Printing Solutions for Nokia 9500 Communicator, 9300, 9300I, E60, E61, E62 and E70 Smartphones 1

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Printing Solutions for Nokia 9500 Communicator, 9300, 9300I, E60, E61, E62 and E70 Smartphones 1 Printing solutions for Nokia 9500 Communicator, 9300, 9300i, E60, E61, E62 and E70 Smartphones 1. “I need a printer and software I can easily carry with me” As a professional that is on the road most of the time, I need a device that can store my critical business documents, and can also deliver them in printed form, anytime, anywhere. With HP Mobile Printing for the Nokia 9500 Communicator, E60, E61, E62 and E70 Smartphone wireless technology, I have integrated printing capabilities on the device, right out of the box. With the addition of the HP DeskJet 460wbt mobile printer, I have high-quality, high-performance HP printing over Bluetooth, so I don’t need to carry printer cables. I simply turn on my Nokia Communicator 9500, 9300, 9300i, E60, E61, E62, or E70 Smartphone, select the DeskJet 460wbt printer from the list of HP compatible printers on HP Mobile Printing, discover the printer via the Bluetooth connection, and print directly from any business application, such as spreadsheets, word processing, or email. I can also print using WiFi connectivity to all of these Nokia devices except my E62 Smartphone to my DeskJet 460wf printer. More information on the DeskJet 460 mobile printers can be found at http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm/WF05a/18972-236251-236267-14438-236267- 466639.html . 2. “In need to access a printer on my wireless LAN in the office or on the road” Much of the information I store on my WiFi enabled Nokia Communicator or Smartphone devices is kept on my device due to my busy travel schedule. For this reason, I often choose to print directly from my Nokia Communicator 9500, or Nokia 9300, 9300i, E60, E61, or E70 Smartphone when I am in my office or home wireless network, or at a WiFi hotspot at a hotel or airport. HP’s large selection of Jet direct Wireless Print Servers allows me to print anywhere I have an 802.11 b or 802.11 g connection. In fact, with the HP ew2400 wireless print server, I can easily roam in my wireless network and print business content from my WiFi Nokia device whenever I need hardcopy. I simply enable the HP Mobile Printing software to adapt to any WiFi enabled HP printer on my network, and print directly from any application. More information on the HP ew2400 wireless print server can be found at www.hp.com/products/ew2400 . .
Recommended publications
  • Nokia 9500 Communicator User Guide
    Nokia 9500 Communicator User Guide DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY Hereby, NOKIA CORPORATION, declares that this RA-2 product is in compliance with the essential requirements and other relevant provisions of Directive 1999/5/EC. A copy of the Declaration of Conformity can be found at http://www.nokia.com/phones/declaration_of_conformity/. Copyright © 2004-2005 Nokia. All rights reserved. Reproduction, transfer, distribution or storage of part or all of the contents in this document in any form without the prior written permission of Nokia is prohibited. Nokia, Nokia Connecting People, Xpress-on and Pop-Port are trademarks or registered trademarks of Nokia Corporation. Other product and company names mentioned herein may be trademarks or tradenames of their respective owners. Nokia tune is a sound mark of Nokia Corporation. This product includes software licensed from Symbian Software Ltd (c) 1998-2004. Symbian and Symbian OS are trademarks of Symbian Ltd. This software is based in part of the work of the FreeType Team. This product is covered by one or more of the following patents: United States Patent 5,155,805, United States Patent 5,325,479, United States Patent 5,159,668, United States Patent 2232861 and France Patent 90 05712. Java and all Java-based marks are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. This product is licensed under the MPEG-4 Visual Patent Portfolio License (i) for personal and noncommercial use in connection with information which has been encoded in compliance with the MPEG-4 Visual Standard by a consumer engaged in a personal and noncommercial activity and (ii) for use in connection with MPEG-4 video provided by a licensed video provider.
