Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Nokia 770 audio player download
Audio player
You can listen to music and other audio files stored on your device,
compatible mobile phone, or memory card, and listen to audio streams
from the Internet. You can also create and manage playlists. Tap ,
and select Audio player.
The audio player supports the following file formats: AAC, AMR, MP2,
MP3, and WAV. The player does not necessarily support all the variations
of a file format .
Nokia 770 software
The 770, like all Nokia Internet Tablets, runs Maemo, which is similar to many handheld operating systems , and provides a "Home" screen—the central point from which all applications and settings are accessed. The Home Screen is divided into areas for launching applications, a menu bar, and a large customisable area that can display information such as an RSS reader, Internet radio player, and Google search box for example. Maemo is a modified version of Debian GNU/Linux.
The 770 is bundled with applications including the Opera web browser, Macromedia Flash and Gizmo. It is compatible with any software designed for Maemo, and supports most common file formats.
Download Nokia 770 software -MaemoThursday, August 28, 2008
Free nokia ringtones download - Ring tone type & Ring tone formats
Before trying to download mobile ringtones you should consider the following points
Types of ring tones
Monophonic
A monophonic ring tone is simply a series of notes, one musical note at a time.
Polyphonic
A polyphonic ring tone can consist of several notes at a time. The first polyphonic ring tones used sequenced recording methods such as MIDI. Such recordings specify what synthetic instrument should play a note at a given time, and the actual instrument sound is dependent upon the playback device.
Truetone
A truetone (also known as "realtone", "mastertone", "superphonic ringtone" or "audio recording") is simply an audio recording, typically in a common format such as "MP3", AAC, or WMA, and represents the latest evolution of the ring tone. Truetones, which are often excerpts from songs, have become popular as ring tones.
Ring tone formats
- AAC: Some phones like the Sony Ericsson W810i support ring tones in ".m4a" AAC format. The iPhone supports ring tones in ".m4r" AAC format.
- eMelody: Older Ericsson format.
- iMelody: Most new phones that don't do Nokia's Smart Messaging are using this format.
- KWS: Kyocera's ringer format.
- MID / MIDI: Popular sound format.
- Morse code: Text files with a .MORSE extension get converted into morse code songs.
- MOT: An older ringer format for Motorola phones.
- MP3: Some phones support ring tones that are mp3 format.
- Nokia / SCKL / OTT: Nokia Smart Messaging format. Nokia phones can receive ring tones as a text message. Ring tone tools can create these text messages. This allows anyone with a compatible phone to load their own ring tones in without a data cable. There are other phones besides Nokia that use this.
- PDB: Palm database. This is the format used to load ring tones on PDA phones such as the Kyocera 6035 and the Handspring Treo.
- PMD: Format co-created by Qualcomm and Japanese company Faith which can include
- MIDI, sampled audio, static graphics, animation, text, vibration and LED events
- QCP: File format generated by Qualcomm PureVoice software.
- RTTTL: A popular text format for ring tones.
- RTX: Similar to RTTTL with some advanced features. Also the octaves are different on RTX.
- Samsung1 & Samsung2: Samsung keypress format.
- Siemens Keypress: Can create and read in a Siemens text file format.
- Siemens SEO: Siemens SEO binary format.
- SMAF: Yamaha music format that combines MIDI with instrument sound data (aka Module files). Filenames have the extension "MMF".
Nokia ,History of Nokia company
Nokia is the world leader in mobility, driving the transformation and growth of the converging Internet and communications industries. We make a wide range of mobile devices with services and software that enable people to experience music, navigation, video, television, imaging, games, business mobility and more. Developing and growing our offering of consumer Internet services, as well as our enterprise solutions and software, is a key area of focus. We
also provide equipment, solutions and services for communications networks through Nokia Siemens Networks.
2007 facts and figures
• Head office in Finland; R&D, production, sales, marketing activities around the world
• World’s #1 manufacturer of mobile devices, with estimated 38% share of global device market in 2007
• Mobile device volumes 437 million units
• Net sales EUR 51.1 billion
• Operating profit EUR 8.0 billion
• 112 262 employees at year end (including Nokia Siemens Networks)
• Strong R&D presence in 10 countries
• R&D investment EUR 5.6 billion
• 30 415 employees in R&D (approximately 27% of workforce, including Nokia Siemens Networks)
• Sales in more than 150 countries
• Nokia devices available at approximately 350,000 points of sale
• World’s 5th most valued brand (Interbrand, 2007) #1 brand in Asia (Synovate 2006 and 2007), and #1 brand in
Europe (European Brand Institute, September 2007).
• World's number one supply chain (AMR Research
Nokia's history
Nokia started by making paper – the original communications technology
The history of Nokia goes back to 1865. That was when Fredrik Idestam built a wood pulp mill on the banks of the Tammerkoski rapids, in southern Finland. A few years later, he built a second mill by the Nokianvirta river – the place that gave Nokia its name.
Who was Fredrik Idestam?
A mining engineer by trade, Idestam brought a new, cheaper paper manufacturing process to Finland from Germany.
It was a great success. Idestam’s invention won a bronze medal at the Paris World Exposition in 1867, and he is considered to be the father of Finland’s paper industry.
Idestam named his company Nokia Ab in 1871
Nokia Ab added electricity generation to its business activities in 1902
Did you know?
The Nokianvirta river is named after a dark, furry animal that was locally known as the nokia – a type of marten.