{"id":10804,"date":"2011-07-25T11:58:47","date_gmt":"2011-07-25T19:58:47","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.wapreview.com\/?p=10804"},"modified":"2014-07-31T21:01:39","modified_gmt":"2014-08-01T04:01:39","slug":"whats-on-my-nokia-e7","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/10804\/","title":{"rendered":"What’s On My Nokia E6?"},"content":{"rendered":"
While there aren’t as many apps available for Symbian as there are for iOS and Android, I’ve always been able to find everything I need for my Symbian phones.<\/p>\n
Here are the apps I like and use on the E6 that WOMWorld\/Nokia<\/a> has loaned me. All are free except for Gravity:<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Gravity<\/strong> needs no introduction for most Symbian users. It’s a beautifully designed, highly intuitive and immensely powerful client for Twitter, Facebook, Identica and Foursquare. There’s rudimentary Google Reader support too but I prefer to use Google’s Nintendo Wii Reader webapp<\/a> with Opera Mini for that. Gravity is the only non-free app on this list. It costs $9.99 but is well worth it. Gravity is available from the Ovi Store<\/a> but last time I checked the version in the store was very old and missing many of the current one’s features. Get the latest version go to the author’s site at\u00a0mobileways.de\/latest\/gravity-beta.sisx\u00a0<\/a>Gravity is updated frequently and updates are free to registered users. Follow Gravity’s author @janole<\/a> on Twitter to get\u00a0notified\u00a0of the latest updates.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Opera Mobile 11.1\u00a0<\/strong>Although the latest Symbianbrowser is a huge improvement over its predecessors it lacks support for geo-location, offline storage and other HTML5 and CSS3 features needed by modern webapps. Even worse, it uses some incredibly tiny, hard to read fonts.<\/strong>\u00a0Opera Mobile 11.1 is the perfect replacement for the built in browser. \u00a0It’s a full featured direct browser with support for the latest web standards. It uses sensible default font sizes and supports continuous zoom with text-reflow so readability is never an issue. The version of Opera Mobile in the Ovi Store<\/a> is not always current so it’s better to get it direct from Opera at\u00a0opera.com\/mobile\/download\/<\/a>\u00a0(PC) or\u00a0m.opera.com<\/a> (mobile)<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Opera Mini 6.1<\/strong> is simply the fastest browser for any phone on any platform. It doesn’t have the HTML 5 support of its big brother and has some issues posting web forms but ts great for quickly loading and navigating even the largest desktop web pages. The latest Symbian version works perfectly on the E6 with all of Opera’s awesome one and two key shortcuts, like 6 = page down and #,5 for bookmarks mapped correctly. Get Opera Mini from m.opera.com<\/a> (mobile) or opera.com\/mobile\/download\/<\/a>\u00a0(PC) as the version in the Ovi Store<\/a> tends to be an old one.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n ScreenSnap<\/strong> – A no-nonsense screen capture utility. All the screenshots of Symbian^3 screens on this blog were made with ScreenSnap. You can configure it to specify image quality, capture key and where (memory card or phone memory) to store images. \u00a0I configure it to use the C6’s side voice command key as the screen capture key. Get ScreenSnap from the Ovi Store<\/a>.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/a>KeePassJ2ME<\/strong> – KeePass Password Safe<\/a> is an open source secure password database and password generator. Originally a Windows PC only app, KeePass has been ported to Mac OS, Linux, the iPhone, Android, BlackBerry, UIQ3, Java ME, Windows Mobile and Windows Phone 7. I use it to store all my passwords on my Linux and Windows PCs and my Android and Symbian devices and Java feature phones. There’s no Symbian^3 or S60 version but the KeePassJ2ME Java port is touch friendly and works well on the E6. Get it from keepassj2me.sourceforge.net<\/a>.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/strong><\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n ZXReader<\/strong> is my favorite eBook Reader for Symbian. It’s a native Symbian app \u00a0with configuarble fonts, margins, justification, line spacing, background colors, background images and brightness.