    [Show full text]
  • Smartphone [ Smartphone History ] 6 Birth in the 1990S, Widespread Adoption with the Iphone
    NE Handbook Series 2011 Smartphone [ Smartphone History ] 6 Birth in the 1990s, Widespread Adoption with the iPhone [ Actual Smartphone Components ] 10 Taking Apart the iPhone 4 Click. 14 Glossary [ Components ] 14 RF Circuits 16 Application Processors 18 Liquid Crystal Panels 20 Organic Electroluminescence Panels Find. 22 CMOS Sensors 23 Pico Projectors 24 Touch Panels 26 Motion Sensors 28 NAND Flash Memory Buy. 30 DRAM 31 GPS 32 Ambient Light Sensors 33 MLCC 34 Li-Ion Rechargeable Batteries 35 USB 36 HDMI 37 SIM Cards [ Wireless Communication ] 38 GSM 39 W-CDMA 40 CDMA2000 41 Mobile WiMAX 42 LTE 44 Wireless LAN [ short-Range Communication ] 46 Bluetooth Low Energy and ANT 48 NFC 50 Wireless Power Supplies [ Operating System ] 52 Android 53 Windows Phone 7 54 iOS 55 Application Store Digi-Key is an authorized distributor for all supplier partners. New products added daily. © 2011 Digi-Key Corporation, 701 Brooks Ave. South, Thief River Falls, MN 56701, USA PR NE Handbook 2011│ SmartPhone Q Howwouldyouassessthecurrentsmartphone Rapidly Changing Smartphones market? Tap Digi-Key’s Potential Restle Smartphonedesignersdidnotinventsnappycolor graphicdisplays,touchscreens,interconnectivity,and Smartphones are proliferating rapidly, with many companies built-insensorssuchasaccelerometers,GPS,andgyro- selling designs sporting a wide variety of electronic compo- scopes,buttheyhavecertainlyinfluencedembeddeddevice nents, including touch panels and gyroscope sensors. What designers,componentmanufacturers,anddistributorsto are the major trends in the smartphone market? How can thinkaboutandincludetheseelementsintheirproduct smartphones be designed most effectively? And what strategy plans.Further,smartphoneeconomiesofscalehavehelped does components distributor Digi-Key Corp of the US have? reducethecostofsmartphone-likecomponents. Ithas Nikkei Electronics interviewed Randall Restle in his new post neverbeeneasiertoincorporatethesecomponentsinto as Director of Design Support Services and asked him about anyembeddedelectronicdevice.
    [Show full text]
  • Nokia and Symbian OS White Paper
    White Paper Nokia and Symbian OS White Paper Contents Nokia and Symbian – the history – extracts from Nokia announcements 3 What is Symbian 4 Symbian OS and Nokia products 5 Commercial benefi ts for both operators and developers 5 Symbian OS – fundamental customer requirements 6 Symbian OS – architecture 6 An open operating system 8 Symbian product releases – launching new technology 8 Writing applications for Symbian OS 8 2 White Paper Symbian is key to the future of the telecommunications industry. Nokia is basing its future smartphones on Symbian OS and it forms the basis of the recently launched Series 60 platform. Nokia is a founding member and shareholder of the Symbian alliance. This paper provides a basic understanding of why Nokia is strongly committed to Symbian – from both a commercial and a technical perspective. Additionally, some of the technical qualities of Symbian OS are examined in some detail – this section is aimed at the more technically minded reader. Nokia and Symbian – the history – extracts from Nokia announcements 24.6.1998 21.5.2001 13.11.2001 “It was announced today that Ericsson, “Nokia expects 50% of its 3G phones Open Mobile Architecture alliance Nokia and Psion have conditionally to use the Symbian Operating System launched – AT&T Wireless, Cingular agreed to form a new joint venture by 2004.” Jorma Ollila, CEO Nokia. Wireless, MM02, NTT DoCoMo, called Symbian. Nokia’s investment is Telefonica Moviles, Vodafone, Fujitsu, approx. USD 50 million. This agreement 5.6.2001 Matsushita, Mitsubishi Electric, is further strengthened by the support The Nokia 9290 Communicator (for US) Motorola, NEC, Nokia, Samsung, Sharp, of Motorola who have signed a launched – “The 9290 Communicator Siemens, Sony Ericsson, Toshiba and Memorandum of Understanding to join demonstrates Nokia’s commitment to Symbian to commit to products Symbian.“ not only provide unique, innovative and services based on open mobile products for our customers, but to do architecture enablers.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Smartphones and Symbian OS
    1 Smartphones and Symbian OS Symbian OS is a full-featured, open, mobile operating system that powers many of today’s smartphones. As these smartphones become more pow- erful and popular, the demand for smartphone software has grown. Symbian smartphones are shipped with a variety of useful pre-loaded and targeted applications, which are selected by each phone’s manu- facturer. Today, the average Symbian smartphone ships with over 30 pieces of third-party software pre-installed. However, the exciting aspect of Symbian smartphones is that they are ‘open’, meaning that users can further customize their phone experience by downloading, installing, and uninstalling applications written by third-party developers (or by the users themselves). Users can download applications from a PC to the smartphone through a link such as USB, or Bluetooth technology, or over-the-air via the Internet. With the largest installed base of smartphones worldwide, Symbian OS offers a great opportunity for software developers to establish them- selves in the mobile market by creating novel and exciting software for the growing mass of smartphone users around the world. There is a growing list of Symbian applications available as freeware or as paid downloads on numerous Internet sites (http://www.handango.com and http://www.epocware.com are good examples). They range from pro- ductivity, entertainment, navigation, multimedia, and communications software to programs that can count fast food calories, improve your golfCOPYRIGHTED swing, keep diaries, and calculate MATERIAL foreign currency exchange. And business opportunities aside, sometimes it’s just plain fun writing your own code to run on your own smartphone.
