The Swiss can now carry their own personal gogglebox around with them everywhere they go in the form of a Nokia N77.
submitted by
NokNok on 2nd Jun 2008 (via noknok.tv)
MobileTechNews is reporting that Swisscom has launched its mobile television service, 'Bluewin TV mobile', in Switzerland to become one of the first European providers to offer DVB-H mobile TV to its mobile customers. The only handset supported is Nokia's S60-running N77 smartphone, though you can bet that other future Nseries devices
submitted by
AllAboutSymbian on 2nd Jun 2008 (via allaboutsymbian.com)
Ever wonder why it's so dang hard to get a Nokia N77 or N92 and service to go along with it? Yeah, Nokia is too, and it's starting to voice its frustration over the molasses-like uptake mobile TV systems have experienced over the last several years. The company has openly pushed DVB-H for a while now, scoring a huge win when the European Union recently formally ratified the standard as Europe's in
submitted by
Engadget on 16th Apr 2008 (via engadgetmobile.com)
Oxygen Software released a new version of its Oxygen Phone Manager II for Symbian OS smartphones to include support for Nokia E51 and Sony Ericsson W960i smartphones. Version 2.17 of the "better PC suite" also includes improved support for Nokia 5700, Nokia 6290 and Nokia N77, as well as other enhancements such as: Connectivity, Options. Added
submitted by
IntoMobile on 5th Apr 2008 (via intomobile.com)
"Nokia’s portfolio offers a couple of DVB-H capable solutions, specifically the Nokia N77 and a more dated phone, the N92. Neither of them was widely available, since they were used either in pilot television projects or tailored for particular regions (like the N77 in Taiwan, starting late fall 2007). Indeed, given that the vast majority of markets still have no DVB-H television enabled, a replic
submitted by
PDAsNews on 25th Mar 2008 (via pdasnews.com)