10 Greatest Gadget Ideas of the Year - New York TimesDecember 29, 2005
David Pogue
10 Greatest Gadget Ideas of the Year
ON New Year's Eve, don't be surprised to witness more heartfelt celebrating than usual; 2005 was not a year noted for its tidings of good cheer, and plenty of people will be happy to see it go.
Still, there were inspiring and gratifying success stories if you knew where to look - and the high-tech industry was one of them. Google Earth redefined how we think of our planet, the Razr phone proved that people do care about beauty, and the iPod - well, you know all about the iPod.
But some of the year's greatest joys weren't new products, but aspects of new products. Here and there, you could find tiny touches of brilliance: clever steps forward and new spins on old features that somehow made it through committee, past the bean counters and under the radar of marketing departments.
Here they are, the 10 best gadget ideas of 2005:
THE FOLDING MEMORY CARD After taking a few digital photos, the next step, for most people, is getting them onto the computer. That usually involves a U.S.B. cable, which is one more thing to carry and avoid misplacing.
SanDisk's better idea is to take the memory card out of the camera and stick it directly into your computer's U.S.B. port.
That's possible with the SanDisk Ultra II SD Plus card. It looks just like any other SD memory card, except that it folds on tiny hinges. When you fold it back on itself, you reveal a set of metal contacts that slide directly into the U.S.B. jack of your Mac or PC. The computer sees the card as an external drive, and you can download the photos as you always do - except that you've eliminated the need to carry around a cable.
THE VOICE MAIL VCR Voice mail is a delightful invention. But trying to remember which keys to press - for replay, skip, delete and so on - is not so delightful, especially if you have more than one voice mail system to learn. Thanks to Palm, then, for adding VCR-style buttons on the touch screen of its coming Treo 700W cellphone. You just tap Skip, Play, Delete, or whatever. The phone remembers which touch tones to play so you don't have to.
THE FRONT-SIDE TV CONNECTOR The home-theater explosion is all well and good, but one less exciting aspect never appears in the photos: the rat's nest of cables. Depending on how permanently your TV has been built into your cabinetry, getting behind it to plug or unplug something is either a royal pain or a full-blown construction project.
Hewlett-Packard's latest microdisplay (rear projection) TV sets solve the problem sweetly and simply: everything plugs into the front. A broad tunnel lets you hand each cable to yourself from the back, an illuminated connection panel makes it easy to see what you're doing at the front, and an attractive door hides the whole ingenious system.
THE BIGGER-THAN-TV MOVIE Most digital still cameras today can also capture video big enough to fill a standard TV screen (640 by 480 pixels) and smooth enough to simulate standard TV motion (30 frames a second). But Canon's PowerShot S80 model goes one step further: it can capture videos at even higher resolution (1024 x 768 pixels).
Why on earth would you need a video picture of higher resolution than the TV itself? Three reasons. First, your videos will look better on high-definition sets. Second, the videos fill much more of your computer screen when played there. And finally, that's so much resolution, you can isolate a single frame and grab it as a still photograph.
TV à LA CARTE It's always seemed crazy that TV companies would spend $1 million an episode writing and producing a program that is shown only once. Yet the obvious solution - making past shows available for purchase on the Internet - gave TV executives nightmares of teenage download pirates run amok.
It took Apple to persuade them to dip a little toe into the Internet waters. ABC took the first plunge, offering iPod owners five shows' worth of archives for a perfectly pitched price of $2 each - and no commercials. NBC came next with a broader menu of shows. The concept was a hit, the floodgates have opened, and the era of downloadable, reasonably priced, lightly copy-protected TV episodes is finally upon us.
THE OUTER-BUTTON FLIP PHONE First came the cellphone with a hinge (the flip phone). Then came the flip phone with an external screen, so you could see who was calling. Problem was, this arrangement deprived you of the option to dismiss the call or send it to voice mail. If you opened the flip phone to get to the Ignore button, you'd answer the call - unless you'd turned off the "opening phone answers the call" feature, in which case you lost one great convenience of having a flip phone to begin with.
The solution? Add buttons on the outside of the phone. When a call comes in to the LG VX8100, for example, its external screen identifies the caller - and the small buttons just below it are labeled Ignore (let it ring until voice mail picks up) or Dismiss (send it directly and immediately to voice mail). You get the best of all cellular worlds, without ever having to open the phone.
THE FREE DOMAIN NAME A domain name is what comes before the ".com" in a Web address - like NYTimes.com, verizonwireless.com or MarryMeBritney.com. Getting your own personal dot-com name has its privileges - for example, your e-mail address can be You@YourNameHere.com - but it costs money and requires some expertise.
It took Microsoft, of all companies, to make getting your own dot-com name free. Its new Office Live online software suite for small businesses, now in testing, will offer a domain name, Web site and e-mail accounts free. Yes, you'll see ads on the screen (unless you pay for the adless version) - but plenty of people won't mind viewing them in exchange for a free, professional-looking Web presence.
THE MODULAR DVD SCREEN If you tallied up the amount of money you've spent on L.C.D. screens, you'd probably go white-haired in horror. One on your laptop, one on your digital camera, plus screens on your Game Boy, camcorder, portable DVD player, car dashboard and so on.
