...more recent posts
Here's a mini review of the Sharp Zaurus SL-C750 PDA. It has the same clamshell with a swivel screen as the Sony Clie PEG UX-50, making it a sort of super sub micro laptop. The Sharp even moreso than the Sony, since it runs linux and has a somewhat improbable 640 x 480 resolution screen (text must be tiny.)
So while it's not a phone, has no built in wireless networking (although it does have expansion slots, so you could add this,) and doesn't even look that great (IMHO,) it is still an interesting device. As phones and PDAs converge I think this sort of PDA-ish form factor will win out. Sony and Sharp have both nailed it, I think, with this basic design (although Sony's is much more stylish I think.)
And the fact that it runs linux means that you - or other knowledgeable third parties - can get into it's guts in order to add functionality. This is so big I cannot stress it enough. The device must run on open (not necessarily free) standard software accessible to the device owner. So go Sharp, go. They win big over the Sony in this department.
Now if someone could just make a combo GSM / WiFi expansion card we could add phone service and wireless to any of these PDA like devices. But without really knowing anything about it, I'm guessing this is not presently possible.
Mitch Kapor outlines his mobile device wish list. I agree with everything he says, but of course I want even much more. A camera, for starters (which his Nokia has, but he doesn't mention.) But beyond that it has to have some sort of wireless connectivity (802.11b is the best bet at this point.) Spontaneous local area networks are going to be the shiznit. Yo.
Help. How do I get an HP officejet D135 (an All In One printer, scanner, fax) to work right under OS X (10.2.6)?
They have drivers (4.6.5 and an alph 4.7.something) but both are incredibly buggy and over time consume huge amounts of CPU resources (like over 70%, when it's not even doing anything?) How could this not be fixed yet?
Is Gimp Print my only hope? Doubt that's going to run the scanner though.
For the hopelessly addicted among you, and really I guess that means me, here are four high res shots of the new P810. Now referred to as the P900. One, two, three, four. Looks like the camera will be just VGA 640x420 instead of the rumored 1.3 megapixels.
Frankly, this doesn't bother me. I don't want super high res in my phone cam until the camera itself can spit out thumbnails (why can't they already?) In other words, I'd love to shoot with x million pixels resolution, and store those images in the phone (to download to computer next time I sync,) but I need the phone to make a smaller version (100K or so) that I can send it right away over the slow mobile network (either to a server or to another phone.) I hate to think how long it would take to send a 1.3 MB file over the mobile network I use now.
No word on when this phone will ship (maybe not too soon, seeing as the P800 is still not completely available.)
In other P800 family news, here's a link to an SSH client. The server is presently slashdotted, but when it comes back to life I want to check this out. SSH is a protocol that allows you to log into a unix computer from a remote location using encryption. This is the reason I can have my server in California while I'm in NYC. It's the king of all geek protocols. So, of course, something I really want on my mobile.
And here is a company that has an SSH client for the Blackberry, and a beta of one for the Nokia 3650 & 6800.
I hate how hard they make it for 3rd parties to write software for the SideKick. This seems to be mainly T-Mobile's fault.
Another fun one from gizmodo: Panasonic wireless (WiFi) webcams. Each unit has a built in web server, so you can access the camera from anywhere on your network, or depending on your firewall, from anywhere on the internet. And it has remote control pan and tilt (nice!).
This has been a while in coming, but it looks like Brighthand is set to finally release their SDIO WiFi card. (SDIO is an expansion slot format used in small mobile devices - usually PDAs - that is smaller than the otherwise similar PC Card slots.) This means most PDAs can now be WiFi equipped. August 1 is the release date, and December should see the follow on card that adds 256 megs of RAM to the deal. No word yet on power consumption which at present represents something of a hurdle for these small devices.
MIT Roofnet is an experimental rooftop wireless network testbed for the Grid Ad-Hoc Networking Project in development at MIT LCS's Parallel and Distributed Operating Systems group. The goal of our project is to build a production-quality self-organizing network capable of providing Internet service while researching scalable routing protocols.This stuff is so cool. I think my neighborhood would be a good test bed as well. When the software gets to a point where a minor geek like me can deal with it I will see what can be done.
