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Monthly Archives: November 2010
Windows Phone 7 users can look forward to January
January is now being touted as the month that Windows Phone 7 will jump a big hurdle and bring copy/paste, Bing turn-by-turn directions, multi-tasking and some other improvements. Nothing groundbreaking, but every smartphone OS needs these. More at wpcentral.

QOTD: Stealing from another OS?
HTC Desire HD Review
Available from Clove for £469.99
The HTC Desire HD is probably HTC’s flagship smartphone of the moment, and without doubt its flagship Android phone. The specifications below show why-
1GHz Processor
Google Android 2.2 with HTC Sense Interface
4.3 inch touch screen 480 x 800 resolution
8.0 Megapixel Camera with auto focus and 2 x LED flashlight
1.5GB Internal Storage
Bluetooth 2.1 with FTP/OPP, A2DP, PBAP
WiFi IEEE 802.11 b/g/n
Dolby Mobile and SRS Surround Sound
DLNA Compatible
The numbers above are highly impressive, but specifications alone do not always make a great smartphone. There are countless devices on the market that boast considerable specifications, but which fail to match the numbers, and others with lower specs often punch above their weight and offer a more usable experience. The Desire HD is designed to offer all of the numbers serious smartphone people want and to bring with it usability enhancements that only some phones on the market currently enjoy; the iPhone 4 and Galaxy S are good examples.
In the box
It is all pretty standard, as you can see from the list below, and is typically HTC from the box design to every single accessory. You get what you need, but no extras like a screen protector or case.
HTC Desire HD
Battery
USB Cable
Mains Charger
8GB MicroSD Card
Stereo Headset
Documentation
The battery capacity, at 1230mAh, is a cause for concern when the large 4.3” screen is considered, but let’s not jump the gun just yet. It would also be nice to see a 16GB card bundled because 8GB cards are quite cheap these days, but maybe I am just being greedy now…
Design / Build Quality
Wow! The screen dominates this phone unlike any other I have used. It is gargantuan at 4.3” and brings many benefits with it besides just being bigger than most competing phones. Typing is easier and so is navigating around the operating system, and this on top of the enhanced media experience. The screen is housed in a metal body which is deceptively shallow with a curved shape designed to make the phone feel slimmer in the hand. It isn’t deep at all at just 11.8mm, but each edge must be approximately 7mm so it really does feel like you are holding a huge screen rather than a powerful smartphone- the surround is minimal and the fact that there are no physical buttons on the front adds to this effect, and it truly works from a design, and practicality, point of view.
The quality of the materials used is better than I have seen before from HTC and the subtle buttons and ports make barely a dent in the overall look of the phone. The MicroUSB port is on the bottom which is useful for the future development of desktop cradles, but so is the headphone jack which is unusual. However, it really is the best place for it because you are much less likely to have the headphone wire drooping over the screen when on a call or watching a video. I hadn’t even considered such a placement previously, but it really does work. The on/off button is on the top over to the left which is slightly tricky for one-handed use and the volume buttons are on the left. Sadly there is no camera key which I presume to be part of trying to keep the outer design as simple as possible.
The back is, as I said earlier, curved and is only broken up by the extended lens of the camera. The dual LED flash sits in its own panel next to the lens and the only other part is the removable section at the bottom which houses the MicroSD and SIM card slots- you have to remove the whole of the bottom section to allow for the MicroUSB and headphone jacks to also be positioned on the outer bottom edge. The battery is, unusually, accessible from the side and simply requires the lifting of one small section of the back cover. It looks and works great, but more than likely will preclude the production of more powerful batteries in the future because the bulk of the back cover is not removable.
That’s about it for the design except to mention that slim silver speaker above the screen and the flush buttons below it. These buttons are larger than normal thanks to the big footprint of the HD and are extremely easy to use once you are familiar enough with them to tap without thinking.
The Desire HD is a quality piece of hardware and it manages to feel good in the hand despite its size- the only quirk I found was that the removable bottom section was not as flush as I would have liked against the top half of the outer cover. I suspect that it is just this phone, but it will be interesting to see if this is repeated on other HD’s.