Audiovox has taken a small step toward reducing that redundancy with its Shuttle DVD player. It's a portable, battery-powered DVD player (available in three screen sizes) that hangs from the driver's-side headrest, for the benefit of the young audience in the back seat of the car. But the beauty of the Shuttle is that you can also buy docking stations for it: a car-ceiling mount, for a more permanent and central position; an under-cabinet mount, complete with AM-FM radio, for the kitchen; a cable-ready tabletop stand, with stereo speakers, for the home; and so on. The player and screen move with you from place to place, so your investment isn't sitting wasted every time you leave the minivan.
THE FAMILY-PORTRAIT BURST MODE If you've ever tried to take a family portrait, you know about Ansel's Law: the odds of somebody's eyes being closed increases geometrically with the number of people in the group.
That's why Casio digital cameras, in self-timer mode, automatically shoot three consecutive snaps, a fraction of a second apart. You've just tripled your odds of getting one decent shot.
THE HYBRID HIGH-DEFINITION TAPE JVC and Sony developed the first camcorders capable of recording in spectacular wide-screen high definition. This would have been a perfect opportunity for them to introduce yet another type of videocassette - some expensive, proprietary new format that wouldn't fit any other camcorder (and would generate millions in sales).
But they didn't. Instead, these HDTV camcorders record on everyday $4 drugstore MiniDV tapes, the same kind used in regular camcorders. In fact, you can mix and match high-def and standard video on the same tape. It took a lot of engineering to cram so much more video data onto the same amount of tape, but for home-movie buffs, it was a surprising, generous, kind-hearted move.
And there you have it: 10 of the year's best small, sweet improvements in our electronic lives. Come New Year's Eve, raise one tiny toast to the anonymous engineers whose eccentricities or idealism brought these sparkling developments to life.
E-mail: Pogue@nytimes.com
An Technology blog focusing on portable devices. I have a news Blog @ News . I have a Culture, Politic and Religion Blog @ Opinionand my domain is @ Armwood.Com. I have a Jazz Blog @ Jazz. I have a Human Rights Blog @ Law.
Thursday, December 29, 2005
Wednesday, December 28, 2005
Brighthand — Price for Treo 700w Leaked
Brighthand — Price for Treo 700w LeakedPrice for Treo 700w Leaked
RumorMill™
By Ed Hardy | Editor-in-Chief
Dec 27, 2005
At this point, a great deal is known about Palm's first Windows Mobile smartphone, the Treo 700w. Still, a few critical details remain a mystery
The device was announced months ago, and rumors have filled in many of the details Palm didn't want to reveal, including the fact that this model will almost certainly be introduced at the Consumer Electronics Show early next month.
But there are a few vital facts that are known... until now. Someone has leaked one of these -- the price.
For many months, this Pocket PC will be available only from Verizon Wireless. And, according to a post on HowardForums, it will cost $500 with a two-year contract.
This is the lowest possible price. With a one-year contract it will go up to $550, and it will be $620 for those who aren't signing a new contract at all.
When this smartphone was formally unveiled, Palm warned that it would cost more than its sister model, the Treo 650, did at its launch. This is because the 700w will be the first model from this company to offer EV-DO.
This means it will it will be able to supply typical data transfer speeds of 400 to 700 kilobits per second (kbps). That's well above any other Treo.
Still Not Known
Neither rumors nor Palm have yet revealed every detail on this smartphone.
The speed of its Intel processor is not known, nor the capacity of its swappable battery.
Still, the post on HowardForums did say that the Treo 700w will offer 4.6 hours of use time, or 360 hours in standby mode.
More About the Windows Mobile Treo
This Pocket will have 64 MB of storage. Because it runs the latest version of Windows Mobile, this will behave similarly to the NVFS storage in the Treo 650, and won't be erased if the device's battery runs down completely.
Windows Mobile TreoThis model will have Bluetooth short-range wireless networking, but not built-in WiFi. Still, users will have option of using a WiFi SD card.
It will be a CDMA-based smartphone that, as previously mentioned, supports EV-DO.
This Pocket PC will have a 240-by-240-pixel display, like HP's most recent Windows Mobile smartphones.
Those considering buying this device should be aware that Palm has said that a similar model Treo with support for GSM/GPRS networks will not be available earlier than the second half of 2006.
Tuesday, December 27, 2005
PCWorld.com - Winners and Losers 2005
PCWorld.com - Winners and Losers 2005Winners and Losers 2005
What were the best and worst tech stories of the year? Our expert separates the good from the bad. In some cases, they're the same.
Dan Tynan
Tuesday, December 27, 2005
It was the best of years, it was the worst of years. In fact, 2005 was a lot like any other year, only for some reason it seemed longer than most. It was a year where blogs and podcasting threatened to overtake mainstream media, where a Web search giant tried to be everything for everybody but instead became a magnet for critics, and where the recording industry won a major battle against peer-to-peer file sharing only to shoot itself in the foot (and every other appendage) over a disastrous copy-protection scheme. And that's just for starters.
Advertisement
Here, then, are one observer's completely unscientific and highly opinionated picks for the biggest winners and losers of the year in technology.
WINNER: Google
Meet your new best friends, Sergey and Larry. Want a free e-mail account? No problem. A blog? Satellite maps? How about a searchable library of every book ever written? Here, have some free Wi-Fi. Oh, and don't forget to enter the stuff you want to sell into Google's new classified ad/online garage sale/whatever-you-want database. No charge, and no need to say thanks. Remember that silly dot-com-era notion that you could make money by giving things away? Guess what? It actually works!
