Archive for the ‘Windows Phone 7’ Category

Converting from Apple iPhone to Nokia Lumia 900

Saturday, August 18th, 2012

Having used the Apple iPhone for many years, I decided to switch over to the Nokia Lumia 900 smartphone to see what the new kid on the block has to offer.

The Nokia Lumia 900 Windows 7.5 smartphone, fresh out of the box.

The Nokia Lumia 900 Windows 7.5 smartphone, fresh out of the box.

I was given a Nokia Lumia 900 smartphone when it arrived in Singapore, so I’ve been using it for a while now, and I’m still with it.

First released in the US during CES 2012 in January this year, and then announced during MWC 2012 in February for markets outside the US, Nokia’s third Lumia smartphone has been available in Singapore since 26 May and retails for S$849.

I find the physical design of the Lumia 900 handsome and masculine. More importantly, the user interface is intuitive and smooth, while web-surfing and mail-checking performance is excellent. Social networking with the People Hub is also convenient and hassle-free.
To sum up, I ended up using my 7” tablet much less often than before.

What I like

Firstly, the design. I know the striking colour is the cyan, but I’m glad I had the black version. It’s a solid slab of masculinity.

If you need turn-by-turn navigation especially when travelling overseas, the Lumia 900 already pays for itself.

If you need turn-by-turn navigation especially when travelling overseas, the Lumia 900 already pays for itself.

At 11.5mm thick, the Lumia 900 is definitely not the most svelte model on the scene. If thin is your thing, go for the HTC One S instead.

I like the solid feel and heft when I hold the Lumia 900 in my palm.

The solid unibody and glass is really robust, despite the rough handling – like throwing the car keys and the Lumia in the same trousers pocket, and dropping it a coupla times – it’s got nary a scratch on body nor screen.

Display is bright and clear, even under strong sunlight.

The blacks are really black. Fonts are so clear that sometimes the red text appear receded below the other-coloured fonts (it’s an optical illusion).

Photos and video appear really vivid on the phone’s screen.

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Norton Mobile Survey 2012: Greater awareness of mobile security needed

Friday, July 13th, 2012

The ownership and use of mobile phones to access the internet and stay connected is fast catching up with the use of computers.

Yet, the awareness of mobile security remains wanting compared to the relative maturity in security awareness for general computer usage.

David Freer, Vice President, Consumer, Asia Pacific and Japan, Symantec

David Freer, Vice President, Consumer, Asia Pacific and Japan, Symantec. Photo taken on a mobile phone.

I was briefed on the results of the Norton Mobile Survey this morning at their offices at Suntec Singapore. A summary of the detailed numbers can be found at the end of this post. Here’s how the survey was conducted.

Ownership and use of mobile phones fast catching up with computers.

Mobile phone Computer
Ownership 91% 92%
Access Internet 88% 69%

This was the same survey which found that “76% of Internet users in Singapore would rather forgo US$1million than give strangers unlimited access to their computers”.

What stood out from the numbers was the disparity between the greater dependence and use of our mobile phones on one hand (see sideboxes), and on the other hand the lagging level of mobile security in their usage.

So we’re doing an awful lot of things on our mobile phones – pretty much the same sort of things we do on our computers – in terms of accessing the Internet and staying connected. (And snapping the cover photo for this article.)

Need for greater awareness of mobile security

Yet almost half of the mobile users in Singapore do not take the simple step of using passwords to protect their phones, even though 61% of Singaporeans acknowledge that mobile threats are real.

What do people actually do on their mobile phones?

Social networking 57%
Read the news 55%
Online messaging 39%
Mobile banking/payments 27%
Location-based tasks, including navigation 25%
Online shopping 19%

In addition, some 30% are not aware that they can remotely track their phone using GPS navigation software.

Is it because we’re still trapped in the age when mobile phones were less capable and we were less dependent on them – and therefore had little to lose if a mobile phone was lost or stolen.

You know, when we had feature phones, the most painful thing about losing the phone was the loss of the contacts on them, and the hassle of having to replace them.

Viruses and malware for feature phones were almost unheard of.

US$1million for complete access to your computer?

US$1million for complete access to your computer?

