Showing posts with label Windows Phones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Windows Phones. Show all posts

Nokia Lumia 925 Officially Announced, Details Here !




Recently, we learned Nokia would be going all-out aluminum with the casing of its latest flagship, and judging by the press images, this is easily the most aesthetically pleasing device Nokia has managed to churn out thus far. Offering the same kinds of materials that give the iPhone 5 and HTC One their beauty was never going to be a bad move, and it has to also be noted that the Lumia 925 is also a great deal slimmer than the rather chunky Lumia 920.

Thanks in part to the limitations of Windows Phone, Nokia is quite some distance behind the major Android and iOS vendors in terms of market share and reach, and in an attempt to bridge some of the gaping gap between its fleet of smartphones and those of the Big Two, the Finnish company has today announced the Lumia 925 - which was teased yesterday in a rather mesmerizing video - at its planned London event. All of the details, as ever, are coming up right after the break!



Following the launch of the Lumia 820 and 920 late last year, Nokia went on to lose a five percent market share in the first quarter of this year according to numbers firm Gartner, but if this device is anything to go by, Nokia is certainly not ready to give up hope just yet.

First and foremost it, of course, runs on Windows Phone 8, and with the “brightest” display Nokia has produced spanning a 4.5-inch diameter, with a screen resolution of 1280 x 768, there’s plenty of real estate there for you to sink your fingertips into. That’s 334 ppi! And oh, it’s AMOLED, in case you’re wondering.

The aluminum chassis is easily the marquee feature here though, and with the device measuring in with an 8.5mm depth and weighing a svelte 139g, it should feel really nice to hold.



Of the camera, it will be another 8.7-megapixel affair, and as you’d expect, it’s of the PureView variety, and although one might presume Nokia to have simply recycled the 920′s (very, very good) camera, the company claims that this new device offers the smartphone world’s most advanced lens technology. With features like Smartcam, which takes up to 10 images in quick succession, it will automatically source the best shot. The lens comes from Carl Zeiss, as you’d expect and is accompanied with a dual LED flash, hence you can rest assured that your images will look bright and stunning even at night. With the capability to shoot 1080p videos at 30 frames per second, it’s safe to bet on the fact that the Lumia 925 is more of a camera phone than a smartphone, if you can’t manage to look past the camera features, that is.

As was the case with the Lumia 920, there’s also wireless charging thrown into the bag, and with a tidy Snapdragon S4 1.5GHz dual-core processor, 1GB of RAM and 16GB of internal storage, it easily slots in among the high-end smartphones in the market. And yes, it has wireless charging as well.

The Lumia 925 will hit the shelves in UK during the first week of June, and will slowly make its way to other markets including Germany, Italy, Spain, China and of course, the US.

Priced at just 469 Euros, it doesn’t really come cheap, but if you look at it’s photography and video prowess, then it might just be a bang on the buck!

Let's check the video here:


Nice Weather Flow updates for Windows 8 and Windows Phone apps




Day by day Windows Phone is perfect by the time going. It is more coming in nice features we need. We love it when apps get updated, especially when it’s one of our favorite apps. One of which is the Weather Flow. It has been on our favorite apps list for quite a while because it is well designed, and the developers keep it updated. Today they have sent out updates for both their Windows and Windows Phone apps.

The phone update will be important mainly to Windows Phone 7.8 users. They now get the double-wide tile, complete with rich or metro themes. The tiles can also now show minimal data or full weather forecasts for the week. Now 7.8 users will have most of the features that WP8 users have.


The Windows update gets some love for the live tiles too. They now have the same rich and metro theme options of the phone app. It also adopts the same detail options as the phone app. Lastly, both apps now support 10 languages. If you use either of these apps you will definitely want this update, and if you’re looking for good weather apps give Weather Flow a try.

