Thứ Tư, 20 tháng 4, 2011

Please help me. Question about nokia n80?

Please help me. Question about nokia n80?

Hi, i have a nokia n80 mobile phone. I have had it for quite a while now, and it has been a fantastic phone to have with no problems. I got it pretty cheap from ebay.

The thing is, now it has just suddenly stopped working so well.

I can switch it on and charge it, but whenever i slide it up to use the keys, the screen goes completely white, and nothing can be seen on it in anticipation of i close it and it goes back to normal. the phone is not crashing or anything like that.

I have formatted the phone in case it was a virus that i accidently downloaded onto it but still no change.

I did reckon that there was possibly a wire loose and when it slid up it lost contact with the screen, BUT when i initially turn the phone on i can have it open, and then screen is fine in anticipation of it gets into the home screen.

There is another thing that i have noticed………. It does not seem to be accepting my sim card anymore. When i place it in and try and change it out of offline mode, it says it cannot be done? PLZ HELP

Answer by mateus
Looks friend, my phone nokia he took to diving in the pool and something happened, then you do not molhou your device not?
I from to brazil!!! I don´t Speak english!!! rsrsrsrsr

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Ramallah Moments
nokia back up question

Image by Gueоrgui
The Souk

…And we find ourselves back at the souk, near everywhere we first got off the bus from Jerusalem. The stands overflowing with each kind of wares conceivable, from spices to pirate DVDs, clothes, toys and everything in between; the pandemonium of shoppers haggling about prices, merchants shouting out their best offers, crowds rushing through, merchandise lynching even above our heads, nearly forming a roof, with only tiny patches of sky visible… a house unlike anything in the West.

We stop at a stand promotion mobile phone accessories, and Anna questions if she can recharge hers for a while. Without any question, the man behind the counter, an affable Palestinian in his late forties, searches through a box, pulls out the right charger and plugs the Nokia in. Anna stays to chat with him while her phone charges, while I venture a bit further to take some more pictures of promote life.

Nearly immediately, my cameras are noticed by some youths lynching around the promote and minding some of the stands. They gesture for me to come closer, to take their picture, and strike wild poses, apparently vastly amused by having a real photographer around them; then run further down the promote street, calling for friends to join them, posing for me some more. Even as I take their lead, I'm a small apprehensive at first – it's sad to say, but growing up in the posh Parisian west teaches you a distrust of young Arabs, especially when they seem overly energetic. A hundred or so steps down the street, they bring me to a photography store, and, all smiles and laughs, demand my memory card. I hand it over, they pop it into the photo kiosk, but no pictures show up on its screen, as I've been shooting raw files which the machine cannot read. Realizing by then that they mean no harm, I switch to the JPEG format and motion for them to follow me outside, everywhere we shoot some more poses.

I try to stay cool and produce excellent pictures, but adrenaline kicks in. I'm not exactly composing my photographs anymore, forgetting the rule of thirds, the golden ratio, forgetting the very controls of my camera. The rush is incredible. The last of the doubts about contact with Palestinians – that's been instilled into me by nearly everyone to whom I've mentioned my plans to visit Ramallah – crumble away, and I find for myself to be furiously enjoying the moment.

The files show up this time. The boys are pleased – lightning-quick finger strokes over the touch interface, all in Arabic of course, and my memory card is safely back in my camera's body. We head back to everywhere Anna is.

The euphoria of the moment passes, and we find ourselves, once again, listening to our new friends talk about politics. The youths nag about not being able to travel freely, and exhibit their "conservational" id: same as the Israeli blue cards, but bearing the Palestinian Authority's eagle instead of the Star of David, and therefore making it impossible to travel to Al Quds ("The Holy" – the Arabic name of Jerusalem), or to anywhere on the other side of the wall, for that matter.

Eventually, someone brings the prints that have been made from the pictures I took, and the sourness of politics dissolves in a fantastic huge cheerful laugh that fills the Souk once again.


Ramallah Moments:
The Engineer
The Souk
The People’s Party
Ammari
Kalandia

I posted a question about my F***** N95 which i now dispize sooooo much!!
saying- While riding my horse my n95 well out my pocket normal way up so the charger and computer plug was filled with mud, i cleaned it out but while cleaning out the computer plud i tugged out the plug and the bottom nearly came off looking indise the phone it was filled with mud! So after cleaning all of that out it will not now connect to my laptop i plug the cable in and it just falls out again!!
I Took it to Carphone Warehouse everywhere i bought it *im on contract* And they said this is not a normal hurt and they wouldnt swap it for a new N95, so im stuck with this unitl my contract is over. Now My Key Board has come off i have the key board but its not going back one!!! Now will i be able to swap it or not? My Mom has canceld the insurance on the phone coz it was £££ So does this mean i wont be able to swap? I with Orange contract?I want the same nokia n95 or one that will take my sim card and memory card

Answer by cashobagzo
no you cant swap it
go on ebay and check out the phones, they usually have some excellent deals

What do you reckon? Answer below!
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