LOSER: Google
What does a company with staggering amounts of computing power, the world's best brains, and a share price north of $400 do? Anything it darn well pleases. But the next thing you know it's getting sued for copyright violations by the Association of American Publishers and becoming part of the hacker's tool kit. Google's seemingly unquenchable ambition and near-monopoly on everything it touches--otherwise known as "Microsoft Syndrome"--is making more and more people nervous.
WINNER: Sony PlayStation Portable (PSP)
Think of it as a Game Boy for arrested adolescents. Sony managed to squeeze one of the world's most powerful gaming systems into a unit slightly larger than a paperback novel. The PSP also holds photos, plays MP3s, and displays major Hollywood releases on its 4-inch LCD (though with some price tags approaching $30, the PSP's Universal Media Discs can cost more than a comparable DVD). It comes with a Wi-Fi-enabled Web browser, and rumors of a cell phone add-on abound. On the downside, it does not make daiquiris--yet.
LOSER: Motorola Rokr E1
The Rokr was supposed to be the new "It" gadget, a marriage between the world's most stylish cell phone and the planet's best digital music player, the IPod. But it was roundly panned for its skimpy 100-song capacity, painfully slow data transfer, and sluggish interface. This marriage is destined to be shorter than one of J. Lo's.
WINNER: The Survival Blog of New Orleans
Operating from the offices of Web host DirectNIC in downtown New Orleans, the Interdictor blog kept posting during the worst of Hurricane Katrina, powered by a 750-kilowatt diesel generator and a fiber-optic hookup. Blogger Michael Barnett and his colleagues slept in the air-conditioned room where they kept the servers, and blogged throughout the crisis. The Interdictor's live Webcam offered some of the first images of the city following the disaster, and the blog has continued to cover the region's recovery and rebuilding.
LOSER: The FEMA Web site
Though it hardly counts as the worst of the Federal Emergency Management Agency's transgressions during Katrina, the FEMA site where displaced people could apply for federal aid worked only with Internet Explorer and JavaScript. Relief workers using donated computers were forced to use the notoriously insecure browser to enter hurricane victims' personal information. Seems like everybody at FEMA was doing one heckava job.
WINNER: Apple Computer
Apple started the year with the Mac Mini, a pint-size $499 Macintosh sans monitor, and ended it with the long-awaited video-enabled IPod. In between, Apple announced it would start using Intel chips in its new line of Macs. The first Intel-based Macs should debut at around the same time as Windows Vista, which could lead to the first serious OS competition since, oh, 1989. All in all, a very good year in Apple-achia.
LOSER: Apple Computer
For a company that turned rumor wrangling into an art form, Apple proved mighty touchy when rumor sites revealed information about the Mac Mini and other products weeks before the company's official announcements. Touchy enough, in fact, to sic their legal beagles upon them. In one case, a California judge ruled the sites could not protect the anonymity of their sources (that ruling is currently under appeal). Apparently, the sites broke St. Steven of Jobs' 10th Commandment: Thou shalt not release information without prior approval. The result? Apple still doesn't have the information it sought, but did get a ton of bad PR.
LOSER: Cisco Systems
When Cisco Systems learned a third-party consultant planned to discuss security flaws in its software at last July's Black Hat conference, the company demanded he change his presentation and instructed conference employees to tear the relevant pages out of the Black Hat program. No matter; Mike Lynn gave his presentation anyway, and the resulting uproar over Cisco's response blew back in the company's face. Cisco says it has fixed the flaws Lynn identified. However, Lynn has recently claimed that Cisco's Internetwork Operating System--software used by thousands of Internet routers--is riddled with other bugs, some more serious than the one he revealed last July.
WINNER: Juniper Networks
In November, Cisco's primary competitor in the router market, Juniper Networks, hired a new networking security expert. His name? Mike Lynn.
LOSER: Sony BMG Entertainment
Adding copy protection to CDs is onerous enough, but Sony BMG Entertainment and its tech partner First 4 Internet went completely beyond the pale. Insert certain Sony BMG CDs into your PC's disc drive and they would secretly install First 4 Internet's XCP software, which not only limited the number of copies you could make, but also made your system vulnerable to hack attacks. Sony BMG then posted a "fix" that made matters worse, before issuing a recall of the music CDs, offering refunds, and promising to discontinue using XCP. It turns out the record company knew about the vulnerability for at least two weeks before blogger Mark Russinovich made the news public last Halloween. Thanks for sharing, Sony.
EXTREME LOSER: Sony BMG Entertainment
Researchers at Information Security Partners recently identified a security flaw with SunnComm's MediaMax, an alternative copy-protection scheme found on other Sony BMG CDs. The flaw could allow a remote attacker to hijack a user's PC. This time, Sony responded with a patch almost immediately--which was quickly found to have the exact same flaw. Can you say "consumer boycott?"
WINNER: ITunes
Kudos go to Apple and ITunes for holding fast to a $1-per-song pricing scheme (for now at least) in the face of extreme pressure from the record labels, as well as for convincing Hollywood to allow its video content to be downloaded (for $2 per show). Since the announcement in October, more than 3 million videos had been sold at press time, proving that people will pay for media online if it's fairly priced and easy to get. Let's just hope downloaders aren't watching them while driving.
