Whatsapp for Nokia Asha 201

Downloading Whatsapp on your Nokia Asha 201
The Nokia Asha 201, a phone produced through Microsoft, is equipped with a single core processor and RAM of 32 MB. Of course the Asha is more than just a processor, it also has a 2.4″ screen, a 2 Megapixel camera, and is the home of the Series 40 Asha operating system, not to mention a condensed QWERTY style keyboard to match it’s internal efficiency.

Nokia Asha 201
All of this is housed in a casing just smaller than the size of your hand. Now that we have a basic understanding of your phone, let’s talk about how to download Whatsapp.

Step 1.
Go to the internet browser (Nokia Browser) on your Nokia Asha 201 (This app should be represented by a blue button with an icon of a globe in the center).

Step 2.
Go to the URL (to clarify, make sure to enter this address into the browser on your Nokia, not your computer).

Step 3.
Follow the instructions provided to install Whatsapp on your Nokia Asha 201.

Alternatively you can choose to install Whatsapp without the use of the browser on your phone by following the steps below. (Note: Alternative installation path still requires the use of data or an internet connection.)

Step 1.
Click the “app” button on your device for a full list of apps. Once at your app page, go to your Nokia Store app, this should be a blue button with an icon of a white shopping bag/cart in the middle.

Step 2.
Search for “s40 Whatsapp messenger” once in the Nokia store app (The search bar once in the store is usually found at the bottom of the screen).

Step 3.
Once you’ve found Whatsapp, click on it, then click the install button on the screen that follows. Wait while your phone installs Whatsapp, and once complete your phone should notify you of a successful installation. (Note: Sometimes Whatsapp shows an error when first installed, a restart of your device usually fixes the issue.)

Whatsapp for Nexus 10

Summary

The Google Nexus 10 is actually a tablet while the Nexus 4 is a mobile phone, but both are co-developed using technologies created by Google and Samsung. In this article, we will take a look at the specs of the Nexus 10 to see if it is capable of running the Whatsapp mobile messaging application.
Nexus 10
System Specs

The Nexus 10 packs quite a powerful punch when it comes to processing capabilities. Here are some of the hardware features that make up its interior:

-Samsung Exynos 5260 chip system
-Dual-core 1.7 GHz Cortex A15 CPU
-Quad-core ARM Mali T604 graphics processing unit
-5-megapixel, rear-facing camera with LED flash

And here’s what you get with the software side of the house:

-Comes installed with Google Chrome, Gmail, Play Music, Play Books, Play Movies, the Play Store application, YouTube, Currents, Google+, Maps, and People.
-Has Android 4.2 (Jellybean) and is upgradable to Android 5.1 (Lollipop)

Will it Run Whatsapp?

Unfortunately, Whatsapp does not officially support the downloading of their apps to tablets at this time. It is likely that this feature will be changed rather soon, as expanding their messaging app’s presence into the tablet market will be huge for marketing and purchases for the creators of Whatsapp.

It almost makes no sense that the Nexus 10 isn’t capable of running right now, as Whatsapp only requires Android 2.1, which is a software that even the oldest Android-based phones and tablets usually possess.

How to Download it in the Future

Assuming that Whatsapp becomes available for your Android Nexus 10 in the future, here are the steps that you will need to take to download it to your tablet:

1. Click on the Google Play Store Application from your tablet’s home screen
2. Inside of the Google Play Store app, look for a search bar in the top right corner. Type in the name of the application in this search bar.
3. Once Whatsapp pops up, click the widget for it, and proceed to hit “download”. The Google Play Store will download the application install it, and then automatically place it on your applications screen (i.e. your home screen).

Conclusion

For now, though, your other option is to run the Whatsapp application on the Google Nexus 10 Tablet’s counterpart, the Nexus 4 smartphone. The Nexus 4 comes fully loaded with all of the hardware and software that you need to run this app effectively, so you won’t have to do anything to change the phone. All you would need to do is follow the above steps in the same manner that you would with the tablet, and you should be good to go.

Whatsapp for Nokia 6120

The Nokia 6120 is a classic style phone running the Symbian (9.2) S60 3rd Edition, Feature Pack 1 OS. It has a 2 inch display that runs at 240×320 pixels with 200ppi pixel density. The CPUS is a single core ARM11 running at 369 MHZ.

