Infospace Manic Medic S60 240×320 J2me
Manic Medic is a casual game that puts you in the shoes of a harassed consultant, who has to assign incoming patients to beds, diagnose what’s wrong with them, heal them, and then clean their bed up after they’ve been booted out of the hospital to make room for another person.
The core gameplay is simple. Hospital beds are assigned number keys: ‘1′, ‘3′, ‘4′, ‘6′, ‘7′ and ‘9′. When patients appear at the entrance to your ward, you press ‘0′ to select them, then a number to assign them to a bed.
Press the bed number again to diagnose them, then press ‘*’ to go to the care table to pick up an item to heal them, although you can also press ‘#’ to pick up a comfort item to cheer them up (I think this may mean Good Drugs). Finally, when they leave, you press the bed number again to pick up their sheet, and then press ‘2′ to drop it in the laundry hamper.
Download : [Read more]
11 Mar
Posted by mfs in Free mobile cell phone applications
See your location on the map, with or without GPS. Save time and tedious keystrokes finding where you are, what's around you, and how to get there. Watch the video on the right to see how it works.

If you have a GPS-enabled device, this blue dot corresponds to your GPS location. At times, or if you do not have a GPS-enabled phone, you might see the blue dot surrounded by a light blue circle (as shown on the right) to indicate uncertainty about your location.
Why the uncertainty? The My Location feature takes information broadcast from mobile towers near you to approximate your current location on the map - it's not GPS, but it comes pretty close (approximately 1000m close, on average). We're still in beta, but we're excited to launch this feature and are constantly working to improve our coverage and accuracy.
The My Location feature is available for most web-enabled mobile phones, including Java, BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, and Nokia/Symbian devices.
Download : [Read more]
11 Mar
Posted by mfs in Free mobile cell phone applications
See your location on the map, with or without GPS. Save time and tedious keystrokes finding where you are, what's around you, and how to get there. Watch the video on the right to see how it works.
If you have a GPS-enabled device, this blue dot corresponds to your GPS location. At times, or if you do not have a GPS-enabled phone, you might see the blue dot surrounded by a light blue circle (as shown on the right) to indicate uncertainty about your location.
Why the uncertainty? The My Location feature takes information broadcast from mobile towers near you to approximate your current location on the map - it's not GPS, but it comes pretty close (approximately 1000m close, on average). We're still in beta, but we're excited to launch this feature and are constantly working to improve our coverage and accuracy.
The My Location feature is available for most web-enabled mobile phones, including Java, BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, and Nokia/Symbian devices.
Download : [Read more]
11 Mar
Posted by mfs in Free mobile cell phone applications, Free mobile cell phone games