LOSER: The Grokster Decision
Last June, the U.S. Supreme Court announced its decision in Grokster v. MGM, holding that providers of P2P networks could be held liable for inducing copyright infringement. The impact on illegal file swappers--who have plenty of other options for doing what they shouldn't be doing--was negligible. But the decision dealt a blow to the rights of ordinary consumers by narrowing the reach of another famous copyright case. The 1984 Betamax decision kept the VCR from being sued out of existence and led to the creation of a $20 billion video-rental industry, as well as the DVD and other innovations. The Grokster decision may make technology companies more reluctant to bring new ideas to market.
WINNER: Wikipedia
You can't do a Web search on any major topic without this wiki popping up near the top of the results page. Heavily linked, authoritative, and constantly updated, the world's largest interactive encyclopedia came into its own this year. According to Hitwise, Wikipedia became the second-most-visited reference site on the Web this year, trailing only Dictionary.com.
LOSER: Wikipedia
Popular, yes. Accurate? Not necessarily. Because its entries can be edited by anyone, the Wikipedia can be the source of dubious or biased information. Like the entry on "Swiftboating" that was recently Swiftboated itself by an anti-John Kerry partisan, or the article that falsely implicated an innocent man in the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy. To the wiki's credit, both items were quickly pulled and corrected; contributors are now required to register for the site, which should, theoretically, limit the number of spurious entries. But with more than 800,000 articles in English and well over 1 million in 15 other languages, foolproof policing is well nigh impossible. Then again, the Journal Nature compared Wikipedia to the venerable Encyclopaedia Brittanica and found hundreds of errors in both--though the wiki had slightly more.
LOSER: TiVo
TiVo fans everywhere were crushed last September when the digital-video-recording service began responding to Macrovision's copy-protection signals, which can automatically block recording of pay-per-view and video-on-demand programming or delete them from your TiVo box after a week. Before you know it, TiVo won't let you fast-forward through commercials or replay those wardrobe malfunctions.
WINNER BY LOSING: Web TV
No, not that browser-on-your-TV gadget that Microsoft bought in 1997 and effectively killed. I'm talking about original programming broadcast on the Web using podcasts, video blogs, and the like. It really got started in 2005, and most of the content is, well, god-awful. But the potential for a smarter, weirder, funnier form of TV is enormous. Memo to Hollywood: Watch your back.
Dan Tynan writes the Gadget Freak column for PC World magazine. He is author of Computer Privacy Annoyances (O'Reilly Media, 2005) and writes The WitList satirical blog.
What were the best and worst tech stories of the year? Our expert separates the good from the bad. In some cases, they're the same.
Dan Tynan
Tuesday, December 27, 2005
It was the best of years, it was the worst of years. In fact, 2005 was a lot like any other year, only for some reason it seemed longer than most. It was a year where blogs and podcasting threatened to overtake mainstream media, where a Web search giant tried to be everything for everybody but instead became a magnet for critics, and where the recording industry won a major battle against peer-to-peer file sharing only to shoot itself in the foot (and every other appendage) over a disastrous copy-protection scheme. And that's just for starters.
Advertisement
Here, then, are one observer's completely unscientific and highly opinionated picks for the biggest winners and losers of the year in technology.
WINNER: Google
Meet your new best friends, Sergey and Larry. Want a free e-mail account? No problem. A blog? Satellite maps? How about a searchable library of every book ever written? Here, have some free Wi-Fi. Oh, and don't forget to enter the stuff you want to sell into Google's new classified ad/online garage sale/whatever-you-want database. No charge, and no need to say thanks. Remember that silly dot-com-era notion that you could make money by giving things away? Guess what? It actually works!
LOSER: Google
What does a company with staggering amounts of computing power, the world's best brains, and a share price north of $400 do? Anything it darn well pleases. But the next thing you know it's getting sued for copyright violations by the Association of American Publishers and becoming part of the hacker's tool kit. Google's seemingly unquenchable ambition and near-monopoly on everything it touches--otherwise known as "Microsoft Syndrome"--is making more and more people nervous.
WINNER: Sony PlayStation Portable (PSP)
Think of it as a Game Boy for arrested adolescents. Sony managed to squeeze one of the world's most powerful gaming systems into a unit slightly larger than a paperback novel. The PSP also holds photos, plays MP3s, and displays major Hollywood releases on its 4-inch LCD (though with some price tags approaching $30, the PSP's Universal Media Discs can cost more than a comparable DVD). It comes with a Wi-Fi-enabled Web browser, and rumors of a cell phone add-on abound. On the downside, it does not make daiquiris--yet.
LOSER: Motorola Rokr E1
The Rokr was supposed to be the new "It" gadget, a marriage between the world's most stylish cell phone and the planet's best digital music player, the IPod. But it was roundly panned for its skimpy 100-song capacity, painfully slow data transfer, and sluggish interface. This marriage is destined to be shorter than one of J. Lo's.
WINNER: The Survival Blog of New Orleans
Operating from the offices of Web host DirectNIC in downtown New Orleans, the Interdictor blog kept posting during the worst of Hurricane Katrina, powered by a 750-kilowatt diesel generator and a fiber-optic hookup. Blogger Michael Barnett and his colleagues slept in the air-conditioned room where they kept the servers, and blogged throughout the crisis. The Interdictor's live Webcam offered some of the first images of the city following the disaster, and the blog has continued to cover the region's recovery and rebuilding.