Windows 8/RT

Windows Phone

Download Instagram for Windows Phone (3rd Party) Called Instagraph




As we can see for now, WP is still lack of apps available on market. But still this OS need more development. One for sure is there is no Instagram for WP as for the moment. But there has been a lot of talk about Instagram for Windows Phone around these parts lately. There have been a lot of official apps arriving on the platform, like Pandora, and it has been making people more anxious for Instagram. Last night WPCentral posted a little teaser saying “Anything is possible” with a photo clearly taken on a Windows Phone and uploaded to an Instagram account. Today we have more information on that app, and a video walkthrough (must be watched on YouTube).

The app is called Instagraph, and it appears to be an officially certified app that can upload photos to Instagram. It doesn’t use the standard Instagram filters. Instead it uses the open source Aviary photo filters. Aviary provides quite a few more options than Instagram users have. After adding filters and applying effects you can then upload the image to Instagram. It might not be the official app that many people want, but this is probably the closest we are going to get. We will let you know as soon as it arrives!

UPDATE: We have learned more about Instagraph. It is not an officially certified app by Instagram. Apparently the developers have found a way to upload images to Instagram without an official API. The interesting part is it doesn’t appear that they have reverse engineered the API, like 3rd-party Pandora apps. This means Instagram can’t suddenly change something and kill the app. We will keep following this interesting app.


via Winsource

How to Make Battery on Windows Phone Last Longer




Some people my have a windows phone and use it on daily activities, such as surfing internet, music, or taking picture. We may wondering how to make our battery last longer so we do not need to charge it every half day. Here are some more tips to help make your battery last.

Reduce the time before the screen turns off
Set a shorter Screen time-out duration and set your phone to lock. This helps save battery power and also prevents your phone from turning on by accident when you put it away.

Lower the brightness setting
On Start, flick left to the App list and tap Settings . Tap Brightness, turn off Automatically adjust, and then select the Level that you want to use instead.

Use a dark background theme
On Start, flick left to the App list and tap Settings . Tap Theme, tap Background, and then tap Dark.

Sync music and pictures at your computer
When you're at your computer, connect your phone and sync your favorite music and pictures to it using the Zune software. To learn more, see Sync music, pictures, and videos . You can then enjoy your favorite pictures and songs on your phone, even if you're in an area with poor reception.

Of course there's a lot of music out there that might not be in your collection, and streaming lets you enjoy new stuff while you're on the go. But if your battery is running low or you can't be around a computer or an outlet, avoid long periods of streaming music because it uses more power. If you listen to your playlists with the screen turned off, make sure that the current playlist doesn't include streaming items. And if you're not a Zune Music Pass subscriber, you can turn off Connect with Zune in the Music + videos settings.

Turn off connections you're not using
When Bluetooth is turned on, your phone checks continuously for available accessories. So if you're not using a Bluetooth accessory, you can turn Bluetooth off. For more info, see Pair my phone with a Bluetooth accessory.

Also, if you listen to music or talk on the phone for hours, try using headphones instead of a Bluetooth device. And if you are using a Bluetooth accessory or the speaker in a call, press the Power  button to turn the screen off. To learn more, see Make and receive phone calls.

Not using games now? Then you can turn off the Connect to Xbox LIVE setting in the Games settings.

Sync email and contacts selectively
To make your battery last a little longer, try one or more of these sync-related tips:
  • Change the sync settings for your email accounts to a longer interval, especially for secondary accounts that you don't need to check as often. You can change the sync setting on a per-account basis. (On Start, flick left to the App list, tap Settings , and then tap Email & accounts. Tap the account that you want to change the sync settings for, tap Download new content, choose a longer interval, and then tap Done .)
  • If you don't use any Windows Live services and don't have an email account hosted by Microsoft, such as a Hotmail account, go into the Windows Live account settings and change the default sync setting to Manually.
  • Choose which contacts are synced to your phone. If your email account doesn't include any contacts that you want to keep on your phone, you can choose to not have them synced to your phone. You can also keep your Facebook contacts separate from your other contacts too, which should help reduce the total number of contacts synced to your phone. For more info, see Social networking on my phone FAQ.
  • Be mindful that each time you visit What's New for People and Pictures, your phone uses extra power to sync and update.

