On Jan 15 at 04:30 -0800, Tom Pěnička wrote: > thanks for your answer. However it still didn't help. > I was able to run the application once, but don't know, how it > happened.
So rebooting doesn't help? And if you uninstall and reinstall, will it run at least one time? This is important information for trying to understand what is going wrong. For instance, after uninstall and reinstall the settings registers would not exist on the first boot and thus the sequence of operations inside Mnemojojo would be different. > In the setup of the application (App manager -> Mnemojojo -> setting) > I have only two choices, something like: "Ask always" and "Not > allowed" (the GUI is localized, not in English). That's typical for older Nokia phones. Which version of firmware is installed on your E52 (see under the 'About' option). > In the info about the application (App manager -> Mnemojojo -> Info) > I see something like "3rd party non trusted site". Ok, that's because it's not signed (the J2ME signing process is beyond ridiculous). > If anybody has any help, please let me know. I really wanted Mnemojojo to run on any Java phone: it only uses one non-core API (for reading and writing to the SDCARD which is unavoidable), and it runs properly in the standard emulator and in microemulator. But, I conceded defeat months ago after many fruitless hours lost downloading giant (100s of megabytes) developer kits (one for each manufacturer), after having gone through usually frustrating registration processes, trying to get the SDKs to run on my machine (they're all for Windows), wading through poorly managed and largely useless developer forums (again, one for each manufacturer), and finding that, even then, it still didn't help to resolve the problems on real phones! It used to be that Mnemojojo would run on most Nokia phones (albeit with the annoyances of their security model), but sadly that seems no longer to be the case. I think I can still give better guarantees for Blackberry devices. In part because their signing program is more reasonable ($25 for a lifetime of signing for all their devices, versus $1000s for signing one version of Mnemojojo for a small subset of devices (maybe)). I'm afraid that none of this helps you, but I wanted to explain that it's not for lack of trying on my part! Sorry. Tim.
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