LOSER: The FEMA Web site
Though it hardly counts as the worst of the Federal Emergency Management Agency's transgressions during Katrina, the FEMA site where displaced people could apply for federal aid worked only with Internet Explorer and JavaScript. Relief workers using donated computers were forced to use the notoriously insecure browser to enter hurricane victims' personal information. Seems like everybody at FEMA was doing one heckava job.
WINNER: Apple Computer
Apple started the year with the Mac Mini, a pint-size $499 Macintosh sans monitor, and ended it with the long-awaited video-enabled IPod. In between, Apple announced it would start using Intel chips in its new line of Macs. The first Intel-based Macs should debut at around the same time as Windows Vista, which could lead to the first serious OS competition since, oh, 1989. All in all, a very good year in Apple-achia.
LOSER: Apple Computer
For a company that turned rumor wrangling into an art form, Apple proved mighty touchy when rumor sites revealed information about the Mac Mini and other products weeks before the company's official announcements. Touchy enough, in fact, to sic their legal beagles upon them. In one case, a California judge ruled the sites could not protect the anonymity of their sources (that ruling is currently under appeal). Apparently, the sites broke St. Steven of Jobs' 10th Commandment: Thou shalt not release information without prior approval. The result? Apple still doesn't have the information it sought, but did get a ton of bad PR.
LOSER: Cisco Systems
When Cisco Systems learned a third-party consultant planned to discuss security flaws in its software at last July's Black Hat conference, the company demanded he change his presentation and instructed conference employees to tear the relevant pages out of the Black Hat program. No matter; Mike Lynn gave his presentation anyway, and the resulting uproar over Cisco's response blew back in the company's face. Cisco says it has fixed the flaws Lynn identified. However, Lynn has recently claimed that Cisco's Internetwork Operating System--software used by thousands of Internet routers--is riddled with other bugs, some more serious than the one he revealed last July.
WINNER: Juniper Networks
In November, Cisco's primary competitor in the router market, Juniper Networks, hired a new networking security expert. His name? Mike Lynn.
LOSER: Sony BMG Entertainment
Adding copy protection to CDs is onerous enough, but Sony BMG Entertainment and its tech partner First 4 Internet went completely beyond the pale. Insert certain Sony BMG CDs into your PC's disc drive and they would secretly install First 4 Internet's XCP software, which not only limited the number of copies you could make, but also made your system vulnerable to hack attacks. Sony BMG then posted a "fix" that made matters worse, before issuing a recall of the music CDs, offering refunds, and promising to discontinue using XCP. It turns out the record company knew about the vulnerability for at least two weeks before blogger Mark Russinovich made the news public last Halloween. Thanks for sharing, Sony.
EXTREME LOSER: Sony BMG Entertainment
Researchers at Information Security Partners recently identified a security flaw with SunnComm's MediaMax, an alternative copy-protection scheme found on other Sony BMG CDs. The flaw could allow a remote attacker to hijack a user's PC. This time, Sony responded with a patch almost immediately--which was quickly found to have the exact same flaw. Can you say "consumer boycott?"
WINNER: ITunes
Kudos go to Apple and ITunes for holding fast to a $1-per-song pricing scheme (for now at least) in the face of extreme pressure from the record labels, as well as for convincing Hollywood to allow its video content to be downloaded (for $2 per show). Since the announcement in October, more than 3 million videos had been sold at press time, proving that people will pay for media online if it's fairly priced and easy to get. Let's just hope downloaders aren't watching them while driving.
LOSER: The Grokster Decision
Last June, the U.S. Supreme Court announced its decision in Grokster v. MGM, holding that providers of P2P networks could be held liable for inducing copyright infringement. The impact on illegal file swappers--who have plenty of other options for doing what they shouldn't be doing--was negligible. But the decision dealt a blow to the rights of ordinary consumers by narrowing the reach of another famous copyright case. The 1984 Betamax decision kept the VCR from being sued out of existence and led to the creation of a $20 billion video-rental industry, as well as the DVD and other innovations. The Grokster decision may make technology companies more reluctant to bring new ideas to market.
WINNER: Wikipedia
You can't do a Web search on any major topic without this wiki popping up near the top of the results page. Heavily linked, authoritative, and constantly updated, the world's largest interactive encyclopedia came into its own this year. According to Hitwise, Wikipedia became the second-most-visited reference site on the Web this year, trailing only Dictionary.com.
LOSER: Wikipedia
Popular, yes. Accurate? Not necessarily. Because its entries can be edited by anyone, the Wikipedia can be the source of dubious or biased information. Like the entry on "Swiftboating" that was recently Swiftboated itself by an anti-John Kerry partisan, or the article that falsely implicated an innocent man in the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy. To the wiki's credit, both items were quickly pulled and corrected; contributors are now required to register for the site, which should, theoretically, limit the number of spurious entries. But with more than 800,000 articles in English and well over 1 million in 15 other languages, foolproof policing is well nigh impossible. Then again, the Journal Nature compared Wikipedia to the venerable Encyclopaedia Brittanica and found hundreds of errors in both--though the wiki had slightly more.
