FileExplorer is a program for managing files on the phone and memory card.
Current features include hiding/unhiding of folders and files, password protected access to the program and copying and moving files.
It also features a slideshow viewer and image viewer. Will NOT open other files except jpg and png. This is NOT the final version. Its a pre-release build.
IMPORTANT Settings before running FileExplorer:
* After FileExplorer has been installed you`ll need to configure the Access Permissions to allow
FileExplorer to access the phone local file system and the internet. How this is done depends on your phone.
Please read the below section for instructions for your phone type.
Configuring Access Permssions for FileExplorer
==============================================
Sony Ericsson phones:
---------------------
Go to either Applications or Games (depending on where you installed FileExplorer). Highlight FileExplorer, but instead of opening it, press More->Permissions.
Select Read User Data and set the access permissions to "Ask once" or "Ask Always". Select Write User Data and set the access permissions to "Ask once" or "Ask Always".
Nokia Series 60 phones:
-----------------------
Go to Tools > Manager > FileExplorer > Options > Suite settings
Select Read User Data and set the access permissions to "Session" or "Ask Always".
Select Write User Data and set the access permissions to "Session" or "Ask Always".
Nokia Series 40 phones:
-----------------------
Go to FileExplorer->Options->Application access->Phone access
Select Read User Data and set the access permissions to "Session" or "Ask Always".
Select Write User Data and set the access permissions to "Session" or "Ask Always".
The development of this application started out as a personal project but from your feedback,
I'll be taking it to a higher level and will be releasing the newer version 3 soon with the following features:
1. Multifunctional Torch
2. Zip archiver and extractor
3. Audio/Video player
4. ID3 tag editor
5. Multi-file renamer
6. Nokia theme (.nth) creator for S40 phones
7. Text file editor
8. Maybe, an image file editor
9. Playlist editor
Change Log for Alpha release:
1. Shows hidden files and folders with separate icons than the normal ones.
2. Improved the support for Sony Ericsson phones. Should work but haven't tested though. Do send feedback
3. Added support for zip files and nokia themes but it's under work and will not work.
4. Changed the UI a bit adding a shortcut to jump directly to a path
5. Added a torch with different colors. The flashlight doesn't work yet.
6. Added Nokia Theme creator UI. Still under development.
7. Support for zipping files and upzipping them. Working on them. To get torch which remains ON permanently press the UP arrow which changes the brightness level.
Torch Keys:
Left Softkey(Nokia): Change color
Right Softkey(Nokia): Go back
UP/DOWN arrow: Increase/decrease brightness
LEFT/RIGHT arrow: Cycle through preset colours
8 key: Toggle Circle light or Full screen light
0 key: Reset all settings
Your donations will encourage me to further improve the project as well as get it Digitally signed so that the all the above operations
can be executed easily on your phone. And rest assured, FileExplorer will never become a shareware. It is primarily for the community
at large which has bought phones and wants to use it to its max. capacity.Donate any amount below $100, please. Thank you for using FileExplorer and your continued support.
Magic Blue Hack is a Bluetooth Hacking software for any J2ME Bluetooth hand set.
How To Setup
This software only for Java MIDP-2 Bluetooth supported handsets. For some mobile no need to setup this software you can run it directly from its source where the file MagicBlueHack.jar situated & for some mobile it need to setup the file named MagicBlueHack.jar. After setup you can find it in your menu folder or where other software will found after setup. But no need to setup this software in the mobile which mobile you want to hack.
How To Run
First turn on Bluetooth of your handset -> then run MagicBlueHack from your handset. Then select Connect from Option menu. Wait till the massage appear “Device Search Completed”. There will appear some Bluetooth device name which is found by searching. Select any one which you want to hack. It may ask for permission to start Bluetooth service with another(You need to Pair then). Then Have fun ………………
How To Call
Just inter the destination phone number in the Number box then -> select Make Call from option menu. Then it will Make call from connected (By Bluetooth) device to your destination number. It will happen without notifying the owner of the connected device. You can cut call by select hang call from option. You can receive any call of that device by pressing Answer Call option. This option will work in all most all handset.
