Kamis, 23 Desember 2010

Aplikasi Survei Berhadiah

survei DETIK.COM berhadiah 1 buah iPad, 2 buah HP Samsung Galaxy 5 http://de.tk/KwPAE

Rabu, 01 Desember 2010

Buy a Cheap BlueAnt S4 True Handsfree Car Kit

BLUEANT_S4

MSRP: $99.99


Description
With the BlueAnt S4, there is no longer any need to touch your phone or car speakerphone while driving. For the first time, drivers can communicate on the road, making and receiving calls and accessing a world of information, using only their voice. Read a review of the BlueAnt S4 by clicking HERE.

Special Features:
• True handsfree voice controlled car speakerphone
• Make and answer calls using just your voice
• Use your voice to access information services on the go
• Embedded audio help talks you through setup and operation
• Multipoint: connect to 2 phones and answer the one that rings
• A2DP streaming for playback of music, podcasts and directions from a GPS application on your phone
• Hardware on/off switch
• Firmware upgradeable
• Up to 20 hours talk time
• Up to 700 hours standby


*Prices include default packaging which in most cases is a poly bag, additional packaging is normally available on request.

Blueant Nokia Bluetooth Headset For Nokia 6300

Free-Press-Release.com) September 2, 2010 --
With the BlueAnt S4, there is no longer any need to touch your phone or car speakerphone while driving. For the first time, drivers can communicate on the road, making and receiving calls and accessing a world of information, using only their voice.
Use Your Voice to Make and Receive Calls
To activate the S4, all you have to do is say the hands-free trigger phrase "BlueAnt Speak to Me" and the S4 will be ready for your voice commands. To make a call, just say "Phone Commands" and the S4 will activate your phone's voice dialing feature.*

When the phone rings you won't need to take your eyes off the road to know who is calling because the S4 will read out the caller's name or number and ask you if you want to take the call. All you have to do is say "Answer" or "Ignore".
Hear Your Messages on the Go
The S4 integrates with Vlingo SafeReader so that you can hear incoming text messages read aloud. Once the Vlingo SafeReader application is installed on your BlackBerry?or Android?2.x smartphone, your incoming messages will be read out automatically as they come in.
Voice Access to the World
The S4 integrates with Microsoft BING-411 to provide a handsfree gateway to a world of information. Just by saying the words you can hear stock quotes, movie times, directions, weather forecasts, sports results, news and traffic updates.**
A2DP Streaming

Rabu, 24 November 2010

Kode Tombol Rahasia Ponsel Nokia

On the main screen type
*#06# for checking the IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity).
*#7780# reset to factory settings.
*#67705646# This will clear the LCD display(operator logo).
*#0000# To view software version.
*#2820# Bluetooth device address.
*#746025625# Sim clock allowed status.
*#62209526# - Display the MAC address of the WLAN adapter. This is available only in the newer devices that supports WLAN like N80
#pw+1234567890+1# Shows if sim have restrictions.

*#92702689# - takes you to a secret menu where you may find some of the information below:
1. Displays Serial Number.
2. Displays the Month and Year of Manufacture
3. Displays (if there) the date where the phone was purchased (MMYY)
4. Displays the date of the last repair - if found (0000)
5. Shows life timer of phone (time passes since last start)

*#3370# - Enhanced Full Rate Codec (EFR) activation. Increase signal strength, better signal reception. It also help if u want to use GPRS and the service is not responding or too slow. Phone battery will drain faster though.
*#3370* - (EFR) deactivation. Phone will automatically restart. Increase battery life by 30% because phone receives less signal from network.
*#4720# - Half Rate Codec activation.
*#4720* - Half Rate Codec deactivation. The phone will automatically restart

If you forgot wallet code for Nokia S60 phone, use this code reset: *#7370925538#
Note, your data in the wallet will be erased. Phone will ask you the lock code. Default lock code is: 12345

Press *#3925538# to delete the contents and code of wallet.

*#7328748263373738# resets security code.
Default security code is 12345

Unlock service provider: Insert sim, turn phone on and press vol up(arrow keys) for 3 seconds, should say pin code. Press C,then press * message should flash, press * again and 04*pin*pin*pin#

Change closed caller group (settings >security settings>user groups) to 00000 and ure phone will sound the message tone when you are near a radar speed trap. Setting it to 500 will cause your phone 2 set off security alarms at shop exits, gr8 for practical jokes! (works with some of the Nokia phones.)

Press and hold "0" on the main screen to open wap browser.
Important!
Try these codes at your own risk! We don't accept any complaints.
Some of these codes may not work.

Kamis, 04 November 2010

mengetahui kode rahasia nokia

Info ini khususnya buat yang punya HP Nokia, buat merk lain sekedar nambah wawasan aja yach, nanti bisa nyusul artikelnya dan buat yang gak punya HP bisa nambah ilmu juga dech ( hari giniiii gak punya HP !!! tolong) , tapi gpp mungkin dia lagi gak mau diganggu dengan sms dan fakir "miskol" mukajail.

Ini adalah kunci kode tombol rahasia yang dapat anda jalankan sendiri dengan mengetiknya di keypad HP ponsel anda yang bermerek Nokia baik yang CDMA maupun yang GSM. Tapi harus hati-hati kalo ingin di "format", semua data bisa hilang, penulis gak bertanggung jawab atas data yang hilang senyum1.

1. Melihat IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity)
Caranya tekan * # 0 6 #

2. Melihat versi software, tanggal pembuatan software dan jenis kompresi software
Caranya tekan * # 0 0 0 0 #
Jika tidak berhasil coba pencet * # 9 9 9 9 #

3. Melihat status call waiting
Caranya tekan * # 4 3 #

4. Melihat nomor / nomer private number yang menghubungi ponsel anda
Caranya tekan * # 3 0 #

5. Menampilkan nomer pengalihan telepon all calls
Caranya tekan * # 2 1 #

6. Melihat nomor penelepon pada pengalihan telepon karena tidak anda jawab (call divert on)
Caranya tekan * # 6 1 #

7. Melihat nomor penelepon pada pengalihan telepon karena di luar jangkauan (call divert on)
Caranya tekan * # 6 2 #

8. Melihat nomor penelepon pada pengalihan telepon karena sibuk (call divert on)
Caranya tekan * # 6 7 #

9. Merubah logo operator pada nokia type 3310 dan 3330
Caranya tekan * # 6 7 7 0 5 6 4 6 #

10. Menampilkan status sim clock
Caranya tekan * # 7 4 6 0 2 5 6 2 5 #

11. Berpindah ke profil profile ponsel anda
Caranya tekan tombol power off tanpa ditahan

12. Merubah seting hp nokia ke default atau pabrikan
Caranya tekan * # 7 7 8 0 #

13. Melakukan reset timer ponsel dan skor game ponsel nokia
Caranya tekan * # 7 3 #

14. Melihat status call waiting
Caranya tekan * # 4 3 #

15. Melihat kode pabrik atau factory code
Caranya tekan * # 7 7 6 0 #

16. Menampilkan serial number atau nomer seri hp, tanggal pembuatan, tanggal pembelian, tanggal servis terakhir, transfer user data. Untuk keluar ponsel harus direset kembali.
Caranya tekan * # 92702689 #

17. Melihat kode pengamanan ponsel anda
Caranya tekan * # 2 6 4 0 #

18. Melihat alamat ip perangkat keras bluetooth anda
Caranya tekan * # 2 8 2 0 #

19. Mengaktifkan EFR dengan kualitas suara terbaik namun boros energi batere. Untuk mematikan menggunakan kode yang sama.
Caranya tekan * # 3 3 7 0 #

20. Mengaktifkan EFR dengan kualitas suara terendah namun hemat energi batere. Untuk mematikan menggunakan kode yang sama.
Caranya tekan * # 4 7 2 0 #

21. Menuju isi phone book dengan cepat di handphone nokia
Caranya tekan nomer urut lalu # contoh : 150#

22. Mengalihkan panggilan ke nomor yang dituju untuk semua panggilan
Caranya tekan * * 2 1 * Nomor Tujuan #

23. Mengalihkan panggilan ke nomor yang dituju untuk panggilan yang tidak terjawab
Caranya tekan * * 6 1 * Nomor Tujuan #

24. Mengalihkan panggilan ke nomor yang dituju untuk panggilan ketika telepon hp anda sedang sibuk
Caranya tekan * * 6 7 * Nomor Tujuan #

Keterangan Tambahan :
- Kode diinput tanpa spasi
- Ada kode-kode nokia yang berlaku pada tipe tertentu saja

kode rahasia hp nokia

HP Nokia anda bermasalah? atau pengen hp nokia anda tampil lebih garang dan lain daripada yang lain? Sebelum anda bawa ke tukang service, tidak ada salahnya kalau anda mencoba beberapa kode rahasia Hp nokia GSM berikut ini.
kode rahasia nokia

kode rahasia nokia

Display IMEI : *#06# – *3001#12345#
Software Version : *#0000#
Sim Clock Stopping : *#746025625#
Display Info : *#92702689#
Activates Enhanced Full Rate : *3370#
Deactives : #3370#
Activates Enhanced HalfRate : *4370#
Deactives : #4370#
Bluetooth information : *#2820#
Enables GPRS pccch : *#7220#
Deletes Wallet (6310 test) : *#3925538#
Clear Operator Logo : *#67705646#
Software Reset : *#7370#

Kamis, 21 Oktober 2010

T-Mobile G2 is the carrier's first high-speed HSPA+ handset

Sleek and classy, the T-Mobile G2 is the carrier's first high-speed HSPA+ handset, and its and the best smartphone with a keyboard you can buy on T-Mobile. The G2 is fast, powerful, and it feels expensive. If you're looking for an executive-class Web and messaging phone on T-Mobile's network, look no further.

Having said that, the G2 isn't quite what it claims to be. This handset has been billed as the "pure" Android experience, much like the original T-Mobile G1 (3.5 stars) and the Motorola Droid (4 stars). It isn't. Rather, it's a Google and T-Mobile experience—full of Google apps, but with its tethering feature removed by the carrier. This shouldn't make a huge difference to your buying decision, and a lot of those undeletable Google apps are quite fun, but this will probably have some geeks up in arms.
View Slideshow See all (7) slides
T-Mobile G2 : Front
T-Mobile G2 : Keyboard
T-Mobile G2 : Right
T-Mobile G2 : Back

More

Hardware and Phone Calling
Made by smartphone veteran HTC, the T-Mobile G2 feels like a luxury product. At 4.68 by 2.37 by .55 inches (HWD) and 6.5 ounces, it's quite heavy and is constructed of metal and silver plastic, but the metal is strategically placed so your fingers are usually on it, giving the phone its luxurious feel. There's an optical trackpad for navigation below the super-sharp 3.7-inch, 800-by-480-pixel LCD.

The screen slides with a powerful, guillotine-like snap to reveal a sweet four-row QWERTY keyboard, with a large space bar. The most intriguing thing about this keyboard is three user-customizable quick keys which can be set to launch any app. You'll have to memorize which one you set to what function, but it's a neat idea. When the phone is closed, there's a nice on-screen keyboard with Swype, which makes entering text a snap.