Screen (8/10)
This is a pretty good screen and any of you who have played with the original HTC HD2 will know the emotions it inspires. Some say that it is too big for a smartphone, but I have to disagree. It has a large footprint, but a quick comparison to three other popular smartphones highlights how efficiently the screen is implemented-
HTC Desire HD- 120.5 X 67 X 11 mm / 157 grams / 4.3″ screen
LG Optimus 7- 125 x 59.8 x 11.5mm / 157 grams / 3.8″ screen
Acer Liquid e- 115 x 62.5 x 12.5mm / 135 grams / 3.5″ screen
Samsung Galaxy S- 122.4 x 64.2 x 9.9 mm / 119 grams / 4.0″ screen
The fact that it is viewable in most conditions and that it is perfectly sensitive when selecting apps, browsing the web and with almost any other activity only helps push it further up in my estimation. In bright sunlight it suffers somewhat and this is where the TFT technology is highlighted- the coating is prone to fingerprints and glare in bright sun which is a shame. The WVGA resolution does not compete with the Retina display on the iPhone 4, but it is still very crisp and the entire interface looks great. I have to say that I would take a larger crisp screen over the smaller super crisp Retina display purely because it offers much more space with which to work and play. The Desire HD screen is one of the best HTC has produced yet. It hits the limit of screen size on a mobile phone and HTC has cleverly built the phone around the screen to make the whole unit as small as is technically possible. It isn’t perfect by any means, but is much better than some other sites would have you believe.
Camera (8/10)
The camera is rated at 8 Megapixels and includes 720p video recording. I believe that a software tweak is needed on the video side because the focus changes were often times so harsh it effected the output. Check out the example below-
The stills side is much better and I had little trouble in quickly capturing decent shots, but a closer inspection on my desktop revealed the small tweaks that would be needed to make the pictures acceptable for blowing up. Having said that, it is by some distance the best camera HTC has produced to date and 99% of users will be more than happy with it. The range of effects within the camera app are useful too and the software is extremely easy to use.
Average light outdoors
Good lighting outdoors
Good lighting indoors
Vintage effect
General Performance (9/10)
If you are going to pit Android 2.2 against a second generation Snapdragon 1GHz processor and 768MB of RAM the experience is likely to be fluid and incredibly fast. It is.
The performance is very smooth and rivals the iPhone and Windows Phone units for sheer delight when tapping and swiping through the OS. Android does not have the same level of human interaction as these operating systems, but this is the best it has felt so far.
Media (8/10)
HTC boasts about the the integrated Dolby Mobile and SRS Surround Sound for video playback, but in all honesty I wouldn’t have noticed the technology when I first played a film through headphones. However, the sound quality is excellent and on a par with any other smartphones I have used in terms of being able to recreate the layers good music deserves. In movies, the marriage of sound and the immersive screen is breathtaking at times.
The only reason it loses a point is because the external speaker is slightly tinny. It is nowhere near as bad as the one on the Desire Z, but it could be deeper in the bass area. I am presuming that this is down to the shallow depth of the design and thus a smaller speaker housing has had to be employed.
Call / Signal Quality (8/10)
Call quality to the ear is very good indeed and I was more than impressed by the loudness and the deep quality in reproducing voices. On the external speaker it is not so loud and suffers slightly from the aforementioned point surrounding the external speaker.
Signal quality is excellent on the phone side and I achieved a consistent HSDPA signal in places that I could not even grab with Desire Z. Strangely, the Wi-Fi signal seems to be quite weak and the signal bars dropped quickly as I moved more than 20 feet from my router. I need to do some more testing, but I haven’t experienced this with other smartphones which all tend to keep a full signal anywhere in my house.
Battery (6-7/10)
This is a difficult one because the Desire HD will get through a whole day if you are not using the power hungry features. However, start using that screen to its fullest and a charge will be needed at some point during the afternoon. The marriage of a 4.3” screen and a 1230mAh battery don’t sound good on paper, and the reality is that it does struggle at times. As I said earlier you won’t be seeing larger replacement batteries available so a spare would be a good option to take up. Most very large screened devices suffer in this area, but HTC has also managed to limit the battery options as well which is not the best idea.
Further testing has revealed that it is better than I first thought, but will still struggle for power users. I now believe that I could get a day out of this phone under my normal usage patterns.
Data Input (8/10)
The large screen helps a lot in terms of quick data entry on a touch screen and the spell correction is on the whole quite accurate. It is flaky at times, but then so are all touch screen smartphone correctors so all in all the experience is positive. In landscape it is very good and the extra size of the HD works better for me because I have long fingers and this makes it feel more natural than a smaller phone in landscape mode.