    [Show full text]
  • Nokia 9500 Communicator
    ® www.protectstar.com Nokia 9500 Communicator ® ® INTRODUCTION: The Nokia 9500 Communicator provides fast and convenient Internet access via wireless LAN at data transfer rates of up to 11 MBit/s. You can work on presentations or text documents in comfort while you are on the move using the integrated office applications, while accessing data on your company network—such as databases— using wireless LAN or fast mobile telephone connectivity. The Nokia 9500 Communicator has 80 MB in internal memory and an the system known at the time of the testing procedure—operating MMC memory card slot for storing more data. system, applications, CGI abuses, useless services, backdoors, se- curity checks and so on. In addition, we used eEye Digital Security’s Source: www.nokia.de Common Hacker Attack Methods (CHAM®), an artificial intelligence SECURITY technology designed to unearth unknown and concealed weaknes- We have subjected the Nokia 9500 Communicator to a series of tests ses in the system by simulating the thought processes of a hacker. under both laboratory and real-life conditions. We can confirm that the device offers almost complete security protection. In carrying out In order to check wireless connectivity (WiFi, IEEE 802.1b), we used the security tests described below, we used a specially configured specifically developed wireless weak-point scanners to analyse WLAN router (ZyXEL ZyAIR G-2000) and several computer systems security techniques such as WEP (wired equivalent privacy) and operating under Windows XP and Linux that were connected WPA (WiFi protected access) and their encryption functions. We together to the Internet and intranet through the router.
    [Show full text]
  • Csonka Péter [CSPQAAI.ELTE] History of Smartphone Operation Systems
    Csonka Péter [CSPQAAI.ELTE] http://csipet.web.elte.hu History of Smartphone Operation Systems I decided to dug myself into the history of smartphones, and nowadays leading Operation systems. Tried to find relevant articles, but I ended up on the Wikipedia, reading nearly the whole smartphone page, so my first article is here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smartphone (Its kind a long, so just the history part). But it’s still only one, so I decided to read articles about the leading smartphone operation systems: the Android and the IOS. I looked for a good comparison (means that the writer agrees with me that Android is the better), and I found this: http://www.dreambloggers.com/comparison-ios-5-vs- android-4-0-what-is-your-call/ Many people think (and I always disagree loudly) that in a year or two will be a 3rd mayor os in the market, the new Windows Phone, so my last article is about the mobile operation system of Microsoft: http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/gadgets/4258114/ Review-Windows-Phone-7 (not the best article, but didn’t find better one which wasn’t 50 pages long.) Wikipedia Smartphone history article Early years The first smartphone was the IBM Simon; it was designed in 1992 and shown as a concept product[5] that year at COMDEX, the computer industry trade show held in Las Vegas, Nevada. It was released to the public in 1993 and sold by BellSouth. Besides being a mobile phone, it also contained a calendar, address book, world clock, calculator, note pad, e-mail client, the ability to send and receive faxes, and games.
