In my experience, it’s as responsive as PalmOS (compared to the Treo), a bit more responsive than Windows Mobile 5 (compared to my 195 Mhz QTek 9100 WM5-AKU2), and a whole world faster than both my Motorola Linux phones (which use a 312 Mhz CPU) and my Motorola M1000 Symbian 7.1 UIQ 2.1 (175 Mhz ARM).
The OS loads in about 35-40 seconds, but after it’s loaded it is fast and responsive. Readers online claim that the E-series is using a faster CPU (at around 250 Mhz) than the N-series (~220 Mhz), but we can’t confirm this as Nokia doesn’t disclose the CPU used or the amount of RAM. The S60 3rd Edition Symbian v9.1 OS is super fast on this device. Grandients and pictures just look much better on the E61. Next to our QTek 9100 65k 2.8″ QVGA screen, it’s like a day and night. It is a 2.8″ 320×240 landscape QVGA non-touchscreen LCD that sets itself apart from the rest by being a true 16 million color screen. Above the screen you will find a small white light which lits up when you receive email (push email supported) and a power button which controls the lock of the device/keyboard, the power on/off of the device, and the profiles. Below the device you will find the charging port, the pop-port which acts as a host to the USB cable & the headset, and at the very right of the device there is the IrDA port. On the left of the device there are two buttons to change the volume of the device up and down, while a button below it opens the sound recorder which starts recording immediately after pressing it (this might cause a bit of a security problem in some companies/organizations). As this is a business device there is no camera.
The device features a QWERTY keyboard, IrDA, Wi-Fi 802.11i/e/g, over 64 MBs free for the user, quad-band GSM/EDGE & 2100 WCDMA antennas, vibration, and Bluetooth 1.2. The device is considerably smaller than a Blackberry. Think of the E61 as a big phone, or a small PDA. It is as long as most PDAs are, but it’s a bit less wide and much thinner. At 144 grams and 117×69.7×14 mm, the E61 resembles a small PDA in terms of size. There is no SD adaptor for the miniSD card (the device itself can function as a flash reader), and no belt-clip case.
In the box we found the phone, a 1500 mAh battery, a 64 MB miniSD (hot swap supported), a CD, a user manual and a quick start guide, a US charger, a USB cable, and a single-ear mono handsfree. Dig in for information, a video and lots of screenshots from the latest ‘S60 3rd Edition’ Symbian v9.1 OS. Hi-Mobile sent us in an E61 unit for the purposes of this review. Still trying using FAT in CCS.It’s no secret: Nokia is after Blackberry’s thunder in the enterprise with their latest E series, and especially via the E61 model. I have tried in CCS also but only for read/write in sector wise operation.
The compiler have example code on SD/MMC. Hello, i'm also looking to do this, could you post your code ?Īctually i have did that part of the code using MikroC compiler. I have already used SD card for storing data in TXT format. My point is weather such file can be play using window media player.i will be very thankful if anybody reply. After implementing the block, the whole block is store in SD card in. This is going to implement after every 56th sample right?. One think, can i implement a block of 100 byte in which 44 byte will be header and the rest 56 will be data. i will appreciate if anybody share source code for similar project like this. Thanks i already visited that link.I know the Format of wave but i need source code for inserting Header particularly for PIC controller.
Now the problem is, i want to convert it into WAV file format and store in SD card. The sampled data is converted into 2:1 ADPCM using microchip's code.
The sampling frequency is 8000Hz and i m using 10bit ADC. I m doing a project on voice recording using PIC and i have to store the recorded sound on SD card in wav file format. Please do not post bug Reports on this forum. FAQ Forum Help Official CCS Support Search Register Profile Log in to check your private messages Log inĬCS does not monitor this forum on a regular basis.