Blog home page re-enabled
We’ve decided to take back alive the front Blog, because we’re thinking of a new comunication way.
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Please, tell us what you think about this.
Thanks all for your support
70 Exclusive Iphone Games!!
Pack contains 70 high quality iPhone games
Compiled by Woofree for Woofree Members
Game List:
3D Cube Puzzle
Air Hockey
AroGyro
Art Puzzle
Asphalt 4 Elite Racing
Asterope
Attack of the cows
Backgammon
Big Bang Board Games
Big Bang Sudoku
BiiBall
Black mamba racer
Blitz
Block Breaker Delux 2
Brain Challenge
Break Classic
Bugdom 2
Cubes
Diner Dash
Domino
Fan Caps
Flick Bowling
Fuzzle
Graf
GL Golf
GTS World Racing
Hanoi plus
Head2Head
iGotchi
iSnake
iSnap
iTanks
JacketpotCasino
koipond
Kroll
Kyodai
Labyrinth
Let’em sing & play
Line Rider
LootMaster
Lucky 7 Shots
Madfighters
MonkeyLab
Mote-M
Ms.Pacman
Par 72 Golf
PowerBall
Raging Thunder
Real Soccer 2009
Reign of Swords
Removem
RockFall
ScriBall
Shaky Summit
Shanghai Mahjong
Spore Origins
Squirgle
Star Trigon
Star Wars The FOrce Unleashed
Super Pong
Tank Ace
Tanzen
Tennis Slam
Tribal
Vegas Poll
Video Poker Death Manjacks
Virtual Pool
Watermelones
ZEN Pinball Rollercoaster
Real Soccer 2009 – Iphone/Iphone Touch

Gameloft’s football sim gets touchy
As you’ll know if you read our earlier coverage, Gameloft is doing Real Soccer 2009 for iPhone. Not only was it unveiled on-stage at Apple’s ‘Let’s Rock’ event tonight – it actually debuted on the App Store too.
EDIT – This morning (10 September), the game’s name appears to have changed back to Real Football 2009 on the UK App Store. Thank goodness for that.
Naturally, I’ve spent the evening getting hands on with the game, not least to find out how you translate a football title to the buttonless iPhone. Happily, it’s made the transition seamlessly.
So, you play the game in landscape mode, with a transparent D-pad at the bottom right, and ‘A’ and ‘B’ buttons at the bottom right, which are used for most of the actions.
The game itself offers nearly 200 teams, with a FIFPRO licence meaning the player names are real. As you can see, the graphics are top-notch, with 3D visuals and some impressive presentation around them. It’s what we’ve come to expect from the Real Football franchise on mobile.
The controls go beyond tapping the on-screen buttons, too. You can tap and drag on empty areas of the screen to do tricks, including a Zidane-style twirly move.
I’m certainly impressed, having been concerned about how football games would work on the iPhone. What’s more, Gameloft is promising a Wi-Fi multiplayer in a forthcoming update of the game.
Deal or No Deal: Million Dollar Mission – Iphone-Ipod Touch

Application description Based on the hit TV series with millions of fans worldwide, Deal or No Deal: Million Dollar Mission puts all the game show’s action and excitement onto your iPhone or iPod Touch!
Enter the high-energy contest of nerves, instincts and raw intuition to try your luck and pick the right suitcase with the million dollar prize. The pressure will mount as new suit cases are opened each round. Will you quit while ahead or lose it all? The Million Dollar Mission is yours, should you choose to accept it!
New in this version 1) Fixed the memory fragmentation issue that was causing the game to crash at launch on iPhones that are heavy users of core apps like e-mail.
2) Improved load times significantly
3) changed Icon name to “Deal”