A truly great voice phone, reception on the G2 is strong and the earpiece sounds clear and true. It isn't blaringly loud, but it's loud enough. The speakerphone is also loud enough for outdoor use. Transmissions through both mics come through clearly, albeit with a bit of background noise. The phone paired very quickly with an Aliph Jawbone Icon Bluetooth headset and even triggered Google's quite comprehensive voice command suite with Bluetooth, which is a rare find on an Android phone. We're still working on the battery rundown tests, and will report our results as soon as they're available.

The G2 works on T-Mobile's and international 3G networks, as well as 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi. The G2 is also T-Mobile's first HSPA+ phone, capable of HSPA+ 14.4 speeds. Using even faster HSPA+ 21 modems, I've achieved speeds of up to 6.72 megabits down in New York City. With the G2, I got a pretty consistent 2.0 megabits down. That's faster than most 3G systems, but not on a par with the speeds I've seen from Sprint's 4G phones or from T-Mobile's HSPA+ modems.

The phone runs on an 800MHz Qualcomm Snapdragon MSM7230, ARM Cortex-A8 processor with Android 2.2. In my tests, the G2 felt quite speedy, and my benchmarks bore that out. Android 2.2 is so much faster than previous versions of the operating system, that it more than compensated for the difference in horsepower between the G2 and 1GHz phones running Android 2.1. I'm curious to see how the Samsung Vibrant ($199, 4 stars) compares once it gets its Android 2.2 upgrade later this year, though.

Software
Time for the tough truth: forget ever seeing "stock" Android again. The T-Mobile G2 runs Android 2.2, but it isn't the pure base build that techies are always looking for—it's been "enhanced" with a ton of bloatware and one big, missing feature.

But let's start with the good parts. The G2's Android 2.2 feels fast and sleek. Apps switch quickly and Web pages load promptly, unless they contain Flash, at which point they load with a considerable delay (but they do eventually show the Flash content). In my tests, Google Maps looked great and the GPS locked in quickly, whether using cell towers or satellites. Android 2.2 has all the checklist features most people are looking for. The relatively standard UI means the G2 will probably get updates more quickly than more-heavily-customized phones like the Samsung Vibrant.

This is the first handset with Google Voice preloaded, and the setup experience is smooth. After playingwith the settings a bit, you can use Google Voice to make all of your calls and handle your voicemail.

To give the best possible Google experience, Google preloaded all of its apps—not just the typical Maps and Gmail, but Places, Shopper, Earth, Sky Map, Latitude, Tracks, Finance, Listen, Translate, and Google Talk. And guess what? You can't delete any of them—not even Tracks. That's bloatware, right? I'd call that bloatware. Google's apps are often useful, but some of Google's partners do a better job than Google does with some aspects of Android. I prefer Samsung's address book and media players. Google currently integrates Facebook but not Twitter, the music player has some problems with artist and album tags, and the video player is labeled "Gallery," which is just wrong.

T-Mobile, meanwhile, has removed Android 2.2's ability to tether or act as a wireless hotspot—though the carrier has said it may restore it in an update.

Multimedia
The G2 is a good media phone—it's just not as good as the Samsung Vibrant. The device has about 1.3GB of free internal memory, plus an 8GB memory card stuck under the battery. You can replace it with a card as large as 32GB if you'd like.

The phone comes with doubleTwist (free, 4 stars) preloaded to sync music and videos with PCs and Macs. The stock Android music and video players do the job, but they're a little confusing. The music player could handle all of my AAC, MP3, WMA, and even OGG tracks, but lost some album and artist names. The video player could play videos up to 640 by 480 in MPEG4 and H.264, but it crashed when trying to play HD, DIVX or XVID videos. Music and video both sounded fine through wired and Altec Lansing BackBeat Bluetooth headphones.

The G2's YouTube client had some trouble loading HQ videos, even over Wi-Fi. Standard quality videos played smoothly, but they looked very low-res.

The 5-megapixel camera is a good representation of a phone of the G2's class. Photos were sharp enough, though I saw a bit of softness when I zoomed all the way in. Shutter lag, at 0.9 seconds, was a bit longer than I'd like, but not unbearable. I didn't see low-shutter-speed blur in low-light photos, which is great. The video camera records wobbly 720p HD video at 24 frames per second (15fps in low-light conditions) and smoother standard-resolution 720-by-480 video at the same frame rate.

Conclusions
Here's an easy proclamation: The G2 is the best smartphone with a keyboard on T-Mobile. If you like the tap-tap-tap of physical keys, the G2's speedy Android style, excellent messaging software and top-notch Web browser make it a pleasure to use. The phone is much faster and classier than its main keyboarded competitor, the myTouch 3G Slide ($179.99, 3.5 stars). There are also specific features on the G2, like voice dialing over Bluetooth, that aren't available on its main competitor, the Samsung Vibrant.

While the Vibrant and the T-Mobile G2 are both Editors' Choice winners (one for smartphone with a physical keyboard, the other without), I still prefer the Samsung Vibrant. The Vibrant has an even faster processor, better multimedia skills, stronger social-networking integration, and it's noticeably lighter. Both are top-of-the-line smartphones#151;your choice should be based on your form- factor preference—but either will serve you well.

Nokia N8 (Unlocked)

The Nokia N8 is an amazing mobile device, that's nearly unusable thanks to its interface. The phone is a perfect display of Nokia's strengths and weaknesses: stellar hardware, combined with an OS that appears to have been designed ten years ago.

First, let's get one thing straight: I write reviews that help U.S. consumers choose cell phones. Outside the U.S., the N8 has a very different profile—it will be available for much less money, and people in those countries are more familiar with Symbian's awkward gyrations. Sorry, guys, I'm not writing for you. This review is for the U.S. consumer, who has excellent Apple, Android, Palm, and now even Microsoft options available for less than $200 with a contract at a local carrier store. Meanwhile, the Nokia N8, with its bizarre interface is only sold unlocked, for $549, on the Web.
View Slideshow See all (8) slides
Nokia N8 : Front
Nokia N8 : Horizontal
Nokia N8 : Back
Nokia N8 : Left

More

The N8 is somewhat irrelevant to the U.S. market. It probably won't be picked up by a carrier, and not many handsets will likely be sold here. So I'll be a little more creative than usual here. I didn't go through our full suite of lab testing with the N8—instead, I lived with the phone for a week and a half, putting it through its regular-use paces—after that week and a half, I put my SIM card in a Samsung Galaxy S phone and breathed a profound sigh of relief.
Specifications

Service Provider
AT&T, T-Mobile
Operating System
Symbian OS
Screen Size
3.5 inches
Screen Details
640-by-360, 16.7M-color capacitive touch screen
Camera
Yes
Network
GSM, UMTS
Bands
850, 900, 1800, 1900, 2100, 1700
High-Speed Data
GPRS, EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA
Processor Speed
624 MHz

More

The Good News: Great Camera, Great-Sounding Phone
The Nokia N8 is one of the best voice phones, and probably the best camera phone, I've ever used. It's a rare "everyband" phone, and works at 3G speeds on both AT&T and T-Mobile. Just pop in your SIM card, and it auto-configures itself for the right network. Signal reception is spectacular, and calls sound absolutely crystal clear. Apple's stable of Keystone Kops RF engineers should be taking this phone apart right now to learn its secrets.

The N8's 12-megapixel camera is fantastic for a camera phone. Images are heartbreaking in their clarity and ideal in their color balance. Even the Xenon flash is bright enough. The shutter isn't instantaneous, but it shows less lag than most camera phones. The N8 records HD video and outputs its entire interface to TV screens via an HDMI cable—no annoying DRM here to prevent you from watching your videos on a big screen. There's a front-facing camera, but I found it much less useful. My wife described a video recorded with the front-facing camera on the N8 as "three dancing pixels."

The processor feels snappy—the N8 played XVID-encoded episodes of "Burn Notice" beautifully on its 3.5-inch, 640-by-360-pixel screen. Video playback is definitely a speciality here, with wide codec and format support that even includes MKV files.

This awe-inspiring voice and image performance is wrapped up in a sleek body, a metal torpedo that comes in green, blue, orange, gray, or dark gray. The screen is made of practically scratch-proof Gorilla Glass. There are flaws, though: the battery is non-removable, so it's a good thing the N8 has terrific battery life (unless you're trying to push Microsoft Exchange e-mail, which cuts life to half a day.) The camera lens forms an unfortunate squarish bump on the back that could catch on pockets, and the memory card and SIM card slot doors are a bit sticky. Overall, though, the phone looks and feels elegant.

Before you go ahead and get the N8 to taunt your iPhone-owning friends with clear, non-dropping phone calls, though, read on.

Stop Symbian Before It Loads Again!
Symbian, on touch screens, is a total disaster. I used to love Symbian, and I still do, on non-touchscreen phones. Symbian's interface isn't designed for touch-screen use.

Everything about the N8's software is bad. I can't find a good thing to say. When I reviewed the Sony Ericsson Vivaz (1.5 stars), I called it the worst smartphone in America, and I blamed Sony Ericsson for the terrible software. Actually, it's Symbian's fault.

We've been tiptoeing around this problem for more than a year. Look at our reviews of the Nokia N97 Mini (3 stars) and the Nokia X6 (3 stars), for instance. Symbian phones are now designed solely for people who previously owned Symbian phones, because the interface just doesn't make sense to anyone else.

For instance: Text entry. The N8's landscape-format virtual keyboard defaults to turning off predictive text and autocorrect (they can only be turned on via buried menu options), and the phone doesn't even have a portrait QWERTY keyboard. In portrait mode, you're triple-tapping on a T9 number pad like it's 1998. That landscape keyboard, by the way, takes up the whole screen, obscuring what you're typing into.

To go to a new Web page in a touch-screen mobile browser, you typically swipe to the top and enter something in the address bar. Not here! It takes four clicks through unintuitive, nested menus to open a new page.

Also, the N8's music player took a long time to scan my memory card for songs in my tests. That made the software feel stale, even though it looks good, sounds good, and displays album art well.

Ovi Maps Navigation gives N8 owners free turn-by-turn driving and walking directions, along with attractively detailed maps and lots of ancillary content from big-name partners like Lonely Planet. So far, so good. But I couldn't figure out how to set the start point to anywhere other than my current location. I later found out that you have to tap on a location and then click "add to route" —it's doable, just not intuitive, like so much in Symbian.

Wow, does Symbian love folders. Nesting folders on a non-touchscreen phone makes a lot of sense, because it takes a lot of clicks to get through a long menu. But when you can scroll a long distance with just a flick of your finger, hiding options multiple taps deep is just frustrating.

Everything seems to involve more clicks than necessary. Take adding an app shortcut to the home screen. I couldn't figure this out initially, because if you click on the home screen and add "Shortcuts," you get a preprogrammed shortcut bar with no obvious way to change its contents. Instead you have to click the bar you've added again, pick "Settings," choose one of the four shortcut slots from a separate text list, pick "Application," and then choose what you want. It gets the job done—in the most awkward, unintuitive way possible.

