουν. Αν δεν είσαι εντός εγγύησης θα πληρώσεις.
-
[Επίσημο] Nokia 5800 XpressMusic - Part 2
Itchrist86 replied to gianpithio's topic in S60 5th Edition
Βγάλε για κανα 10 λεπτό τη μπαταρία από το κινητό. Έπειτα τοποθέτησέ τη και πάλι στο κινητό, δοκίμασε να βάλεις για φόρτιση και άσε το για ορισμένο χρονικό διάστημα. Αν δεις πως δεν γίνεται τίποτα πήγαινε σε ένα Nokia Care. Ίσως να οφείλεται σε μη καλή επαφή της μπαταρίας με τα σιδεράκια του κινητού. Έχουν αναφερθεί ξανά παρόμοια περιστατικά. Δοκίμασε να στριμώξεις τη μπαταρία προς τη πλευρά που έχει τις επαφές βάζοντας ένα χαρτάκι στην απέναντι. -
Όχι, δεν μπορείς μέσω της εφαρμογής Μεταφορά. Θα πρέπει να το συγχρονίσεις το E72με το Microsoft Outlook μέσω του PC Suite (ή OVI Suite) και έπειτα το νέο κινητό μέσω του αντίστοιχου προγράμματος που παρέχει η κατασκευάστρια εταιρία με το Microsoft Outlook.
-
Δοκίμασε βάζοντας μια άλλη κάρτα να δεις αν συνεχίζουν τα προβλήματα. Αν δεν συνεχίζουν, απλά πάρε άλλη κάρτα μνήμης.
-
[Symbian^1 (ex S60 5th Ed.)] Nokia Maps (ex. Ovi Maps)
Itchrist86 replied to gianpithio's topic in Symbian
Μη διαβάζετε μισά τα ποστ ρε παιδιά... Λέει επίσης: Update 21/1/2010: Από την έκδοση OVI Maps 3.03 η πλοήγηση καθίσταται εντελώς δωρεάν. Πλέον δεν χρειάζεται η απόκτηση άδειας πλοήγησης. Ωστόσο η έκδοση αυτή του προγράμματος δεν είναι διαθέσιμη για όλες τις συσκευές ακόμη. -
Windows 8: A First Peek http://www.winsupersite.com/win7/win8_leak.asp Thanks to a mistakenly leaked set of documents Microsoft shared with its PC maker partners--I won't reveal the source like some other unprofessional bloggers did with this year's iPhone 4 leak--we now have our first inside look at what Microsoft is currently thinking about including in Windows 8. These plans, of course, are bound to change and much is still up in the air. But for those tech enthusiasts who have been simply pining away for information, this is the mother lode, especially given how far ahead of the release we are. Here's what we found out this week. Schedule Actually, this bit wasn't included in the leaked documents: Microsoft currently plans to ship Windows 8 by mid-2012. If you do the math, that means a first beta release by mid-2011--just one year from now--and a public beta by the end of 2011. As with Windows 7, Windows 8 will follow a very regimented and logical schedule. Currently, Microsoft is in the planning stages, where the big picture comes together and broad themes are introduced. These themes will morph into scenarios and then, finally, into individual features. This phase is just about over. In phase two, development, Microsoft will design and build those features. It will refine the SKU (product edition) lineup. And it will begin sharing code with other development groups within Microsoft so that they can build their own integration pieces. This phase will last until Beta, in mid-2011. Finally, in the third phase, readiness, the product is now feature complete. Microsoft prepares Windows 8 to come to market by fixing bugs. Note that, as with Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows 8 and Windows Server "8" are being developed simultaneously. This is the plan going forward for all Windows/Windows Server versions. Product edition differentiation While we're still many months away from understanding what features will be included in each Windows 8 product edition, Microsoft does already have an idea about some of the features it will use to differentiate each version: App Store (yes, like that for the iPhone; possibly called Windows Store), devices, multimedia, help and support, and UI & theming. The Windows 8 user experience will be even "less complex" than that of Windows 7. Microsoft will also allow its PC maker partners to customize Windows 8 in ways that were not previously possible. This includes cobranding on the App Store/Microsoft Store, enhancements to Device Stage, integration in Help & Support and Windows Troubleshooting, and so on. Also, the PC market is changing. By 2013, China will be the number one PC market in the world. Emerging form factors like slates are redefining people's expectations, and low-cost PCs like netbooks will continue to grow. Co-developed products Microsoft has confirmed that Internet Explorer 9 will be part of Windows 8, though it will most likely ship well before Windows 8. Interestingly, Windows Live Wave 5 will also ship concurrently with Windows 8, or at least be developed concurrently. This makes sense when you consider the 18 month development time for each Windows Live wave. The current release, Windows Live Wave 4, will ship sometime in late 2010. That time period plus 18 months is mid-2012, exactly when Microsoft plans to ship Windows 8. (By the way, the leaked documents note that an IE 9 beta is expected in August 2010 and that this release will involve the "first release of full IE functionality." Release Candidate and RTW--release to web--dates are TBD.) PC form factor targets Microsoft expects Windows 8 to target three main PC types, the "Lap PC," the "Workhorse PC," and the "Family Hub PC." These names roughly correspond to PC types we're currently familiar with, of course, and one might imagine that the "Lap PC" category includes netbooks, tablets, and notebook computers. Windows Store (App Store) Microsoft intends to support Windows 8 with an iPhone-like App Store that could be named Windows Store. It will provide consumers with an obvious and trustworthy way to find new Windows 8 applications, with a delightful end user experience. The company feels that improving the Windows app model (see below) is "critical" for success and that having one catalog and one experience is key to making it happen. Application platform Microsoft's recent (Vista+) application development platform technologies haven't exactly taken the world by storm, and as Google is fond of pointing out, most new applications these days are actually web applications, not applications that target traditional desktop OSes like Windows or Mac OS X. With this in