LOSER: TiVo
TiVo fans everywhere were crushed last September when the digital-video-recording service began responding to Macrovision's copy-protection signals, which can automatically block recording of pay-per-view and video-on-demand programming or delete them from your TiVo box after a week. Before you know it, TiVo won't let you fast-forward through commercials or replay those wardrobe malfunctions.
WINNER BY LOSING: Web TV
No, not that browser-on-your-TV gadget that Microsoft bought in 1997 and effectively killed. I'm talking about original programming broadcast on the Web using podcasts, video blogs, and the like. It really got started in 2005, and most of the content is, well, god-awful. But the potential for a smarter, weirder, funnier form of TV is enormous. Memo to Hollywood: Watch your back.
Dan Tynan writes the Gadget Freak column for PC World magazine. He is author of Computer Privacy Annoyances (O'Reilly Media, 2005) and writes The WitList satirical blog.
Monday, December 26, 2005
KeralaNext.com:Print
KeralaNext.com:PrintTaiwan & Korea Lead in the Adoption of Consumer Technologies
Dallas, TX December 23, 2005 -- Taiwan and South Korea lead the world in the adoption of consumer technologies, according to Global Digital Living™ (GDL), a new international study from Parks Associates.
GDL surveyed over 10,000 households in 13 countries and ranked nations according to their proclivity to adopt and use MP3 players, video-on-demand (VOD), home networks, computers, online services, and similar advanced technologies. The United States proved the most receptive to TV-related technologies (such as DVRs and digital cable) but fell behind Taiwan and Korea in the adoption of computer-related technologies. Europe countries generally placed behind North America and developed Asian countries like Japan in the adoption of all categories surveyed.
“Each nation has particular strengths and weaknesses in terms of technology adoption,” said John Barrett, director of research at Parks Associates. “Canada, for instance, is a very impressive market for home networking while Japan is the undisputed champion for mobile phones, with over one-half of all Japanese households using mobile phone features like e-mail or photo messaging every month. Of course long commute times in Japan encourage the use of mobile phone entertainment features.”
The results of the Global Digital Living™ survey were released to coincide with the upcoming Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas where Parks Associates will be on-hand to discuss the results (South Hall, booth 25539). For additional information on Global Digital Living™, visit www.parksassociates.com or contact 972-490-1113.
About Parks Associates: Parks Associates is a market research and consulting firm focused on all product and service segments that are “digital” or provide connectivity within the home. The company’s expertise includes home networks, digital entertainment, consumer electronics, broadband and Internet services, and home systems.
Founded in 1986, Parks Associates creates research capital for companies ranging from Fortune 500 to small start-ups through market reports, multiclient studies, consumer research, workshops, and custom-tailored client solutions. Parks Associates also hosts Fall Focus and co-hosts CONNECTIONS™ (in partnership with the Consumer Electronics Association) each year. www.parksassociates.com.
Contact: Jenny Barrett or Chelsey Tyson
Parks Associates
972-490-1113
Dallas, TX December 23, 2005 -- Taiwan and South Korea lead the world in the adoption of consumer technologies, according to Global Digital Living™ (GDL), a new international study from Parks Associates.
GDL surveyed over 10,000 households in 13 countries and ranked nations according to their proclivity to adopt and use MP3 players, video-on-demand (VOD), home networks, computers, online services, and similar advanced technologies. The United States proved the most receptive to TV-related technologies (such as DVRs and digital cable) but fell behind Taiwan and Korea in the adoption of computer-related technologies. Europe countries generally placed behind North America and developed Asian countries like Japan in the adoption of all categories surveyed.
“Each nation has particular strengths and weaknesses in terms of technology adoption,” said John Barrett, director of research at Parks Associates. “Canada, for instance, is a very impressive market for home networking while Japan is the undisputed champion for mobile phones, with over one-half of all Japanese households using mobile phone features like e-mail or photo messaging every month. Of course long commute times in Japan encourage the use of mobile phone entertainment features.”
The results of the Global Digital Living™ survey were released to coincide with the upcoming Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas where Parks Associates will be on-hand to discuss the results (South Hall, booth 25539). For additional information on Global Digital Living™, visit www.parksassociates.com or contact 972-490-1113.
About Parks Associates: Parks Associates is a market research and consulting firm focused on all product and service segments that are “digital” or provide connectivity within the home. The company’s expertise includes home networks, digital entertainment, consumer electronics, broadband and Internet services, and home systems.
Founded in 1986, Parks Associates creates research capital for companies ranging from Fortune 500 to small start-ups through market reports, multiclient studies, consumer research, workshops, and custom-tailored client solutions. Parks Associates also hosts Fall Focus and co-hosts CONNECTIONS™ (in partnership with the Consumer Electronics Association) each year. www.parksassociates.com.
