Attempts to solve the problem since 10/01/11 1) tried to redownload and install Update Error! 2) removed app and tried again Update Error! 3) removed Nokia Big Screen that left no files in app manager, tried again Update Error! 4) John told me of the new version of Nokia Big Screen, tried to install Update Error (2153775107), but this time it left in the app manager the entry Nokia Big Screen Repository Files, removed that. 5) Digital TV app is finally installed, but I am able to get only the sound no Images 6) During the removal of the Repository Files I was warned that it might cause problems for other apps. So I decided to reinstall Nokia Big Screen
The Nokia Mobile TV Headset, DVB-H, is all you need to turn your mobile device into a portable television. Anywhere there’s mobile DVB-H (Digital Video Broadband – Handset) coverage, you can tune into sports events or TV shows and watch them without worrying about an Internet connection. DVB-H is also kinder to your battery life than Web TV solutions.
The immediate difference between the Nokia N96 and The N95 is the built in digital TV tuner. This is a first for any mobile phone. Now you can watch TV wherever you are and whenever you want. This is a step forward technologically as no other manufacturer has ever managed to achieve such a feat. The quality of the TV images is still relatively unknown, but more information will become available nearer to its release date in Q3 of 2008. At the time of writing it is also unknown as to whether or not this rather remarkable feature will be available in the UK.
Set to launch in Q2 2006, the N92, which runs using Nokia's Series 60 interface, features a DVB-H TV tuner that in the future will be able to receive as many as fifty TV channels. DVB-H is a variant of the digital TV standard as used in the UK by Freeview, which has been optimised for mobile devices. It is set to launch in Italy in time for the 2006 World Cup with other European countries following later in the year. There's no official UK launch for the service, but it could theoretically arrive as early as 2007. Nokia, along with O2 and NTL, recently conducted a DVB-H trial in the Oxford area.