mind, Windows 8 will support "tailored web applications" that appear to blend web technologies with native Windows technologies, providing a more seamless experience for users, especially when you consider that discoverability will occur via an App Store, possibly called Windows Store. According to Microsoft, these "tailored experiences" offer instant gratification (super easy discovery and install), take advantage of web services, integrate with social networks (and such social technologies as ratings and collaboration), are extensible, scale according to device type and capabilities, and have flexible licensing, distribution, and monetization options. These monetization options are similar to what's planned for Windows Phone: Try/buy, in-app purchases, subscriptions, ad-supported, and alternate currencies, among others. Best of all, this integration with the web will enable a My Applications scenario where applications and application settings follow users from device to device. The big question is how this will all come together. Native Windows APIs are diverse and inconsistent, and languages like C++ and C# are not approachable for hobbyists. Microsoft is investigating HTML 5 and JavaScript as an alternative, providing tiers of programming models that would be accessible to all kinds of developers. Microsoft is also looking at other application-level interactions, including stereoscopic 3D, high color displays, and multi-nodal natural input. Digital media While the leaked documents don't communicate the fates of Microsoft's myriad of digital media players (Windows Media Player, Windows Media Center, and Zune), there is still some very interesting information. Windows 8 will include support for new formats, including AVC HD (with chapter seek), 3D video, and multiple MPEG-4 formats for the web, and will improve MJPEG (webcams and still cameras), MPEG-2 (decoding/encoding), H.264 (encoding), and WMV. Additionally, Microsoft will expand the Windows 8 Play To experiences to include HTML 5-based audio and video in web pages. Backup Windows 7 built off of the solid backup and restore foundation from Windows Vista but made some more logical differentiations between the various SKUs, or product editions. With Windows 8, Microsoft hopes to further improve backup and continue differentiating between the low-end and premium SKUs. Windows 8 will utilize new location capabilities (see below) to determine how/if Windows Backup can function, and will be more automatic, requiring less user intervention. Startup time and power management While Windows 7 included dramatic improvements to resume time (from sleep) and power management in general, Windows 8 will provide fast, nearly instantaneous resumes from various states and should resemble appliance performance. A lot of this work is simply an extension of what happened in Windows 7 and thus doesn't bear much discussion, but it's important to note, I think, that the sudden emphasis on iPad-like slate PCs will require Windows 8 to function more like a device than like a PC when it comes to wakeup times. One thing Microsoft is considering is renaming the power off states; perhaps by eliminating or renaming "Shut down" they can convince users to utilize built-in power management efficiencies. Restore, reset and recovery While most PC makers offer some form of PC recovery functionality that is based on lower-level Microsoft tools and technologies, Windows itself doesn't currently offer any integrated functionality along these lines. That may change in Windows 8, where Microsoft is planning to provide a number of features that will help users overcome performance issues both real and imagined. These include a way for users to restore the system to a recommended state with calling for help and a "push button" ("factory") reset option that would (finally) protect users' personal data, settings, and other customizations. After such a reset, the user could launch the Windows Store to reinstall applications. New device types Windows 8 will natively support next generation devices based on the USB 3.0 standard. It will also support Bluetooth 3.0 (but not Bluetooth 3.0 + High Speed) for hands free adapters and mono and stereo headsets. Interestingly, Microsoft is considering deprecating Firewire/IEEE1394 support in Windows 8, meaning that support would continue but that improvements and enhancements would cease. Locations and sensors While Windows 7 was the first Windows version to provide a sensors platform, including support for all-important location capabilities, Windows 8 will improve on these technologies dramatically. The biggest piece of this is an "in-box" location service, codenamed Orion, which uses Wi-Fi triangulation with accuracy down to 50 to 100 meters, or IP lookup with accuracy down to 25 kilometers. (It supports dedicated GPS hardware as well, of course. This provides accuracy to 3 to 20 meters.) Windows 8 will also include support for other sensor types, including human presence sensors (read: Kinect) with facial recognition and attention detection functionality, ambient lighting, system orientatin, accelerometer, infrared, and so on. The sensor support in Windows 8 may seem uninteresting, but it enables some fascinating possibilities. In the leaked Microsoft documentation, the software giant explains how a sensor-enabled Windows 8 PC could detect which user just walked in the room, turn on the PC, and log him in, all automatically. When he gets up and leaves, the PC logs off. Likewise, on portable PCs, you could be playing a game and then stand up and leave; when you do so, the game will pause and, over time, log off. Microsoft expects sensors to be a common feature of most Windows PCs by 2012. Just in time for Windows 8. Final thoughts There's a bit more, but that's the big picture stuff and probably the most interesting bits. Certainly, we didn't receive a gift like this so early in the Windows 7 development timeline, so this is quite interesting indeed. I can't wait to find out more.