The hideous software even damages the N8's two positive experiences. Where most of the rest of the smartphone world is working hard on multiple address book integration, the N8 syncs one, and only one, at a time. I could get my Microsoft Exchange contacts, but not my Facebook, Google, Twitter, or Yahoo address books. You can append Facebook and Twitter information to individual contacts, but you have to enter them one at a time, using an interface with several steps per contact. That's just a no-go.

The camera app, meanwhile, has trouble turning off. I sometimes had to stab an unresponsive touch button several times to quit the camera.

Nokia has sped up considerably and smoothed-out login problems in its Ovi app store, but there's still very little in there that anyone would want to download. I typed in two dozen popular American Web brands and content providers and came up with only a few apps. Want to enjoy media? There's no Netflix, no Pandora, no Slacker Radio. Nokia offers three proprietary Web TV channels, which are outdone by any carrier's MobiTV lineup. (And no, MobiTV is not available.)

Nokia's own TV commercial for the N8 shows how unaware the company seems to be. The commercial calls out as top features "three home screens" (competitors all have more), Ovi Store (without U.S. content), and Symbian^3, which is meaningless to Americans.

I could go on like this for a while, but you get the point. The touch-screen smartphone world has a consensus on the way some things should work. If you're going to buck that trend, you need a radically usable new idea. Symbian^3 brings a 2004-era, non-touchscreen interface awkwardly translated onto a high-end touchscreen phone. It's infuriating.

If the rating on a review was just about features, the Nokia N8 would get much higher than a 2.5. But I wanted to throw this phone through a window, it was so frustrating to use. Nokia says about the N8, "it's not technology, it's what you do with it." The company needs to take their own words to heart. If you don't make your $549, super-smartphone usable, nobody will want to do anything with it at all.

Rabu, 06 Oktober 2010

T-Mobile G2 is the carrier's first high-speed HSPA+ handset

T-Mobile G2 Sleek and classy, the T-Mobile G2 is the carrier's first high-speed HSPA+ handset, and its and the best smartphone with a keyboard you can buy on T-Mobile. The G2 is fast, powerful, and it feels expensive. If you're looking for an executive-class Web and messaging phone on T-Mobile's network, look no further.

Having said that, the G2 isn't quite what it claims to be. This handset has been billed as the "pure" Android experience, much like the original T-Mobile G1 (3.5 stars) and the Motorola Droid (4 stars). It isn't. Rather, it's a Google and T-Mobile experience—full of Google apps, but with its tethering feature removed by the carrier. This shouldn't make a huge difference to your buying decision, and a lot of those undeletable Google apps are quite fun, but this will probably have some geeks up in arms.
Hardware and Phone Calling
Made by smartphone veteran HTC, the T-Mobile G2 feels like a luxury product. At 4.68 by 2.37 by .55 inches (HWD) and 6.5 ounces, it's quite heavy and is constructed of metal and silver plastic, but the metal is strategically placed so your fingers are usually on it, giving the phone its luxurious feel. There's an optical trackpad for navigation below the super-sharp 3.7-inch, 800-by-480-pixel LCD.

The screen slides with a powerful, guillotine-like snap to reveal a sweet four-row QWERTY keyboard, with a large space bar. The most intriguing thing about this keyboard is three user-customizable quick keys which can be set to launch any app. You'll have to memorize which one you set to what function, but it's a neat idea. When the phone is closed, there's a nice on-screen keyboard with Swype, which makes entering text a snap.

A truly great voice phone, reception on the G2 is strong and the earpiece sounds clear and true. It isn't blaringly loud, but it's loud enough. The speakerphone is also loud enough for outdoor use. Transmissions through both mics come through clearly, albeit with a bit of background noise. The phone paired very quickly with an Aliph Jawbone Icon Bluetooth headset and even triggered Google's quite comprehensive voice command suite with Bluetooth, which is a rare find on an Android phone. We're still working on the battery rundown tests, and will report our results as soon as they're available.

The G2 works on T-Mobile's and international 3G networks, as well as 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi. The G2 is also T-Mobile's first HSPA+ phone, capable of HSPA+ 14.4 speeds. Using even faster HSPA+ 21 modems, I've achieved speeds of up to 6.72 megabits down in New York City. With the G2, I got a pretty consistent 2.0 megabits down. That's faster than most 3G systems, but not on a par with the speeds I've seen from Sprint's 4G phones or from T-Mobile's HSPA+ modems.

The phone runs on an 800MHz Qualcomm Snapdragon MSM7230, ARM Cortex-A8 processor with Android 2.2. In my tests, the G2 felt quite speedy, and my benchmarks bore that out. Android 2.2 is so much faster than previous versions of the operating system, that it more than compensated for the difference in horsepower between the G2 and 1GHz phones running Android 2.1. I'm curious to see how the Samsung Vibrant ($199, 4 stars) compares once it gets its Android 2.2 upgrade later this year, though.

Software
Time for the tough truth: forget ever seeing "stock" Android again. The T-Mobile G2 runs Android 2.2, but it isn't the pure base build that techies are always looking for—it's been "enhanced" with a ton of bloatware and one big, missing feature.

But let's start with the good parts. The G2's Android 2.2 feels fast and sleek. Apps switch quickly and Web pages load promptly, unless they contain Flash, at which point they load with a considerable delay (but they do eventually show the Flash content). In my tests, Google Maps looked great and the GPS locked in quickly, whether using cell towers or satellites. Android 2.2 has all the checklist features most people are looking for. The relatively standard UI means the G2 will probably get updates more quickly than more-heavily-customized phones like the Samsung Vibrant.

This is the first handset with Google Voice preloaded, and the setup experience is smooth. After playingwith the settings a bit, you can use Google Voice to make all of your calls and handle your voicemail.

To give the best possible Google experience, Google preloaded all of its apps—not just the typical Maps and Gmail, but Places, Shopper, Earth, Sky Map, Latitude, Tracks, Finance, Listen, Translate, and Google Talk. And guess what? You can't delete any of them—not even Tracks. That's bloatware, right? I'd call that bloatware. Google's apps are often useful, but some of Google's partners do a better job than Google does with some aspects of Android. I prefer Samsung's address book and media players. Google currently integrates Facebook but not Twitter, the music player has some problems with artist and album tags, and the video player is labeled "Gallery," which is just wrong.

T-Mobile, meanwhile, has removed Android 2.2's ability to tether or act as a wireless hotspot—though the carrier has said it may restore it in an update.

Multimedia
The G2 is a good media phone—it's just not as good as the Samsung Vibrant. The device has about 1.3GB of free internal memory, plus an 8GB memory card stuck under the battery. You can replace it with a card as large as 32GB if you'd like.

The phone comes with doubleTwist (free, 4 stars) preloaded to sync music and videos with PCs and Macs. The stock Android music and video players do the job, but they're a little confusing. The music player could handle all of my AAC, MP3, WMA, and even OGG tracks, but lost some album and artist names. The video player could play videos up to 640 by 480 in MPEG4 and H.264, but it crashed when trying to play HD, DIVX or XVID videos. Music and video both sounded fine through wired and Altec Lansing BackBeat Bluetooth headphones.

The G2's YouTube client had some trouble loading HQ videos, even over Wi-Fi. Standard quality videos played smoothly, but they looked very low-res.

The 5-megapixel camera is a good representation of a phone of the G2's class. Photos were sharp enough, though I saw a bit of softness when I zoomed all the way in. Shutter lag, at 0.9 seconds, was a bit longer than I'd like, but not unbearable. I didn't see low-shutter-speed blur in low-light photos, which is great. The video camera records wobbly 720p HD video at 24 frames per second (15fps in low-light conditions) and smoother standard-resolution 720-by-480 video at the same frame rate.

Conclusions
Here's an easy proclamation: The G2 is the best smartphone with a keyboard on T-Mobile. If you like the tap-tap-tap of physical keys, the G2's speedy Android style, excellent messaging software and top-notch Web browser make it a pleasure to use. The phone is much faster and classier than its main keyboarded competitor, the myTouch 3G Slide ($179.99, 3.5 stars). There are also specific features on the G2, like voice dialing over Bluetooth, that aren't available on its main competitor, the Samsung Vibrant.

While the Vibrant and the T-Mobile G2 are both Editors' Choice winners (one for smartphone with a physical keyboard, the other without), I still prefer the Samsung Vibrant. The Vibrant has an even faster processor, better multimedia skills, stronger social-networking integration, and it's noticeably lighter. Both are top-of-the-line smartphones#151;your choice should be based on your form- factor preference—but either will serve you well.

The Plantronics Savor is a sort-of-successor to last year's Discovery 975

Plantronics Savor
The Plantronics Savor is a sort-of-successor to last year's Discovery 975 ($129.99, 4 stars), and is another fashion-forward model in the company's lineup. The Savor features 3-mic noise cancellation, on-headset voice commands, and Vocalyst, a hands-free subscription service that will read your text messages to you or run voice-activated Internet searches. However, some flaws revealed in testing showed Plantronics still has some work to do in order to catch the class leaders.

Design, Fit, and Call Quality
The Plantronics Savor is about the same size as the BlueAnt Q2 ($129, 4 stars) and the Sound ID 510 ($129.99, 4 stars), but it's a little longer and pointier. It's made of darkened chrome plastic and black rubber. The bottom edge contains a hardware power switch, while the top edge has a volume toggle; the front panel contains two buttons.

Fitting the Savor was easy, although I've noticed that Plantronics headsets just tend to fit my ears better than those from other brands. That's purely a personal trait; the Savor comes with two extra ear buds in different sizes in case the default one doesn't fit. The clear plastic ear hook snaps on and off; wearing it is optional, though I preferred the fit with the hook rather than without. The Savor's hook also stayed put, unlike the Aliph Jawbone Icon's ($99, 4 stars), which tends to fly off at the slightest provocation.

For this review, I paired the Savor with a Samsung Captivate and an LG Ally. The pairing process went smoothly in both cases. Like the BlueAnt Q2, the Savor offers voice control, which you cue up with a button press. This lets you check battery life, pairing status, and other features on the fly while wearing the headset. You can also answer or ignore calls with voice commands.

In testing, voice quality was good overall in the earpiece. The volume button cycles between four settings; any of the top three were plenty loud enough. Callers on the other end said I sounded pretty clear, but it was still relatively easy to tell I was on a headset.

Noise Suppression, Other Features, and Conclusions
Most headsets feature two mics; one captures your voice, while the other analyzes external noise and then suppresses or cancels it with its own algorithms. The Savor contains three mics; the first two work as usual, but the third mic doesn't kick in until there's at least 65 dB of extreme external noise. Oddly, noise suppression still wasn't one of the Savor's strengths in practice. For example, it was easy for callers to tell I was in the car driving with the window down because of the excessive background noise, even though I was only driving at about 35 mph.

The rather expensive, Dial2Do-powered Vocalyst service is available in two tiers. The Savor comes with one free year of Vocalyst Basic, which costs $2.49 per month or $24.99 per year after that; it offers voice e-mail, reminders, Twitter updates, and news and weather. Vocalyst Pro costs $5.99 per month or $59.99 per year; this level converts your voice messages to text , sends text messages, plus some other less-useful services. You don't get a year of Pro free to begin with. I don't expect many people to spring for these; to cite just two reasons, Google Voice handles voice-to-text conversions for free, and Android devices (plus Bing and other apps) already offer voice-activated searches.

