With G-off display you can turn off the screen by rotating and holding the phone upside down and holding it like that for a second. To save battery while listen to your favorite music, simply point your phone downward, light off. All background processes remain
G-Rotator is an application which uses the G-Sensor to detect the orientation of the device to change the screen orientation respectively. Sensitivity of sensor and duration after which data from sensor has to be fetched is user-defined
TouchLockPro is designed not to interfere with running applications and is a multipurpose locking application. Other locking solutions are often specific for locking only incoming calls/SMS. A lot of locking solutions also place a (transparent looking) Window on top of the running application (e.g
TorchButton Dropped your keys? Finding something behind the bench? Performing surgery on a computer and need to find that jumper on the mainboard?
This is a simple application built for some HTC devices that have a hardware LED, normally used to take pictures in the dark. However the LED can be used as a handy pocket flashlight
TouchResponse - This program is a touch driver to handle the touchscreen presses and vibration. TouchResponse will vibrate on touch.
A settings program exists to configure how the vibration works. Since this is a touch driver, there is no program you need to run to start it
SpoonTorch - Does your phone or PDA not have an external light on it? Do you want to use your phone's screen as a light?
This application lets you quickly create a white screen to use as a torch.
· Single tap of the screen to make the whole screen turn white. Tap again for the menu.
· Switching to fullscreen, backscreen brightness is set to maximum
O2Flash - Flashlight application for Windows Mobile. O2Flash is integrated into the O2Compass installer, but if you need it alone...
What's New in This Release:
· The application does not let the phone to sleep, so the flash doesn't turn off when the screens turn off
Mobile FlashLight - Many people today carry mini-flashlights on the end of their key chain. Apparently there is a need for this type of device because many stores sell them near the cash registers in the checkout lines. I wonder why these mini-flashlights are so popular when almost everyone has a mobile phone today