Picture-taking tips
When you're done taking a picture, press the Back  button to exit the camera viewfinder. (You can also press the Power  button to put your phone to sleep.) When the viewfinder is active, the screen stays on longer.

Also, when it's time to upload pictures, upload only the ones you want to keep and skip those not-so-great ones. This saves power—and saves you time later when you want to sort your pics at your computer.

Warning
Do not remove or replace the battery when the phone is turned on. If you have a spare battery, turn off your phone, and then replace the battery in your phone with the spare. This helps ensure that your data is saved properly. To turn off your phone, press and hold the Power button for three seconds until the goodbye message appears and the screen goes dark.

How to Update Windows Phone Software Via PC (Mac and Windows)




On this article i will show you how to update your windows phone software via PC. This tutorial is also available for the Mac users and Winsows Users. Usually when there is an update available, a notification will appear on the phone. So here is the steps for Updating the Software on Windows Phone.

Notes
  • If you use a Mac, you'll need to use the Windows Phone app for Mac (formerly the Windows Phone Connector for Mac). To learn more, see Sync and get updates with my Mac.
  • Windows 8 Pro supports the Zune software, but Windows RT does not.


How to prepare for an update

  1. Install the Zune software on your PC. You'll need this software to download the phone update.
  2. If your battery level is low, give your phone a quick charge before starting the update. For more info, see My battery is too low to update my phone.
  3. Make some room on your phone for the update. If necessary, remove a few unwanted apps or other large items.
  4. To see how much free space you have on your phone, on Start, flick left to the App list, tap Settings  > About, and look at the number to the right of Available storage. For more info, see Make room on my phone to update it.
  5. Free up space on your computer.
  6. We'll need some room to download the software update, to save a backup of your existing phone software and settings, and possibly to sync media files from your phone to your computer. For more info, see Make room on my computer for phone updates.
  7. Make sure your computer has a reliable Internet connection.
  8. In some cases, you might need to switch from a wireless (Wi-Fi) connection to a wired (Ethernet) connection. Or you might need to adjust your computer's firewall or proxy settings. For more info, see the Network connection problems in Windows tutorial.
  9. Verify that your phone is set to the correct date and time. That'll help us determine which updates you need. For more info, see Correct my date and time to update my phone.


How to install an update

  • When an update is available, we'll notify you on your phone. After you see the notification, pick a convenient time to install the update on your phone. The process can take up to an hour.
  • If you miss the notification or don't have time to install the update, we'll remind you again in a few days.
  • Connect your phone to your primary computer—the first one you connected your phone to—using the USB cable that came with your phone.
  • If you're using a different computer than you normally use, please see some important information in the Notes below.
  • If the Zune software doesn't start automatically when you connect your phone, start it manually.
  • We might ask you to update the Zune software. If we do, just follow the on-screen instructions. Then restart the sync software.
  • In the Zune software, click Update Now.
  • Make sure you keep your phone connected to your computer until you see a notification that the update is complete.


Notes
  • When you connect your phone to a PC for the first time, the Zune software will automatically create a primary sync relationship between your phone and that computer. Other computers you connect to after that will have a guest sync relationship with your phone. Your primary computer remembers your linked phone and all of its settings and history, so it's the only computer that will create a backup of your phone during the update process. That's why we recommend that you only use your primary computer to update your phone software. If you need to use a different computer, see Syncing your phone to another computer.
  • To check if an update is available for your phone, on Start, flick left to the App list, tap Settings , and then tap Phone update.
  • By default, your phone uses your cellular data connection to check for updates and notifies you when an update is found. To change the type of connection for future updates, do this: on Start, flick left to the App list, tap Settings , and then tap Phone update.
  • Although we notify you "over the air" (via your phone's data connection) when an update is available to download, we don't deliver the actual software update over the air. You must connect your phone to your computer to download and install available updates.
  • When you install an update, all of your settings, apps, and media files are preserved.