Now, your smartphone can store a substantial trove of precious PERSONAL photos and videos, work-related documents and apps that access your stockmarket transactions.

The survey found that for the one in three Singaporeans who have had their mobile phone stolen/lost, most of them (78%) mentioned that losing their contact information was the worst part of the experience, with 52% feeling their privacy had been invaded.

To resolve their lost/stolen phone situation, two in three Singaporeans had paid an average of S$424.

The survey found that three in five Singaporeans would rather pay a ransom S$273 to get your phone back.averaging S$273 in order to resolve their lost/stolen phone problem – assuming they were offered the chance.

This is almost double the S$148 “ransom” that half of those surveyed in LAST YEAR’s study were willing to pay.

Dark cloud arising

“Singapore is a very tech savvy nation that is hugely mobile and connected,” said David Freer, Vice President of Norton for Asia Pacific & Japan.

Personally, I believe the concern with lost contact information will diminish rapidly with the convenience of syncing contact and calendar information with cloud-based services, such as iCloud and Google.

These cloud services allow you to reinstate contact lists and calendars in a new smartphone in a matter of minutes.

On the other hand, the tight coupling between the smartphones with cloud services bring with it a much greater problem.

“With greater connectivity to the Internet through mobile devices, cybercriminals are increasingly targeting this platform.

With so much valuable and personal information residing on our mobile devices, mobile users need to have the right security measures in place – both a reliable mobile security solution and personal diligence to back up important information,” added Freer.

By serving as gateways to access huge repositories of information on the cloud, people who lose their mobile phones stand to lose much more than just what’s physically stored on the phone itself.

It’s akin to losing a wallet full of cash viz-a-viz losing a wallet full of cash and a couple of credit cards.

So, if you haven’t enabled remote locking or wiping, anyone losing their phone would also need to change the passwords of all the online services the phone and its apps has been authorised to access.

Emails accounts, Facebook/Twitter accounts, Dropbox are but a few that immediately pop into mind. How many of these can you recall off the top of your head, and in the heat and stress of having realised you’ve just lost your phone?

Norton Mobile Security

Norton Mobile Security for Android devices addresses some of today’s most common mobile issues, including device loss and data protection.

Norton Mobile Survey 2012Norton Mobile Security has anti-theft, anti-malware, locate and remote wipe features.

Norton Mobile Security Lite is available for free in English on the Google Play Store.

For users seeking additional protection, there is the option to upgrade to the full featured Norton Mobile Security for an annual subscription of S$19.90.

Versions for iOS and Windows Phone will be released later this year.

Below is a summary of the main findings of the Norton Mobile Survey 2012.

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Preview of Windows Phone 8

Thursday, June 21st, 2012

Windows Phone 8 will get a Start screen facelift; share technology core with Windows 8; support for NFC, in-app purchases and eWallet; more developer tools; and better security for enterprise use.

But existing Windows Phone 7.5 users will only get the revamped Start screen through an upgrade to Windows Phone 7.8.

Microsoft gave a preview of what Windows Phone 8 will be at the Windows Phone Summit in San Francisco.

Windows Phone 8 will probably arrive end of the year although it’s anybody’s guess when Windows Phone 7.8 will be available.The immediate cosmetic change to the user-interface is the Start screen.

In addition to the current square tiles and rectangular (twice the width of the square tiles) tiles, there is now a third size for tiles.

This is what I call the “mini-square” tile. Each of these is a square tile a quarter the size of the original square tile.

Microsoft gave a preview of what Windows Phone 8 will be at the Windows Phone Summit in San Francisco.Whereas Windows Phone 7.5 does not allow users to specify which tile to use for an app – Windows Phone 8 will let users specify which tile size to use for each app.

Bigger tile for more frequently used apps (or to display more live information), and smaller tiles for less used apps.

The smaller tiles also allows more tiles/apps to be displayed on each screen to minimise scrolling.

The future of Windows Phone: Windows Phone 8Existing Windows Phone 7.5 users will get this revamped Start screen through an upgrade to Windows Phone 7.8 (no date given), but that’s pretty much all they’ll get – they will NOT be able to upgrade to Windows Phone 8 when it becomes available end of the year.