Software (9/10)
I have complained before about the vast number of apps and features that are bundled with Android, and in many way this phone is no different, but it comes back to the screen again. Somehow it all feels less crowded and HTC has included useful apps that the users will genuinely need on a day to day basis. None of the basics are missing and everything from turn-by-turn navigation to eBook reading is included. eBooks look great on the Kindle app and the eReading experience is yet again greatly enhanced by the larger screen.
Quick Lookup is an excellent app which offers the ability to search once and see the results in Wikipedia, Google, YouTube, Google Translate and Google Dictionary- it quickly became my default app for research.
Car Panel is just a fancy looking shortcut windows to various GPS related features, but the Nearby feature is especially useful. You can also get to Footprints through it which remains one of the most pleasing apps that HTC has implemented to date- it doesn’t do a great deal, but could come in handy time and time again.
The Android Market gets better every time I look at it and a quick search through the free and paid for titles shows that many of the mainstays of the iTunes App Store are now present. It isn’t quite as polished as the App Store, but a small amount of familiarity will soon make it an easy to navigate and complete resource to you.
At times it felt like I was typing on a mini tablet and the simple Calculator app highlighted that more than anything else. The keys are huge and it was all so easy to use for when the time comes (back to the screen size again).
There is so much to cover in terms of the operating system and the apps that I would be here all day if I attempted to do so. What I can say is that Android is growing on me and that it feels more complete as time goes by. I cannot think of another smartphone platform that offers so much out of the box and as the third party offerings improve, it will start to compete with the very best.
Conclusion
This is a truly excellent smartphone that proves that a 4.3” screen is possible on a phone that is still portable enough to use every day. The build quality and design are exceptional and the entire experience is only slightly marred by the battery performance. It seems that every smartphone has a flaw, and the battery is the weak area, but I am still convinced that most people will get though a day’s use quite happily.
It is one of the best smartphones I have used and the first to genuinely make me question my iPhone 4 ownership, but the battery is the one thing that plays on my mind. Having said that, the iPhone is hardly a powerhouse when it comes to battery performance. If you are happy to buy a spare battery or if your daily use is ‘normal’ then I would 100% recommend this phone- it is brilliant in so many ways and one more step up the ladder to smartphone perfection.

COTD: Beta v VHS
Bob takes today’s comment of the day- “I think back to the Beta vs VHS days or the more recent DVD HD vs Blu-ray. The better technology was not necessarily the winner. You could also argue about the Windows vs Mac OS “battle”.
I think that iOS is getting more mature but Android has a way to go. Windows Phone 7 is brand new but is a follow-up from an older system, so the name is already in the mobile marketplace. I don’t think that Web OS will make it because it will be HP only and they’re too late to the dance.
I have no idea about Symbian but I don’t expect much. And as others have said, RIM has to update their OS to keep up. They still have the business market but that won’t last.
In two years I see Android as the majority player with Windows Phone 7/8/9, and iOS as minority players with a significant share. Android will be on lots of devices versus iOS which will be only on Apple’s. Windows Phone will stick around only because Microsoft won’t give in. Whether it makes any money for them is debatable.”
Battery first, then build the rest
I have reviewed countless high-end smartphones that suffer in one area, the battery. The race to squeeze larger high density screens, faster processors in ever smaller phones continues and the battery is, more than any other feature, the likely candidate to be the weak point.
BlackBerry’s do well in this department, as do Nokia smartphones, but the rest really do struggle and it seems that the majority of consumer are prepared to accept this fact. Marketeers, manufacturers and consumer could not care a jot about battery life, until the latter group buys a phone that can’t get them through a single day’s use.
Imagine what would happen if a manufacturer picked the battery first, the biggest one possible, and then built the rest of the phone around it. The screen would still be big enough and the phone fast enough and even the camera does not need to be an 8 Megapixel monster to be a good snapper. It could all work perfectly well and offer 3 to 4 day’s of battery life on one charge.
And nobody would buy it…
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My Taptu for iPhone, iTouch and iPad
My Taptu is proving to be a highly efficient news reader on my iPhone 4 and is well worth a look for free. It is also available for the iPod Touch and iPad and easily rivals the more expensive news aggregators.
My Taptu is a clever yet simple social news aggregator that looks great, feels great and even sounds great.
Get instant access to the latest on everything you are into – your friends, your news, your sports, your music, your interests – all in one beautiful little app.
Check out what’s happening on Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn, keep up with the latest news and gossip from your favourite online sources and then share all the best bits with your friends.
My Taptu keeps you up-to-date with all of your content via highly personalised and visual ‘streams’. You can view them at-a-glance and then dive in if you want to see more.
