June 21st, 2006

Prototype of a Flash Lite BREW Application

Rocket Mobile, Inc., a developer of mobile applications, is one of the first to demonstrate a BREW mobile application that integrates Flash Lite 2.1. Rocket Mobile was among a select set of developers chosen by Adobe to build a prototype content catalog application to provide Flash Lite content to a BREW handset. The prototype, which adds screensaver content to Rocket Mobile’s wallpaper application for handsets, was demonstrated at BREW 2006 at the Manchester Grand Hyatt in San Diego.

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June 10th, 2006

Mobility Device Matrix

The Mobility Center on the Sun Developer Network has updated the Device Matrix, a database tracking the Java characteristics of mobile devices. The new version includes a re-designed user interface and will serve as a robust platform for future enhancements. The new release adds several new devices, bringing the total number of devices to over 250.
See The Java ME Device Table at sun.com.

June 7th, 2006

Nokia Now Supports Flash Lite on Nearly 20 Devices

(from Nokia newsletter)

Just 15 months after Nokia announced it would license Flash Lite technology, the company now has 16 devices that will ship with Macromedia Flash Lite from Adobe as a default component and three devices that will ship with Flash Lite in specific-language versions. The Nokia devices include all 12 of the S60 3rd Edition devices the company has announced — including the Eseries enterprise devices, the Nseries multimedia computers, the Nokia 3250 phone, and the Nokia 5500 Sport — as well as four Series 40 phones: the Nokia 6125, Nokia 6131, Nokia 6136, and Nokia 6233 phones. Flash Lite 1.1 is the version currently shipping in S60 and Series 40 devices, and the transition to the next release of the player, Flash Lite 2, will begin in the second half of this year.

Nokia Handsets that are Announced/Shipping with Flash Lite


June 7th, 2006

Learn Carbide the Easy Way

Carbide tools from Nokia make it easy to create great mobile applications, and two new screencasts make it easy to start using the Carbide tools. Each screencast shows how a particular tool works, and includes clear narration to aid the learning process. Screencast viewers can pause the presentation, skip ahead, or repeat any section as often as they desire. Each screencast is packaged as a self-contained downloadable file, so that a developer can view it anywhere — even in a location without Internet access.

Download the screencast for Carbide.c++

Download the screencast for Carbide.j

June 5th, 2006

Getting the IMEI code from Series 40 3rd Edition devices

I searched in internet something about problem with application which I code now, and found interesting trick on Nokia forum . You can get the IMEI code from Series 40 3rd Edition devices in your midlet

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