To conclude AAS's series on using the Nokia N95's TV Out feature, we take a look back at the kinds of problems we encountered, and how TV Out needs to be improved in order to address these issues.
Continuing AAS's series on using the Nokia N95's TV Out feature, we take a look at how the N95 handles various forms of internet and communications software while connected to a television and full-size keyboard.
In an exclusive preview of a Smartphones Show video feature, Steve Litchfield rounds up the various ways in which you can now use your smartphone to find your way around the world for free.
So, you've got a 332 MHz top-of-the-range smartphone from 2007 with 3D graphics acceleration hardware and a 16 million colour screen. What do you do with that? Obviously, you'd use it to emulate 8-bit home computers and consoles from 1982!
The Nokia N95 can be hooked up to a television and full-size keyboard, and used in a similar manner to a desktop computer. In this article Krisse looks at the effect this has on productivity software and ponders how close we are to an office that you can carry in your pocket.
The Nokia N95 (like the N93 and N93i) has a TV Out feature, which lets you connect it to any television. Krisse examines how S60 games look on the big screen, and how the big screen may affect gameplay.
Steve Litchfield explores the current Nseries Download! application/service in gory detail... everything you ever wanted to know about which bits are worth downloading...
Steve Litchfield has been getting twitchy feet over his reliance on Outlook as the PIM partner to his smartphones and he's overjoyed to find a Web-based PIM that's totally cross platform, that supports just about every smartphone ever made and which is completely free!