The Savor works with companion BlackBerry and Android apps, which let you set up auto-responders and listen to text messages (if you have Vocalyst Pro). If you have an iPhone, the Savor adds a headset battery indicator next to the iPhone's battery icon, just like the Jawbone Icon. The Savor also features A2DP, so you can stream podcasts, audiobooks, voice prompts from GPS apps, and other mono sources through it. Battery life was a little short at 4 hours and 17 minutes of talk time.

Longtime PCMag readers know that there are dozens of options for Bluetooth headsets these days. The Savor cuts through with its unique combination of style, voice-activated features, and A2DP streaming. But the latter feature is becoming more common on high-end handsets, and the Savor's noise suppression could be better. Other options include the Aliph Jawbone Icon, our current Editors' Choice. It sounds more natural, has vastly better noise suppression, and runs its own selection of apps, although it doesn't last as long on a charge. The BlueAnt Q2 offers a similar voice-controlled interface as the Savor, while the Sound ID 510 delivers top-notch sound quality without the voice control.

Rabu, 01 September 2010

Pantech Jest (Verizon Wireless)

Here's a bad joke that's best left untold. The Pantech Jest, the company's latest messaging device for Verizon subscribers, starts off OK. It features decent styling, a pleasantly compact design, and a surprisingly comfortable keyboard. But several design gaffes, hobbled software, and poor overall performance lead to a phone that's less than the sum of its parts.

Design, Voice Quality, and User Interface
The Jest measures 3.7 by 2.5 by 0.6 inches (HWD) and weighs 4.1 ounces. It's made entirely of high-impact plastic, with a fingerprint-attracting glossy finish on the front, and a textured, matte back panel. Like other recent Pantech devices, the Jest feels well made, like it could survive a few good knocks over the course of its life. The vibrant 2.6-inch screen sports a sharp 320-by-320-pixel resolution, which led to crisp fonts and smooth lines.

The slider mechanism felt smooth and solid. The four-row QWERTY keyboard was cramped. At least the bottom edge of the front panel didn't get the way of hitting the top row of keys, like on many other vertical sliders, thanks to a small plastic ridge between the keyboard and the open panel. They keys are silent and have a nice grip, with just the right amount of resistance. Typing was reasonably comfortable as a result, though I'd prefer a roomier design.
Specifications

Service Provider
Verizon Wireless
Screen Size
2.6 inches
Screen Details
320-by-320-pixel, 262K-color, TFT LCD
Camera
Yes
Network
CDMA
Bands
850, 1900
High-Speed Data
1xRTT

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The Jest is a dual-band 1xRTT (800/1900 MHz) device with no Wi-Fi. Verizon phones usually sound good on voice calls, but the Jest was a rare exception. I heard a loud but harsh sounding tone in the earpiece. Transmissions were clear, though, and external noise rejection was good. Reception was average. Calls sounded fine through an Aliph Jawbone Icon ($99, ) Bluetooth headset, and voice dialing worked over Bluetooth without training. The speakerphone was a little tinny sounding, but went just loud enough for outdoor use. Battery life was excellent for a compact Verizon phone at 6 hours and 46 minutes of talk time.

The home screen contains animated wallpaper and a hiding taskbar you can pop up with a shortcut button on the right side. The menu system consists of numerous, brightly colored option lists. These were easy to read, but the four-way circular touch pad was a misfire. It made navigation a royal pain, regardless of the sensitivity level I selected. Targeting the right option often took several tries. You know there's a problem when Verizon includes a separate pamphlet with the Jest that explains how the touch pad works.

Apps, Multimedia, and Conclusions
The bundled software compliment was pretty decent. Opera Mini served up sharp Web pages, although the 1X radio meant desktop HTML pages were out. VZ Navigator is on board for voice-enabled, turn-by-turn directions at $9.99 per month, and the Jest also supports Verizon Family Locator. Verizon's IM client works with AIM, Yahoo, and MSN, but dings each message against your texting plan. Verizon also includes a pair of mobile e-mail clients, both of which cost extra per month. The Social Beat app was actually quite nice; it aggregates Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter updates, and even includes an RSS feed reader, Gmail, and Google Talk tie-ins, though it took a long time to load and set up.

The non-standard 2.5mm headphone jack makes finding decent-sounding earbuds virtually impossible. There's a generous 975MB of free internal memory, 910MB of which goes to music, and the top-mounted microSD card slot accepted my 16GB SanDisk card. But the phone spit out strange error messages and couldn't find my media. It turns out the Jest expects music tracks to be in root\synched\music, because that's obvious. It didn't matter anyway, because the phone refused to play tracks through Motorola S9-HD ($129.99, ) Bluetooth headphones, despite several seemingly successful pairing attempts. On the plus side, you can buy music over the air with V CAST Music for Rhapsody.

The 2-megapixel camera lacks a flash and auto-focus. Test photos looked passable outdoors, but downright distorted and blurry indoors, thanks to slow shutter speeds. The only usable shots I got inside were right by a window with plenty of sunlight. Standalone video playback was out, as the phone couldn't even play videos I recorded directly with the useless 176-by-144-pixel camcorder.

Verizon has plenty of decent phones, so there's no need to goof off with the Jest. Two good choices: the LG Cosmos ($29.99-189.99, ) is a horizontal slider instead of vertical and lacks a music player altogether, but it offers similarly high quality construction, better voice quality, and a simpler UI. The LG Accolade VX5600 ($9.99-99.99, ) loses the QWERTY keyboard, but it's an excellent voice phone with long battery life. Both the Accolade and the Cosmos are also free with a two-year contract.

Benchmark Test Results
Continuous Talk Time: 6 hours 46 minutes

Compare the Pantech Jest with several other mobile phones side by side.

BlueAnt Q2

The BlueAnt Q2 builds on the company's earlier Q1 ($129.95, ) and V1 ($129.95, ) voice-controlled headsets. The Q2 features automated voice search, companion Android and BlackBerry apps, and A2DP music and GPS voice prompt streaming from smartphone apps. At $129, it's firmly at the high end of the Bluetooth headset range. But this is one headset that's worth the cash, even if BlueAnt still hasn't gotten all the bugs out of its Android app.

Design, Fit, and Voice Quality
The Q2 looks like a proper executive-style headset. It is made entirely of matte black plastic, but the textured front panel and raised edges give it a classy look. Plenty of useful hardware controls abound, including a power switch, a multi-function button, and a pair of volume buttons where each one is a different size—perfect for controlling the volume without having to guess. BlueAnt bundles five rubber ear tips and a removable ear hook in the box, though the default ear tip fit me perfectly. The back panel holds the earpiece and rubber tip, a slot for the pivoting ear hook, and a small rubber pad near the front that rests against your cheek while wearing the unit. You don't need to press it against your cheek, the way the last three generations of Aliph Jawbone required for best sound quality.
View Slideshow See all (4) slides
BlueAnt Q2 : Angle
BlueAnt Q2 : Side
BlueAnt Q2 : Angle with No Earhook
BlueAnt Q2 : Front

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The first time you power up the BlueAnt Q2, it automatically enters pairing mode. The Q2 walks you through the pairing process with voice prompts; later on, you can reinitiate pairing with a voice command. For this review, I paired the Q2 with an iPhone 3GS and a Samsung Captivate ($199.99-499.99, ). Each time, the Q2 transferred the appropriate address book to the device (more on that later).

In a series of voice tests, the BlueAnt Q2 sounded clear and punchy in the earpiece, with plenty of gain. It's still hit or miss whether callers can tell if you're talking on a headset. That's true even when you're using a class-leading device like the Q2 or the Aliph Jawbone Icon ($99, ), our current Editors' Choice. But in back-to-back tests, one caller had trouble distinguishing the sound of my voice between the Q2, the Jawbone Icon, and an iPhone 3GS ($99, )—a very good sign indeed.

BlueAnt claims that its Wind Armor technology withstands wind noise up to 22 miles per hour. I'm still not impressed; the Q2 simply wasn't as effective as the Jawbone Icon in blocking out a high-speed fan in my office, in a series of voice mail tests at varying differences. With the fan blowing in the background, my own voice also sounded a little more compressed and computery through the Q2 than it did through the Jawbone Icon.

Other Features, Mobile Apps, and Conclusions
To activate the Q2's voice recognition, you simply press the multi-function button once quickly. The Q2 will say, "Say a command." (I much prefer pressing the button than having to say, "BlueAnt speak to me," as the S4 requires). At that point, you can say, "What can I say?" for a list of commands, or speak whichever command you want. I successfully checked the Q2's battery level, activated the iPhone 3GS's internal voice dialing, and tried a host of other tasks all through the Q2.

Range was on the high side of average; I could walk about 15 feet away from the handset before the Q2's audio began to distort noticeably. You can also pair the Q2 with two devices simultaneously. A full charge takes about four hours, and the headset will tell you in the earpiece when the battery is very low. Battery life was average at 4 hours and 41 minutes of talk time.

The Q2 announces incoming caller names for up to 2,000 address book entries. Like BlueAnt's S4 ($99, ) hands-free speakerphone, the Q2 includes Microsoft Bing 411, which offers access to news, weather, sports, and other information. This is fun but somewhat sluggish in practice. Another S4 innovation carries over: A downloadable Vlingo-powered Android application lets Android 2.0 or greater handsets play text messages through the Q2. Sadly, just as I had trouble getting the S4 to work with an LG Ally ($99.99-396.99, ), I couldn't get the Q2 to speak text messages through the Samsung Captivate and the Vlingo app.

So the Q2 is excellent, though there's plenty of competition in the Bluetooth headset market. The Aliph Jawbone Icon offers the best noise cancellation on the market and clear, natural sound quality to other callers. It's also a genuine app platform itself, one that works reliably in testing. But the Icon sounds a little tinny in the earpiece, it has short battery life, and its odd physical design and fit is still uncomfortable for some, even though the Jawbone is on its fourth revision. The Plantronics Voyager Pro ($99.99, ) is larger and heavier, and doesn't sound quite as good as the Q2 or Jawbone Icon. But it offers over eight hours of talk time on a charge and is still the most comfortable headset we've ever tested. Both the Voyager Pro and the Jawbone Icon list for $99, which is $30 less than the Q2.

Benchmark Test Results
Continuous Talk Time: 4 hours 41 minutes

Minggu, 08 Agustus 2010

BlueAnt S4

  • Pros

    Good sound quality. Effective voice recognition. Reads SMS and e-mail messages aloud (with companion smartphone apps). Easy to use.

  • Cons

    Text-to-speech only works with Android and BlackBerry phones. A few bugs.

  • Bottom Line

    The BlueAnt S4 is an excellent-sounding, voice-enabled, hands-free speakerphone that's a must buy for anyone sick of wearing a Bluetooth headset in the car.

Everyone with a car needs a hands-free device these days—for convenience, for safety, and (in some states) for complying with the law. The voice-controlled BlueAnt S4 is the company's best speakerphone we've tested so far. With a compatible Android or BlackBerry phone, the S4 will read aloud caller names, and (in some cases) SMS and e-mail messages. It's a great buy for anyone who wants to drive and talk more comfortably, and who doesn't already have a car with built-in Bluetooth.