Take the plunge in our StreamStore and you’ll discover even more about the things you’re into and maybe some things you don’t even know you’re into. It’s an incredibly simple way of staying in touch with everything and everyone you follow, wherever you are.
My Taptu puts your world at your fingertips. In fact, it turns your Smartphone into your Geniusphone.
Symbian Foundation web sites to shut down
Sorry, a bit late with this story, but it is an important one. All of the Symbian Foundation web sites will shut down on 17th December. Don’t worry though because source repositories will be available on CD or USB stick (just like software was many years ago).
If ever a platform needed a consistent and forward thinking strategy it is this one.
Recently, we announced that the Symbian Foundation will be transitioning to a licensing body. In practise this will mean a reduction in the day-to-day operations of the Foundation by the end of the year.
As a result, we expect our websites will be shutting down on 17th December. We are working hard to make sure that most of the content accessible through web services (such as the source code, kits, wiki, bug database, reference documentation & Symbian Ideas) is available in some form, most likely on a DVD or USB hard drive upon request to the Symbian Foundation. Preparing this content will take some time, hence it will not be distributable before 31st January 2011. A charge may be levied for media and shipping.
While we don’t have all of the information just yet, we’ve prepared the Q&A below to help answer any questions you may have and we’ll keep this page updated with the latest information as it becomes available.
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iOS 4.2.1 problems
I admit that my smartphone history has been checkered with accidents, unreliability and lots of stupidity on my part. And here I am again with more problems. Since installing iOS 4.2.1 on my iPhone 4 the performance of the phone has been much less smooth than before. I have installed no extra applications since and have over 5MB available, but transitions between apps is shaky at best and a few apps are quitting randomly; PayPal, Awesome Note and even iPod are really struggling. My Bluetooth hands-free will simply not connect any more either.
I have done a full restore, but the problem remains. It is not jailbroken by the way. So, any thoughts as to what is wrong and have you seen any strange problems after installing the update?
GPSNotifier for iPhone 4: location based alarms are here
GPSNotifier has been released for the iPhone 4 and brings what some have wanted for a long time, location based alarms.
GPSNotifier : the alarm application of the 21st century:
GPSNotifier for iPhone 4 is an alarm reminder based on your location instead of time. The next time you are near a defined GPS location, GPSNotifier will automatically remind you even if the application is not running.
GPSNotifier REQUIRE an iPhone 4 in order to work. The technology used by the application is ONLY AVAILABLE with the iPhone 4 hardware.
With GPSNotifier user interface you will be setting GPS alarm in seconds !
Features:
- enable/disable alarm from the main screen
- enter address from your address book, current location, or by dropping a pin on the map
- drag & drop pin on a map
- multiple alarm sounds
- choose alarm proximity level
- up to 64 alarms defined
Continued use of GPS running in the background can dramatically decrease battery life.
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QOTD: If you lost it?
If you lost your smartphone how much would the loss impact your life? Pretend that you have no replacement available when answering. For me I would have no traffic monitoring for getting into work tomorrow, I would not be able to view my emails until I got home, I wouldn’t be able to collect snippets of information for 247 and my calendar, social network updates would also be lost. Not to mention basics like phone calls and texts. To sum up, I would be lost without it.
Windows Phone 7 review
Last week I spent some time looking at the LG Optimus 7 hardware and concluded that it was an extremely capable performer, albeit one that does not excel on the personality front. It delivers in terms of battery power, screen clarity and build quality and only the camera let it down slightly. Today is the turn of the onboard operating system- Windows Phone.
My first experience with Windows Phone was highly positive- I was completely blown away by what appeared to be another iPhone moment and it really did impress in the first 30 minutes of use. After my first glorious few minutes with Windows Phone I settled down with the Optimus 7 and started to dig beneath the surface. It is highly intuitive and creates an excellent first impression- the flat interface and live tiles stand out unlike any other mobile operating system and the differentiation against Android, iOS and the others is just enough to give it a personality of its own.
The smooth interaction stands out more than anything and is the first OS I have used that matches iOS in this regard. Touches and swipes are responded to immediately and Microsoft’s insistence on specific hardware requirments offers the reassurance that any Windows Phone should be able to cope with the OS quite happily.
I have little else to say about the interface apart from the fact that it is beautifully implemented and that it works as well as any system I have seen on a smartphone, and this offers plenty of potential for the future.
