March 28, 2009

Ben 10: Power Of The Omnitrix - Free Action Mobile Games Download

Corrodium meteors are bass beat the foxhole and the alien master Vilgax wants them to agree to the planet! In the function of Ben Tennyson, you’re the barely one with the purpose of can sojourn him! boxing match your way plain-spoken twelve exciting levels facing an band of drones, ceaselessly knights, mutants and bosses therein frantic action-packed beat’em up adventure. make a claim your alien wrist watch, the Omnitrix, to transform addicted to three impressive alien forms: Heatblast, Fourarms and Cannonbolt. All by way of its not public capabilities and combat skills.
Features:
- Supported the highly-rated Cartoon group illustrate
- Twelve levels, four environments and 4 bosses
- special game-play with many lettering and two java spirited modes

This itinerant big game information is a multiscreen one, it workings on 128*128, 128*160, 176*208, 176*220, 240*320 and extra further partition resolution, you can download and try on your mobile phone. Enjoy it!



March 23, 2009

Windows portable 7 phone release now sincerely delayed - may perhaps be as overdue as 2010

Microsoft is delaying the update to its mobile in use system, called Windows cellular phone 7, together with the new phones carrying the in commission practice now increasingly dubious to hit the promote before 2010, according to sources.

The slow up comes at a bad era for Microsoft, since rivals comparable the iPhone and now Google’s robot are striking the sell through souped up in use systems that are creating a lot of buzz. Apple’s iPhone 3G is performance hefty traction, and machine has shaped its own thrill by near enough an unguarded foundation song — for the reason that directness wins converts among developers.

CNET leading reported more or less a significant delay. Microsoft partners who had probable to allow a decisive make public in their hands by before time 2009 control been told now with the purpose of it won’t be ready pending the second half of 2009. However, persons partners spirit prerequisite edit to the OS for a few months by they can launch distribution, near enough rear earliest flow of the phones into 2010. Partners comprise companies similar Verizon, Motorola and Samsung, all of which plot new phones to involve the cellular phone Windows 7 OS.

We contacted Microsoft carry on dark for comment. They said before time in the present day they’d produce a answer shortly, but we haven’t heard back. We’ll renovate after we hear. [Update: Scott Rockfeld, band together produce boss of Windows Mobile, responded, adage the troupe is "not widely allocation our roadmap at this point."]

Windows cell phone 7 is estimated to say features akin to gesture gratitude and language input. In the meantime, Microsoft self-control energy for a child update its 6.1 version as basic as this day still, business it 6.2 — which spirit hold some bells and whistles be fond of an better browser with the intention of can ceremony flicker and Ajax applications. (See screenshot absent of the pending update, which shows with the purpose of traveler 6 want be rendering on the OS; extra at Theunwired).

CEO Steve Ballmer and cell phone troop head Andy residue met as well as 17 of the company’s principal booth call maker and hauler partners recently, and that’s while the news flash of the adjournment first circulated.

March 16, 2009

Samsung Epix

The Samsung Epix is a mid-range Windows Mobile smartphone that debuted recently from AT&T.

This device includes both a touchscreen and an optical mouse. It also has a small QWERTY keyboard, 3G support, and Wi-Fi.

Design and Construction

The first thing that you notice about the Epix is that it bears a strong resemblance to Samsung's popular BlackJack smartphones, which has lead to some people referring to it as the BlackJack III. This dovetails nicely into my first major theme: appearances can be deceiving.

Despite the similarity, the Epix is not being marketed as a successor to the Samsung BlackJack and BlackJack II models. And for good reason: a lot of that look is skin deep. The most obvious difference is that the Epix has a touchscreen, and runs the more complex Windows Mobile Pro version of the platform.

It also looks black in the publicity photos, which led me to be surprised when I opened up the box and found that it's actually a hematite grey, like a glossy version of the color sported by the Samsung Ace. If you don't know what hematite looks like, think dark silver. It's a good look, being attractive but still businesslike. It's a little fingerprint-prone, but not so much that it becomes a distraction. I'm pretty hard to please about fingerprints, but the Epix does better than my relatively smudgable BlackJack II.

Speaking of deceptive photos, the first impression that people tend to get from looking at them is that the Epix is monstrously thick (an impression bolstered by online peanut-gallery commentators with more opinions than facts). But that's not really the case. The Epix measures out at just 0.51 inches thick, substantially less than the similarly specced AT&T Tilt and the same as the Palm Treo Pro. Both of those other devices, notably, have a smaller battery than the Epix.

Build quality is typical for Samsung, which is to say excellent. I've dropped my BlackJack II more than once onto a wood and even concrete floor without noticeable damage -- that should give you an idea how sturdily these things are built.
This brings me to the usability factor, where I have my first mixed note. The keyboard on the Epix is wonderful, as good as Samsung usually builds. But the 5-way directional control is rather questionable. The Epix has the same kind of optical-tracking pad that we first saw on the Samsung Omnia. Instead of actually moving or clicking it, you slide your finger over the sensor, and it reads the movement. You have the option of using it either as a standard 5-way directional pad, or as a kind of virtual mouse, with the optics controlling the mouse cursor.

I will say this, the optical controller works a lot better on the Epix than it did on the Omnia, if for no other reason than the fact that your finger is in a lot more natural spot to manipulate it. Still, it doesn't quite match up to a real directional pad. It's hard to move precisely when you're in 5-way mode, so much of the time you might as well just tap the screen to select menu options.
The mouse cursor is a lot more precise, and is actually surprisingly usable for day-to-day navigation. However, there's no quick and easy way to switch from directional controls to mouse and back, making navigation more difficult in apps like Opera Mini which really want a conventional directional pad. I'd much rather Samsung had combined the approaches: the optical sensor surrounded by a clickable 4-way control. That would give you the best of the classic style while still enabling the optical mouse for those times when it really is convenient.

Inside the box with the Epix you get the usual assortment of accessories -- mostly, anyway. Absent is the usual cheap headset or headphones. In its place, you get an adapter to connect standard 3.5 mm headphones to the Samsung proprietary audio jack. Better than nothing, I suppose. More and more these days the assumption seems to be that anyone serious about hands-free use will use a Bluetooth headset.