Daily Archives: October 9, 2009

Nokia N900 Video Shows Off 3D Gaming, YouTube Shenanigans, And More

Not satisfied with a video of the Nokia N900’s browser, an in-depth look at its Maemo 5 operation system, or even a glimpse of it playing the odd SNES game? Then fear not, ’cause the device is on the scene at the now-happening Maemo Summit, and it’s thankfully been caught on video once again for those not lucky enough to be in attendance. Highlights this time around include a look at the device’s 3D gaming capabilities (demoed with a Marble Madness-type game called Bounce Evolution), and a demonstration of the device not only playing YouTube videos in a browser, but within a thumbnail in the Maemo interface — not exactly the most practical thing in the world, but it sure is impressive on a mobile device. Head on past the break to see the whole thing for yourself.

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source: engadgetmobile.com

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Nokia Makes Qt Port To Maemo 5 And N900 Official (Video)

Hey developers, Nokia’s got a special treat for you today. It just announced the official port of the community-driven Qt for Maemo project. That means a common framework for writing native applications (and web apps and services thanks to Webkit integration) across Maemo 5 and future Maemo 6 releases, Symbian, and Windows Mobile. That’s a broad reach in terms of devices (including the hotly anticipated N900) and marketshare and a smart move by Nokia in an era where devices are differentiated not by hardware and OS but by their ability to run apps and connect to web services. A “technology preview” release is available now and scheduled for final release (based on Qt 4.6) in Q1 of 2010. Click through for a wee taste.

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source: engadgetmobile.com

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Dev Finds Windows Marketplace DRM Severely Lacking, Easily Circumventable

Microsoft’s Windows Phones just left the chute a few days ago, and already it seems that ye old DRM is getting talked about — and not in a good way. According to one Chainfire over at XDA-Developers, the so-called “copy protection” involved in keeping applications in place rather than strewn across a neighborhood of handsets is a pitiful joke, requiring just five minutes of tinkering to save the CAB files that the Marketplace app downloads to a separate folder. In other words, that relocated CAB file could be distributed to all of your friends, turning a single purchase into freeware for as many people as you know (or don’t know, even). So, Marketplace devs — does that make you feel all warm and fuzzy on the inside, or what?

source: engadgetmobile.com

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