The interface carries through to the core apps such as calendar, messaging and the rest, but at times this can almost be too simplistic. In a similar way to how the iOS calendar is too bare bones, the feeling is repeated in some of the core functions here. Contacts is just brilliant and the Facebook integration is a marvel of cross feeding data, the calendar retains a beautifully simple flatness that offers a clear overview of what is happening, but does suffer from being over simplistic for those who require serious organisation.
Despite the interface and navigation being exceptional in Windows Phone 7, it currently feels like a smartphone OS that is not finished. It is capable of managing all of the core functions a user needs and succeeds in this area, with some good quality third party apps and games available already, but it does feel incredibly locked down. iOS is locked down, but there are a multitude of third party apps available to increase the flexibility of the OS and hopefully Windows Phone will continue to develop in a similar fashion. It seems to me as if Microsoft is looking to follow the path laid down by Apple in terms of locking down the OS, but is maybe hoping that gradual updates and a series of well-made apps will follow. This is a bit of a gamble in a market so crowded, but I believe that it will find a place over the next 12 months. Whether that place is at the forefront of the industry remains to be seen.
Windows Phone is currently a difficult platform to review completely because it sits somewhere between a full smartphone OS and a setup like Bada, but shows a glimpse that it will evolve into something much more powerful, hopefully somewhere between iOS and Android. This isn’t a deep delve into the workings of the OS, but more a general opinion of how it performs and overall it is a very positive experience.
Despite all of the pleasantness it needs to differentiate itself from iOS more and the close down system shouldn’t last forever. It has a feel that is as good as iOS, but needs to offer more flexibility to truly catch on. It does the job already, but more development is needed to compete with the big boys.
COTD: All of the mobile operating systems
Today’s comment of the day comes from Lazyboy who has aired his thoughts on all of the major mobile operating systems-
“iOS is currently the largest, most coherent mobile platform, selling somewhere in the region of 25 million iOS devices (iPhones, iPod Touches and iPads) last quarter. I would expect it to maintain that advantage for some while to come.
Android, despite its proliferation among handset manufacturers, is plainly suffering from fragmentation issues, and its image is damaged by cheap, poorly performing devices sporting the Android logo. It is a second choice destination for developers at the moment, and, until the fragmentation issues are cleared up, is likely to remain so.
Windows Phone 7 is a puzzle. It lacks any truly compelling selling points, but clearly has potential. Unfortunately, MS’s mobile device strategy is completely incoherent, and this will hold the platform back, despite MS’s massive clout. The current marketing is woeful.
RIM/Blackberry is in a bind, with an outdated smartphone OS and an untested Tablet OS whose future development is not entirely under its control. Corporate inertia will mean it continues to sell cheap handsets in large volume, but I wish RIM luck in building up a successful consumer ecosystem with its current strategy.
WebOS is languishing at the moment. Nothing coherent is coming out of HP regarding its future, and releasing version 2 of a failed handset design is only going to appeal to the dwindling band of hardcore Palm fans.
Symbian? Still shifting big numbers and still irrelevant in terms of the mobile computing landscape. Nokia needs to make some hard decisions and make them quickly. If anything proves that market share does not always equate to market leadership, Symbian is it.”
Your 247 Interview: Bob Deskin
1/ What smartphone do you use at the moment and why?
iPhone 4. I bought an iPhone 3G about 2 1/2 years ago after playing with it in the store a few times. I’ve really enjoyed it. The iPhone 4 was a natural progression and I love it. I’ve had very few problems over the years. My wife got one too, and liked it so much that when it was time to upgrade her laptop, she bought a MacBook Pro. Not to be outdone, I did too. And now we both have iPads.
2/ What was the first mobile device (smartphone / PDA) you owned and what are your memories of it?
Palm IIIc. I received a bonus in early 2000 and decided to look at a PDA. I had seen the Newton, but it was too big and by the time I was interested it had disappeared. Electronic rolodexes were available, but they were too limited. I went to one of the big box stores and looked at the array (such as it was) of PDAs. I compared the Palm to a Windows Mobile device (or Windows CE). I remember exactly what my impression was. The Palm was a PDA. The Windows Mobile device was a tiny computer running Windows. I did not want a PDA with Windows or an OS squeezed into a small box.
I remember reading about the Zen of Palm and being very impressed. Whether they did it on purpose, I think Apple has adopted that philosophy.
3/ How many mobile devices have you owned to date?
After the Palm IIIc, I had a Sony Clie, a Palm Tungsten, and a Palm Treo. Before the Treo, I had 2 other standard mobile phones that were not very smart. I got tired of carrying two devices so I went for the Treo. It was okay. Not a great phone and not as good a PDA as the Tungsten. But it set me up for the iPhone.