It has 64 MB of RAM, and 045 GB of built in storage. It does contain a microSD slot for expanded storage. The camera is 2 megapixels with a built in flash and digital zoom. There is also a front facing camera for video chat. The average talk time on a full charge is 3 hours, and the phone can stand by for 10.8 days.
Nokia 6120
To install Whatsapp on your Nokia 6120, visit the official website for whatsapp here from your phone’s web browser.

Next, click on download. On this page you will find multiple links for different phones. For the Nokia 6120, you will want to download from the Nokia Symbian link. Once you click on that, it will take you to the download page for this phone type. Click the “Download Now” button at the top of the page. It will then begin downloading a .sis file to install on your device.

Once you finish downloading the app, you can install it by clicking on the file. It will then read you off a series of instruction on installing the application.

Now that you have it installed, you can go through your contacts to see which of your friends already have the app installed.

It will automatically add those people to your favorite’s list. If they do not show up, then you can add them manually by entering the number and adding it to your favorite’s list.

If you have added the contact to your list, but they still don’t show up, you can click on Favorites, then options, and finally refresh favorites.

Remember, to use WhatsApp, you must have an adequate data plan. All messages are free, but standard data rates do apply from your service provider. So if possible, you should try to have an unlimited data plan so you do not have any overages.

Why Is Facebook Keeping WhatsApp Separate ?

Many people will be wondering why Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is keeping WhatsApp separate from his major social media solution. After all, some media reports indicate that Facebook spent as much as $21.8 billion in stock and cash to purchase WhatsApp.

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Mark Zuckerberg, Jan Koum and Brian Acton

Interestingly enough, there are several good reasons why Mr. Zuckerberg wants WhatsApp to remain entirely separate from Facebook. Even though the reasons are not readily apparent to us, they are fairly obvious. Yet even some seasoned investors will be skeptical of the purchase because WhatsApp apparently lost $138 million in 2013, according to The New York Times Deal Book.

From a business standpoint, leaving WhatsApp separate makes a great deal of sense. It could also be a highly lucrative strategy that could make Facebook the most powerful and profitable force in the world of social media.

The Reasons Why Zuckerberg Wants WhatsApp to Remain Separate from Facebook

Some of the major reasons why WhatsApp will remain a separate entity from Facebook for the foreseeable future include:

  • WhatsApp is a smartphone-based solution, while Facebook is an inter-oriented application. Basically, Facebook is designed to facilitate communication over the Internet, while WhatsApp is designed to facilitate communication over phones. Those two functions require very different technologies that are in many ways are highly incompatible.
  • WhatsApp itself will do little or nothing to enhance Facebook. Since Facebook is designed to be used through computers, it would be hard to integrate with WhatsApp.

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  • Integrating WhatsApp with Facebook would greatly diminish its value. Were WhatsApp to be seen as merely a tool to use with Facebook, a lot of people would not use it.
  • Facebook and WhatsApp reach entirely different audiences. Facebook’s users are mostly affluent people in developed countries with access to traditional desktop, tablet, or laptop computers. WhatsApp’s users are persons in developing countries with access only to phones. Part of the reason why Zuckerberg bought WhatsApp was to access a vast audience he could never reach through Facebook.
  • WhatsApp has a very different business model than Facebook. Facebook’s business model is to create a market for advertising by expanding its social network. WhatsApp’s model is to create a worldwide delivery system for a wide variety of services and possibly goods.
  • Facebook also relies heavily upon advertising revenue, while WhatsApp does not. This occurs partially because its creators, Brian Acton and Jan Koum, designed WhatsApp as an ad-free environment, which is part of its appeal. Making WhatsApp part of Facebook would destroy that aspect of its business and limit its appeal.
  • Zuckerberg also wants to keep Koum and Acton happy because they’re brilliant guys. He wants them to be working at Facebook when they come up with their next $21 billion idea.

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  • Facebook can afford to lose $138 million a year at WhatsApp for a long, long time. The company reported a net income of $2.82 billion, a free cash flow of $1.412 billion and revenues of $15.94 billion on September 30, 2015, according to YCharts. That means Facebook can afford to lose money on WhatsApp for quite a while; Facebook also had $15.83 billion in the bank on the same day.
  • The value at WhatsApp comes from the number of active users. It has 900 million in September 2015. Obviously, it is very successful in that regard, so Zuckerberg has no reason to mess with success.