Contact: Jenny Barrett or Chelsey Tyson
Parks Associates
972-490-1113
Wednesday, December 21, 2005
Engadget > Chi Mei's UCP-100 may or may not be Moto's next Smartphone, but we do know it has 802.11g
EngadgetChi Mei's UCP-100 may or may not be Moto's next Smartphone, but we do know it has 802.11g
Posted Feb 17th 2005 9:01AM by Peter Rojas
Filed under: Cellphones
Chi Mei UCP-110 UMA Windows Mobile Smartphone
Are you ready to rock? Because PhoneScoop got the scoop on the Chi Mei UCP-100, a promising new Windows Mobile-powered smartphone which could possibly end up being the successor to Motorola's MPx220 (Chi Mei made that phone, too). This clamshell-style handset has quad-band GSM, EDGE, 1.3 megapixel digitial camera, Bluetooth, and a miniSD card slot, but the best part is that it sports built-in 802.11g WiFi. Oh, and it also has Kineto's new UMA software we wrote about the other day, which'll let you seamlessly hop between WiFi and cellular networks, automatically switching you from one to the other depending on how close you are to a hotspot. No word on when this might arrive over here or what it might be called when it gets here.
Treonauts | Dedicated to your Treo 700 & 650. The Perfect All-In-One Communications, Information & Entertainment Tool.: Treo 700w Review: Part 1
Treonauts | Dedicated to your Treo 700 & 650. The Perfect All-In-One Communications, Information & Entertainment Tool.: Treo 700w Review: Part 1Treo 700w Review: Part 1
I’ve now had the opportunity to play around with my Treo 700w for a little over a week and I’m slowly getting a sense of what it can do and how well and easy (or bad and complicated) it is to use on a daily basis.
First I must state that I have no previous experience whatsoever with Windows Mobile or Pocket PC devices and so I will be unable to compare the performance of the Treo 700w to competing devices powered by this OS. Instead I will be using my beloved Treo 650 running PalmOS as the benchmark for evaluating the forthcoming Treo 700w.
My intention is not to write about “the battle of the OS’” pitching PalmSource against Microsoft but to evaluate both pragmatically and neutrally. It is evident that some Treonauts will categorically prefer either PalmOS or Windows Mobile without much consideration for performance and usability while others will carefully weigh the pros and cons of each to decide which Treo to purchase. There is no doubt that both the Treo 650 and Treo 700w have unique pros and cons that will each be more or less appealing to different Treonauts and as you’ll discover in my review the ‘perfect’ solution combining the best of both worlds is still not in sight.
Below are the main areas of performance and usability of the Treo 700w that I will be taking a closer look at and review in the coming days:
1. Synchronization (Microsoft ActiveSync 4.1)
2. Today (Home screen)
3. Phone (Calls, Speed Dial)
4. Contacts
5. Calendar
6. Tasks
7. Notes
8. Email (part of Messaging)
9. Browser (Internet Explorer)
10. SMS and MMS (part of Messaging)
11. Pictures & Videos
12. Windows Media Mobile (Movies, Music, TV, Streaming Audio & Video)
13. Word, Excel and PowerPoint Mobile
14. Pocket MSN (Messenger, Hotmail)
15. Verizon Wireless Sync
16. Programs
17. Settings
18. Bluetooth
19. WiFi
In this first part of my review I will be taking you through my experiences with the Synchronization and Today functions. Additionally, in parentheses I have added my opinion of how each function compares to our Treo 650.
1. Synchronization with Microsoft ActiveSync 4.1 (Better)
Installing ActiveSync on my PC was done in a few minutes and after following the simple instructions and setting my preferences (I chose to sync my Outlook Contacts, Calendar, Tasks and Notes leaving out the email, IE Favorites, Files and Media options) I was ready to sync my Treo for the first time using either my existing Seidio Retractable Sync & Charge cable or the standard Treo 650 cradle.
There are a number of things that I particularly liked about ActiveSync such as the fact that it syncs in the background without the annoying, distracting and even stressful Hotsync progress windows that appear on screen under PalmOS – I could easily keep working without noticing that a sync was in progress.
Additionally, the Explore button in ActiveSync easily allows me to view, add or delete files on my Treo 700w. Similarly, you can also access the files on any SD card inserted in the Treo 700w so that it becomes a useful USB card reader – I really love this and wish that it was available out of the box in our Treo 650 instead of having to use a third party program such as Softick Card Export II.
Under Tools there is also an option to quickly Add/Remove Programs and perhaps more importantly was the very cool finding that once your Treo 700w is connected to your PC it can automatically share its Internet connection saving you from having to use data minutes if you don’t happen to have an unlimited wireless data plan (it’s kind of the same setup that I use with reverse BT DUN on my Treo 650 but much, much easier).
2. Today (Better)
There is much to like about the Treo 700w’s Today screen even if it could be considered to be somewhat cluttered with too much information if you decide to add all of the options that you can have which include: Lookup Field (Type name or number), Date, Speed Dial (Text + Picture), Owner Info, Messaging, Tasks, Web Search, Pocket MSN, Calendar and Picture. I personally chose to add everything except Owner Info and Picture (which was making my Today screen run extremely slow…).
As on the Treo 650, typing any character will automatically start a Contacts search. However, the Treo 700w has a few minor but neat additions such as the fact that the contacts begin to appear in a pop up (see below) within the Lookup Field and that it also has a smart feature which allows it to determine whether you are trying to dial a number (below right) or search a contact.
Next is the Speed Dial section which offers you the option of dialing via either Picture or Text as well as a Quick Key for any existing or new contact that you want.
Below this I have added the Email and Tasks which I can access via either the 5Way button or simply with my thumb on the screen to open each respective application.