Finally a good (at least for the Mac) p2p client: Poisoned. Connects to FastTrack, OpenFT, and Gnutella. It's only a 0.3 release, but works great.
Left my phone in a cab. Shit. Having one of those days. Sorry if anyone is trying to reach me. Use email here if possible.
Sony-Ericsson P800 vs. Danger HipTop. I too thought the P800 was much bigger. It's actually a very nice size. Seems like a great device, but I'm stubbornly attached to the thumb keyboard for text entry so this one is out for me. But as a straight phone (and PDA, and camera, and web browser, and email reader) the P800 is the best you can do right now. Very cool device.
The P800 vs. Treo 600 will be a better fight. Although by the time the Treo hits the P800 may be replaced by the slightly sexier (or so it seems) P810. So no matter what you buy you'll be out of date quickly. But that's a good thing.
Well it looks like Sony has almost done it. Here is some more info on the new Clie PEG-UX50. If this thing was a phone (with GPRS data I guess) we would have a winner. Without the phone link it's really no use to me, but I can still be in awe of this device. Bluetooth and 802.11b for wireless connectivity. Memorystick Pro (I'd rather have it be Compact Flash, of course, but this is Sony, and at least the pro slots can take 1 Gig memory sticks.) Touchscreen with Graffiti handwriting recognition, plus a QWERTY thumb board. And a built in camera. All in that slick little package.
The problem for me is that it wouldn't be connected to the internet all the time. I want the dream device to have GRPS like my Hiptop (basically data over existing cell phone networks,) but to only sign into that network if there isn't an 802.11b network in range. So if you are in Bryant Park and there is free 802.11b WiFi your device will use that. And if not it will sign onto the cell network (where you'll have to pay somehow for your minutes, but the coverage areas are orders of magnitude bigger.) Maybe someday WiFi hotspots will be omnipresent enough so that we don't need the telephone companies at all, but for now (and probably forever) we need to be able to roam seamlessly between these networks.
It's hard to figure out what Sony is doing. Their cellphone business is all tied up with Ericsson in a way that makes you wonder if the Clie PDAs (from a different part of the sprawling Sony empire) can ever cross over and absorb those features. It will be a shame if they don't because this device is otherwise perfect.
Last night, from 7:18 to 7:23 was MOB #4. This is a strange event that gathers a large crowd at a specific location, for no apparent reason, and then just as quickly disbands. This fourth version introduced one step of misdirection as the last MOB (#3) ran into some paranoia from law enforcement types. So rather than preannouce the location you had to gather first at one of three local bars where the final destination was revealed only moments before the event. Last night this turned out to be the shoe store Tootsie Plohound on Lafayette and Prince. Several hundred techno hipsters descended on the store, camera phones and other gadgets flashing, for the alloted five minutes, and then just as quickly disappeared (well, that's the idea at least, but people weren't actually as good about leaving promptly since everyone was having fun.) Store personal were perplexed, to say the least. The crowd spilled out into the street. Passerbys were scratching their heads trying to figure out what was going on. And of course, nothing was going on. "But what's the point?" someone asked me. "No point, it's just a MOB."
So I've been playing a bit with a copy of OS X 10.3 (Panther) which will be released sometime before the end of the year. Hopefully in September at Macworld Paris. Not sure what to report. Other sites have posted exhaustive screen shots, so I won't bother. If anyone has any specific questions I'd be happy to try to answer them.
My brief summary is that this is a very nice update. Lots and lots of minor changes that add up to a greatly improved interface. The Finder (the file system interface) is morphing into the two column view Apple has been using in iTunes and iPhoto. I had thought about this possibility before - and they've done a great job of implementing it. I think new users will find this very intuitive. Open and Save dialogue boxes are much improved as well. And the new feature Exposé is very cool. You can assign it to any key combination, and then activating it reveals every open window at once by shrinking each window as much as necessary so they all fit on the screen. Then you can click on any window you want and everything zooms back to full size, with the one you selected on top. For finding a particular window on a very cluttered desktop this is so much better than window shades (from OS 9) that it is not even funny. Great time saver if you work with lots of open documents. I think Exposé alone will make the switch to X worth it for MB and H.