As you can see, Mark Zuckerberg has many very good reasons to keep WhatsApp separate for now, although that might change in the future because there is a strong possibility that WhatsApp and Facebook could be integrated at some point.

Will Facebook and WhatsApp Ever Be Integrated?

Perhaps the most intriguing possibility of all is that at some point in the future Zuckerberg will integrate all of his social media solutions—WhatsApp, Facebook, and Instagram—into one massive social media platform that will bring the Internet and phones together in a new form of communication.

The recent changes to WhatsApp, which include the WhatsApp Web interface for computers and video message, indicate that is entirely possible. Koum, Acton, and Zuckerberg do seem to be making WhatsApp more and more like Facebook.

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Yet they may have other plans for WhatsApp. One strong possibility is that they might try to turn it into an ecommerce solution. People in many parts of the world, such as India, are already making use of WhatsApp for business. Some features, such as WhatsApp Lists, do seem designed for ecommerce.

A more grandiose plan could make WhatsApp into something like Google, which evolved from a humble search engine into a portal to the entire web. WhatsApp could serve as the Google of the developing world, bringing the whole web to them just as Google brought the web to the average people of American and Europe.

Google’s Present Could Show Us WhatsApp’s Future

If Zuckerberg wants to follow Google’s example, then WhatsApp could stay a separate company for the foreseeable future. In the summer of 2015 Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page totally reorganized their company into a new entity called Alphabet.

Alphabet is actually a holding company on Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, which owns a variety of businesses but keeps them entirely separate. Today, Google, which operates the search engine, YouTube, and Android, is actually a separate company owned by Alphabet.

Other companies owned by Alphabet, including Google Ventures, Google Capital, Calico, Nest, Fiber, and the research organization Google X, will be wholly owned by Alphabet but kept entirely separate. The reason for this is that those companies are entirely different from the search engine. Fiber is basically a telecom that owns, manages, and installs advanced fiber optic cable systems; Ventures is an investment bank, and Nest develops instruments.

Like Page and Brin, Zuckerberg recognizes that operating all the companies as one will invite disaster. So he intends to keep the various arms of his empire separate. Another reason for that is to reduce bureaucracy and the expenses it creates.

Naturally, many people will wonder how this will work and what it will look like. Nobody knows, but given Zuckerberg’s track record, it is likely to be big and highly successful. Facebook’s various social media solutions, including WhatsApp, Facebook itself, and Messenger, have 1.6 billion users, according to Empresa Journal . Keeping WhatsApp separate is the fastest, cheapest, and most sensible way to keep that empire expanding successfully.

WhatsApp for Android: update your device with the latest 2.16.26 Beta version

whatsapp beta androidA new Beta version of WhatsApp for Android users is available on the Google Play Store. Even if there is no change log for this latest 2.16.26 Beta version, we can tell you that the weight of this update is 29.16 MB (just 1.5MB more than the previous 2.16.25 version) and that, as usual, it comes with some bug fixes and performance improvements.

Certainly now everybody knows that recently WhatsApp has introduced end-to-end encryption for all messages and voice calls, a feature that seems to be really appreciated by WhatsApp users. But not all governments seem to agree with the users of this popular instant messaging app. For example India’s government, since it allows online services to use just up to 40-bit encryption, while WhatsApp uses 256.

That said, obviously the job of WhatsApp developers hasn’t come to an end, on the contrary, and the future of the app is full of new features. So, how can you install this latest 2.1.26 Beta version of WhatsApp for Android? If you are already a member of the Official Beta Channel, you can download it from the Google Play Store. If not, you can always download if from the APK Mirror.

Considering the incredible amount of messages sent through WhatsApp (about a million messages every two seconds), you might think that the Facebook-owned company employs hundreds of engineers. Well, you’re wrong. WhatsApp has a total of 57 engineers. At the last F8 Conference Rick Reed, WhatsApp software engineer, said that such a small size allows the company to stay nimble and explained that “The culture really has everything to do with our ability to scale” adding that “Our mission is to provide a simple, fast, reliable communications tool without a lot of extra bells and whistles“.

