Tag Archives: technology

Mobile Myspace Beta

Myspace Mobile betaWas trying to browse Myspace from my Palm Centro the other day and noticed it redirected me to mobile.myspace.com. Looks like they took a cue from Facebook and finally rolled out a mobile phone optimized website.

Gives you quick access to all the Myspace features (send messages, leave comments, view friends’ pages, view pictures, add people, blogging, updating your status, etc etc etc). Since it’s in beta a few things don’t work properly now. For example… viewing comments seems jacked up. Looks like the most recent 25 or so comments don’t show up for some weird reason. Getting to some Myspace features takes a few clicks (especially when trying to view someone’s profile…you have to pick which section you want to view instead of seeing the entire profile) but that’s a minor gripe.

Mobile Myspace gets a thumbs up from me. Sure beats trying to load the full site on my mobile phone just to check messages and leave comments.

Got My Palm Centro This Weekend

Before I get into the details, let me just say that I absolutely love my new Palm Centro from Sprint. It’s everything I’ve come to love with the Treos but in a smaller form factor making it feel more like a phone. Sure it’s the same old Palm OS the Treos have been using for years, but I don’t really see that as a bad thing. And at $99 after a $200 instant rebate and $100 mail-in, you really can’t go wrong.

Friday morning I noticed over on the Treocentral forums that some people were getting Centros early from their local Sprint Stores. I decided to call around on my lunch break to see if they had any or if they would be getting some on Sunday for the official launch. Lucked out with my first phone call to the Sprint Store on Niagara Fall Boulevard when they said they had the black model in. Sweet! Didn’t want the red one anyways.

Stopped by the store on my way home from work and asked what sort of rebates were available on the Centro. Wasn’t sure what I would be eligible for since I’m a current customer so I wanted to make sure I wouldn’t be paying the full $400. Turns out my contract with Sprint had expired a few weeks ago so I was up for renewal discount. Received the $200 instant rebate and they gave me a form to mail-in to receive an additional $100—bringing my total to $99 with tax after renewing for 2 years. Nice!

They had some problems selling me the phone because it didn’t seem to be in the computer properly yet. Started to get nervous that they would screw up my plan and I’d lose some of my grandfathered perks (free unlimited txt messaging and $10 unlimited Vision), but was assured that nothing would change since it was a simple phone upgrade. Sweet again.

Activated my phone, handed me my receipt, and I was off. Looks like Sprint is calling the Centro a Palm Treo 690 EVDO internally, because that’s what it said on my receipt. Funny… didn’t think they made a Treo 690 =). Well anyways. Got in my car and made a phone call just to make sure everything was activated correctly. Made that mistake once before when they activated me under another phone number… oopsies. My phone had problems provisioning data but it was able to make and receive calls, so I drove home.

Couldn’t test out Vision so I decided to clean up my contacts and calendar data and get ready to sync the Treo to my iMac for the first time. Didn’t bother installing the included software since I’m using Missing Sync to handle all that. Sync’ed my Treo 650 one last time and then pushed all the data from my computer to the Centro. All my applications and data synced over fine and I was feel pretty good about my purchase.

I eventually got the phone to provision and was able to connect to Vision. It wasn’t Power Vision so I didn’t get EVDO speeds, but it seemed on par with what I experienced on the 650. When I fired up Blazer later that evening it wouldn’t connect. Did some research on the Treocentral forums trying to figure out what the deal was or if the Vision services were down. Fast forward to Sunday and me calling Tech Support to figure out what the deal was. They told me that I needed to upgrade to Power Vision for $5 more a month since the Centro only works with that. Well whatever, I didn’t really mind paying that since I wanted the faster transfer speeds anyways.

Now everything is up and working how it should and I am in love. The screen is physically smaller than the Treos, but it has the same pixel count. I really can’t tell the difference to be honest. I like the new 5-way and the look of the hardware buttons—not sure why this phone gets so much hate for looking ugly, but I think it’s pretty slick. Although I will say that the battery cover sucks hard. It’s almost impossible to get off. I’m surprised I haven’t broken my phone yet just trying to remove it. Thankfully I won’t have to do that unless I have to perform a reset.

Oh and the keyboard. It’s smaller than the Treos, but I have had absolutely no problems typing on it like a champ. They have this rubbery cushion feel to them when you type which is nothing like the hard plastic keys on the Treos. I’m sure some people will have problems typing on the Centro’s keyboard, but I can blind type and pound away pretty fast from my experience with the Treo 600 and 650.

I’m sure many of the minor software improvements on the Centro popped up on the 755p, but are new to me. For starters the Contacts app now allows you to choose different ringtones for each contact. That’s nice. The camera application has a different interface than my 650 but seems to do all the same things (draw on pictures, add memos, email/beam photos). Blazer looks to have some improvements too. Looking through the manual I saw mention of being able to save images and sound files from websites. Haven’t tried it out yet but thats a welcomed addition.

The Centro also comes bundled with Documents to Go so I can open Word, Excel, Powerpoint, and PDF documents. A few other nice included applications from Sprint are IM (support for AIM, MSN, and Yahoo) and Email (which is different from the included Versamail app).