-
Ναι, αυτόν.
-
Plug in θα είναι όπως είναι τώρα το Flash Lite. Θα μπορείς να μπαίνεις από τον S60 browser και θα βλέπεις τα πάντα.
-
Η συσκευή αυτή καθε αυτή τίποτα απολύτως. Απ' ότι βλέπω μόνο τα περιεχόμενα στης συσκευασίας αλλάζουν. Συγκεκριμένα αναφέρει πως περιέχει και φορτιστή αυτοκινήτου του.
-
Να θυμίσω κάτι... Παρακαλείστε να μην προχωρείτε δημόσια σε αιτήματα για την ανάρτηση παράνομου περιεχομένου, ούτε όμως και να διακινείτε τέτοιους συνδέσμους μέσα από τα forums του myphone.gr. Οι ήδη δημοσιευμένοι σύνδεσμοι έχουν αφαιρεθεί, ενώ στο μέλλον θα διαγράφονται χωρίς άλλη προειδοποίηση. Επίσης, αιτήσεις μέσω προσωπικών μηνυμάτων (personal message) προς στους moderators του forum για παροχή link δεν γίνονται δεκτά σε καμία περίπτωση.
-
[Επίσημο] Αξεσουάρ (memory cards, hands free & άλλα)
Itchrist86 replied to Itchrist86's topic in S60 5th Edition
Όλα έτσι είναι πάνω-κάτω. Αφήνουν τους αισθητήρες ακάλυπτους γιατί αλλιώς υπάρχει πρόβλημα. -
[Επίσημο] Nokia 5800 XpressMusic - Part 2
Itchrist86 replied to gianpithio's topic in S60 5th Edition
1) Καλό θα ήταν να τοποθετήσεις ένα screen protector. Προτάσεις υπάρχουν στο θέμα των αξεσουάρ όπου γίνεται και η αντίστοιχη συζήτηση. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Όχι. Τρέχει και σε περιβάλλον Windows κανονικά εφόσον είναι Java App. Απλά για να τρέξει χρειάζεται να είναι εγκατεστημένο και το Java Runtime Environment. -
Από τα Θέματα. Υπάρχει επιλογή Εικόνα κλήσης.
-
[Επίσημο] Nokia 5800 XpressMusic - Part 2
Itchrist86 replied to gianpithio's topic in S60 5th Edition
Είναι απόλυτα λογικό να αργεί να κλειδώσει δορυφόρους χωρίς τη βοήθεια του A-GPS. Άστο για κανά 10λεπτο-15λεπτο σε σημείο που να βλέπει ουρανό. Δε μπορεί, θα τα καταφέρει να κλειδώσει. ΥΓ: Τελικά διέγραψες όλα τα σημεία πρόσβασης της Vodafone? Αν ναι, τοτε το A-GPS δεν έχει που να συνδεθεί. -
[Επίσημο] Nokia 5800 XpressMusic - Part 2
Itchrist86 replied to gianpithio's topic in S60 5th Edition
Δοκιμάστε αυτό. -
Ολόγραμμα στο iPhone:p [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bspdGeAvRng]YouTube- HoloToy hologram for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch - update #5 CatBot Jump Alot[/ame]
-
Ίσως να βγει, αλλά δεν μπορούμε να γνωρίζουμε σίγουρα. Οι χάρτες πάντως είναι διαθέσιμοι από εδώ.
-
[Επίσημο] Nokia 5800 XpressMusic - Part 2
Itchrist86 replied to gianpithio's topic in S60 5th Edition
Δεν θα έχεις το A-GPS με αποτέλεσμα να μην κλειδώνει τους δορυφόρους γρήγορα. Μέσω της εφαρμογής Οδηγός ρυθμίσεων μπορείς να δημιουργήσεις εκ νέου τα σημεία πρόσβασης. Χρησιμοποιεί τη μέθοδο τριγωνισμού των κεραιών κινητής τηλεφωνίας για τον κατά προσέγγιση εντοπισμό της συσκευής. Δεν χρησιμοποιεί κάποιο σημείο πρόσβασης. -
Το N86 πλέον χακάρεται μόνο μέσω της διαδικασίας φλασαρίσματος. Αφού περάσεις τη τροποποιημένη έκδοση λογισμικού δεν υπάρχει λόγος να εγκαταστήσεις το HelloOX ούτε το Drakarious.