T9Nav
One thing that struck a chord with me in the announcement of the Palm Pre a couple of weeks ago was that it was stated that there's now so much information and functionality on our phones that new ways of finding something are needed. Now, hardened power users will go 'pah if I want a contact, I'll go to Contacts, if I want a Calendar entry, I'll go to Calendar, if I want to use a Web bookmark, I'll go to Web'. And so on. However, an arguably smarter way to operate - and seemingly perfectly aligned with how the Pre is going to work - is so simply start typing the thing you're looking for and letting the operating system find anything that matches.
This is, in fact based on how the old Palm OS Find used to work, and to, a certain extent how Nokia's Mobile Search works. But what they showed on the Palm Pre went quite a bit further, in that you can simply start typing from the home screen in order to bring up anything on the device that matched. Nokia's E71 and E63 attempt something similar, but just for contacts.
Now, you really don't have to wait until the Pre launches to see this sort of functionality on your phone. Over a year ago, I reviewed an application called SkyeQuiKey here, which proved to be very good. But I've now found something that's even better.
T9Nav is a theoretically-still in beta and currently free utility that installs in the background on your S60 phone, indexes all your content and then sits invisibly behind the home screen, waiting for input. The name itself is one clue, of course. Start tapping in an alphabetic search clue using T9 'predictive' keystrokes and the software then searches (nearly) everything for all possible matches to your T9 sequence.
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Looking for the contact 'Wickes' with "9425" and the music track 'Comfortably Numb' with "26636"
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Looking for the bookmark 'All About Symbian' with "255" and the application 'Connection Mgr' with "2666"
The upshot of it all is that everything looks normal on the home screen. But whether you want to get to a contact, a music track, an S60 application, a web bookmark, a Calendar entry, an image or video, you literally starting typing, just as if you were typing a common word using predictive text, and the software does the rest. Just as with the Palm Pre demo, it's almost like magic.
The Palm Pre implementation of this functionality also included links to online services, and so does T9Nav, coming with a couple of dozen services also included in the search, e.g. Yahoo Mail, Royal Mail postcode finder, Wikipedia and quite a bit more. These are in addition to your own Web bookmarks.
The top line of each set of matches is initially a shortcut to the T9Nav graphical tutorial, but this sensibly goes away once you've viewed it. It's also worth mentioning the extra tab, which restricts matches to just those from Contacts, in case you're looking for a person and getting deluged in matches from other sources.
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Now, apart from the beta status, I should mention a few caveats: there's an initial indexing period of several minutes, after installation, when T9Nav has to go through your phone working out what's where - so be patient! After the initial index, it keeps itself up to date much more quickly.
Then there are some speed issues: the way it still takes a second or two to come up with matches. And scrolling down its match list isn't quick, though thankfully there's a shortcut in that you can go to the top match by just pressing in the d-pad, which helps.
Finally, it doesn't index Map favorites, To-do items or Notes (maybe these could be added in a future update?) Or, obviously, items from within third party applications.
One of T9Nav's best (if niche) abilities is that it searches within numeric fields. Suppose someone calls your landline while you were out but you don't recognise the number. Remembering just the last few digits "something 8382...." you open up your phone and tap in 8382 into the standby screen/T9Nav. Any matches in your Contacts will be shown. Very useful indeed.
It takes quite a bit of training to forget about the S60 Applications menu and Contacts and to use T9Nav instead, but this is largely what it promises - obviating the need for the S60 menu and bringing its contents (and a lot more) into the existing home/standby screen.
The only uncertainty in the whole project is the beta nature. The current beta runs out at the end of January - hopefully a new download with later expiry date will appear soon. Nuance, the developers, seemingly haven't made up their minds on whether to sell/give away the utility - I'd bet on a $10 purchase price when it becomes commercial. Mind you, T9Nav is so fundamentally useful that anyone with a S60 phone with numeric keypad shouldn't hesitate to buy. Watch this space for news.
