New smart phone owner needs a ground-up tutorial.

angminas

Diamond Member
Dec 17, 2006
3,331
26
91
So I picked up a Nokia 520 for $30: http://www.amazon.com/Nokia-Lumia-52.../dp/B00E45043A

I do not plan to use it as a phone at this time. I mainly want it for the camera and for the MP3 capability. I might also do some browsing or gaming if I'm at a hot spot. I have turned the phone on and charged it, but I did not insert the SIM card.

I've never had a smart phone, and I don't know where to start. I'm not able to get my wi-fi working at home at this time, so I'd have to use it at Starbucks or similar. My main concern to start is security- do I download a separate AV app? Is it going to be relatively safe to take a new, unprotected phone to Starbucks to get it updated?

Also, what can I do with this phone that I might not have thought of? I really don't know which questions to ask, so any and all input is welcomed. TIA
 

shabby

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
5,782
45
91
Av app on a windows phone? Shirley you jest.
The only thing i wouldn't do on public wifi is any type of banking transaction, anyone can host a "starbucks wifi" hotspot and intercept everything that passes through it.

Download nokia here navigation and download your state maps, it doesn't need a data connection.
 

Crono

Lifer
Aug 8, 2001
23,720
1,502
136
No, you don't need antivirus. You don't need any security apps at all (they are of dubious value even on Android, where it's possible to get yourself into trouble if you allow app installation from unknown sources). WP is arguably locked even tighter than iOS.

You *might* want to use a VPN if you were doing anything sensitive for business reasons, national security, or just for peace of mind when on unencrypted connections to websites, but almost anything important is automatically done over HTTPS (on banking sites, for instance) for the most part. No need to worry otherwise, and you can update on public Wi-Fi just fine.

For interesting things you can do or apps you might want:

- As shabby mentioned, get Nokia Here maps loaded for your state and surrounding states. Excellent offline navigation. I use Waze for when traffic might be a concern, though, which requires data.

- I listen to a lot of podcasts on my Lumia (I have the Icon). Podcasts! is a great app, and I spend a lot of time listening to podcasts like Freakonomics, TWiT network, and Stuff You Should Know in the background. There are podcasts for nearly every time of interest or hobby. Windows Weekly (TWiT podcast network) often has interesting news, app recommendations, etc for Windows Phone, as well as other Microsoft-related news.

- I spend even more time listening to music via Spotify (or Xbox Music, before I switched subscriptions, and still use it for locally stored music). Spotify recently got an update, as did Netflix, to catch them up to the Android and iOS versions. If you pay for a Premium subscription you can save music for offline listening, but even the free version of Spotify will let you play from their huge collection of music and playlists (albeit with ads and only shuffle mode for albums).

- Play around with Cortana if you like voice control. Does some things better than Siri or Google Now, and some things worse. I personally don't use voice control on any of my devices, but only as a matter of preference.

- Get MoliPlayer pro if you have any videos you want to store on the phone. Plays everything that the stock Videos app doesn't.

- Get a microSD card for additional music, app, and file storage. Lumia 520/521 is an awesome mp3 player, and can last a long time (especially if you buy cheap spare batteries). Make sure you get a fast microSD card from SanDisk or Samsung if you plan on using it for apps. I like SanDisk's Ultra line, but you can find fast Samsung cards on sale from time to time. Make sure you look at reviews and see what people are getting via benchmark, and not just the rated "class".

- Microsoft makes an Authenticator app for two-factor authentication. A must for securing email sites like Gmail or other accounts that could be compromised by hackers if they manage to guess your passwords. Equivalent (mostly) to Google Authenticator on Android.

- FreshPaint, Fantasia Painter, and PS Express are three excellent apps if you like to create art or edit photos on your phone. There are other purpose-made and specific apps for other thing like Instagram or for merging or converting photos, as well.

- If you have a Chromecast, Tubecast Pro is the only (or one of a few, been a while since I checked) that supports Chromecast. Other Miracast devices like this one support mirroring your phone to tv screens or other displays with HDMI.

- Games: There are a number of good games for Windows Phone. I'm not as much of a mobile gamer as others, but currently I have: Halo: Spartan Assault, Trivia Crack, Bridge Constructor, Death Worm, Jetpack Joyride, Final Fantasy, Microsoft Mahjong, Rail Rush, Raving Rabbids Big Bang, RISK, Impossible Shoota, Reaper, Wordament, Temple Run 2, Radiant Defense, Subway Surfers, Sudoku, Doors, and Physi Bricks. There are a number of emulators available, too. The Xbox Games section of the app store is a great place to start if you don't mind paying for games that are better than average, but there are plenty of free games in the store.