How to See Windows Phone Version Installed on your Phone



Some of us my be a beginner of Windows Phone, or they just curious to use such a new Operating System on the mobile phone. So for those who want to know which kind of WP OS version on the phone here is the steps.

To see which Windows Phone operating system (OS) version is installed on your phone, do the following:


  1. On Start, flick left to the App list.

  2. Tap Settings  > About > More info.


The Software section indicates the general product name we use to describe the release (for example, "Windows Phone 7.5"). The OS version section indicates the specific build number of the release (for example, "7.10.8773.98").

Nokia Lumia 610 Reviews and Full Specification

Overview:
Nokia Lumia 610 might be one of the cheap Nokia mobile phones as has been promised by Nokia to release the cheap mobile phone on this year. To get priced at around  of €189, Nokia Lumia 610 brings the operating system of Microsoft windows Phone 7.5 Mango designed in full touchscreen on 3.7 Inches.

Nokia Lumia 610 Reviews and Full Specification

Another features brought by Lumia 610 are 800 MHz processor equipped with 256 MB RAM which the internal memory cann't expended only on 8 GB storage. The main camera of this windows phone is 5 MP featured with geo-tagging, face detection, and many others. The new difference with the previous Lumia phones is the SNS integration which only can be found on this windows phone.

However, Lumia 610 brings such a new featured will also compete with the android phones in which currently have being more interested by people around the world especially their amazing operating system of Ice Cream Sandwich OS. Even windows phones currently stiil below android phones but it will be still same leve at the same time because both OS has its own privileges. Let's take a look inside the phone below:

Features
  • 2G Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
  • 3G Network HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100
  • Dimensions 119 x 62 x 12 mm, 77.6 cc
  • Weight 131.5 g, TFT capacitive touchscreen, 56K colors
  • Size 480 x 800 pixels, 3.7 inches (~252 ppi pixel density)
  • Multitouch, Corning Gorilla Glass, 3.5mm jack
  • OS Microsoft Windows Phone 7.5 Mango with CPU 800 MHz
  • Internal 8 GB storage, 256 MB RAM
  • GPRS Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
  • EDGE Class 10, 236.8 kbps
  • Speed HSDPA, 7.2 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps
  • Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n
  • Bluetooth v2.1 with A2DP, EDR, MicroUSB v2.0
  • 5 MP, 2592Ñ…1944 pixels, autofocus, LED flash, Video 720p@30fps
  • Features Geo-tagging, face detection
  • Sensors Accelerometer, compass
  • SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email, IM
  • Browser HTML5
  • Radio Stereo FM radio with RDS
  • A-GPS support
  • Colors White, Cyan, Magenta, Black
  • MicroSIM card support only
  • SNS integration
  • Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
  • MP3/WAV/eAAC+/WMA player
  • MP4/H.264/H.263/WMV player
  • Document viewer
  • Video/photo editor
  • Voice memo/dial
  • Predictive text input
  • Standard battery, Li-Ion 1300 mAh (BP-3L)
  • Stand-by Up to 670 h (2G) / Up to 720 h (3G)
  • Talk time Up to 10 h 30 min (2G) / Up to 9 h 30 min (3G)
  • Music play Up to 35 h
Main disadvantages:
  • No card slot
  • No secondary camera
  • No java
Gallery:


Video:


Nokia Lumia 900 Price and Review, Music play Up to 60 hours !

Overview:
Introducing the first Nokia Mobile Phone to released with Microsoft Windows Mango 7.5 on the year 2012, Nokia Lumia 900. This phone definitely will hit the market coming with the best features to be compete with other smartphone of Android and symbian, designed in rather a high class om 4.3 Inch touchscreen and featured with Nokia Clearblack display.