    [Show full text]
  • PRESS RELEASE Nokia Reports Fourth Quarter 2005 Net Sales Of
    PRESS RELEASE 1 (24) January 26, 2006 Nokia reports fourth quarter 2005 net sales of EUR 10.3 billion, EPS of EUR 0.25 Nokia reports 2005 net sales of EUR 34.2 billion, EPS of EUR 0.83 Device market share gains in Q4 and 2005 drive 16% annual sales growth and 20% EPS growth Nokia’s Board of Directors will propose a dividend of EUR 0.37 per share for 2005 (EUR 0.33 per share for 2004) NOKIA Q4 and 2005 EUR million Q4/2005 Q4/2004 Change 2005 2004 Change (*revised) (%) (*revised) (%) Net sales 10 333 9 456 9 34 191 29 371 16 Mobile Phones 6 217 5 871 6 20 811 18 521 12 Multimedia 2 024 1 272 59 5 981 3 676 63 Enterprise Solutions 153 295 -48 861 839 3 Networks 1 951 2 031 -4 6 557 6 431 2 Operating profit 1 368 1 450 -6 4 639 4 326 7 Mobile Phones 1 060 1 107 -4 3 598 3 786 -5 Multimedia 310 168 85 836 175 Enterprise Solutions -136 -44 -258 -210 Networks 268 306 -12 855 884 -3 Common Group Expenses -134 -87 -392 -309 Operating margin (%) 13.2 15.3 13.6 14.7 Mobile Phones (%) 17.1 18.9 17.3 20.4 Multimedia (%) 15.3 13.2 14.0 4.8 Enterprise Solutions (%) -88.9 -14.9 -30.0 -25.0 Networks (%) 13.7 15.1 13.0 13.7 Financial income and expenses 78 116 -33 322 405 -20 Profit before tax and minority interests 1 453 1 556 -7 4 971 4 705 6 Net profit 1 073 1 083 -1 3 616 3 192 13 EPS, EUR Basic 0.25 0.24 4 0.83 0.69 20 Diluted 0.25 0.24 4 0.83 0.69 20 All reported Q4 and 2005 figures can be found in the tables on pages (10-13) and (19-23) SPECIAL ITEMS Fourth quarter 2005 special items - EUR 29 million charge for Enterprise Solutions restructuring
    [Show full text]
  • The Symbian OS Architecture Sourcebook
    The Symbian OS Architecture Sourcebook The Symbian OS Architecture Sourcebook Design and Evolution of a Mobile Phone OS By Ben Morris Reviewed by Chris Davies, Warren Day, Martin de Jode, Roy Hayun, Simon Higginson, Mark Jacobs, Andrew Langstaff, David Mery, Matthew O’Donnell, Kal Patel, Dominic Pinkman, Alan Robinson, Matthew Reynolds, Mark Shackman, Jo Stichbury, Jan van Bergen Symbian Press Head of Symbian Press Freddie Gjertsen Managing Editor Satu McNabb Copyright 2007 Symbian Software, Ltd John Wiley & Sons, Ltd The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex PO19 8SQ, England Telephone (+44) 1243 779777 Email (for orders and customer service enquiries): [email protected] Visit our Home Page on www.wileyeurope.com or www.wiley.com All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise, except under the terms of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 or under the terms of a licence issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London W1T 4LP, UK, without the permission in writing of the Publisher. Requests to the Publisher should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons Ltd, The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex PO19 8SQ, England, or emailed to [email protected], or faxed to (+44) 1243 770620. Designations used by companies to distinguish their products are often claimed as trademarks. All brand names and product names used in this book are trade names, service marks, trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.
    [Show full text]
  • Handset and Network Loading
    RTT TECHNOLOGY TOPIC May 2004 Handset and network loading Last Month's Hot Topic looked at how different phones from different manufacturers perform in different ways on different networks. Differences in RF performance (receive sensitivity) translate directly into a variation in dropped call rates and voice quality from phone to phone. The choice of phone, rather than the choice of network, dictates the quality of the user experience. This month's Hot Topic studies the impact of handset hardware and handset software on the user experience and the related properties needed from the radio layer and the network. The Graphical User Interface The starting point is to compare some hardware and software form factors, using as an example some Symbian based devices based on Series 40/60/80 and 90 GUI's (graphical user interfaces). Figure 1 Figure 1 shows four types of handset, a Series 40 Nokia 6230 entry level camera phone, a Series 60 Nokia 6600 with memory expansion, a Series 60 N-Gage with memory expansion (the Panasonic X700 is another typical product in this category), a Series 80 Nokia 9500 communicator and a Series 90 Nokia 7700 media device. The GUIs are determined by the hardware form factor of the phone. The distinguishing feature of the Series 60 platform for example is the expandable memory functionality. The N-Gage adds in gaming software and a stereo FM receiver (a good candidate for DAB/DVB-H connectivity), and support for EDGE circuit switched data and GPRS 2+2. The 9500 has a dual display, 128x128 pixels when closed (working as a Series 40 device) and 640 by 200 pixels when open (working as a Series 80 device).