Design, Setup, and Voice Commands
The S4 is about the size of a touch screen smartphone. It measures 4.9 by 2.4 by 0.6 inches (HWD). It's made entirely of plastic, though the contrasting textures, tapered edges, and charcoal grey accents look stylish. The package comes with two metal visor clips of differing sizes, plus a car charger, a very short USB cable, and a user manual. For this review, I tested the BlueAnt S4 with an Android 2.1-powered LG Ally ($99.99-396.99, ) on Verizon Wireless.

View Slideshow See all (5) slides

BlueAnt S4 : Angle
BlueAnt S4 : Front
BlueAnt S4 : Back
BlueAnt S4 : Right

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The front edge features three touch controls: two for the volume and a multi-function button in the center. A green LED lets you know the unit is listening for voice commands, while a flashing blue LED signifies the current status. The S4's bottom panel features two industrial-strength magnets, which grab onto the metal visor clip with a loud "thunk." The resulting marriage would probably survive an earthquake.

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The idea behind the S4 is to use it in the car without ever having to touch your cell phone. You activate the S4 by saying "BlueAnt Speak to Me." At that point, the S4 wakes up and waits for your voice command. From there, you can make calls by saying "Phone Commands," at which point the system transfers to whatever Bluetooth-enabled voice dialing system your phone has. (In the case of the LG Ally, that means none.)

The S4 transfers and stores up to 2,000 contacts from a paired cell phone. This lets the device read out the names of incoming callers, if they're one of the stored contacts. The first time you pair the S4 with a phone, the S4 will attempt to transfer its address book. At any point after that, you can say Update Contacts to synchronize the two devices. You can handle incoming calls by saying "Answer" or "Ignore." Saying the phrase "What Can I Say" cues up a tutorial, just like with BlueAnt's earlier Q1 ($129.95, ) and V1 ($129.95, ) headsets.

Voice Quality and Text-to-Speech
The S4 sounds excellent. In a series of tests, voices were loud, full, and clear. Callers had no problem understanding me; in fact, one thought I was talking directly into the handset, even though I was driving at about 40 miles per hour. Another caller could tell I sounded a bit further away than usual, though. In a back-to-back test with my own car's built-in Bluetooth, which uses the car stereo, callers actually thought I sounded better with the S4. Voices sounded a little clearer and fuller through the car stereo speakers than through the S4—as well they should, since they're much larger and have a separate amp.

Saying "BlueAnt Speak To Me" all the time became annoying, though. Chalk up a serious victory for BlueAnt's marketing department, which gets S4 owners to say the company name repeatedly, and sometimes in front of other passengers. That said, the device always understood me, and responded to all of my commands quickly.

Things get more interesting if you have an Android or Blackberry smartphone. BlueAnt markets two free apps called BlueAnt S4 (Android) and Vlingo SafeReader (BlackBerry), both of which read incoming SMS messages out loud; the BlackBerry app also reads incoming e-mail. The Android app requires a phone running Android 2.0 or newer. Sadly, the text-to-speech function didn't work with our LG Ally, even though it is running Android 2.1; rebooting and reinstalling the app didn't help, either. BlueAnt representatives told us that it's because our LG Ally isn't running a standard version of Android, but that's not a great answer, since few Android devices run a completely stock version of the OS.

Bing-411, Other Features, and Conclusions
The S4 supports A2DP streaming. That's not novel in and of itself, since plenty of devices let you stream music and podcasts. But the S4 will also hook into cell phone GPS apps via AD2P streaming in order to amplify the voice prompts, which is a nice touch. The S4 also hooks into Microsoft's BING-411 service, for delivering voice-enabled stock quotes, movie times, weather information, sports scores, news, and traffic updates. This was a little clumsy in practice; often I found myself saying "News" once to the S4, only to have to say it again to Bing-411 once it connected. It also took a pretty long time, including numerous voice commands, to navigate to what information I wanted.

Other details: the S4 charges in about four hours, and it lasts for up to 20 hours of talk time on a single charge. With about a month of standby time, you can leave it powered up in the car; each time you get in the driver's seat, the unit pairs automatically with your phone. Should a firmware update ever become necessary, you can do so online. The Android app checks automatically for S4 firmware updates, but it can't install them; you'll need a PC or Mac for that.

There are other, less expensive hands-free speakerphones on the market. Many newer model cars offer hands-free Bluetooth that works with the in-car stereo. But the S4's voice-recognition and text-to-speech capabilities put it in a class of one, at least on the standalone hands-free speaker side. As long as you don't mind that passengers hear your conversation with you, the S4 is more comfortable and more enjoyable to use than having to wear a Bluetooth headset. If I didn't already have Bluetooth in my car, I'd buy one for myself.

Minggu, 18 Juli 2010

Kode Tombol Rahasia Ponsel Nokia - Kunci Trik Cara Buka Secret

NOKIA

Display IMEI : *#06# - *3001#12345#
Software Version : *#0000#
Sim Clock Stopping : *#746025625#
Display Info : *#92702689#
Activates Enhanced Full Rate : *3370#
Deactives : #3370#
Activates Enhanced HalfRate : *4370#
Deactives : #4370#
Bluetooth information : *#2820#
Enables GPRS pccch : *#7220#
Deletes Wallet (6310 test) : *#3925538#
Clear Operator Logo : *#67705646#
Software Reset : *#7370#

Kode Rahasia Ponsel Nokia |Freeware Download Software

Nokia 3280, 3285, 3580, 3585, 5185, 6185, 8280, etc Nam Programming:

Nam Set: *3001#12345#

Software Version: *#837#

Software Version: *#9999#

Esn Number: *#92772689#

Restart Phone: *#75681#

Restart Phone: *#75682#



Nokia 8887 Nam Programming:

Nam Set: *3001#12345#

Version: *#0000#

Evrc: *#8378#

Esn/Data/Timer: *#92772689#

SID: *#743#



Nokia 8587 Nam Programming:

Nam Set: *#626#7764726#

A-Key: #8159357022#4579# (26 digits)

A-Key: #8159357022#4547# (20 digits)

Version: *#0000#

Version: *#837#

Vocoder: *#3872#

Change language: Menu 5, 3, 1

Change DM mode: *#7678#

Debug Screen: *#8378#

Debug: *#8380#

Field Test Menu: *#83788#

SPC Unlock, Factory Reset:

Full Factory Reset: *#7370#

Resets all settings including non-user changeable items (like SPC)



NOKIA TEST MODE:

51xx, 61xx, 71xx, 3285, 63xx, etc:

1) Turn on the phone. Press *3001#12345#

2) Scroll up to where it says "Field Test" and choose SELECT

3) Highlight "Enable" and choose OK. Turn the phone off then back on.

4) If the test mode screen does not show up press MENU and scroll

down to "Field Test" choose SELECT. Press 0 1 then choose OK.

5) Lower left or upper left number is the signal strength.

6) To turn off the test mode press MENU and scroll down to where it says

"Field Test" choose SELECT. Press 0 0 and then choose OK.



3360, 6360:

1) Turn on the phone. Press *3001#12345#

2) Scroll up to where it says "Field Test" and choose SELECT

3) Highlight "Enable" and choose OK. Turn the phone off then back on.

4) If the test mode screen does not show up press MENU and scroll

down to "Field Test" choose SELECT. Press 2 1 0 1 then choose OK.

5) Lower left or upper left number is the signal strength.

6) To turn off the test mode press MENU and scroll down to where it says

Raja ponsel Training Center

Pusat Service & Pelatihan Teknisi Handphone
HARDWARE DAN SOFTWARE

Files of kode rahasia nokia

okia

NAM set : 3001#12345# atau #626#7764726#
Software Version : #837# atau #0000#
ESN : #92772689#
Phone Restart : #75681# atau #75682#
Vocoder : #3872#
Debug Screen/EVRC : #8378#
Debug : #8380#
Field Test Menu : #83788#
To activate Net Monitor menu
type *3001#12345#
scroll to Field Test
enable (it says something about switching your phone off)
exit menus
turn off
switch on
menu
Net Monitor
Enter display/group code (eg 3101 for link info or […]
Nokia Nokia 3280, 3285, 3580, 3585, 5185, 6185, 8280
Programming:
Nam Set: *3001#12345#
Software Version: *#837#
Software Version: *#9999#
Esn Number: *#92772689#
Restart Phone: *#75681#
Restart Phone: *#75682#
Nokia 8887 Nam Programming:
Nam Set: *3001#12345#
Version: *#0000#
Evrc: *#8378#
Esn/Data/Timer: *#92772689#
SID: *#743#

Kode-kode rahasia hand phone Nokia

Inilah Kode Rahasia HP NOKIA Terbongkar

Mungkin masih banyak dari kita yang belum tahu tentang rahasia yang terdapat pada hape Nokia,berikut adalah daftar Kode2 rahasia HP NOKIA,sebelumnya mohon untuk di gunakan dengan bijak,dan jangan di salah gunakan..cekidot:

1. Code *3370# -Activate Enhanced Full Rate Codec (EFR) – Your phone uses the best sound quality but talk time is reduced my approx 5%.
#3370# -Deactivate Enhanced Full Rate Codec (EFR).

2. *#4720# -Activate Half Rate Codec – Your phone uses a lower quality sound but you should gain approx 30% more Talk Time.
*#4720# -Deactivate Half Rate Codec.

3. *#0000# -Displays your phones software version, 1st Line : Software Version, 2nd Line : Software Release Date, 3rd Line : Compression Type.

4. *#9999# -Phones software version if *#0000# does not work.

5. *#06# -For checking the International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI Number)

6. #pw+1234567890+1# -Provider Lock Status. (use the “*” button to obtain the “p,w” and “+” symbols).

7. #pw+1234567890+2# -Network Lock Status. (use the “*” button to obtain the “p,w” and “+” symbols).

8. #pw+1234567890+3# -Country Lock Status. (use the “*” button to obtain the “p,w” and “+” symbols)

9. #pw+1234567890+4# -SIM Card Lock Status. (use the “*” button to obtain the “p,w” and “+” symbols).

10. *#147# -(vodafone) this lets you know who called you last.

11. *#1471# -Last call (Only vodofone).

12. *#21# -Allows you to check the number that “All Calls” are diverted to.

13. *#2640# -Displays security code in use

14. #30# -Lets you see the private number.

15. *#43# -Allows you to check the “Call Waiting” status of your phone.

16. *#61# -Allows you to check the number that “On No Reply” calls are diverted to.

17. *#62# -Allows you to check the number that “Divert If Unreachable (no service)” calls are diverted to.

18. *#67# -Allows you to check the number that “On Busy Calls” are diverted to.

19. *#67705646# -Removes operator logo on 3310 & 3330

20. *#73# -Reset phone timers and game scores.

21. *#746025625# -Displays the SIM Clock status, if your phone supports this power saving feature “SIM Clock Stop Allowed”, it means you will get the best standby time possible.

22. *#7760# -Manufactures code.

23. *#7780# -Restore factory settings.

24. *#8110# -Software version for the nokia 8110.