Yes, some who have just bought spanking new Windows 7.5 phones are complaining that they’re now landed with “obsolete” handsets.

Microsoft says that Windows Phone 8 is a generation shift in technology so it will not run on existing hardware.

Read more details about Windows Phone 8 on the official Windows Phone Blog.

Nokia Lumia 900 for Singapore

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

First released in the US during CES 2012 in January this year, and then announced during MWC 2012 in February for markets outside the US, Nokia’s third Lumia smartphone will be in Singapore for S$849 from 26 May 2012.

Nokia Lumia 900, running on Windows Phone 7.5 Mango, will be available in Singapore for S$849.

Nokia Lumia 900, running on Windows Phone 7.5 Mango, will be available in Singapore for S$849.

The Lumia series of smartphones from Nokia leads the Finnish company’s renewed focus on the Windows Phone platform.

Nokia Lumia 900
OS Windows Phone 7.5
Screen 4.3″
Resolution 800 x 480, WVGA
Battery 1,830 mAh
Processor 1.4 GHz Single Core Snapdragon APQ8055 + MDM9200
Camera Rear: 8mp (F2.2)
Front: 1.3mp (f2.4)
Video 720p @ 30 fps
Memory Int: 16 GB
Ext: Nil
Size /mm 127.8 x 68.5 x 11.5
Weight 160 g
Price S$849

The Lumia 900 runs on Microsoft’s latest Windows Phone 7.5 operating system – with its sleek Metro user interface and dynamic live tiles.

Following the launch of the Lumia 800 and Lumia 710 Windows smartphones, the Lumia 900 is bigger, faster and more powerful than its predecessors.

It has a huge 4.3” glass display and 1,800mAH battery.

The handsomely designed smartphone comes in Black, White and Cyan.

The Lumia 900 boasts a powerful 8-megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics, dual-LED flash, autofocus and a wide-angle focal length of 28mm.

At f2.2, its large aperture means images and videos are vivid and sharp even in low light.

The Nokia Lumia 900 also comes with a 1 MP front-facing camera, so you can enjoy high-quality free phone and video calls via Tango – the pre-loaded video-call app.

Nokia Lumia 900

Nokia Lumia 900

For web-surfing there is Internet Explorer 9 browser, Bing search and HTML 5.

As a Windows Phone, an Office Hub app allows viewing and editing of Microsoft Word, Excel, OneNote and PowerPoint documents on the phone.

People Hub collates all your social networking apps in one place – including Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.

And as a Nokia phone, there are Nokia Maps and Nokia Drive apps to help you find your way around; as well as Nokia Music and Mix Radio apps for audio entertainment on the move.

Follow the links below to other articles I’ve posted about Nokia Lumia smartphones on tech4tea.com.

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White delights on Nokia Mix Radio

Saturday, April 21st, 2012

Nokia has created a “white” themed playlist on Mix Radio to celebrating the white Lumia 800 smartphone.

Nokia Lumia 800 Windows Phone smartphone.

Nokia Lumia 800 Windows Phone smartphone.

Yearning for some tunes to go along with the new, sleek, snow-white Nokia Lumia 800?

"White" songs for the white Lumia 800.

"White" songs for the white Lumia 800.

Start white-listing your favourite songs as you go through the interesting selection of tracks in the playlist.

From music by Barry White and the White Stripes, to songs like White As Snow and White Flag, Nokia Lumia owners will be able to access this special playlist on Mix Radio via the Nokia Music app.

They can also expect an exciting multi-cultural mix of Chinese, Malay and Indian tunes such as Ding Dang’s Bai Se, Amuk’s Putih Hitam Biru and Ilaiyaraaja’s Vellai Pura Ondru.

White Bird by Singapore-born singer, Vanessa Mae, is also available on this white playlist.

Mix Radio features a myriad of other colourful tracks as well.

Users can create their own mixes and personalised playlists based on music they love.

Mix Radio app on the Nokia Lumia 800.

Mix Radio app on the Nokia Lumia 800.

Simply choose an artist or a genre of music as a starting point and Mix Radio will dynamically create a playlist.

Mix radio can also be personalized based on your library of music, automatically noting your favourite genres and creating more genre playlists of recommended music.