All in all this phone is really nice. I never really thought the Treos were huge, but compared to the Centro they just feel big. Fits in my pocket nicely now and I don’t have to worry about breaking that annoying antennae off that the 650 had. Really really happy with my purchase. Maybe in two years when my Sprint contract runs out Apple will have finally opened up the iPhone to 3rd party applications. =)

Palm Centro packagingPalm Centro phone applicationPalm Centro Sprint IM applicationPalm Centro in my handPalm Centro ringtone silencerPalm Centro hotsync and power connectorsPalm Centro 1.3 camera and speakerTreo 650 and Centro comparedPalm Centro vs Treo 650 topviewPalm Centro vs Treo 650 sideview

One Week With the New iPod classic

Last week Apple finally unveiled the new generation of iPod’s. The last iPod I purchased was a 3rd generation model with 40GB of hard drive space and have been waiting for a decent successor. My iTunes Music Library has finally outgrown the 3rd gen so I decided this was the time to get a replacement. I figured an iPod that resembled the iPhone would be just around the corner and pleasantly surprised when the iPod touch was announced.

At 16GB the iPod touch couldn’t meet my needs, so I decided to go with the new iPod classic 80GB model which should hold me over for the next 2 years. Hopefully by then flash drives sky rocket in capacity and I can get a version of the iPod touch with 100GB+. Until then the classic more than meets what I was looking for and—a music player that can hold all my tunes and have enough juice for a full work day.

The classic has it’s problems but nothing that is giving me buyer’s remorse. The following are some reasons I adore my new purchase and then a few areas it needs improving on.

The pros:

  • Battery life!!! I played 3 hours of video (with backlight on) and 4 hours of audio and the battery meter barely moved. With a promised 30 hours of audio / 7 hours of video playback I’m extremely happy with this little guys performance. Sure beats the 20 minutes I’d get on a full charge with my 3rd gen…
  • Nice and thin. About half the size of my old iPod
  • All metal enclosure. Feels solid and well built.
  • New interface. Spliting the menu in half and showing album art and photos fade by looks great. There was so much dead space with the 5th generation iPod’s interface that this is a step in the right direction.

The cons:

  • The interface. Sure it has eye candy like cover flow and the new menu design, but it’s way to sluggish. When you move from music to photos to videos to settings, the menu just chugs along and you have to wait while it pre-fetches artwork. It’s not a problem once you get into playing some music but half the time I thought I didn’t press the button because you get no feedback that you actually selected something.
  • The clock. WTF?!? After 20 seconds of inactivity the Now Playing screen goes away and you get this lame clock displaying the time and battery level. The only way I’ve been able to get rid of this “feature” is by turning the backlight setting to Always On. Must be some energy saving feature Apple thought was necessary. Give me the option to turn this off please.
  • Scroll wheel sensitivity seems off. Maybe I’m used to pre-click wheel iPod’s and it’s a problem they’ve all shared, but I have problems rating songs or moving through the menus accurately.
  • Screen glare. When used in my car during the day I can barely see the screen. Not that big of a deal, but I’m glad I didn’t get an iPod touch for this very reason. Would have nearly impossible to navigate through songs since it has no hard buttons and I wouldn’t be able to see the screen.

iPod classic syncingiPod classic thickness compared to 3rd gen iPodiPod classic interfaceiPod classic games menuiPod classic coverflowiPod classic coverflow - album track listingiPod classic browsing photosiPod classic search

Decisions, Decisions, Decisions

I was overcome with excitement as I read Engadget’s live blogging of Steve Job’s Keynote at the “Beat Goes On” Special Event held Yesterday. Finally Apple was releasing an iPod that had everything I had been waiting for–touch screen, beautiful widescreen display, built in wifi, amazing web browsing, and decent battery life. Then reality kicked in when I immediately thought to myself “how is something this thin going to have more than 40GB’s of disk space?” My dream had been killed when it was announced that the new iPod touch would come in two flavors–an 8GB model and a 16GB model. =(

I have been putting off purchasing a new iPod for the past two years. With every refresh I tell myself “just wait six more months…something better is coming.” That something better turned out to be an iPhone, but with it being an exclusive to AT&T I just couldn’t justify switching carriers and paying more to get all the plan features I have now. So I waited, knowing the day would come when Apple would release an iPod in the iPhone form factor, minus the phone stuff.

My first impulse was to just buy the iPod touch when it was announced. Saying the hell with having a ton of space to store all my music. The beautiful screen, the ability to browse the real internet with Safari, being able to watch YouTube videos on the go, and flipping through my music by using multi-touch seemed to outweigh the fact that it was ONLY 16GB!!!

Then I started making a list of all the things I needed in a portable music player and what I’d really use it for.

  • Has to be 60GB or great. My iTunes Music Library is around 50GB and I have 5GB of photos. If I want access to all my goodies it needs to be at least this size.
  • Battery life. My current iPod (a 3rd Generation 40GB) lasts about 4 hours with back-light and shuffle turned off. Need something to get me through a full 8 hour shift at work and then some.
  • Has to be easy to browse through my music while driving. This is where I do most of my music listening. Really don’t need to get into an accident because I was trying to change albums or rate a track.

