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Sunday, February 28, 2010
Nokia Image Exchange 1.0 beta
Nokia Image Exchange is a free mobile image gallery app for nokia s60v3 or s60v5 to make browsing and sharing photos fun and easy. Image Exchange explores user experience when the mobile phone is enabled with an always-on data connection and utilizes existing contact information as a basis for social networking.
download Nokia Image Exchange 1.0 beta for S60v3 such as N95, N85, N82, N81, E71, N76, N78..etc
download Nokia Image Exchange 1.0 beta for S60v5 such as N97 Mini, 5530, 5800 XpressMusic dan X6
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Eyes-Free: TalkBack And Shell Improvements
Here is a brief summary of updates to Android's eyes-free tools--- including TalkBack, and the Eyes-Free Shell from the last two weeks.
TalkBack
- Speech during a phone call is now re-enabled.
- Turning the screen on/off is spoken. This announcement includes the ringer mode/volume.
- Changes in the the ringer mode - silent, vibrate, and normal are now announced.
- Unlocking the phone is announced.
- Other Android applications can programmatically discover if TalkBack is enabled.
Eyes-Free Shell
Now that applications can programmatically discover whetherTalkBack has been enabled, configuring Eyes-Free shell to become your default home screen has become a lot easier. In a nutshell,if you are a TalkBack user and install Eyes-Free shell, hitting the Home
button will bring up the eyes-free shell, ---no configuration needed. Note that you can always get to the default Android home screen by long-pressing the Back
button.
Share And Enjoy
Eyes-Free: TalkBack And Shell Improvements
Here is a brief summary of updates to Android's eyes-free tools--- including TalkBack, and the Eyes-Free Shell from the last two weeks.
TalkBack
- Speech during a phone call is now re-enabled.
- Turning the screen on/off is spoken. This announcement includes the ringer mode/volume.
- Changes in the the ringer mode - silent, vibrate, and normal are now announced.
- Unlocking the phone is announced.
- Other Android applications can programmatically discover if TalkBack is enabled.
Eyes-Free Shell
Now that applications can programmatically discover whetherTalkBack has been enabled, configuring Eyes-Free shell to become your default home screen has become a lot easier. In a nutshell,if you are a TalkBack user and install Eyes-Free shell, hitting the Home
button will bring up the eyes-free shell, ---no configuration needed. Note that you can always get to the default Android home screen by long-pressing the Back
button.
Share And Enjoy
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Touch Piano for S60v5
Touch Piano is a free symbian touch apps such as nokia N97, Nokia 5800, Nokia 5230, X6 which will turn your cellphone into a musical instrument.
Touch Piano for S60v5
Monday, February 15, 2010
Qik 1.0.50 - Share Live Video for Symbian 3rd/5th Edition
Qik is a free symbian app that lets you stream video live directly from your symbian device to the web, where your audience can chat back in real time to your device's screen while you broadcast.
This application enables you to sign-up/sign-in using Facebook Connect and share your videos directly to your contacts on the phone with a cool, new Speed Sharing Ribbon.
Qik 1.0.50 - Share Live Video for Symbian 3rd/5th Edition
Friday, February 12, 2010
Eyes-Free Updates: Marvin And TalkBack Simplified
We routinely push updates to our access tools on Android; usersget these updates automatically via Android Market updates. Wejust pushed out updated versions of TalkBack, our Open Sourcescreenreader for Android, and Marvin, the Eyes-Free shell. Hereis a brief summary of these updates:
- Android applications can now programmatically discover ifTalkBack is running, thanks to the latest changes inTalkBack. From an end-user perspective, this means that you nolonger need to configure Eyes-Free shell via EyesFreeConfig tobe the default home. If you run TalkBack, and have EyesFreeShell installed, then pressing Home automatically givesyou the EyesFree Shell.Remember, you can always get to the default Android Home bylong-pressing Back.
- EyesFree Shell now includes a touch-based shortcutsmanager. Until now, shortcuts needed to be explicitly configuredby editting an XML file on the SDCard. With the recent EyesFreeupdate, you can interactively define short-cuts via a touch-basedShortCuts manager. By default, we have assigned shortcut1 to the ShortCuts manager; so to invoke this newfeature, do:
- Stroke left (4 using stroke dialer notation) toenter the shortcuts screen.
- Stroke up and to the left (1 using stroke-dialernotation) to invoke application ShortCuts Manager.
- Use the trackball/D-Pad to configure each of the 8 availableshortcuts.
Marvin: We hope this gives some minimal relief to the painin all the diodes on your left side.
Eyes-Free Updates: Marvin And TalkBack Simplified
We routinely push updates to our access tools on Android; usersget these updates automatically via Android Market updates. Wejust pushed out updated versions of TalkBack, our Open Sourcescreenreader for Android, and Marvin, the Eyes-Free shell. Hereis a brief summary of these updates:
- Android applications can now programmatically discover ifTalkBack is running, thanks to the latest changes inTalkBack. From an end-user perspective, this means that you nolonger need to configure Eyes-Free shell via EyesFreeConfig tobe the default home. If you run TalkBack, and have EyesFreeShell installed, then pressing Home automatically givesyou the EyesFree Shell.Remember, you can always get to the default Android Home bylong-pressing Back.