Users can even pin their favourite playlists to the start screen or download them for listening when they are offline.

BlackBerry OS vs iOS vs Windows Phone vs Android

Monday, April 16th, 2012

Trend Micro has released the results of its study on the four main mobile operating systems in a report titled “Enterprise Readiness of Consumer Mobile Platforms”.

The security firm found the BlackBerry 7 OS the most secure mobile operating system, followed by iOS 5, Windows Phone 7.5, and Android 2.3.

Summary chart from “Enterprise Readiness of Consumer Mobile Platforms” White Paper by Trend Micro.

Summary chart from “Enterprise Readiness of Consumer Mobile Platforms” White Paper by Trend Micro.

Android 2.3 was used in the study because it was the dominant installed/supplied version of Google’s mobile OS at the time of the research.

Below is an excerpt from the White Paper summarising the findings about the four mobile platforms.

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Pit your phone against a Windows Phone for S$100

Friday, March 9th, 2012

Get ready to be smoked by a Windows Phone?!

Today and tomorrow, prove to the Microsoft Windows Phone crew that your smartphone (of any make and OS) is faster than the Windows Phone and walk away S$100 richer.

The video above is from a similar “Smoked by Windows Phone” campaign in the US, showing challengers with Android smartphones and Apple’s iPhones.

Paul Foster and his Windows Phone crew will be hitting the roads in Singapore looking for challengers to the cash prize. Catch them at the following locations and timings.

9 March (Friday)
11.30am – 1.30pm Boat Quay / Raffles Place / Chevron House
2.30pm – 5.00pm IT Show 2012, Level 6, Hall 602, Booth 6441
5.30pm – 7.30pm Raffles City / Marina Square
10 March (Saturday)
11.30am – 1.30pm Raffles City / Marina Square / Suntec City
2.30pm – 5.00pm IT Show 2012, Level 6, Hall 602, Booth 6441
5.30pm – 7.30pm Bugis Junction / National Library / Sim Lim Square

Nokia announces large LTE Lumia 900 for the US

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

Nokia and AT&T announced the Nokia Lumia 900 at the 2012 International Consumer Electronic’s Show (CES) – the first Windows Phone 7 smartphone from Nokia to feature high speed LTE connectivity.

Large screen, large bandwidth and “large” camera – Lumia 900 will be larger than life.

Nokia Lumia 900 unveiled during CES 2012 on 9 January.

Nokia Lumia 900 unveiled during CES 2012 on 9 January.

With Nokia’s largest display, the Nokia Lumia 900 delivers a rich content experience from a phone that still fits easily in your hand.

The Nokia Lumia 900 has a 4.3-inch AMOLED ClearBlack Display, for rich, bright images both indoors and out in the sun.

The Nokia Lumia 900 has a large 4.3-inch AMOLED ClearBlack Display.

The Nokia Lumia 900 has a large 4.3-inch AMOLED ClearBlack Display.

However, resolution is only 800×480 pixels.

Cutting edge 4G LTE technology enables faster connection speeds of up to 50Mbps on AT&T’s 4G LTE network.

The Lumia 900 is powered by a 1.4GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon APQ8055 + MDM9200 processor, with a long- lasting battery with 1830mAH for 7 hrs talk-time and up to 300 hrs on standby.

Nokia’s third Lumia smartphone (after the Lumia 800 and Lumia 710), the Nokia Lumia 900 builds on Lumia’s head-turning design on the outside and a rich social and Internet experience on the inside.

People Hub is the quickest way to connect with friends using Live Tiles for real-time updates and a fast Web browsing experience with Internet Explorer Mobile.

The Nokia Lumia 900 is designed for the US and comes with 4G LTE.

The Nokia Lumia 900 is designed for the US and comes with 4G LTE.

The camera will put greater pressure on compact cameras. The 8-megapixel camera comes with a large aperture of f/2.2 and wide angle at 28mm. Add to this a Carl Zeiss lens and dual LED flash, it will the owner greater impetus to leave the compact camera at home.

Video is so-so, with hi-res video capture at 720p/30fps. A second, front-facing 1-megapixel camera for video calls has an f/2.4 lens and 30fps capture.

