When a restore isn’t a restore
I undertook the recent forced reset of my E90 without too much worry about data loss. After all, all my contacts, diary and email details would be synchronized once RoadSync got going again. I performed a backup using the PC Suite of all device content just before the reset and complete a backup like that every other week in any case. Once the device was back up and running, a quick glance at all the information I needed confirmed that everything seemed in order.
One of the applications I constantly use on the E90 is ActiveNotes. Anything of interest, lists and other notes find their way into an ActiveNote. When I tried to add something to my ever-growing list titled Research, I discovered that the notes had obviously been cleared due to the device reset. No problem: the PC Suite features a restore from a backup file. In fact, the restore and backup functionality is flexible enough to enable the user to select what content should be restored or backed up. The only problem is this: the ActiveNote data is combined with the Calendar data…
Okay if the calendar hasn’t changed, but of little use if a recent sync has updated and modified many entries. Obviously I was not willing to sacrifice my calendar’s known-good state for the sake of restoring my notes. On the other hand, I really wanted the notes back.
Thankfully the Interweb always offers a solution. Noki is an application that is able to read and interpret the contents of the Nokia backup files. These files generally have the NBU extension and contain all the data selected for backup during the backup process.Use of the application is very easy and there is little that can go wrong.
Using Noki, it’s a simple matter of selecting the desired backup file. The content is displayed in a neat tree view.
The ActiveNotes are basic HTML files. Using Noki I was able to extract them to the desktop and then copy them back to the phone’s ActiveNotes directory. Simple as that!
Over and above that, Noki is a means of integrating your phone’s data to a variety of other applications and using it in a number of other ways. The homepage provides a download link to the latest version and a list of capabilities. The price for Noki is pegged at USD 22 – I managed to get my notes out of the NBU file without being bothered by any request for serial numbers or a payment, and I can’t identify a place where the software is locked. Maybe that’s a special feature of the version I downloaded?
If you’re stuck with Nokia phone backups and need to manipulate or restore the data, Noki may be a lifesaver for you too.



























The impending arrival of the
I had a Nokia N95 for a while, but that was too little business and too much phone. Some very annoying issues with that device, to be sure. The N95‘s successor, the