- Play around with transparency tiles if you want the parallax effect. Pretty cool if done right.

- Sign up for the Preview for Developers program if you want all the latest updates. They are beta updates, but usually pretty stable in my experience. I think these instructions on how to do it are still accurate, I hope.

- #1 ToolKit app has a lot of nifty mini apps like a recorder, timer, stopwatch, ruler, flashlight, etc. One of the best all-in-one tool apps I've seen.

- Dark Note is a great app for creating and pinning notes to your home screen. There are other apps that offer similar functionality, as well. Useful for short reminders.

- Translator is Microsoft's equivalent to Google Translate. Great for translating (of course) to/from different languages from different sources.

- Many apps will let you pin features in the form of a live tile to home screen. Weather is an obvious one and may be enabled by default (I forget), but you can also pin web sites as tiles. Look around in settings whenever you get a new app - sometimes pinning makes things a lot easier (like pinning specific podcasts, for instance).

- There are a number of remote desktop apps, both paid and free. I normally use TeamViewer.

- Archiver and Files apps are a must for extraction/file management on the device.

- If you have trouble sleeping sometimes or want to block out noise with ambient music or white noise, Relax Melodies, Soothr, and Sleep are worth checking out.

There are other random apps, tips, features, etc I'm missing, but you'll get most of it from checking out the store and from just playing around with the phone. If you want to keep up to date with Windows Phone news, check out Windows Central.
 
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Muse

Lifer
Jul 11, 2001
40,527
10,009
136
Congrats on your getting the 520!

MyAppFree is a free app that features a different app for free every day. I've gotten quite a number of useful apps when I have bothered to check it out. You can read a description of the app of the day there (obviously written by the developer), and others' reviews before deciding if you want to download it. I think that the featured app is generally a for $ app that's available for free that day, or sometimes it's the non-pro version. Reading the reviews you can often get an idea if you might like it. Of course, you can always delete an app.

When you have wifi you can go to Store and check out what's available, do searches. For instance one day I got the idea that I'd like a timer and in short order found a nice free one that I have pinned to my Home screen.

Some of my favorite apps on my 520 are Battery and Amazing Weather HD (which I don't think is free, but well worth it). One of it's great features is weather radar display and you can zoom in and out, move the center in any direction, like Google Maps. In fact I think it might use Google Maps because you can zoom in in the same way to the point where you can see house-sized structures, seemingly anywhere! Of course, you need wifi or data for it to work.

I have a Kindle and there's a cool free Kindle app that lets you read your Kindle books and keeps synch between your Nokia and your Kindle as to where you are in your books.

If you do decide you want phone/data, a cheap way to go is Airvoice Wireless. They have $10/month and $10/3 months plans. I'm using the former, and accumulating unused $$$, because it has rollover (I do the auto pay thing). I rarely use my 520 to make calls and often have data turned off, I don't need it a lot. I'm thinking of moving to the latter plan, but unfortunately I won't get my unused $$$ if I do.

I just checked out MyAppFree and downloaded today's app, GPS Calculator Pro... looks awesome! Does a ton of stuff including calculating elevation. How often have I wondered what elevation I'm at?!

Get your home wifi working, you'll be glad you did.

I've bought two Samsung Electronics 64GB EVO Micro SDXC with Adapter at different times, each close to $30 at Amazon. I have one in my Nokia Lumia 520, the other in one of my digicams. Fast card! You can read the reviews at Amazon.
 
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Belegost

Golden Member
Feb 20, 2001
1,807
19
81
Good choice on the 520. I definitely agree to getting the home WiFi working is a good priority, it will greatly increase the usefulness of the device.

My suggestions for apps:

Weave - Really good news aggregator, comes with pre-populated lists of sources for about 30 subject groups like "Tech" and "World News" or "Art and Photography."

Awesome Lock - Adds details to the lock screen, including a weather bar, battery details, calendar updates, battery life details, and top articles from your choice of RSS feed. Plus can cycle background images from different sources such as 500px, Bing Picture of the Day, your own Photo folder, or Facebook gallery, etc.

Fotor - My favorite for image editing, can do basic cropping, brightness/contrast/saturation/sharpening, rotation, plus adding borders or instagram style filters. Though the Lumia Creative Studio is also really good, especially for control over color temp, and with the lightroom style "clarity" slider.

After that the apps get a bit specific to personal interests - I like photography so I have Depth of Field to help calculate focal plane distances at different aperture and focal length settings.
 

Muse

Lifer
Jul 11, 2001
40,527
10,009
136
Also, what can I do with this phone that I might not have thought of? I really don't know which questions to ask, so any and all input is welcomed. TIA
You can learn alot by reading the reviews at Amazon.