As the years passed and phones developed, so did the screen sizes. While searching for the games, you'll realize they always come branded with 128x128, 128x160, 176x220, 240x320 or some other numbers. Those are screen resolutions and you want the best one, 240x320, preferably of Sony Ericsson, since SE K810i was the ultimate gaming phone back in the day. Some of the older games, which were released before 240x320 resolution came to pass, are obviously available only in 176x220 or 128x160. Also, you want the JAR file, not JAD.
The Samsung Champ was a feature phone that was announced by Samsung in May 2010 GT-C3303K & August 2011 GT-C3303i. It features a quad band GSM support along with a 40 MB internal flash memory (expandable up to 8 GB via microSD), a 2.4-inch, 240x320-pixel resistive touchscreen display, a digital camera and on select models, a 1.3-megapixel camera.
The problem is with that the image is different size for different screen, some screens have a size of 240x320 some 400x800 for the image view I use fill_parent so the image will fill the whole screen in every screen. and this clickable areas sometimes will be 50dip from the left border sometimes will be 150dip. Sometimes it is 10dip from the top sometimes it is 500dip... everything depends on the screen size
Chinese phone maker Huawei is relatively unknown in the U.S. market. Up until recently, its only U.S. phones have been basic handsets, like the Huawei M328 from MetroPCS. That has changed with the T-Mobile Tap, which marks the company's first feature-rich touch-screen handset with a major U.S. cell phone carrier. The T-Mobile Tap is available for $79.99 with a two-year contract and $179.99 without.
Design
The T-Mobile Tap has a similar look and feel to the HTC Touch. Measuring 4.2 inches long by 2.2 inches wide by 0.5 inch thick, the Tap has curved corners, rounded edges, and a soft-touch exterior. This gives it a nice comfortable feel in the hand, and at 3.7 ounces, it won't weigh you down. Like the Touch, it is also one of the more petite touch-screen handsets we've ever used.
One of the reasons the Tap is so small is due to its 2.8-inch display, which is smaller than the 3.0-inch displays on comparable touch-screen phones like the Samsung Mythic and the LG Chocolate Touch. Despite its size, however, the screen has 262,000-color support and 240x320-pixel resolution, which results in crisp and vibrant graphics. You can adjust the brightness, the backlight time, and the greeting message.
The touch screen on the Tap is quite responsive, though you need to press the screen a little hard at times. It has haptic feedback, and you can change the intensity of the vibrations. You also can improve the precision of your finger taps by going through the calibration wizard. Along the left side of the Tap's home screen is a widget tray very similar to the TouchWiz interface commonly found on Samsung phones. You can show or hide it, and you can drag and drop shortcut icons to and from the home screen. Some of the more notable widgets on the Tap include shortcuts to Google Maps and GPS with TeleNav.
Sony Ericsson this morning announced the Aspen, the front-facing QWERTY keyboard phone we previously saw as the Faith. What's more, this is the first Windows Mobile phone to officially launch with Windows Mobile Professional 6.5.3 (and that solves the mystery of what version number would be next). It's also the first front-facing keyboard phone with a touchscreen that we've seen in a while.
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