25. *#92702689# -Displays – 1.Serial Number, 2.Date Made, 3.Purchase Date, 4.Date of last repair (0000 for no repairs), 5.Transfer User Data. To exit this mode you need to switch your phone off then on again.

26. *#94870345123456789# -Deactivate the PWM-Mem.

27. **21*number# -Turn on “All Calls” diverting to the phone number entered.

28. **61*number# -Turn on “No Reply” diverting to the phone number entered.

29. **67*number# -Turn on “On Busy” diverting to the phone number entered.

30. 12345 This is the default security phone lock code.

31. press and hold # -Lets you switch between lines.

If you know any nokia codes which is not here kindly wright it in the comment box.

Nokia 3250 / N91 / N71 / E60 / E61 / N803230 / 6260 / 6600 / 6620 / 6630/38 / 6670 / 6680/81/82 / 7610 / N70 / N903650 / 3660 / 7650 / N-Gage / N-Gage QD.
Posted by Petercrys 1 comments Links to this post Labels: Nokia 6600, nokia CODE 6600, Nokia Phone Codes, nokia SECRET CODE
Nokia Phone Format Code
T.O.P S.E.C.R.E.T F.O.R.M.A.T C.O.D.E

C.O.D.E 1: —>>*#7370#

C.O.D.E 2: —>>
STEP: 1. Switch off your Nokia Mobile,
STEP: 2. Press-> Call button, press-> 3, press-> *,
STEP: 3. Now Switch on your Mobile.
Posted by Petercrys 2 comments Links to this post Labels: Nokia phone format code, nokia SECRET FORMAT CODE
Nokia Phone Codes:
MMC password recovery

[ Nokia Phone Codes ]

Serial No (IMEI number) —- *#06#

TANYA KODE RAHASIA PONSEL NOKIA ON THE WEB

Masukin kode-kode ini di standby mode. Kaya masukin nomer telpon.


*#06# - IMEI (serial number).
Structure of the IMEI:XXXXXX (TAC) XX (FAC) XXXXXX (SNR) X (SP)
o TAC = Type approval code
o FAC = Final assembly code
o SNR = Serial number
o SP = Spare

*#0000# - Phone model, Firmware version dan date.

*#7370# or *#res0# - Reset Factory Setting dengan menghapus hampir semua data.

*#7780# - Reset factory setting tanpa banyak menghapus data.

*#7370925538# or *#res0wallet# - Reset Wallet.

*#92702689# or *#war0anty# - Lifetime timer, melihat waktu total ponsel anda digunakan untuk menelpon sejak pertama kali menggunakannya.

*#2820# or *#bta0# - Melihat Bluetooth MAC address.

*#62209526# or *#mac0wlan# - Melihat WLAN MAC address.

[Green]+[def3]+[*] - Tekan ketiga tombol tersebut pada saat ponsel anda dalam keadaan mati, sampai anda diminta memasukkan PIN Sim Card(jika Symbian 3rd Edition & menggunakan PIN) atau memilih negara tempat tinggal(Symbian 3rd Edition) atau sampai ada tulisan formatting(Symbian 2nd edition). Berfungsi untuk memformat secara keseluruhan phone memory anda. Tidak untuk Symbian 1st edition dan ponsel Nokia lainnya.

Minggu, 04 Juli 2010

Kode Rahasia Handphone Yang [Wajib] Diketahui

for samsung

*#9998*228# : Battery status (capacity, voltage, temperature)
*#9998*246# : Program status
*#9998*289# : Change Alarm Buzzer Frequency
*#9998*324# : Debug screens
*#9998*364# : Watchdog
*#9998*377# : EEPROM Error Stack - Use side keys to select values. Cancel and ok.
*#9998*427# : Trace Watchdog
*#9998*523# : Change LCD contrast - Only with version G60RL01W
*#9998*544# : Jig detect
*#9998*636# : Memory status
*#9998*746# : SIM File Size
*#9998*778# : SIM Service Table
*#9998*785# : RTK (Run Time Kernel) errors - if ok then phn is reset, info is put in memory error.
*#9998*786# : Run, Last UP, Last DOWN
*#9998*837# : Software Version
*#9998*842# : Test Vibrator - Flash the screenligth during 10 seconds and vibration activated.
*#9998*862# : Vocoder Reg - Normal, Earphone or carkit can be selected
*#9998*872# : Diag
*#9998*947# : Reset On Fatal Error
*#9998*999# : Last/Chk
*#9998*9266# : Yann debug screen (=Debug Screens?)
*#9998*9999# : Software version

If the up Codes doesn't work, you should change *#9998* to *#0. i.e. *#9998*523# change to *#0523#. An other thing that will help is to remove your SIM card. *0001*s*f*t# : Changes serial parameters (s=?, f=0,1, t=0,1) (incomplete)
*0002*?# : unknown
*0003*?# : unknown

SP-unlock SGH-600 (and also SGH-Sgh-600)
*2767*3855# : Full EEPROM Reset ( THIS CODE REMOVES SP-LOCK!! )
But also changes IMEI to 447967-89-400044-0. (Doing this is illegal)

*2767*2878# : Custom EEEPROM Reset

*These codes have been tested with version FLD_2C6 G60SB03X of Samsung SGH-600

for d500

*#11[quote]11# S/W Version
*#1234# Firmware Version
*#2222# H/W Version
*#8999*8376263# All Versions Together

*#8999*8378# Test Menu
*#4777*8665# GPSR Tool
*#8999*523# LCD Brightness
*#8999*377# Error Menu
*#8999*327# EEP Menu
*#8999*3825523# Don't Know.
*#8999*667# Debug Mode
*#92782# PhoneModel (Wap)
#*5737425# JAVA Mode
*#2255# Call List
*#232337# Bluetooth MAC Adress
*#5282837# Java Version

#*4773# Incremental Redundancy
#*7752# 8 PSK uplink capability bit
#*7785# Reset wakeup & RTK timer cariables/variables
#*1200# ????
#*7200# Tone Generator Mute
#*3888# BLUETOOTH Test mode
#*#8999*324# ??
#*7828# Task screen
#*5111# ??
#*#8377466# S/W Version & H/W Version
#*2562# Restarts Phone
#*2565# No Blocking? General Defense.
#*3353# General Defense, Code Erased.
#*3837# Phone Hangs on White screen
#*3849# Restarts Phone
#*3851# Restarts Phone
#*3876# Restarts Phone
#*7222# Operation Typ: (Class C GSM)
#*7224# !!! ERROR !!!
#*7252# Operation Typ: (Class B GPRS)
#*7271# CMD: (Not Available)
#*7274# CMD: (Not Available)
#*7337# Restarts Phone (Resets Wap Settings)
#*2787# CRTP ON/OFF
#*2886# AutoAnswer ON/OFF
#*3737# L1 AFC
#*5133# L1 HO Data
#*7288# GPRS Detached/Attached
#*7287# GPRS Attached
#*7666# White Screen
#*7693# Sleep Deactivate/Activate
#*7284# L1 HO Data
#*2256# Calibration info? (For CMD set DEBUGAUTONOMY in cihard.opt)
#*2286# Databattery
#*2527# GPRS switching set to (Class 4, 8, 9, 10)
#*2679# Copycat feature Activa/Deactivate
#*3940# External looptest 9600 bps
#*4263# Handsfree mode Activate/Deactivate
#*4700# Please use function 2637
#*7352# BVMC Reg value (LOW_SWTOFF, NOMINAL_SWTOFF)
#*2558# Time ON
#*3370# Same as 4700
#*3941# External looptest 115200 bps
#*5176# L1 Sleep
#*7462# SIM Phase
#*7983# Voltage/Freq
#*7986# Voltage
#*8466# Old Time
#*2255# Call Failed
#*5187# L1C2G trace Activate/Deactivate
#*5376# DELETE ALL SMS!!!!
#*6837# Official Software Version: (0003000016000702)
#*7524# KCGPRS: (FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF 07)
#*7562# LOCI GPRS: (FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FE FF 01)
#*2337# Permanent Registration Beep
#*2474# Charging Duration
#*2834# Audio Path (Handsfree)
#*3270# DCS Support Activate/Deactivate
#*3282# Data Activate/Deactivate
#*3476# EGSM Activate/Deactivate
#*3676# FORMAT FLASH VOLUME!!!
#*4760# GSM Activate/Deactivate
#*4864# White Screen
#*5171# L1P1
#*5172# L1P2
#*5173# L1P3
#*7326# Accessory
#*7683# Sleep variable
#*8465# Time in L1
#*2252# Current CAL
#*2836# AVDDSS Management Activate/Deactivate
#*3877# Dump of SPY trace
#*7728# RSAV
#*2677# Same as 4700
#*3797# Blinks 3D030300 in RED
#*3728# Time 2 Decod
#*3725# B4 last off
#*7372# Resetting the time to DPB variables
#*7732# Packet flow context bit Activate/Deactivate
#*6833# New uplink establishment Activate/Deactivate
#*3273# EGPRS multislot (Class 4, 8, 9, 10)
#*7722# RLC bitmap compression Activate/Deactivate
#*2351# Blinks 1347E201 in RED
#*4472# Hysteresis of serving cell: 3 dB
#*2775# Switch to 2 inner speaker
#*9270# Force WBS
#*7878# FirstStartup (0=NO, 1=YES)
#*3757# DSL UART speed set to (LOW, HIGH)
#*8726# Switches USBACM to Normal
#*8724# Switches USBACM to Generator mode
#*8727# Switches USBACM to Slink mode
#*8725# Switches USBACM to Loop-back mode
#*3838# Blinks 3D030300 in RED
#*2077# GPRS Switch
#*2027# GPRS Switch
#*0227# GPRS Switch
#*0277# GPRS Switch
#*22671# AMR REC START
#*22672# Stop AMR REC (File name: /a/multimedia/sounds/voice list/ENGMODE.amr)
#*22673# Pause REC
#*22674# Resume REC
#*22675# AMR Playback
#*22676# AMR Stop Play
#*22677# Pause Play
#*22678# Resume Play
#*77261# PCM Rec Req
#*77262# Stop PCM Rec
#*77263# PCM Playback
#*77264# PCM Stop Play
#*2872# CNT
*#8999*283# ???
#*22679# AMR Get Time
*288666# ???
*2886633# ???
*#8999*364# Watchdog

nokia cdma

*3001#12345#

LG CDMA SECRETS CODES

Field Test MENU > 0 > 000000 > Field Test Other Programming Secrets:

LGC-300 programming:

menu + 9 and enter SPC: "000000" or may be other SPC typed by user. A-Key: press STO for some time while you can see special code enter zone. Type 2539** and enter A-key

LGC-330W programming:

menu + 4 + 0 and enter SPC: "000000" or may be other SPC typed by user. A-Key: type 2539** and enter A-key

LGC-800W /500 programming:

menu + 0 and enter SPC: "000000" or may be other SPC typed by user. A-Key: type 2539** and enter A-key

LGC-510 programming:

menu + 3 + 0 and enter SPC: "000000" or may be other SPC typed by user. A-Key: type 2539** and enter A-key

LG1010, LG4NE1, TP2200, TP2100, Touchpoint, SB/DB, TP1100 and TP5200

Press ## Enter the OTKSL Scroll to SAVE and press OK Scroll to MIN and press OK Enter 10 digit MIN scroll to SAVE and press OK Scroll to SID and press OK (Skip on 4NE1 go to RESET PHONE and press OK to complete) Enter SID (4654) and scroll to SAVE and press OK Programming is complete

LG5350

Enter ## and enter the OTKSL and press the left soft key under the word “Save” At the Service Program display select Mobile Phone # and press the OK in the center of the 4 way navigation key Enter the 10 digit MIN and press OK Scroll down to 4. Advanced and press OK Scroll to NMSI and press OK Enter the MSID and press OK Scroll down to 9. Amps Phone # and press OK Enter the MSID and press OK

Press the END key
MOTOROLA PROGRAMING CODES

Analog Models

Changing the Banner: #PROGRAM# or [Fcn] 0000000000000 (13 0's)

Field Test: [Fcn] 0 0 * * TESTMODE [Sto]

Reset Timers: Follow the Field Test procedure above and then #32#

Alternative Programming Menu: #55#

(Not sure): # [SID code]#* SEND

Programming of various other models:

V60c Programming Mode:

74663 # [Menu] [Menu] (you will need the programming code)

Field Test: [Menu] 073887 * (you will need the security code -- try 000000)

To deactivate field test: Power phone up, hit MENU and the left button (should bring up the menu). There's a menu option for test-mode and at this point you can turn the menu off and return the phone to normal. Alternatively press menu and then the nearest button to the left (Phone book button) quickly and it will take you back to the main screen and your phone will look normal.