How To SMS
Just inter the destination phone number in the Number box then inter your sms text in SMS Text box then -> select Send sms from option menu. Your sms will be sent to the destination number from the connected (By Bluetooth) device without notifying him. You will not charge for sms but general sms charge will applicable for the connected (By Bluetooth) device. This option will work in all most all handset.
How To Read Phone Book
Just Go to option Then select Phonebook. Then you can read phone book list from the connected device. This feature can’t read phonebook from some Symbian Handset. We are trying to fix this bug for our next version.
How To Hang Cal
Hang Call function will cut a call which is hacked….
Ans Call ???
Ans Call function will receive the in coming call automatically which is hacked….
Notes:
1.) When connecting devices use a code 00 or Pair with any other code.
2.) At start of program do not forget to turn ON Bluetooth before start of the application
3.) This application works on all J2ME Devices like S60 S60v3 and PDA's too
4.) If there any message (when connecting/searching device): "Error in Getting Name" then please press ok or dismis.
By using this Software on your mobile you can Control /Access another Bluetooth mobile such as make Call(Free), Send SMS(free), Read Phone Book and Read SMS Inbox from another Mobile without notifying him(Traffic charge can be apply for hacked mobile) by Using Mobile Bluetooth Technology. It may ask for permission to start Bluetooth service with another for first time. But no need to setup this software in another mobile which you want to hack...
This project has been made just for fun & aware you that don’t turn on always your Bluetooth device, connect only & only when you feel safe.
v.2.3.01
GlassPlayer offers a multi-functioning media player with capabilities to play mp3 files along with all other formats supported by the device. Video playing capabilities include full screen (where applicable). On selected phones you are able to use equalizer to adjust your tunes to fit perfectly to your head phones and sound preferences
The newest version has support for PLS and M3U files as well as support for international id3-tags. Added hot-keys for music control and few user interface improvements. We also added couple of versions so you can download a version with different skin, from right here, GetJar
If you find the application useful and would want to get to use all the features, please Get Full Version for only 2.99€ Official Site: the latest releases and user guides are located at the Official Site |
Mobile phones have brought about a dramatic change to the communication industry. The development of mobile phones has made long-distance communication a matter of seconds. Who was the genius to invent the first mobile phone and when was it invented?
Who invented the mobile phone ?
and
when was the first mobile phone invented?
Here is the history of mobile phones.
Not only history of mobile phones but also history and development of mobile phones.
The mobile phone was invented in 1973 by Dr. Martin Cooper, a Motorola employee. On April 3, 1973, the first cell phone call was made. The caller was naturally, Dr. Cooper himself. The receiver of the first mobile phone call was Joel Angel, the research head at AT&T’s Bell Labs and rival of Dr. Cooper.
Prior to the development of mobile phones, people used two-way radios to communicate while they were mobile. The idea behind two-way radios gave rise to the invention of mobile phones. During the 1940s, Motorola came up with the Walkie-Talkie followed by handheld two-way radios that operated on battery power.
In 1947, Douglas Ring and W. Rae Young at Bell Labs introduced the idea of hexagonal cells for mobile phones. Philip Porter at Bell Labs came up with the idea that the cell towers should be at the corners of the hexagonal cells and not at their centers. He also proposed that the cell towers should have directional antennas.
Top of cellular telephone tower
Ericsson came up with an automatic mobile phone system, which was released in Sweden in 1956. It was known as MTA and did not require manual control. The drawback of this system was that the phones weighed 40 kgs. The year 1965 witnessed the introduction of a revised mobile phone technology that was based on DTMF signaling and used lighter mobile phones. Till 1970, mobile phones had to remain within their cell area and there were no means to continue communication while switching between cell areas. The call handoff system that allows users to move through different cell areas came up only in 1970. It's invention is attributed to Amos E. Joel, Jr, a Bell Labs engineer. The ARP network in Finland, established in 1971, boasts of being the first successful commercial mobile phone network. You may like to know more...........