Nokia Lumia 900 Price and Review
Nokia Lumia 900 is featured with the Operating system of Microsoft Windows Phone 7.5 Mango, equipped with 1.4 GHz Scorpion, and 512 MB RAM. These specs are enough to run this Windows phone tu run fast with the OS Mango. It is different with the Android Smartphones which needs a lot of spec to run the latest ICS. Unfortunately, this Lumia 900 is not presented with the card slot, but the internal storage of 16GB. 

Other features included on Lumia 900 is not something different, such as the 8 MP main camera and 1.3 secondary camera. The thing attract us is the battery capacity than can play music up to 60 hours. This is absolutely amazing when we are going anywhere and need such huge battrey for music playing.

Features:
  • GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
  • 480 x 800 pixels, 4.3 inches (~217 ppi pixel density)
  • AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
  • Corning Gorilla Glass
  • Nokia ClearBlack display
  • OS Microsoft Windows Phone 7.5 Mango
  • Chipset Qualcomm APQ8055 Snapdragon
  • CPU 1.4 GHz Scorpion
  • GPU Adreno 205
  • Internal 16GB storage, 512 MB RAM
  • GPRS Class 33
  • EDGE Class 33
  • Speed HSDPA, 42 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps
  • Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n
  • Bluetooth v2.1 with A2DP, EDR
  • microUSB v2.0, HS
  • Primary 8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus, dual-LED flash
  • Features Geo-tagging
  • Video 720p@30fps, video stabilization
  • Secondary 1.3 MP, VGA@15fps
  • Browser HTML5
  • Stereo FM radio with RDS
  • GPS with A-GPS support and GLONASS
  • Colors Black, cyan, white
  • MicroSIM card support only
  • SNS integration
  • Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
  • MP3/WAV/eAAC+/WMA player
  • MP4/H.264/H.263/WMV player
  • Document viewer/editor
  • Video/photo editor
  • Voice memo/command/dial
  • Predictive text input
  • Standard battery, Li-Ion 1830 mAh (BP-6EW)
  • Stand-by Up to 300 h (2G) / Up to 300 h (3G)
  • Talk time Up to 7 h (2G) / Up to 7 h (3G)
  • Music play Up to 60 h
Main disadvantages
  • No card slot
  • No Java
Prices:

Nokia Windows Phone sold on the carrier's network with a price tag of $99.99 with a two-year contract.

Gallery:


Video:


Nokia Plans to Release Cheaper Windows Smartphone

Under some reason of the market competition, Nokia plans to unveil their cheaper Windows Smartphone to release for public after MWC 2012 in Barcelona, Spain. 

The midrange Smartphone to be released is alongside with the new Lumia 610 and the worldwide version of the Lumia 900. Cheaper phones are the key for Nokia and Microsoft in their battle to win a larger share of the market, analysts say.


Nokia is set to unveil the phones at a news conference next Monday, on February 27.

Nokia last year dumped its own smartphone software platforms in favor of Microsoft's Windows Phone, which has so far had a limited impact due to the high prices of phones using it.

Microsoft's share of the smartphone market fell to a mere 2 percent last quarter, compared with 3 percent a year ago and 13 percent four years earlier, according to Strategy Analytics.

Source

Nokia Lumia 800 Specification and Reviews

Is this really the first windows phone of Nokia ?

Nokia finally introduced its new mobile phone The Lumia 800 that uses Windows Phone 7.5, with a few Nokia-centric additions like Nokia Maps, Nokia Music, and Nokia Drive (turn-by-turn navigation). This phone isn't new, exactly. It has previously existed as the Nokia N9, a thoroughly odd outlier of a phone that may be the only phone to ever use the MeeGo operating system.