Here is the full data sheet for the Nokia Lumia 900:

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Samsung Omnia W available in Singapore

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

The Windows Phone 7.5 Mango smartphone from Samsung will be available in Singapore this month at S$498 (incl GST, excl line contract).

Update (6 January 2012): The Omnia W will be available for purchase starting from 7 January.

Samsung Omnia W, available in Singapore on 7 Jaunuary at S$498 (incl GST, excl line contract).

Samsung Omnia W, available in Singapore on 7 Jaunuary at S$498 (incl GST, excl line contract).

First announced back in November last year, the Omnia W is the first smartphone from Samsung using Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7.5 Mango operating system.

I played with the phone during its launch yesterday together with two other smartphones (GALAXY Nexus and GALAXY W) and two tablets (GALAXY Tab 7.7 and GALAXY Tab 7.0 Plus).

The Omnia W uses Microsoft Windows Phone 7.5 Mango

The Omnia W uses Microsoft Windows Phone 7.5 Mango

The phone was fast and responsive and the interface reminded me of Nokia’s newly launched Lumia 800, which is also based on Windows Phone 7.5 Mango.

Samsung’s Omnia W has a sleek design with a metallic finish and a rich 3.7” Super AMOLED display, giving vivid clarity for photos and videos captured with the 5MP camera.

The latest Windows Phone version provides enhanced usability including superior web browsing with integration of Internet Explorer 9 and Bing, as well as Office Hub that provides productivity on-the-go.

The smartphone includes Samsung-exclusive productivity apps including Samsung AllShare that provides seamless content transfer between the smartphone and other DLNA-enabled devices such as HDTVs, monitors and digital cameras.

Here are the main technical specifications of the Omnia W.

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Technical specifications: Nokia Lumia 800

Saturday, December 10th, 2011

The Lumia 800 was launched in Singapore on 7 December 2011 and goes on sale today at a RRP of S$775 (excl GST and no contract).

Nokia Lumia 800 on Microsoft Windows Phone 7. Click on image to see full data sheet.

Nokia Lumia 800 on Microsoft Windows Phone 7. Click on image to see full data sheet.

The “social” Nokia Lumia 800 comes in 3 vivid colors (cyan, magenta and black) and promises great Internet performance, with one-touch social network access, easy grouping of contacts, integrated communication threads and Internet Explorer 9.

Nokia Lumia 800 comes in 3 colours

Nokia Lumia 800 comes in 3 colours

It features a 3.7 inch AMOLED ClearBlack curved display blending seamlessly into the reduced body design, and a 1.4 GHz processor with hardware acceleration and a graphics processor.

The Nokia Lumia 800 contains an instant-share camera experience based on Carl Zeiss optics, HD video playback, 16GB of internal user memory and 25GB of free SkyDrive storage for storing images and music.

The main technical specifications of the Nokia Lumia 800 are summarized below.

Networks WCDMA 850/900/1900/2100, GSM/EDGE 850/900/1800/1900
Speed HSDPA cat 10: 14.4 Mbps, HSUPA cat 6: 5.76 Mbps
Display 3.7″ WVGA (800×480) AMOLED capacitive touch ClearBlack display with pinch zoom, 2.5D curved glass seamlessly integrated to unibody
Operating System Windows Phone 7.5 – Mango
Memory 512MB RAM, 16GB storage
Camera 8Mpix auto-focus Carl Zeiss, LED flash, Video capturing MPEG-4 720p @ 30 fps
Size/Weight 116.5 mm x 61.2 mm x 12.1 mm (LxWxT) / 76.08 cc / 142 g
Connectivity WLAN 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1, A-GPS, micro-USB connector and charging, 3.5mm AHJ connector, Accelerometer, Proximity, Magnetometer, ALS
Processor 1.4 Ghz Single Core MSM8255 (WCDMA)
Audio MP3 player, Audio jack: 3.5mm, Supported codecs: mp3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, m42, m4b, wma, EVRC, QCELP
Battery 1450 mAh
Talk time (GSM/WCDMA) up to 13 h/9.5h
Standby time (GSM/WCDMA) up to 265h / up to 335h
Music playback up to 55 hours