Enjoy the Vista Effect on your Nokia cell phones
Themes (SIS Format)
(Click here for Supported phones for these themes)
Vista Green :

Click here to Download this theme
********
Click here to download this theme
**********
Your Mobile Portal for Reviews, Videos, Ringtones, Windows Mobile News, Nokia Symbian Applications, Games and Sony Ericsson etc.
Enjoy the Vista Effect on your Nokia cell phones
Themes (SIS Format)
(Click here for Supported phones for these themes)
Vista Green :

Click here to Download this theme
********
Click here to download this theme
**********

Have you spent so much on your watch that you can’t afford a clock? Neither did we. We’re just trying to find some angle to support the Von Zios.
While the Von Zios wears like a normal watch, the links can snap together allowing for a rigid support structure. We don’t necessarily like the idea for a watch…or at least this particular watch…but for an MP3 player or general PMP the design could have far more utility. Because the last thing you want to buy is a bulky stand for your iPod Video.
[Gizmodo]
Mac OS X aficionado? Check. RIM BlackBerry user? Check. Syncing a Mac and a BlackBerry? Not so fast — until now. While RIM has had official syncing software available for years on the Windows platform, the faithful Mac crowd has once again been left behind. But, with Mac shipments upping the pace recently, perhaps hardware vendors will need to soon think again, eh? New “Missing Sync” software from Mark/Space is now available in a “public preview” format that allows Mac OS X users to synchronize data on their beloved Macs with their beloved BlackBerry smartphones — with no unofficial hack needed. The solution uses a standard USB tethering cable and appears to be functional with many newer BlackBerry handsets, and owners of the BlackBerry Pearl and newer BlackBerry 8800 series handsets can even sync iPhoto albums and iTunes playlists. Although The Missing Sync isn’t officially sanctioned RIM software, Mark/Space says that full release is expected by the end of March. You’ll need Mac OS X version 10.4.8 and a BlackBerry handset running version 4.0 of RIM’s BlackBerry OS.
If you’re an avid T-Mobile USA data user (handset-based, that is), you may be aware that the GSM carrier has started to become very stingy in the last year or so on which pieces of software can have full access to the Internet (factory apps and browsers on branded handsets) and which cannot (all others). There have been quite a few knowledgeable T-Mobile users paying for the carriers’ “t-zones” or “T-MobileWeb” handset browser service but then using third-party apps like Opera Mini, Google Maps and others to get ‘full access’ to the web and download larger and larger amounts of data.