That’s it. Those are the only features I really need! Having wifi would surely be nice, but I’m rarely in range of free public wifi to make it useful. When I am it’s at my house and could just use my iMac or Wii or something to browse the internet instead. I could care less about wirelessly downloading music from the iTunes Music Store right from my iPod or buying tracks that are playing in my local Starbucks.

iPod Classic (in black and silver)Coming to those realizations I decided to go with the re-branded iPod classic 160GB. With that amount of hard drive space I shouldn’t have any problems holding all my content for the next 4 years. It’ll be nice to have all my music, photos, and possibly videos (if I decide to start encoding movies from my DVD collection) in one small package. I’m sure it’ll be a lot safer when I drive compared to an iPod touch. I’ll be able to change tracks without looking at the screen since the classic has hardware buttons and I can feel where they are. Something impossible to do with the iPod touch. Not to mention the classic has an insane battery life…40 hours of audio 7 hours of video!!!

This weekend I’ll venture out to my local Apple Store at the Walden Galleria Mall and pick me up an iPod Classic. Stay tuned for a quick review of it chock full of nerdy unpacking pictures. The only other decision left to be made is silver or black? Decisions decisions…does it ever end?

The iPhone’s ‘Real Internet’ Doesn’t Matter To Me—7 WAP Sites That Do

I’ll be the first to admit, the idea of having a full on desktop browser in the palm of my hand is something to lust over. But you know what? Who cares. Sure Apple has done some really great things with Safari on the iPhone that make browsing websites on a smaller screen tolerable. I’m not into all the extra scrolling, or tapping to zoom in/out is all that necessary when you have simple WAP sites out there.

When done properly these sites allow you to get what you need quickly and easily. Sure they are abbreviated versions of their big brothers, but when I’m away from my desktop that’s all I need. The funny thing is most web apps being developed for the iPhone are nothing more than simplified versions of commonly used sites, with a cleaned up UI and fancy animations and AJAX junks. So maybe that’s were all this WAP stuff will eventually evolve into…

For now, the following are WAP enabled sites I can’t live without, especially on my lunch breaks. :-)
Oh and you don’t need a fancy smartphone to use these sites, any mobile phone with access to the Internet will do.

1. Google Reader
http://www.google.com/reader/m

Google Reader Mobile Home ScreenshotGoogle Reader Mobile Article ScreenshotI’m a RSS feed whore and Google Reader makes it so easy to keep up on all my subscriptions. The best part is if I read an article on my phone it’s marked as read and won’t show up later when I read from my iMac at home. You can do pretty much anything you’d expect to, all on your phone.

  • Read articles
  • Browse by tags
  • Browse by subscriptions
  • Star an article
  • Mark articles as unread

2. Digg
http://diggriver.com

Digg Mobile Home ScreenshotWhen you want to digg or browse top stories on your mobile phone, diggriver.com is the jam. It does have a few hang-ups though:

  • Can’t bury stories. Can only digg them.
  • Can’t view or add comments on stories.
  • Viewing the original story can get screwy since it often links to non WAP sites.

3. Wikipedia
http://wapedia.mobi/en

This has come in handy a few times when I needed to know a piece of trivia to impress my friends. Sweet! Works like it’s big brother.

4. Flickr
http://m.flickr.com

Flickr Mobile Contacts ScreenshotFlickr makes it easy to upload photos from your mobile phone and now it’s even easier to browse them from your phone. You can’t edit photo details as far as I can tell, but other than that it gets the job done well.

  • Search for photos by keyword and tags
  • Upload photos (or send by email)
  • View your contacts photos
  • View and add comments to photos

5. Vox
http://www.vox.com

Vox Mobile Home ScreenshotVox Mobile Photos ScreenshotVox is great social community for blogging that is heavily integrated with other web services. It makes sharing posts containing images, video, and music with friends and family super simple. They even have an application that you can install on your phone or Palm to make posting even easier.

  • Create posts
  • Read posts from your neighborhood or just explore the recently added
  • Search posts
  • View/add comments on posts and media
  • Organize your library of media

6. Ebay
http://wap2.bonfiremedia.com

Ebay Mobile Home ScreenshotEbay Mobile Search ScreenshotNow you don’t have to worry about being at your computer minutes before an auction ends to get in a last minute bid. Just watch an items bidding history right from your phone now! Does pretty much everything you’d need it to do.

  • View items you are bidding on, watching, selling, won, and more
  • Bid on items
  • Search for items
  • View listings with full descriptions and gallery pictures

7. Facebook
http://m.facebook.com

Facebook Mobile Profile ScreenshotFacebook Mobile Home ScreenshotWow a social networking site that actually gets it. If you’ve ever tried to open Myspace on your phone Facebook’s mobile version will be a treat. When you log in your home screen resembles one you’re used to, complete with all the things your friends have been up to. The profiles are simplified and don’t support 3rd party apps that might have been added, but all the basic information is still there.

  • View profiles
  • Send messages
  • Leave notes on friends’ walls
  • Update your status
  • View photos
  • Check events