Other than Apple, Sony is the only company to produce consistently good, and good looking, consumer electronics. (Okay, that's a pretty broad statement, but I'm sticking to it...) Their Clie line of PDAs are particularly attractive (and again, like Apple products, very expensive.) For instance, here is the flagship NR70V. But check out this low res shot of a new Clie expected to be announced on Friday. Nice! Supposedly that has wireless (of some sort, probably 802.11b) and a built in camera. Very cool.
EVill Net: free wireless internet access from "most" rooftops in the East Village (btw A & B, from 2nd to 10th.)
The ability to take pictures is one key to our dream mobile device. I think camera phones will be one of the most interesting consumer electronics product over the next year. In anecdotal evidence, a camera phone is the first geek gadget my friend MB has shown interest in (and don't think she doesn't hear breathless recounts of every type of gadget that comes along.)
I think the days of stand alone cameras are numbered. I don't mean for professional photographers - but for everyone else. Still, there are some interesting things going on with digital cameras. Sanyo has a prototype of a WiFi enabled camera. This camera from Concord (who?) is supposedly shipping now, with Bluetooth wireless bulit in. And Ricoh tops them both with the Caplio G3 which can have WiFi, Bluetooth, and GPS capabilities added with expansion cards (although it's unclear to me if you can have more than one of these options at the same time.)
I think this sort of product will lose to mobile phones with bulit in cameras, but it is interesting none the less. The urgent need to to collapse the cycle of steps now needed to take pictures, download them to a computer, and then upload them to the internet. The goal is to have one step: from snapping the picture to posting it on the internet. These cameras are not there, but they show that people are thinking about how to do this.
In general, we can no longer think about the taking of pictures as seperate from the sharing of those pictures. These now seperate tasks need to become one action.
Convergence. That's the dream. I only want to carry one computer device, so it has to do everything. The perfect product does not yet exist, but we are quickly closing in on it.
I've had the T-Mobile Sidekick (which is the rebranded Danger Hiptop) since it's introduction on October 1, 2002. I have been wildly happy with this device. It is a mobile phone, with a qwerty thumb board for entering text. It does email, AOL instant messenger, and basic web surfing. For me email is king, and I use it constantly. It also comes with a plug in camera attachment, but the photos are so small as to be basically unusable.
A new color (screen) version has just come out. And with a much better camera, although it sill lags seriously behind other camera phones on the market.
I might upgrade to the new version, but I think I will probably end up with the soon to be released Handspring Treo 600 instead. I liked the original Treo (pictured for comparison on that page,) but it was just a little too big. The 600 solves that problem. It has the thumb board which I like (over stylus entry like a palm pilot, or like the Sony Ericsson P800 uber phone.) I guess this is personal, but I've got to have the keyboard. And it has a built in camera which will hopefully have decent resolution.
But this is still just an approximation at best. But getting closer. Hopefully it will be out by October first.
This weekend was perfect here in NYC. Spent Saturday in Central Park under beautiful blue skies. Hot, but with a breeze in the air. Very nice.
I'm going to try to return to blogging more regularly. I didn't exactly intend to take this long break, but that's what happened. Went through some difficult things, but also some nice things that just aren't possible to write about here. Both have made me a little stronger. My energy feels very focused now, although to what exact end I am still unsure.
I love NYC, in case I haven't said that recently. Summer absolutely kicks ass.
I'm still going to write some about my personal life here (I don't really think it is a blog if you don't provide this sort of real life context for your other posts,) but my rather vague plan is to otherwise tighten the focus a bit. I'm still overly interested in Apple, but only to the extent that I see them as having the best chance of building the mobile computing device that I am really interested in. This yet to be realized product will be the axis around which most future posting will revolve.
Bet you can't wait, huh? Well, hopefully it will be better than nothing.
From the Python Dev mailing list:
...At EuroPython I was cornered by the key Macpython developers with exciting news: Apple's next release of Mac OSX, code-named Panther, uses Python and Apple is planning to include Python 2.3 in that release. (Apple already ships Mac OSX with Python 2.2 included in the developer tools, but Panther will actually use Python for some essential functionality.)I wonder what "essential functionality" refers to?
Apple's schedule is such that August 1st is about the latest release date for Python 2.3 that will make this possible. I appreciate everybody's help with keeping this schedule!
--Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)