- EyesFree Shell now includes a touch-based shortcutsmanager. Until now, shortcuts needed to be explicitly configuredby editting an XML file on the SDCard. With the recent EyesFreeupdate, you can interactively define short-cuts via a touch-basedShortCuts manager. By default, we have assigned shortcut1 to the ShortCuts manager; so to invoke this newfeature, do:
- Stroke left (4 using stroke dialer notation) toenter the shortcuts screen.
- Stroke up and to the left (1 using stroke-dialernotation) to invoke application ShortCuts Manager.
- Use the trackball/D-Pad to configure each of the 8 availableshortcuts.
Marvin: We hope this gives some minimal relief to the painin all the diodes on your left side.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Silencing Speech With A Wave Of Your Hand On Android 2.0
Update To Android Access: TalkBack
Smart phones tend to be short on physical buttons --- evendevices like the G1 or MotoRola Droid have very few buttons when thephysical keyboard is not open. This provides interestingchallenges when designing an efficient eyes-free interface ---especially given the old maxim Speech is silvern, but silenceis golden!.Said differently, once you have built a systemthat talks back, the first thing you want to build is anefficient means of silencing spoken feedback.
Early versions of TalkBack on Android skimmed by without astop speech button --- you basically moved from one activity toanother,and the speech produced by the new activity effectivelystopped ongoing spoken output. However, as we make more and moreapplications work seamlessly with our Access APIs, it's alwaysbeen clear to us that we need a global stop speechgesture! Notice that I said gesture --- notkey --- stopping speech is a critical function that we'dlike to enable without having to pull out the physical keyboard,and something we'd like to have devices without a physicalkeyboard.
In the spirit of the dual to every access challenge is an opportunity toinnovate, we recently launched a new experimental TalkBackfeature on devices running Android 2.0. Devices on the Android2.0 platform have a proximity sensor on the top frontleft corner of the phone --- this is typically used to lock thescreen when you're holding the phone up to your ear when on aphone call. As the name implies, the proximitysensorfires when you get close to it --- you can activate itby waving your hand close to the top left corner of the phone. Asan experimental feature, we have configured the latest version ofTalkBack to silence ongoing speech if you wave your hand infront of the proximity sensor.
Note that this is a new, experimental feature --- it'ssomething that we welcome feedback on our public Eyes-Free GoogleGroup. We'd like to know if you accidentally activatestop speechbecause of this new feature. In having usedit for a few weeks, I find that I am not triggering itaccidentally --- but that might well be a function of how I holdthe phone.
What Devices Does This Available On?
Note that at the time of writing, the devices that have aproximity sensor that I have used this on include:
- MotoRola Droid from Verizon
- Google NexusOne
Note that the G1 and other older Android devices did not havea proximity sensor.
Silencing Speech With A Wave Of Your Hand On Android 2.0
Update To Android Access: TalkBack
Smart phones tend to be short on physical buttons --- evendevices like the G1 or MotoRola Droid have very few buttons when thephysical keyboard is not open. This provides interestingchallenges when designing an efficient eyes-free interface ---especially given the old maxim Speech is silvern, but silenceis golden!.Said differently, once you have built a systemthat talks back, the first thing you want to build is anefficient means of silencing spoken feedback.
Early versions of TalkBack on Android skimmed by without astop speech button --- you basically moved from one activity toanother,and the speech produced by the new activity effectivelystopped ongoing spoken output. However, as we make more and moreapplications work seamlessly with our Access APIs, it's alwaysbeen clear to us that we need a global stop speechgesture! Notice that I said gesture --- notkey --- stopping speech is a critical function that we'dlike to enable without having to pull out the physical keyboard,and something we'd like to have devices without a physicalkeyboard.
In the spirit of the dual to every access challenge is an opportunity toinnovate, we recently launched a new experimental TalkBackfeature on devices running Android 2.0. Devices on the Android2.0 platform have a proximity sensor on the top frontleft corner of the phone --- this is typically used to lock thescreen when you're holding the phone up to your ear when on aphone call. As the name implies, the proximitysensorfires when you get close to it --- you can activate itby waving your hand close to the top left corner of the phone. Asan experimental feature, we have configured the latest version ofTalkBack to silence ongoing speech if you wave your hand infront of the proximity sensor.
Note that this is a new, experimental feature --- it'ssomething that we welcome feedback on our public Eyes-Free GoogleGroup. We'd like to know if you accidentally activatestop speechbecause of this new feature. In having usedit for a few weeks, I find that I am not triggering itaccidentally --- but that might well be a function of how I holdthe phone.
What Devices Does This Available On?
Note that at the time of writing, the devices that have aproximity sensor that I have used this on include:
- MotoRola Droid from Verizon
- Google NexusOne
Note that the G1 and other older Android devices did not havea proximity sensor.