Nokia Lumia 800
The Nokia Lumia 800 shares its exterior styling with the previously substantially less hyped Nokia N9, a Meego-based smartphone, although the screen size is reduced from 3.9" (854x480 pixels) to 3.7" (800x480 pixels) to conform to the Windows Phone spec list. The CPU, however, increases from the 1GHz ARM Cortex-A8 to the 1.4GHz MSM8255 Snapdragon/Scorpion which certainly helps add snap to the Windows Phone Mango OS. That being said, the Lumia has probably the best, darkest blacks I've ever seen on a phone, which is a very good thing in an optionally black-heavy OS like Windows Phone.

16GB of non-expandable memory is pretty low, especially given how great a media device this is. It's not a dealbreaker, especially if you use a subscription music service like Rdio, Spotify, or, I guess, Zune, but 32GB or more would be preferable. (with no microSD expansion--you're stuck with 16GB).

You can check the video of Nokia Lumia 800 here:


In addition, the camera is also great--not as good as the iPhone 4S, and, oddly, not as good as the older and worse-in-every-other-conceivable-way Nokia N8. But still, definitely one of the better cameras I've used. It uses an f/2.2 lens, and gives more manual control than other Windows Phones to take advantage of it. I was very pleased with the image quality.

The phone is ever so slightly thicker than the iPhone, a millimeter or two at most, so it still feels very sleek in the hand. The Nokia Lumia 800, although being the more expensive of the two Nokia Windows Phone offerings (the other being the budget Nokia Lumia 710) shares the Nokia N9's 16-bit AMOLED ClearBlack display whereas the Nokia Lumia 710 sports a 24-bit ClearBlack TFT.

Based on the two manufacturer's product specs it soon becomes apparent that the Nokia Lumia 800 is intended to compete against the HTC Titan and the Nokia Lumia 710 with the HTC Radar.

Nokia Lumia 800 Price
According to information in the market, Nokia Lumia 710 will be marketed with a very affordable price, at around 270 euros. While the price of Nokia Lumia 800 will be priced at 2x more expensive than the price of the Nokia Lumia 710.

Nokia Lumia 800 Specification

Network
2G Network: GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G Network: HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100

Dimension 
Dimension: 116.5 x 61.2 x 12.1 mm, 76.1 cc
Weight: 142 g

Screen
Type: AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size: 480 x 800 pixels, 3.7 inches (~252 ppi pixel density)
- Nokia ClearBlack display
- Multi-touch input method
- Proximity sensor for auto turn-off
- Accelerometer sensor for UI auto-rotate
- Touch-sensitive controls

Audio
Alert types: Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
Loudspeaker: Yes
3.5mm jack: Yes

Memory
Phonebook: Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall
Call records: Yes
Internal: 16 GB storage, 512 MB RAM
Card slot: No

Data
GPRS: Class 33
EDGE: Class 33
3G: HSDPA 14.4 Mbps, HSUPA 5.76 Mbps
WLAN: Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n
Bluetooth: Yes, v2.1 with A2DP, EDR
Infrared port: No
USB: Yes, microUSB v2.0

Camera
Primary: 8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus, dual-LED flash
Features: Geo-tagging
Video: Yes, 720p@30fps
Secondary: No

Features
OS: Microsoft Windows Phone 7.5 Mango
CPU: 1.4 GHz processor, Qualcomm MSM8255 chipset, 3D Graphics HW Accelerator
Messaging: SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email, IM
Browser: WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML5, RSS feeds
Radio: Stereo FM radio with RDS
Games: Yes + downloadable
Color: Black, Cyan, Magenta
GPS: Yes, with A-GPS support
Java: Yes, MIDP 2.1
- MicroSIM card support only
- SNS integration
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- Digital compass
- MP3/WAV/eAAC+/WMA player
- MP4/H.264/H.263/WMV player
- Document viewer
- Video/photo editor
- Voice memo/command/dial
- Predictive text input
Battery
Standard battery, Li-Ion 1450 mAh (BV-5JW)
- Stand-by: Up to 265 h (2G) / Up to 335 h (3G)
- Talk time: Up to 13 h (2G) / Up to 9 h 30 min (3G)