    [Show full text]
  • Symbian in the Enterprise
    Symbian in the Enterprise Symbian OS is the world-leading open operating system that powers the most popular and advanced smartphones from the world’s leading handset manufacturers. Symbian OS is the industry's standard choice for smartphones that not only feature calendars, contacts, messaging, push email and web browsing, but can also extend easily to any enterprise information system. Maximize productivity from one converged device Email and messaging – all Symbian OS phones have email Staying connected with colleagues, customers and partners support out of the box. Emails can be composed, read and throughout the day is fundamental to business. Symbian managed offline as well as online. The phone can support OS smartphones for mobile professionals are, first and several email accounts and, depending on available memory, foremost, uncompromised great phones, robust and can store around 1000 emails. Email attachments can be capable, with excellent battery life, size and usability. In viewed using downloadable viewers. Some Symbian OS addition to regular voice, messaging and email, the open phones are supplied with these viewers already installed. nature of Symbian OS phones enables a range of advanced solutions, such as voice conferencing and push-to-talk. Push email – business users can access their full corporate Lotus Notes/Microsoft Exchange email and additionally have it ‘pushed’ to their phone using downloadable applications Extend the phone to any back-end infrastructure from companies such as Intellisync, Smartner, Visto, Symbian’s approach to enterprise connectivity is to ensure Extended Systems, JP Mobile and others. These solutions that Symbian OS phones can be extended to any existing have end-to-end security.
    [Show full text]
  • Cara Format Manual Nokia E90
    Cara Format Manual Nokia E90 When Nokia logo appears on screen, release your finger from the Power button but keep SONY Xperia SP C5303 Manual Hard Reset and Unlocking info. NOKIA E73 Mode Hard Reset Format Factory Settings · NOKIA E90 Hard Reset. How to hard reset Nokia N70 and similar Nokia Nseries mobilephones. Dijin Justin HOW. Reset NOKIA E90, Next hold and press * key + 3 key + Call button + Power button. Reset NOKIA E90, Keep your fingers out from the phone, when you see Nokia. 19 mei 2013 cara download whatsapp nokia e63 cantumkan link e61 nokia e63 nokia e661i nokia Manual placa mae pos mig31ag - fotoonyou. 9300, 9500, e50, e60, e61, e61i, e62, e65, e70, e90, adobe reader for nokia symbain mobiles opera vista 2009 free internet in ph. form 88a in excel format free download NOKIA E90 Hard Reset Format Factory Settings & Clear unlock code SONY Xperia SP C5303 Manual Hard Reset and Unlocking info. WARNING ! Hard Reset. Nokia Lumia 610 - How to unlock security code by hard reset Cara Reset Phone Lock Samsung GT- E1205Y with Volcano Box (Product Line),i9100,s52 30,galaxy,s2,e1 080,e2121b,e250 ,e2250,e700,e90 0,j700,f480,f48 of the box state,note iv,erase,lesson ,guide,manual,u nlock,Hardware Reset,Samsung Galaxy. Cara Format Manual Nokia E90 Read/Download Backup contacts, calendar, tasks, notes and sms messages from Nokia E90 synced my phone's data with PhoneCopy, performed a factory reset, and set up the sync Universe seems to agree was made after manual Nokia 206 Thanks. Pc auto backup software veeam backup & replication v6 manual, server backup software acronis Freepbx backup ssh cara backup autotext blackberry di pc.
    [Show full text]
  • Nokia 9500 Communicator User Guide
    Nokia 9500 Communicator User Guide 9230978 Issue 2 DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY We, NOKIA CORPORATION declare under our sole responsibility that the products RA-2 and RA-3 are in conformity with the provisions of the following Council Directive: 1999/5/EC. A copy of the Declaration of Conformity can be found from www.nokia.com/phones/declaration_of_conformity/. Copyright © 2004 Nokia. All rights reserved. Reproduction, transfer, distribution or storage of part or all of the contents in this document in any form without the prior written permission of Nokia is prohibited. Copyright © 2004 Nokia. All rights reserved. Reproduction, transfer, distribution or storage of part or all of the contents in this document in any form without the prior written permission of Nokia is prohibited. Nokia, Nokia Connecting People, Xpress-on and Pop-port are trademarks or registered trademarks of Nokia Corporation. Other product and company names mentioned herein may be trademarks or tradenames of their respective owners. Nokia tune is a sound mark of Nokia Corporation. This product includes software licensed from Symbian Software Ltd (c) 1998-2004. Symbian and Symbian OS are trademarks of Symbian Ltd. This software is based in part of the work of the FreeType Team. This product is covered by one or more of the following patents: United States Patent 5,155,805, United States Patent 5,325,479, United States Patent 5,159,668, United States Patent 2232861 and France Patent 90 05712. Java and all Java-based marks are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. Bluetooth is a registered trademark of Bluetooth SIG, Inc.
    [Show full text]