Link: Download page for T9Nav
Steve Litchfield, All About Symbian
Published by Steve Litchfield at 10:24 UTC, January 20th 2009
Categories: Applications
Platforms: S60 3rd Edition
News Discussion
Both are great apps though, no question.
I see the beta lasts until 2nd Feb... will check that and then add to the [URL="http://www.allaboutsymbian.com/forum/showthread.php?t=68941"]useful apps thread on the N95 forum[/URL]
Good news: It's worth every penny. You may never see the menu again, and its speed is still good, considering how many clicks its saving you.
Actually I have been in close correspondence with the devs of this and they have been a fantastic bunch, specifically addressing my problems and providing me with new versions to test. So I guess they do deserve a little plug ;-)
I think it would be more beneficial on a touch screen device without a dpad than it is on the n95, though obviously great in both cases!
If they port it to S60 5th Edition it should work fine, and I'm sure they'll do that if the 5800, N97 etc sell well.
I had liked SkyeQuikey too, but I didn't buy it because the small time limit on the trial had put me off. It was some time ago, but I think it was limited to one day's use. One day is enough to understand how the app functions and to impress on you the value that it will be providing. But it is not sufficient time to determine the effect on your battery life, whether some other phone function will be affected in some way, whether it may cause any sort of instability etc. Especially when you are going to pay a (relatively) high price for a mobile app - It think it was about 25 USD at that time.
On the other hand, I am glad T9Nav is providing a beta- you can follow its development and also have some idea about the points I have mentioned above.
SkyeQuiKey (I hate this name) is nice, but have some annoying problems. The first letter is always "swallowed", that mean that you have always press the first button of your word twice and also other small errors
(good review here: bestofsymbian.com/skyequikey-from-skyestream-review/)
T9nav have nothing of that and seemīs for me the better application. But it shows no applications!?
It shows in the indexes list that it found 103 applications, but when you type it in, there will be no one found. Also the standard applications are not found.
Hope that there will be some updates soon...
By the way, you can use this "type and find" function on your windows desktop with slickrun!
bayden.com/SlickRun/
By the way, you can use this "type and find" function on your windows desktop with slickrun!
bayden.com/SlickRun/[/quote]
There's also, "Launchy" for Windows, "Gnome Do" for Linux, and "Quicksilver" for MacOSX.
2nd day with T9Nav. It's definitely not as fast as SkyeQuiKey, but so far it seems to be playing nicely with Psiloc Crystal Chinese.
But didn't FP2 introduce this functionality (at least in terms of contacts search) anyway?
T9Nav finds more things (almost TOO much), but it does have tabs that separate out what it finds into categories if the results are overwhelming (Contacts, Settings, Media, Bookmarks, Applications, Calendar, Keywords).
However, the biggest missing feature in T9Nav for me is the ability to configure keypresses to do something specific with the results - specifically to send an SMS to a contact. In SkyQuiKey I can type 2639, select the right Andy and press the right side of the D-pad and I'm ready to type my message. It's still the fastest way I've found to send one to the right person.
(The only other option I've come across is one of the "Handy" utilities - I forget which one - that allows you to set up an icon to send an SMS to a specific person. I gave up on it when I discovered how fiddly it is to arrange things in it unless you plan meticulously in advance ;-). No doubt there are other options that I haven't come across!)
I did find T9Nav to be a bit unpredictable about telephoning contacts too. Sometimes it seems to insist on dialling the digits you've entered, rather than the phone number of the contact it's found.
So, not bad for free, but I'll be sticking with SkyQuiKey for now.
Julie
Since one of the initial beta's i've been a avid fan & I do hope they port it to the 5800XM home screen although as someone mentioned, I'm not sure if its going to be easy unless they manage to implement it without using the standard dialer but using the virtual num-pad which has alpha keys too. N97 would not be too bad since it has a actual keyboard below it too.
Im a fan of free app's & I usually find a free software that can do what I want on my phone or my pc but honestly, if it comes to it, I'm willing to buy T9Nav for a reasonable price (that basically doesn't bankrupt me in the process!)
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