\u00a0 There’s full text search and table of contents and bookmark support. ZX Reader uses books in FB2 format (ManyBooks.net<\/a>\u00a0is a good source for free eBooks in FB2 format). The\u00a0ZX Reader\u00a0site<\/a>\u00a0is in Russian. Google Translate works well on the site if you don’t understand Russian.\u00a0The app itself supports English, just choose it when you are prompted during installation. Here’s a direct download link for the latest version of ZXReader: \u00a0zxstyles.allnokia.ru\/download\/zxreader\/ZXReader_2.0.3.5th.signed.sis<\/a><\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Y-Browser<\/strong> is a file explorer utility that lets you see much more of the Symbian file system than the built in file manager. It also supports sharing any file type using Bluetooth and has a built in file viewer. My favorite Y-Browser\u00a0feature is that it lets you set up file assoctions so, for example, .txt files open in QuickOffice. \u00a0Y-Browser is available in a free self signed version from the developer’s site at\u00a0drjukka.com\/YBrowser.html<\/a>. \u00a0There’s also a Symbian Signed version in the Ovi store<\/a> for $1.99 that provides a few more\u00a0capabilities\u00a0like the ability to open Email attachments that are blocked by platform security with the self-signed version.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n SiC! FTP<\/a><\/strong>\u00a0– I like to have an FTP client on my phones in case something goes wrong with one of my Web servers while I’m out and about. It’s\u00a0handy\u00a0to be able to FTP into the server \u00a0to read the error logs and hopefully download and edit a file with QuickOffice to make a quick fix and get things working again. \u00a0Sic! FTP is a poweful FTP client that stores server address and ports, login credentials, default file paths and settings for multiple servers so that you can get connected with a couple of clicks. Written for S60 3rd edition four years ago and never updated this app works surprising well on the E6. \u00a0Download it from the publisher’s mobile site at www.content.ag\/ftp.php<\/a>\u00a0using the Symbian browser.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Symbian PuTTY Touch UI<\/strong> – This port of the popular open source PuTTY SSH client is another tool I use for low level work on broken Web servers. It provides secure shell access to Linux, Unix and Windows servers. There’s support for multiple server configurations including servers running SSH on non-standard ports. Down load Symbian PuTTY Touch UI \u00a0from the author’s site at http:\/\/bd.kicks-ass.net\/koodaus\/putty\/<\/a>.\u00a0The one gripe I have with this app is that it uses fonts that are very small on the E6’s high pixel density screen. A partial fix for the font issue is to download the \u00a0Additional fonts for S60 third edition<\/a>\u00a0zip file from the non-Touch Symbian version of Putty’s site at\u00a0http:\/\/s2putty.sourceforge.net\/download.html<\/a>.\u00a0Extract and install the largest font file,\u00a0putty_font_10x20_s60v3.sisx<\/em>\u00a0contained in the zip. The Symbian installer will warn you that the font file is\u00a0incompatible but lets you install it anyway and it works with no issues. Even the 10×20 font is smaller than I’d like, but at least I can read it.<\/p>\n None of these apps are E6 specific. All will work on any Symbian^3 or 5th edition phone. \u00a0I didn’t list any games because I’m not much of a gamer and game preferences tend to be highly personal anyway. \u00a0There are thousands of games to choose from in the Ovi Store<\/a> and many more on GetJar.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" While there aren’t as many apps available for Symbian as there are for iOS and Android, I’ve always been able to find everything I need for my Symbian phones. Here are the apps I like and use on the E6 that WOMWorld\/Nokia has loaned me. All are free except for Gravity: Gravity needs no introduction for most Symbian users. It’s a beautifully designed, highly intuitive and immensely powerful client for Twitter, Facebook, Identica and Foursquare. There’s rudimentary Google Reader support … Continue reading