Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Friday, 9 September 2011

News : Download Windows Phone 7.5 Mango ROM For HTC HD7 And Other Handsets

Two couple of months ago, Microsoft announced that the next version of Windows Phone, codenamed ‘Mango’, had been finalized, yet no devices running earlier versions of the system have officially obtained ‘Mango’. Thankfully, official HTC ROMs have been leaked and made their way onto the Internet, enabling users of the HTC HD7 to run ‘Mango’ right now, one day after a similar ROM file was leaked for the HTC 7 Mozart.

Last month, an unmodified ROM of the final version of ‘Mango’ found its way onto the Internet. Yet, the unmodified version contains none of the software HTC loads onto its devices, namely HTC Hub, a dashboard that houses several mini-applications such as weather and stocks widgets, and even a small notepad.
If you don’t want to lose these tools, you might be much happier with the customized ROMs that have leaked out today, for the HTC HD7 but also for a wide range of other HTC devices that came with Windows Phone 7 preinstalled, namely the Gold (Pro), Mozart, Spark (Trophy), and Schubert (HD7). The only one missing appears to be the Mondrian (Surround). Each of these ROMs, slightly different for each device, contain the final version of ‘Mango’, build 7720.68 along with all the HTC customizations, which you’d expect out of the box.
Before loading a custom ROM on any of these devices, make sure you have first removed HSPL, as we have described on this guide. Attempting to flash the firmware of any device without removing HSPL first could permanently brick it, forever voiding its warranty. Before proceeding, make sure you know the exact risks and take the right precautions: be sure you run the HSPL remover utility. You’re also advised to have some experience using Windows Phone devices and have a basic understanding of its inner workings. If you don’t consider yourself a power user, you should instead wait until ‘Mango’ is officially pushed to your device by HTC, which should happen fairly soon.
Windows Phone 7.5, also known as ‘Mango’, is the newest version of Microsoft’s mobile operating system. Building on the efforts of Windows Phone 7, which itself was a complete departure from previous versions of Windows Mobile. Mango includes several long wished-for features, such as multitasking, support for Zune SmartDJ, improved social networking integration features such as the ability to “check in” at places using Facebook places, an improved Camera app and several other smaller improvements. Mango was first demoed at a Microsoft event in April and is expected to progressively roll out to most Windows Phone handsets in the next few months.
Check out this forum thread for download links and additional instructions. But be aware, we will not be held responsible if something goes wrong, therefore proceed with caution and understand the potential risks involved in the whole process.

Tuesday, 30 August 2011

News : ChatON For iPhone, Android And BlackBerry Is Samsung’s Answer To iMessage

For almost as long as we’ve used mobile phones, we’ve been able to send and receive text messages, and later audio and video, through the cell network. Yet, as data packages become increasingly more common for mobile devices, sending those messages over the Internet sounds more conceivable than ever before. Samsung is the new player in this space with its ChatON messaging service.
Other companies have developed this type of service in the past; typically, they all allow text, video and picture messaging between compatible devices. RIM offers BlackBerry Messenger and iOS 5 by Apple will include iMessage, both with similar feature sets but different interfaces. Yet, they don’t support any device made by others, making it impossible for Blackberry Messenger users to communicate with Android or iPhone users, for example.
Samsung’s ChatON, on the other hand, will work with every major smartphone platform available, including iOS, Android, Blackberry OS as well as Samsung’s very own homebrew OS known as Bada. Indeed, ChatON will allow users to message each other no matter which platform they’re running, just as long as they have the client installed.
As you can tell from the demo video above, Samsung is being rather serious about ChatON and has indeed packed it with features. The most basic feature is one-to-one text chat, which behaves similarly to other chat clients on both traditional and mobile platforms. Group conversations are also easy to set up, making it easy to chat with many at once, much like what’s possible with other chat clients as well.
More than just text, users will also be able to share multimedia through a feature known as Trunk. For each conversation there’s a Trunk, which organizes all the multimedia sent throughout said conversation. It will even be possible to add comments to existing media, making interaction that much simpler. In addition to Trunk, ChatON will allow simple video animations to be created right from the device using hand drawings, text, backgrounds, images as well as a background music which is also available at the user’s disposal. This feature, which has no comparable equivalent on other clients, is known as AMS, which stands for Animation Message Service.
ChatON will be available in September in as many as 120 countries, according to Samsung itself. While not particularly innovative, this tool might help needing users cut down their SMS fees, but keep in mind that data charges apply.
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