StarTac 7790

Field Test: [Fcn] 0 0 * * TESTMODE [Sto]

StarTac 7760, 7860

Field Test: [Fcn] 0 0 * * TESTMODE [Sto] Service Menu: [Fcn] 0 000000 000000 RCL

Complete system test (most models): (Phone OFF), Hold down any row of keys (1+2+3, 4+5+6, etc) and turn the phone ON

To access the diagnostic mode on the I30: #, *, MENU, JOYSTICK-RIGHT (Do these keystrokes fast)

To access the diagnostic mode on any of the older iDEN phones (pre-i1000): VOLUME DOWN, MENU, MENU, MENU, LEFT, MENU, MENU, LEFT (this is the reverse of the test menu routine)

To access the diagnostic mode on any of the new models (i1000+, i700+, i550+, etc): Hold down any three keys in a row across.

The unit will enter the test mode and can be stepped through the various functions with the keys and buttons. At the end of the test, power cycle the unit to return to normal function. This test will check various phone functions, including LCD display, speaker, earphone, microphone, LEDs, vibrator, backlight and all of the buttons and keys for the newer models

SAMSUNG CDMA SECET CODES

Older Models:

NAM Programming: 47*869#08#9

Test mode: *759#813580 OR 5809540*45680

Exit Test Mode: 02 A-Key: menu + 0,

code 25##

Samsung SPH-T100

MENU 820 > 810325

Samsung SCH-3500

MENU 820 > 295184

Programming of various other models:

Samsung A500

Enter ## and the 6 digitOTKSL

SERVICE MENU will appear and 1.Basic will be highlighted

Press OK Device will display NAM CDMA/ Phone Number

Enter 10 digit MIN Press OK (3 times) Display will return to Service Menu.

Press END. Programming is complete

Samsung N240 and N400

Enter ## and type in the 6 digit OTKSL

The display will show SVC MENU and 1. Phone Number

Press OK Enter the 10 digit MIN and press OK

The display will show NAM with Home SID on the second line (Note: SID is no longer used)

Press OK

The display will return to the SVC MENU

Press END to complete the programming

Samsung N300

Press ## followed by the OTKSL
SVC menu will be displayed
Press 1 for Phone #
Enter the 10 digit MIN and press OK
MIN that was entered will be displayed press OK
SVC Menu will display press 3 for NAM
Enter the 4 digit Home SID press OK
Press END and handset will power cycle

Samsung i300
Tap on the Phone Icon with stylus
Press #907*9#0 ENTER LOCK should appear on screen
ENTER OTKSL
SVC MENU will appear press 1
Enter 10 digit MIN and then press SAVE
Press SAVE again
Press 3 and then press SAVE 6 times
Enter the HOME SID and press SAVE once
Press END key twice

Samsung A400 and A460
Enter ## and OTKSL
Press 1 for Basic at MENU (1 of Phone # when using the MSL)
Enter 10 digit MIN and press OK
At 1.Basic Menu press the END key
Handset will power cycle

Samsung 3500, 8500, 6100, and N200
Press MENU
Press 6 0 (3500) 8 2 0 (8500/6100/N200)
Enter OTKSL
Press 1 at SVC MENU Screen
Enter MIN and press OK
Press OK 4 times
Enter SID (4654) and press OK
Press END key
Programming is complete

gsm NOKIA SECRET CODES

Nokia CodesThese Nokia codes will work on most Nokia mobile phones, however we accept no responsibility of any kind for damage done to your phone whilst trying these Nokia secret codes.

Nokia code Code function

*3370# This Nokia code activates Enhanced Full Rate Codec (EFR) - Your Nokia cell phone uses the best sound quality but talk time is reduced my approx. 5%

#3370# Deactivate Enhanced Full Rate Codec (EFR)

*#4720# Activate Half Rate Codec - Your phone uses a lower quality sound but you should gain approx 30% more Talk Time

*#4720# With this Nokia code you can deactivate the Half Rate Codec

*#0000# Displays your phones software version, 1st Line : Software Version, 2nd Line : Software Release Date, 3rd Line : Compression Type

*#9999# Phones software version if *#0000# does not work *#06# For checking the International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI Number)

#pw+1234567890+1# Provider Lock Status. (use the "*" button to obtain the "p,w" and "+" symbols)

#pw+1234567890+2# Network Lock Status. (use the "*" button to obtain the "p,w" and "+" symbols)

#pw+1234567890+3# Country Lock Status. (use the "*" button to obtain the "p,w" and "+" symbols)

#pw+1234567890+4# SIM Card Lock Status. (use the "*" button to obtain the "p,w" and "+" symbols)

GSM SAMSUNG SECRET CODES

*#06# -> Show IMEI

*#9999# -> Show Software version

*#0837# -> Show Software Version (instructions)

*#0001# -> Show Serial Parameters

*#9125# -> Activates the smiley when charging.

*#9998*228# -> Battery status (capacity, voltage, temperature)

*#9998*246# -> Program status

*#9998*289# -> Change Alarm Buzzer Frequency

*#9998*324# -> Debug screenslect values. Cancel and ok.

*#9998*427# -> Trace Watchdog

*#9998*523# -> Change LCD contrast - Only with version G60RL01W

*#9998*544# -> Jig detectService Table

*#9998*785# -> RTK (Run Time Kernel) errors - if ok then phn is reset, info is put inmemory error.

*#9998*786# -> Run, Last UP, Last DOWN

*#9998*837# -> Software Version

*#9998*842# -> Test Vibrator - Flash the screenligth during 10 seconds and vibrationactivated.

*#9998*862# -> Vocoder Reg - Normal, Earphone or carkit can be selected

*#9998*872# -> Diag

*#9998*947# -> Reset On Fatal Error

*#9998*999# -> Last/Chk

*#9998*9266# -> Yann debug screen (=Debug Screens?)

*#9998*9999# -> Software version

*0001*s*f*t# -> Changes serial parameters (s=?, f=0,1, t=0,1) (incomplete)

*0002*?# -> unknown

*0003*?# -> unknown SP-unlock SGH-600 and SGH 2100

*2767*3855# -> Full EEPROM Reset ( THIS CODE REMOVES SP-LOCK!! ) But also changes IMEI to 447967-89-400044-0

*2767*2878# -> Custom EEEPROM Reset These codes has been tested with version FLD_2C6 G60SB03X of Samsung SGH-600 type 8889 instead of 9998.

GSM MOTOROLA SECRET MOBILE CODES

Motorola

IMEI number: * # 0 6#
Net Monitor ON: * * * 1 1 3 * 1 * [OK]
Net Monitor OFF: * * * 1 1 3 * 1 * [OK]
* - press this until box shown up

To activate RBS:

(pause means the * key held in until box appears)

[pause] [pause] [pause] 1 1 3 [pause] 1 [pause] [ok]

You now have to press the [MENU] and scroll to the 'Eng Field Options' function with the keys, and enable it.

To de-activate RBS,

[pause] [pause] [pause] 1 1 3 [pause] 0 [pause] [ok]

This only works with some versions of software. Please report what works and doesn't for you.

Reported working, by country:

d460: IT
6200 Flare: UK (Orange), AU
7500: IT (model: F16 HW: 5.2 SW: 2.1)
8200: ES, AU, NL, BE
8400: IT, NL
8700: AU, IT, SG, DE, ES, ZA
Uses of RBS:

Distance From Base Station - Place a call, when it is answered, press [MENU] until 'Eng Field Option' is displayed, press [OK], select 'Active Cell', press [OK], press [MENU] until 'Time Adv xxx' appears, where xxx is a number. Multiply this number by 550, and the result is the distance from the RBS (Radio Base Station), in meters.

Signal Quality - press [MENU] until 'Eng Field Option' is displayed, press [OK], select 'Active Cell', press [OK], press [MENU] until 'C1' appears. This is the signal quality. If it becomes negative for longer than 5 seconds, a new cell is selected.

SONY ERICSSON SECRET CODE

General Secrets

IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity): *#06#

Firmware Version: >*<<*<*

Programming Checks: >*<<*<*> or >*<<*<*>

Accessing the phone without a SIM card: **04*0000*0000*0000# then on 'Wrong Pin' No

Reset English Menu: *#0000#

300, 600, 700 Series

Programming Menu (Short): 987 + >

Programming Menu (Long): 923885 + >

Field Test: 904090 + > (to exit 904090 + >)

Phone Test: 904059 + > (to exit 3 + <)

Phone Reset: 904060 + >

CDMA Mode: 904093 + menu

Analog Mode: 904095 + menu DM mode 904959 + menu

GSM PHILIPS SECRET CODES

Philips GENIE

To view IMEI number *#06#

*#2254*# is the statusregister: C, BS, RR, MMI, CREAT.