4/ What’s your favourite book, song and film?
No one book, I have a few favourite authors, those who I will read anything they write as soon as possible – , Robert Sawyer, Michael Crichton (unfortunately there’ll be no new books), Tanya Huff. I really liked Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card.
Song: My Girl by The Temptations.
Movie: Avatar. The level of detail is incredible.
5/ Describe yourself in 30 words?
Tech geek. Good sense of humour (like Shaun). Sarcastic (like Shaun). Polite. Helpful. Casual. Cat person. Hockey fan. Somewhat retentive (ok anal). Pack rat (I’m working on it). Apple convert.
There. 30 exactly. Oops.
6/ Anything you would like to add?
I love playing with high tech toys and well-made Apps. Did I mention that I was somewhat retentive and a pack rat? Thank God that Apple put folders in iOS 4. I have way too many Apps. Do I really need 7 dictionaries?
I live about 30 miles south of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada in a semi-rural house (about 5 miles outside the nearest town) on an acre and a bit with my wife, 3 dogs and 7 cats. Yes, that’s right, 7 cats. My wife fosters pregnant cats for a nearby shelter and the kittens keep adopting me. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it. Feeding time is fun. Here are the latest two – Penny and Copper.
I’m a Software Product Manager for a major corporation. I’ve been in the computer business for almost 40 years. What I have in my iphone would have been considered a super computer back then. I learned on a machine with 32K (that’s right, K) of core memory. The two hard drives were 7MB each. Punched cards of course.
I scan lots of web sites every day, but I read PDA-247 in the morning over breakfast just after I check the weather. I like the humour, the friendliness, and the variety of opinions.
CyberMonday & Tuesday: 50% off 25 top BlackBerry apps!
We have a huge sale going on in the PDA-247 BlackBerry software stores over the next 2 days. All of the titles listed below are discounted by 50% so make the jump to this page and do a quick search for the ones you are interested in.

| App Name | ID | Developer | Price | Discount |
| BerrySlider | 33230 | Leetcom | $3.99 | $2.00 |
| Brainwave Tuner | 33789 | iMobileLife | $3.99 | $2.00 |
| CIA World Factbook 2010 | 37955 | S4BB Ltd | $29.99 | $15.00 |
| e-Mobile Sports | 30440 | e-Mobile | $19.95 | $9.98 |
| e-Mobile Today News Expansion Pack | 20752 | e-Mobile | $6.95 | $3.48 |
| e-Mobile Today Pro | 45976 | e-Mobile | $24.99 | $12.50 |
| e-Mobile Weather | 21428 | e-Mobile | $14.95 | $7.48 |
| e-Moible GPS Companion | 17002 | e-Mobile | $24.95 | $12.48 |
| FlightView | 64987 | FlightView, Inc | $4.99 | $2.50 |
| GPS Guru Pro | 79253 | Aztux | $6.99 | $3.50 |
| Memory Booster – RAM Optimizer | 27020 | S4BB Ltd | $9.99 | $5.00 |
| Mobile Bartender | 27303 | Mobatech | $5.99 | $3.00 |
| Mobile Checkbook | 28394 | Mobatech | $9.99 | $5.00 |
| Mobile Pickup Guide | 50336 | S4BB Ltd | $9.99 | $5.00 |
| MP3 Ringtone Creator | 41560 | Javatek Media | $6.95 | $3.48 |
| mScorecard | 999 | Velocor | $19.99 | $10.00 |
| NextAction! Std | 6737 | S4BB Ltd | $49.99 | $25.00 |
| Pinball Deluxe | 62737 | Mobigloo | $4.99 | $2.50 |
| PocketDay Pro | 7049 | Cross River Systems | $19.99 | $10.00 |
| SmartWiFi | 45539 | S4BB Ltd | $9.99 | $5.00 |
| SmrtGuard – Annual | 30108 | SmrtGuard | $44.99 | $22.50 |
| tawkon | 59111 | tawkon | $9.99 | $5.00 |
| Tether | 27826 | Tether | $49.99 | $25.00 |
| trackIT: Expense Edition | 4821 | Javatek Media | $14.95 | $7.48 |
| Wallpaper Megaplex lifetime access | 9019 | S4BB Ltd | $14.99 | $7.50 |
| Xobni Super Address Book | 106221 | Xobni | $9.99 | $5.00 |






















