{"id":620,"date":"2008-08-07T20:39:22","date_gmt":"2008-08-08T03:39:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wapreview.com\/?p=620"},"modified":"2008-08-11T20:14:00","modified_gmt":"2008-08-12T03:14:00","slug":"s60-widgets-library","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/620\/","title":{"rendered":"S60 Widgets Library"},"content":{"rendered":"
Nokia’s S60 Widgets were launched<\/a> at CTIA 2007 but until recently it was hard to find many actual Widgets to install. That’s not a problem anymore as Nokia has created a Widget Library on the mobile web with over 1000 Widgets to choose from.<\/p>\n “Widget” is such confusingly generic name.\u00a0 The word is just so overloaded with different meanings. There are desktop widgets and browser widgets for PCs,\u00a0 J2ME based mobile widgets, GUI Widgets in various development tools and probably a few other kinds of Widgets I’ve haven’t heard of.<\/p>\n Nokia’s S60 Widgets are something else, a relatively new type of mobile Widgets, which for lack of a better term, I’ll call “mobile AJAX Widgets”.\u00a0 They look like standalone applications and are launched from icons in the S60 Launcher just like native and Java applications. The ability to be run simply by clicking an icon is what distinguishes AJAX mobile Widgets differ from Java ME based widget platforms like Plusmo, WebWag and Nokia’s own Widsets. Each Widget is a small package of code created using the same technologies as web pages; HTML, JavaScript and CSS. In order for Widgets to work, the Nokia Web Runtime must be available in the phone’s firmware. Currently that means an N95, N82, N96, 5320 Xpress Music, 6210 Navigator, 6220 Classic or E90. For some of these phones specific firmware versions<\/a> versions are required too.<\/p>\n If you have a compatible handset, head over to Widgets Library at widsets.mobi\/library<\/a> The library’s home screen (top image) has a carousel-like display of five featured widgets at the top and a list of categories containing the rest of the Widgets. Each category has it’s own featured Widgets too.\u00a0 I installed quite a few of the widgets and my advice is to stick with the featured Widgets, at least at first as they really are the best.\u00a0 My favorite is the MOSH Widget (2nd image).\u00a0 MOSH is Nokia’s mobile social content sharing site and the widget is an easy to use catalog of the most downloaded audio, image, video and game files on MOSH along with a search engine that makes it easy to find any game, application and video on the MOSH mobile site.\u00a0 The MOSH widget is what Nokia Download<\/em><\/a> should be, a comprehensive catalog of mobile content.\u00a0 Nokia doesn’t promote MOSH very much, I suspect some of their carrier customers are pretty upset about it\u00a0 because it’s an end run around their download portals.\u00a0 I can’t imagine commercial game publishers are too happy either as there is a lot of pirated commercial content particularly in the Game category. That doesn’t really bother me but I’m surprised that Nokia doesn’t do a better job of policing uploaded content for the sake of their corporate image.\u00a0 But MOSH works and has just about everything you could possibly want for your phone, so if I’m looking for a game or application MOSH is the first place I go.\u00a0 It’s the closest thing Nokia has to to the iPhone App store and it’s all free. This Widget makes MOSH even easier to use.<\/p>\n The WeatherBug Widget (bottom) is also nice, so nice that I’ve added it to my Active Standby shortcuts. It displays a three day forecast, weather map and live camera for your selected location. Plus it’s really an attractive design visually. I’ve tried quite a few of the non-featured widgets and I wasn’t too impressed with any of them.\u00a0 Except for the games they were all basically single feed RSS readers that show headlines from one news site or blog.\u00a0 Clicking a headline launches the browser and loads a page from the site.\u00a0 I’d rather use a real RSS reader like Bloglines Mobile. But Weather Bug and MOSH show the potential of the platform. I’m sure we will see better and better widgets as time goes on.<\/p>\n Looking at the\u00a0 Widgets Library as a mobile website it generally works pretty well.\u00a0 You can search for titles and filter the listings by category and language.\u00a0 There is one aspect of the site I really hate though, Nokia has broken the browser back button! No matter how deep you drill down into the site, a single press of the back button takes you to the Widsets.mobi homepage!\u00a0 Not even the library front page but all the way up to the top level.\u00a0 What’s up with that?\u00a0 Their are links to the Library Home and Search box at the top of each page but no way to just go back one page with makes browsing the library more cumbersome than it should be.<\/p>\n Other mobile Ajax Widget platforms that are similar to S60 Widgets include Opera<\/a>, Netfront<\/a> and Motorola’s’ WebUI<\/a> Widgets. All four mobile AJAX Widget platforms claim adherence to the W3C Widget 1.0 Draft Spec<\/a> so it should be relatively easy to port\u00a0 a Widget from one platform to another.\u00a0 There isn’t yet true compatibility across platforms, you can’t install a Nokia Widget on Windows Mobile phone running Opera or Netfront\u00a0 because of differences in\u00a0 packaging and proprietary extensions and because the W3C draft is incomplete. At yesterday’s Motorola MotoDev Workshop<\/em><\/a> at LinuxWorld<\/em>, one of the Motorola representatives told me that Motorola and Nokia are working to make their widgets compatible with each other. The W3C is also slowly creating a standard for mobile widget compatibility across a platforms. When this happens Ajax Widgets will be a viable alternative to Java ME and the mobile web as a platform for cross-platform mobile applications.<\/p>\n Mobile Link<\/em>: widsets.mobi\/library<\/a><\/p>\n Ratings<\/em>: Content: Usability: <\/p>\n Related:<\/em> Mobile Site Directory – Technology\/Mobile\/Downloads <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Nokia’s S60 Widgets were launched at CTIA 2007 but until recently it was hard to find many actual Widgets to install. That’s not a problem anymore as Nokia has created a Widget Library on the mobile web with over 1000 Widgets to choose from. “Widget” is such confusingly generic name.\u00a0 The word is just so overloaded with different meanings. There are desktop widgets and browser widgets for PCs,\u00a0 J2ME based mobile widgets, GUI Widgets in various development tools and probably … Continue reading