*#2255*# will activate and deactivate the "DEBUG CALL"-Mode

*#2558*# will display the time in days,hours and minutes you are connected to the GSM network

To force a reconnection to the network, type : *#2562*#

To view and modify the Security Code of the phone, type: *#7489*#

To view some info about your SIM card like the phase level, the name, type: *#7378*#

To obtain information on SIM lock, Init and Flags, press: *#3377*#

To activate or deactivate Sleep Mode: *#7693*#

To get info about Sleep Mode: *#8463*#

Philips FIZZ
IMEI: *#06#

Lock Code: *#1234#

Software Version
To find software version, enter *#8377*#

The output will look something like:

Version : 0916 - EEPROM : 00000000-00 - TDA : 2445 - KISS : 0502 SIM-LCK

..or extended software version *#5644*#

output:

Version : 09162205 - EEPROM : 00000000-00 - TDA : 2445 - KISS : 0502 SIM-LCK

SM ALCATEL SECRET MOBILE CODES

ALCATEL

* # 0 6 # : IMEI number
* # 0 6 # : Software version
0 0 0 0 0 0 * : Net Monitor

PINOUTS AND CODES FOR PANASONIC MOBILES

Panasonic G500

IEMI:
To view IMEI number *#06#

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

PINOUTS

1 - Ground
2 - TX_Audio
3 - Audio_Ground
4 - HF_ON (L=ON) -> L=H/F ON
5 - AOP_Sense <- Data Adaptor Select
6 - Serial_Up <- UART up (9600,33.8kbps)
7 - Serial_Down -> UART down
8 - External_Power <- POWER FOR CHARGING
9 - Ground
10 - RX_Audio
11 - Radio_Mute -> L=MUTE
12 - HF_Sense <- L=H/F MODE
13 - Reserved L=FLASH WRITE ENABLE
14 - Ignition <- H=ON
15 - Logic_Power -> H=HANDSET ON
16 - PAON -> Power Amplifier Control Signal.

************************************************** **
Nokia 3310 Secret codes
Jul, 08 2003 - 06:20
contributed by: mef
*#06# To find IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity)

*#7780# Restores Factory Settings..(Memory, language, counters not included)

*#3110# For checking the phone's software (SW) - called firmware revision information.

*#746025625# [*#sim0clock#] To check if the Sim-Clock can be Stopped (Sim-clock-stop is a kind of standby mode which will save battery time)

*#92702689# [*#war0anty#] Phone asks 'warranty code:'

6232 (OK) Displays the Month and Year of Manufacture

9268 (OK) Displays Serial Number

7332 (OK) Displays the date of the last repairment - if found

7832 (OK) Displays (if found) the date where the phone was purchased

37832 (OK) Set the Purchasing Date MMYY (This date can be set only once!)

87267 (OK) Transfers ALL phone numbers, Logo's, and ringtones from other gsm phones

Nokia 101 cell phone lockcode
Jul, 10 2000 - 02:35
Nokia 101 cell phones set up by Bell Mobility in Toronto can have their lock code circumvented by the following method:

Type: * 3001 # 12345 [STO] 00
Wait for: NOT DONE
Type: [RCL] 01

Clear old lock code (the last four digits) and enter a new lock code. Be very careful not to delete other characters.

Type: [STO] 01 [STO]
Turn power off.

Nokia 9000/9000i
Nov, 25 2000 - 22:41
To view IMEI number *#06#
To view Software Version enter *#8110# Latest Version is under Phone Info.
To view Week and Year of manufacture enter *#3283#

Samsung SGH-600 / SGH-2100
Secret Codes

*#06# -> Show IMEI
*#9999# -> Show Software Version
*#0837# -> Show Software Version (instructions)
*#0001# -> Show Serial Parameters
*#9125# -> Activates the smiley when charging.

*#9998*228# -> Battery status (capacity, voltage, temperature)
*#9998*246# -> Program status
*#9998*289# -> Change Alarm Buzzer Frequency
*#9998*324# -> Debug screens
*#9998*364# -> Watchdog
*#9998*377# -> EEPROM Error Stack - Use side keys to select values. Cancel and ok.
*#9998*427# -> Trace Watchdog
*#9998*523# -> Change LCD contrast - Only with version G60RL01W
*#9998*544# -> Jig detect
*#9998*636# -> Memory status
*#9998*746# -> SIM File Size
*#9998*778# -> SIM Service Table
*#9998*785# -> RTK (Run Time Kernel) errors - if ok then phn is reset, info is put in memory error. *#9998*786# -> Run, Last UP, Last DOWN
*#9998*837# -> Software Version
*#9998*842# -> Test Vibrator - Flash the screenligth during 10 seconds and vibration activated.
*#9998*862# -> Vocoder Reg - Normal, Earphone or carkit can be selected
*#9998*872# -> Diag
*#9998*947# -> Reset On Fatal Error
*#9998*999# -> Last/Chk

*#9998*9266# -> Yann debug screen (=Debug Screens?)
*#9998*9999# -> Software version

*0001*s*f*t# -> Changes serial parameters (s=?, f=0,1, t=0,1) (incomplete)
*0002*?# -> unknown
*0003*?# -> unknown

SP-unlock SGH-600 and SGH 2100

*2767*3855# -> Full EEPROM Reset ( THIS CODE REMOVES SP-LOCK!! )
But also changes IMEI to 447967-89-400044-0, To restore your old IMEI use the IMEI program found on the software page.

*2767*2878# -> Custom EEEPROM Reset

These codes has been tested with version FLD_2C6 G60SB03X of Samsung SGH-600

Samsung 811
Jul, 08 2000 - 01:24
47*869#08#9

- unlock code / change roaming code / ID

SIEMENS S1 / S3 / S3 COM / S4

To view the software date and else with S3 com, S4, S4Power
press with SIM removed *#06# and left softkey.

To view some other stuff with S4Power
press with SIM removed *#06# and left softkey twice.

To view the software date with S3 com, S4, S4Power
press with SIM installed menu 98 and left softkey twice.

ACTIVATE MONITOR MODE

Siemens S1/S3

Menu, 9 (Phone Options), 7 (Phone Status), Left Display Button (left MENU key),
5553756, HangUp Button (Red HandSet key)

Siemens S3 COM/S4

Menu, 9 (Phone Options), 7 (Phone Status), Left Display Button
(left MENU key), 7684666, HangUp Button (Red HandSet key)

Note: Now Monitor should appear at the bottom of the Network Options menu.

MONITOR MODE

Pressing the right Display Button when in monitor mode will toggle into 1 and 2 modes

Pressing the right Display Button when in monitor mode will show a
list of the six cells with the strongest signals.

Test Mode Indicators: (* = only available when call in progress )

CH Channel Number

RX Signal Strength (dB)

N NCC (Colour Code)

B BCC (Colour Code)

CI Cell ID (in Hex)

C1+ How long before phone does forced hand over.(see RX and RXAM)

LAI Location Area Identity. Display Network ID code(42F010 = 240.01) and MSC

TXPWR Transmit Power (dB)

RXAM Receive signal strength cut-off point

TS* Time Slot Number

TA* Timing Advance. Distance from tower in Km X 2

PL* Power Level
SIEMENS S1

Here's a trick to play Tetris, also known as Klotz on a Siemens S1.
Turn the phone on. Enter PIN. Before the telephone has logged in to the
your GSM net do the following steps.

1: Choose F 9 (function settings)
2: Choose send own number and push the right button for choose.
3: Push 9

USE 2 as < and 8 as > , rotate the klotz with 5 and drop with 4.

I have just heard from one of the programmers of the phone that Tetris
was in the phone during development, but it was removed before it was produced.
Apparantly someone has the patent on games in mobile phones and Siemens
didn't want to pay the licensing fees. It was either in Menu F-9-9 or it's not there at all.

Siemens C 25

Secret Codes

SP unlock *#0003*(secret code 8 digits)#

*#06# for checking the IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity)

Resets language to automatic selection : * # 0000 # then Green button

Pin Out

1- GND
2- SB
3- POWER
4- NC
5- TX
6- RX
7- CLOCK
8- DATA
9- GND MIC
10- HF MIC
11- AUDIO
12- GND AUDIO

Sagem MC959

Secret Codes

MC959

in main menu press * for hot-menu:
lcd, led, vibra, tests, imei, software versions, battery voltage

Type MENU - 5 - 1 - 1 - # to enter Engineering menu on SAGEM (RC-712, 721, 815 and 815 plus) phones.

Panasonic G500

IEMI:
To view IMEI number *#06#

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

PINOUTS

1 - Ground
2 - TX_Audio
3 - Audio_Ground
4 - HF_ON (L=ON) -> L=H/F ON
5 - AOP_Sense <- Data Adaptor Select
6 - Serial_Up <- UART up (9600,33.8kbps)
7 - Serial_Down -> UART down
8 - External_Power <- POWER FOR CHARGING
9 - Ground
10 - RX_Audio
11 - Radio_Mute -> L=MUTE
12 - HF_Sense <- L=H/F MODE
13 - Reserved L=FLASH WRITE ENABLE
14 - Ignition <- H=ON
15 - Logic_Power -> H=HANDSET ON
16 - PAON -> Power Amplifier Control Signal.

Mitsubishi MT- D30

Secret Codes

Monitor mode: Hold C and press 379
Secret menu: Hold C and press 987
Version number: Hold C and press 597
Phase1 and 2 : Hold C and press 499
Warm start : Hold C and press 179
Instant turn off: Hold C and press 999
Unlock menu: Hold C and press 787090

Mitsubishi Trium

*#0000# to reset the phones menu-language to natural language, set initially by the distributor.

*#06# for checking the IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity)

hold * then 5806 - show software version
hold * then 5807 - a littel bit diffrent
hold * then 5472 - Testmode for datacable (it seems so)
hold * then 4329 - Activate and deactivate NETMONITOR
hold * then 621342 - Activate and deactivate another NETMONITOR
hold * then 3926 - shutdown

SP lock
You can turn around the lock routin by entering **04*PIN*PIN*PIN# now the secretcode change was applied and the software turns back to main menue. It works not on all triums, only on thos with older sofware versions.

SIEMENS S1 / S3 / S3 COM / S4

To view the software date and else with S3 com, S4, S4Power
press with SIM removed *#06# and left softkey.

To view some other stuff with S4Power
press with SIM removed *#06# and left softkey twice.

To view the software date with S3 com, S4, S4Power
press with SIM installed menu 98 and left softkey twice.

ACTIVATE MONITOR MODE

Siemens S1/S3

Menu, 9 (Phone Options), 7 (Phone Status), Left Display Button (left MENU key),
5553756, HangUp Button (Red HandSet key)

Siemens S3 COM/S4

Menu, 9 (Phone Options), 7 (Phone Status), Left Display Button
(left MENU key), 7684666, HangUp Button (Red HandSet key)

Note: Now Monitor should appear at the bottom of the Network Options menu.

MONITOR MODE

Pressing the right Display Button when in monitor mode will toggle into 1 and 2 modes

Pressing the right Display Button when in monitor mode will show a
list of the six cells with the strongest signals.

Test Mode Indicators: (* = only available when call in progress )

CH Channel Number

RX Signal Strength (dB)

N NCC (Colour Code)

B BCC (Colour Code)

CI Cell ID (in Hex)

C1+ How long before phone does forced hand over.(see RX and RXAM)

LAI Location Area Identity. Display Network ID code(42F010 = 240.01) and MSC

TXPWR Transmit Power (dB)

RXAM Receive signal strength cut-off point

TS* Time Slot Number

TA* Timing Advance. Distance from tower in Km X 2

PL* Power Level
SIEMENS S1

Here's a trick to play Tetris, also known as Klotz on a Siemens S1.
Turn the phone on. Enter PIN. Before the telephone has logged in to the
your GSM net do the following steps.

1: Choose F 9 (function settings)
2: Choose send own number and push the right button for choose.
3: Push 9

USE 2 as < and 8 as > , rotate the klotz with 5 and drop with 4.

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