...more recent posts
I've been doing more research on cellular data plans. A friend bought the Sony Ericsson T616 for the AT&T network, and the plans are very confusing. And expensive. The phone, which I've mentioned before, is beautiful. The camera is okay, but not quite as good as hoped. I still recommend looking at this phone (for non text use especially,) but I simply can't recommend AT&T for mobile data usage.
Sprint seems like the way to go for data. T-Mobile, which I have been using, is okay too. At least they have an all you can eat flat rate like Sprint. But Sprint has much faster data speeds. And a much larger coverage area.
The downside is that Sprint uses CDMA, not GSM, so there is no chance of taking your Sprint phone outside the country and having it work (well, maybe Iraq, but don't get me started on that boondoogle.) But the reality is that you wouldn't want to roam in Europe with your U.S. based GSM phone plan anyway because the rates would be orders of magnitude higher than just picking up a pre paid GSM phone while you are over there and tossing it when you are done.
The other interesting thing I've learned is that incoming phone calls don't come through when your phone is sending or receiving data. This explains why so many calls go right into my voice mail without ringing. I can't believe I never realized why this was happening. But this seems true across carriers and technology, so what are you going to do?
Email is the other big differentiator. It can be either push or pull. The blackberry and the hiptop (which is the T-Mobile sidekick) both have push email. This means you don't check for new messages, they are automatically pushed right to your device which notifies you *immediately* when a new message has arrived. Pull email is like what you have on your computer. You have to check and see if there is something new. Sure, software lets you set up automatic checking (polling,) so maybe you don't actually have to check yourself, but it is still pull, there is still a polling interval, and on some mobile services the minimum time between polls is quite large. Obviously push is what you want.
But none of the phone carriers have this (again, excepting the blackberry and hiptop, which are phones, but have their roots in the two-way market.) As I understand it some people have gotten around this by using SMS as a new email notification system, but I'm a little fuzzy on the details of such a set up (seems like it might work though.) This is definitely an area I will be investigating, as I have gotten quite spoiled by the excellent email on the sidekick.
In any case, I think I am going with Sprint. Rumors are putting the Handspring Treo 600 on sale in NYC on either the 5th, 6th, or 7th of October. Here's a flash demo by the European carrier Orange (so it shows the GSM version of the Treo 600 which is almost identical to the CDMA version I want.) It is an almost perfect device for me.
Biggest complaint? No bluetooth. It does have an SD expansion slot, and there are SD bluetooth cards - but it's a Palm OS 5 device, and there are no drivers for bluetooth SD cards for OS 5! I had thought this was just a matter of time, but apparently Palm has said they have no plans to develop the drivers. Opinions differ on how difficult it would be to write the drivers, but it seems clear, at least, that it's not particularly easy. Hagiwara says they are developing such drivers, but apparently they have been saying this for some time without showing anything. Charges of vaporware are rather strong (you'd be surprised how passionate people are about such things.) So possibly the Treo 600 will never have bluetooth.
Why would I want bluetooth? (Bluetooth is a short range, low power, wireless technology.) For one thing it means that my contacts (and calendar, etc...) are always synced between my phone and my computer. And this syncing happens in the background whenever my phone is in range of my computer. I don't have to put it in a cradle. I don't even have to take the phone out of my bag or pocket. That's pretty cool. But it gets even better. Because I run Mac OS X, a bluetooth wireless device can completely control any program (well, any applescriptable program, but that's basically every program.) So my phone, camera, PDA, mobile email device also becomes an uber remote for my computer. And since my computer is at the heart of my audio/video setup, this is quite cool. In fact, a remote is about the only thing I was missing.
But back to the complaints - I'd also like the camera to be higher resolution. It does take 640 x 480 pictures, which is as good as it gets right now in the U.S. camera phone market, but I know that 1 megapixel camera phones are right around the corner. Still, these pictures will be good for the web, and you can't really do better at the moment. I guess the question is how long does a moment last? Into the first quarter of next year I'd say. At least.
Metaweb: a Wiki for Neal Stephenson's new novel Quicksilver. (What's a wiki? "The simplest online database that could possibly work.")
Nokia 7600 (page requires flash.) Wow. Very nice to see something a little different.
Nokia is also introducing wearable necklace displays that you can transfer pictures to over IR. Cool idea, although I doubt this will really take off. Two models: here and here. And similarly, the Kaleidoscope. I've wondered before if such a setup could work for reading email and web surfing.
(all links via gizmodo)
Google has a new toy: Search by Location. Here's the FAQ page. This is definitely beta, as I'm getting more server errors than actual results. But I'm sure they will get the bugs ironed out. Definitely cool when it works.
Apple has posted OS X 10.2.8 (for non G5 computers.) This will be the final 10.2 update before Panther (10.3) arrives in the next few months.
But I'm advising people to wait on installing this one as their seems to be some problems with loss of network connectivity for some people. Always safer to let others go first.
Looks like sales of camera phones have outpaced the sales of digital cameras in the first half of '03.
I've been saying this for a long time: the stand alone consumer camera market is doomed. But the handset manufactures still have some progress to make. We're starting to see 1 megapixel units, but we need at least twice that resolution. And, more importantly, we need on the fly variable jpeg compression. I mean: each time you snap a picture you should produce two images. One full size image that gets stored in your phone (and synched to your PC later by bluetooth or cable,) and one smaller (the user can select a target size, say, between 20K and 200K) reduced quality image that can be emailed (or sent via mms) right from the phone immediately. I think this is key. So far I know of no one doing this.
Fastap is a new alpha keyboard layout for cellphones. Very interesting compromise. Intel has some reference designs and we should see production models by the end of the year. Will this finally get Americans text messaging?
On Wednesday there will be an Applescript for system admins webcast featuring Apple's AS guru Sal Soghoian.
Pictures of my new 1,100 dual 2.0 Ghz G5 Mac cluster.
Oh no wait, those are shots of the cluster at Virginia Tech.
Got a chance to play with Alex's new 17 inch Powerbook yesterday. That is one sweet machine. Compared to my 15 inch (last generation titanium,) the 17 inch aluminum is much nicer. The screen is sharper, with (it seemed to me at least) better color. The hinge mechanism for the screen is greatly improved and now glides open fluidly. A real pleasure. And the backlit keyboard is hard not to fall in love with.
This was also my first chance to play with two wireless powerbooks. We had Alex's machine connected to the office router with an ethernet cable. And my machine was wirelessly connected to Alex's through airport. This is very easy, but still not perfectly easy. I could share his internet connection. And my iTunes library automagically showed up in his version of iTunes (and vice versa.) That one is especially impressive.
I can't wait for the first time my iTunes program loads up some unknown iTunes users library when I'm out in public somewhere. Imagine being on a plane flight and having the music library of everyone with a powerbook on the plane suddenly display on your computer. "I wonder which of these people is the big Joy Division fan?" That's going to be fun. Ad hoc local wireless networks. Wi-fi and zeroconf (airport and rendez-vous in apple speak) are going to make the gadget world very interesting.
Still, when I tried to copy over my 17 gigs of, uh, uncopyrighted, uh, historical data (yeah, that's it, Alex and I are *way* into historical data,) we could see the limits of 802.11b 10 mb/sec connections. The highly unreliable time remaining indicator told us we would be waiting 9 days for it to finish. Plugging the machines directly into each other with an ethernet cable (both machines have gigabit/sec ethernet) resulted in the transfer time being knocked down to under 1 hour.