In 1910 Lars Magnus Ericsson installed a telephone in his car, although this was not a radio telephone. While travelling across the country, he would stop at a place where telephone lines were accessible and using a pair of long electric wires he could connect to the national telephone network.[citation needed] In 1946 soviet engineers G. Shapiro and I. Zaharchenko successfully tested their version of a radio mobile phone mounted inside a car. The device could connect to local telephone network on a range up to 20 kilometers. In December 1947, Douglas H. Ring and W. Rae Young, Bell Labs engineers, proposed hexagonal cells for mobile phones in vehicles.[1] Philip T. Porter, also of Bell Labs, proposed that the cell towers be at the corners of the hexagons rather than the centers and have directional antennas that would transmit/receive in 3 directions (see picture at right) into 3 adjacent hexagon cells.[2] [3] The technology did not exist then and the frequencies had not yet been allocated. Cellular technology was undeveloped until the 1960s, when Richard H. Frenkiel and Joel S. Engel of Bell Labs developed the electronics.
Two 1991 GSM mobile phones
Recognizable mobile phones with direct dialing have existed at least since the 1950s. In the 1954 movie Sabrina, the businessman Linus Larrabee (played by Humphrey Bogart) makes a call from the phone in the back of his limousine.
The first fully automatic mobile phone system, called MTA (Mobile Telephone system A), was developed by Ericsson and commercially released in Sweden in 1956. This was the first system that did require any kind of manual control, but had the disadvantage of a phone weight of 40 kg (90 lb). MTB, an upgraded version with transistors, weighing 9 kg (20 lb), was introduced in 1965 and used DTMF signaling. It had 150 customers in the beginning and 600 when it shut down in 1983.
In 1957 young soviet radio engineer Leonid Kupriyanovich from Moscow created the portable mobile phone, named after himself as LK-1 or "radiophone".[4] This true mobile phone consisted of a relatively small-sized handset equipped with an antenna and rotary dial, and communicated with a base station. Kupriyanovich's "radiophone" had 3 kilogram of total weight, could operate up to 20 or 30 kilometers, and had 20 or 30 hours of battery lifespan. LK-1 and its layout was depicted in popular soviet magazines as "Nauka i zhizn", 8, 1957, p. 49, "Yuniy technik", 7, 1957, p. 43-44. Engineer Kupriyanovich patented his mobile phone in the same year 1957 (author's certificate (USSR Patent) # 115494, 1.11.1957). The base station of LK-1 ( called ATR, or Automated Telephone Radiostation) could connect to local telephone network and serve several customers.
In 1958, Kupriyanovich resized his "radiophone" to "pocket" version. The weight of improved "light" handset was about 500 gram.
In 1958 the USSR also began to deploy the "Altay" national civil mobile phone service specially for motorists. The newly-developed mobile telephone system was based on Soviet MRT-1327 standard. The main developers of the Altay system were Voronezh Science Research Institute of Communications (VNIIS)and the State Specialized Project Institute (GSPI). In 1963 this service started in Moscow, and in 1970 the Altay service already was deployed in 30 cities of the USSR. The last upgraded versions of the Altay system are still in use in some places of Russia as a trunking system.
In 1966, Bulgaria presented the pocket mobile automatic phone RAT-0,5 combined with a base station RATZ-10 (RATC-10) on Interorgtechnika-66 international exhibition. One base station, connected to one telephone wire line, could serve up to 6 customers.
In 1967, each mobile phone had to stay within the cell area serviced by one base station throughout the phone call. This did not provide continuity of automatic telephone service to mobile phones moving through several cell areas. In 1970 Amos E. Joel, Jr., another Bell Labs engineer,[5] invented an automatic "call handoff" system to allow mobile phones to move through several cell areas during a single conversation without loss of conversation.
In December 1971, AT&T submitted a proposal for cellular service to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). After years of hearings, the FCC approved the proposal in 1982 for Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) and allocated frequencies in the 824-894 MHz band.[6] Analog AMPS was superseded by Digital AMPS in 1990.
One of the first successful public commercial mobile phone networks was the ARP network in Finland, launched in 1971. Posthumously, ARP is sometimes viewed as a zero generation (0G) cellular network, being slightly above previous proprietary and limited coverage networks.
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