Enjoy!
Reuploading Games
Nokia E63
Essentially a cut-down version of the existing Nokia E71, the Nokia E63 is a 3G smartphone with a QWERTY keyboard and WiFi, aimed slightly more at consumers than business people, and with a significantly lower price tag.
Nokia are pitching the E63 at around €200 (approximately £160 / $240) before tax and subsidy, compared with the current retail price of about €340 (£270 / $400) for the E71.. but the E63 is almost identical in most major respects.
Some immediately obvious features that the E63 shares with the E71 are the QWERTY keyboard and the 2.36 inch QVGA display. As with the E71, the E63 is a 3G phone with WiFi support, microSD expandable memory, email and VPN support, a web browser, multimedia player, an FM radio and the Symbian S60 operating system. Both the E71 and E63 feature dual home screens so that work appointments can be kept separate from personal ones. Both handsets can use Nokia’s Ovi service, and this now has enhanced file sharing capabilities with the E63.
Some features from the E71 are missing – the Nokia E63 doesn’t have HSDPA or GPS capabilities, and the E63 only has a 2 megapixel fixed-focus camera compared to the 3.2 megapixel autofocus sensor on the E71. On the other hand, the E61 has a more standard 3.5mm audio socket, rather than the 2.5mm one on the E71. Both handsets have the same 1500 mAh battery giving up to 4.5 hours talktime on 3G and a maximum of 20 days standby time.
Clearly, the E63 is a simpler phone than the E71, so it will be cheaper to make. But is it really €140 cheaper to make than the E71? More like €40 than €140, we feel. Either this means that the E71 is seriously overpriced, or the E63 offers very good value for money. The E63 is certainly much cheaper than the equivalent BlackBerry model, so it looks like the E63 is rather inexpensive.. especially when you consider that it is cheaper than the Nokia 6500 Slide and Classic handsets.
Nokia say that the E61 should be available in the nest few weeks in ruby red and ultramarine blue colour combinations.
HTC MAX 4G
If you were going to guess which European country the HTC MAX 4G might be launched in, then which one would you choose? Germany? Sweden? Britain? Nope, the answer is Russia.. a country that is developing into a very interesting market for mobile phones with a number of handsets made exclusively for that market.
The HTC MAX 4G is an impressively specified Windows smartphone, but perhaps the most interesting part is the “4G” tag. If plain old UMTS / WCDMA is 3G, and HSDPA is 3.5G.. then what exactly is 4G? Well, that’s a good question because strictly speaking there are no recognised 4G standards. In this case, HTC are referring to the phone’s WiMAX capabilities. We have covered WiMAX before with the Nokia N810 WiMAX Edition, and essentially it works a little like a cross between a cellular phone network and wi-fi (you can read more about it here).
Currently, Moscow and St Petersburg have a WiMAX network running under the “Yota” brand name which allows for very high-speed network access wherever there is WiMAX coverage. Unlike the N810 though, the HTC MAX 4G is also a fully featured mobile phone with tri-band GSM, GPRS and EDGE data support (but no 3G) and also standard 802.11 b and g wi-fi. The WiMAX radio works in the 2.5 to 2.7 GHz band, but not all WiMAX implementations worldwide use this frequency.
Other than the WiMAX support, the HTC MAX 4G is pretty similar in specification to the HTC Touch HD. The 800 x 480 pixel touchscreen is actually a little larger at 3.8″, and there is a motion sensor built-in to automatically change the orientation between wide and tall formats. there’s a 5 megapixel autofocus camera on the back plus a secondary 0.3 megapixel video calling camera on the front. Audio output is via a standard 3.5mm socket, and the HTC MAX 4G has an FM radio too.
The MAX 4G also has GPS support, 8GB of built-in memory, 256MB of RAM and a 528 MHz Qualcomm ESM7206A processor. It weighs 151 grams and measures 114 x 63 x 14mm. Talktime on GSM is 7 hours, and a little under 4 hours if using VOIP.
The operating system is Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional with some HTC enhancements, including the rather good TouchFLO interface. The MAX 4G is also integrated with Yota’s “Yap-yap” service allows photo sharing and contact synchronisation. Yota will also provide free-of-charge TV to the MAX 4G over their WiMAX network.
Priced at 28900 roubles (around €840 / £670 / $1000), the HTC MAX 4G is a pretty expensive device.. but a very desirable one, if you are lucky enough to live in a WiMAX coverage area. HTC say that the MAX 4G should be available from 26th November.




