Posted on 06 February 2007, at 12:48 pm, by Judie Lipsett
Spb Mobile Shell is a program I’ve been using for a couple weeks, and that I recently reviewed for Pocket PC Thoughts.
Here’s the conclusion that I posted at PPC Thoughts:
I am actually pretty amazed that Spb House released this program, because it takes several of their popular Today Plug-ins and offers “lite” versions of each rolled into one very nicely rounded application. I recognize bits borrowed from Spb Weather, Spb Time, Spb Pocket Plus, and perhaps snatches from a few of their other titles. This is a really great program for someone that doesn’t need all of the extra features in the other full Spb applications, but it will also integrate and play nicely with the Spb titles I just mentioned and others. I like that it allows such a high degree of personalization while making the entire one-handed mobile phone experience even better with my Treo. Spb Mobile Shell has earned a permanent spot on my Treo.
You can read my whole review here.
Andy Mason (Warthog) at Aximsite has also got his review up, and it looks like he is happy with the program as well.
In the meantime, check out the press release…
Spb Software House Releases Spb Mobile Shell
February 6th, 2007 – Spb Software House, the leading Pocket PC software developer, unveils Spb Mobile Shell.
The Pocket PC user interface has not been significantly changed for the last six years. Originally the Pocket PC was a PDA designed for stylus navigation and long but infrequent periods of general use. It has since evolved into many things, including a phone. Along the way, though the people who use a Pocket PC and the tasks it is made to perform have changed, the main interface has not. The goal of Spb Mobile Shell is to close this gap between the old Pocket PC interface and one people should expect from such a smart, modern and powerful device.
Spb Mobile Shell introduces the next generation user interface while keeping all advantages of Windows Mobile. It dramatically improves the standard interface and adds features that most would expect from a modern PDA phone. This program is designed for ROM and it will not be a surprise if in a little while most Windows Mobile devices will bundle this operating system upgrade taking the Pocket PC user interface to the next level. Therefore, Spb Mobile Shell is the first program a Pocket PC user should install on a device running plain Windows Mobile.
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Creating a new user interface is quite an ambitious goal. If this could be accomplished easily it would have been done already by either Microsoft, an OEM, or an ISV. Spb Software House has the unique expertise necessary to achieve this goal. By using feedback from hundreds of thousands of users and years of experience in the field of mobile interface design, Spb Software House was successful and created Spb Mobile Shell.
Spb Mobile Shell preserves values of an open platform, which is more difficult than creating a closed vertical platform. A few operators and OEMs have tried to customize their devices to look like a consumer phone, but this left some third party applications and built-in system features unusable (for example, adding a full-screen Today plug-in would crowd out other Today plug-ins).
The key features include:
* The most relevant information is displayed on one screen
* Phone style menu
* Weather forecasts
* Photo speed dial
* World time
* Launcher
* Big dynamic tabs on Today
* Color based themes
* Smart contact search
* Auto-hide mode for Today plug-ins
*** Target Audience ***
Spb Mobile Shell targets people who need the power of a Windows Mobile phone, but are not happy with the standard Pocket PC user interface. It is designed with phone users in mind. All scenarios were evaluated with the understanding that the Pocket PC is first and foremost a convergence device. However, Spb Mobile Shell will work well on a Windows Mobile 5.0 Pocket PC without phone. Non-phone users might use it differently. For example, you might want to use a more complex configuration on your Today screen and may not use the Now Screen as often as phone users will.
*** Designed for ROM ***
Spb Mobile Shell was designed as a product that an OEM can ship in ROM, as is. In fact, once you install this program you may think that this is an ideal program to come pre-installed on a device. It even makes more sense for those regular users who never buy software online.
Spb Software House has worked with OEMs in the past, and knows they have tough requirements for resident software to reside in ROM. For example, many ISVs do not care about subtle issues such as the amount of available virtual memory inside the process named device.exe. As a result, if too many third-party applications are installed on a modern 3G HTC device, your favorite SIP might not work anymore even when there is enough program memory available. In designing a product for ROM, from the very beginning of development Spb Software House takes great care to consider all of these issues and potential impacts to your device.
*** Pricing and Availability ***
Spb Mobile Shell is currently available in English, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, Czech, Polish and Traditional Chinese languages. A free 15-day trial, or the full version of Spb Mobile Shell for 29.95 USD, are available at http://www.spbsoftwarehouse.com/.
*** Further Information and Downloads ***
Further information regarding Spb Mobile Shell can be found at the Spb
website:
http://www.spbsoftwarehouse.com/products/mobileshell/
Spb Mobile Shell screenshots:
http://www.spbsoftwarehouse.com/products/mobileshell/screenshots.html
A free 15-day trial can be downloaded from:
http://www.spbsoftwarehouse.com/products/mobileshell/download.html
*** About Spb Software House ***Spb Software House is a software development company, specializing mainly in Windows Mobile software for Pocket PCs. Founded in 1999, the company offers advanced software solutions for use in a wide range of applications.
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February 6th, 2007 at 3:45 pm
Eergh… I can’t afford this now! I just got a Dell XPS M1210 running Vista Ultimate…
I need more money
February 6th, 2007 at 4:27 pm
Thanks for the review link, Judie!
Andy
February 6th, 2007 at 5:05 pm
Anytime Andy.
February 7th, 2007 at 11:27 pm
I sprung for it, and noticed that there were updates to Weather, Diary and Pocket Plus available, so I downloaded and installed them all at once. Now I have no weather forecasts available for my location.
Uninstalling this version of Spb Weather and reinstalling the previous (functioning) version didn’t correct it either.
So I`m off the the Spb forums to see if there are any other reports of this happening.
February 7th, 2007 at 11:29 pm
Chris, you need to download the weather plugin. let me know if you can’t find it, and I’ll help.
February 8th, 2007 at 12:10 am
I’m on the Mobile Shell page atm, and I do not see a weather plugin mentioned. There’s obviously Spb Weather but I assume you’re not talking about that.
February 8th, 2007 at 12:28 am
Okay, reinstall Spb Weather with Shell, and then add this to a folder on your PPC.
http://www.pdagold.com/themes/detail.asp?t=11968
From within the options menu in Spb Weather, you can look for databases. Find this one and you should be okay? I hope…
Let me know.
February 8th, 2007 at 1:24 am
Hmm… I had it working using CAXX0167 as the weathercode, using this template: http://www.pdagold.com/themes/detail.asp?t=13038 as the source and I was getting a 14 day forecast with a fairly small download. Now I have to use CABC0119 and I only get seven days, with a much larger download.
Oh well. At least I can get a forecast now…
Thanks for your help!
February 10th, 2007 at 12:50 am
Whoops! I was using the wrong template file. I had a BBC file and a WeatherNetwork-Ca template on the SD card that I keep all my installers on, so I assumed that I had been using the WeatherNetwork-Ca template previously. It turns out that I had been using one from the Weather channel. So the correct template, in conjunction with the latest version of Spb Weather now gets me a forecast as detailed as I had previously.
I replied to Yevgeniy’s post in the Pocket PC Thoughts thread suggesting that they consider implementing a mechanism in future versions of the product to save template files when upgrading.
February 10th, 2007 at 12:53 pm
Okay – so you got it working, then. Phew!
You like?
February 10th, 2007 at 4:50 pm
I like!
February 10th, 2007 at 4:51 pm