At the Conference Reed has also explained the company’s philosophy, which is, to use his own words, “no-meeting culture“. Instead of meetings it seems that WhatsApp staffers use “various chat programs to talk to each other constantly, within small project groups. It really allows us to stay focused on what we’re doing and it really contributes to a very quiet office“. Is it the secret of the success of WhatsApp? Certainly not the only one. Furthermore, Reed said that  “We work really hard to get the right people into the right positions“. And the results show that he’s right.

Have you got any idea about how many WhatsApp messages are sent every day? Combined with Facebook Messenger, three times more than SMS

whatsapp and facebook three times sms60 billion messages a day: that’s the really impressive number of messages sent through WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger. Exactly three times the global volume of SMS messages, which is 20 billion (which, to be honest, are not a few). Actually these figures aren’t completely unexpected, but they are remarkable indeed.

The popularity of instant messaging apps around the world is increasing every day for several reasons. First of all they are cheaper and faster (you simply need an internet connection) than SMS, and especially much cheaper than phone calls, and, what’s more important, instant messaging apps allow users not only to send messages or to use voice call options, but they also allow users to share pictures, videos and now also documents.

One more time, we must admire the foresight of Mark Zuckerberg, chairman, chief executive, and co-founder of Facebook, who has understood well in advance the importance of these kind of services and consequently decided to buy Instagram and WhatsApp. Now WhatsApp has reached the incredible number of 1 billion monthly active users, followed immediately by Facebook with 900 million monthly users. And with all the improvements and new functions that are regularly added to these messaging  apps, we can safely imagine that the number of users will certainly grow in the near future.

Despite all the debates around the end-to-end encryption feature, or the competition with other instant messaging apps such as Viber or Telegram, WhatsApp is daily used by millions of people around the world not only for personal reasons. In fact, something like 330 million people use WhatsApp on a daily basis for business purposes.

Is it definitively the end of an era and the beginning of a new one? Many people think so. Telephone companies are not giving up but certainly they are struggling to survive to this fierce competition. So, what’s your favourite way to communicate: WhatsApp or SMS?

WhatsApp for Android: have you already installed the new 2.16.13 stable version?

WhatsApp for Android stable versionThe importance of WhatsApp in our everyday life is undeniable, and every day there is a reason to talk about the Facebook-owned instant messaging application. After the clamour caused by the decision to add end-to-end encryption, WhatsApp developers have never stopped updating the app, and almost every day there is the release of an updated version of the app.Sometimes the update is for the Android platform, some other times for Windows Phone or iPhone platforms, but fact is that the app keeps getting better and better.

Today let’s see what changes for Android users with this latest 2.16.13 stable version of WhatsApp. Probably the most noticeable improvement that has been brought is the optimization of the end-to-end encryption feature, since some features that were added with the latest Beta are not included in this 2.16.13 stable version. We are talking about the ability to use different fonts in our messages such bold, italic and strikeout, or the new wallpapers and the new interface for capturing photos and videos.

But of course this new stable version fixes some issues and brings stability improvements. As we said above, this latest version of WhatsApp for Android devices already benefit of the end-to-end encryption, which guarantees users that messages can be read only by sender and receiver. How can you install this latest stable version of WhatsApp for Android on your device?

Couldn’t be more easy. You can already find it on the Google Play Store, so you simply need to open the official Android Store and search for WhatsApp. Once you’ve found it you can install it on your Android device. We talked above about the importance of WhatsApp in our everyday life, and we can safely state that internet messaging applications have now a relevant part in communication all over the world.

For this reason some governments try to banish these apps or to control their use. Some recent news report that in some regions of Ethiopia, including Oromia, it was not possible to use WhatsApp or other messaging services such as Facebook or Twitter for more than a month due to fatal protests.

These protests began in November in Oromia, where people demonstrated because of economic and political marginalization of Ethiopia’s most populous ethnic group. The protest has been harshly repressed and since then the government is trying to restrict access to social media. Leslie Lefkow, deputy director for Africa at New York-based Human Rights Watch, said: “Pulling the plug on social media is a predictable attempt to cut the flow of news and information about the Oromo protests,”