One function of the Today screen which I particularly like and which immediately makes the most of its high speed data connection is the Web Search box in which you type anything then hit the return key to see a couple of seconds later your query results from Google… very neat.
I haven’t yet properly setup my MSN account and so I will have to slightly skim this part but I can quickly tell you that the icons for the MSN butterfly, house, messenger and mail respectively open 1) an MSN jump page; 2) the MSN Mobile web page in IE Mobile; 3) MSN Messenger and 4) your Hotmail account. Any existing MSN user will undoubtedly be absolutely delighted to see such a tight integration on the Treo 700w.
I can also tell you as a bit of a preview that I was able to follow a link here from WindowsMedia.com which allowed me to perfectly stream both TV and video on the Treo 700w…
Lastly I have my Calendar function at the very bottom of the Today screen which like the Email and Task will take me to the application with either the 5Way or my thumb on the screen.
I hope that this will have given you a good overview of how ActiveSync and Today work with the Treo 700w and how it compares to the Treo 650. Also, even though I write that I consider both these functions to be ‘Better’ overall than the similar ones under PalmOS in our Treo 650 there are nonetheless other ones which I will review in the coming days that are definitely not so.
Tuesday, December 20, 2005
T-Mobile Hints At 3G Plans (MobileBurn)
T-Mobile Hints At 3G Plans (MobileBurn)T-Mobile Hints At 3G Plans
Newsbrief by Brad Kellett on Tuesday December 20, 2005.
Note: Sponsored advertising links, if any, are in green.
In an interview with BetaNews, T-Mobile's senior vice president of Engineering Operations, Neville Ray, hinted at T-Mobile's plans for 3G services. Ray also revealed that the company is currently undertaking 3G testing in some markets, though he would not reveal specific locations.
"We are very hopeful that by the end of 2006, and definitely in 2007, we'd be able to bring 3G services to the market. Some of this is auction dependent," Ray stated, referring to a cellular spectrum auction to take place next summer. The article notes that while Ray does not talk about which 3G technology T-Mobile will be utilizing, it is likely that they will head to UMTS - the same technology used by T-Mobile's sister companies in Europe.
Newsbrief by Brad Kellett on Tuesday December 20, 2005.
Note: Sponsored advertising links, if any, are in green.
In an interview with BetaNews, T-Mobile's senior vice president of Engineering Operations, Neville Ray, hinted at T-Mobile's plans for 3G services. Ray also revealed that the company is currently undertaking 3G testing in some markets, though he would not reveal specific locations.
"We are very hopeful that by the end of 2006, and definitely in 2007, we'd be able to bring 3G services to the market. Some of this is auction dependent," Ray stated, referring to a cellular spectrum auction to take place next summer. The article notes that while Ray does not talk about which 3G technology T-Mobile will be utilizing, it is likely that they will head to UMTS - the same technology used by T-Mobile's sister companies in Europe.
Monday, December 19, 2005
Verizon’s Treo 700w to launch at CES in January? - Engadget - www.engadget.com
Verizon’s Treo 700w to launch at CES in January? - Engadget - www.engadget.comVerizon’s Treo 700w to launch at CES in January?
Posted Dec 19, 2005, 4:30 AM ET by Paul Miller
Related entries: Cellphones, Handhelds
Treo 700 small
It seems Handango, the mobile software provider, might of let the word slip in a letter to developers requesting applications a certain forthcoming phone on VZW, stating that “in early January, Verizon will be exclusively launching the new Windows Mobile 5.0 Treo 700, and we need YOUR applications to feature on our Verizon sites.” Early January would lead us to believe that they’re targeting this for the one expo to rule them all: CES.
[Thanks, Kerunt]
Resco Explorer: Another Program With Registration Code Problems
Resco Explorer: Another Program With Registration Code Problems
A few months ago I posted a rant about Travelmate and its subscription services not being user friendly.
It is now time for another software to join the list: Resco Explorer 2005.
I have installed the software on my Windows Mobile 5.0 device, and entered the registration code. This was one week ago. Today I tried using it to be greeted with an announcement that I was running a demo version. I then tried the registration code I have here and it showed a dialog:
"ERRORL The code does not match with this Owner name. Legal owners can obtain a valid code at: www.resco.net/regcode.asp".
What? What a pain... Ok, so I entered my email address on that page and got the registration code. The same one again. And again the same stupid error message.
When are companies stop using this registration procedures that are so non user friendly?
This is not free software, Resco did not send it for a review, and like many others I paid for it and I am being tortured by this stupid thing.
I don't want my worst enemy using this kind of mind torturing software.
What type of software authentication would you like to see in use, knowing that most of these devices must be connected to a network (via Activesync at least) when installing new software?
Would something like a centralised repository where all the software keys are stored and your software is authorised based on your emal address, owner name and password be a good solution?
Sunday, December 18, 2005
BBC NEWS | Programmes | Click Online | Microsoft's vision of the future
BBC NEWS | Programmes | Click Online | Microsoft's vision of the future Microsoft's vision of the future
By Dan Simmons
Reporter, BBC Click Online
Everyone has a different idea of what fun gadgets they would like to see in the future, and some of Microsoft's researchers have been demonstrating in Brussels what they hope might take off.
WHEREABOUTS CLOCK
Those familiar with the Harry Potter books and films might recognise the first idea - called the Whereabouts Clock.
It shows you where people are, and its inventor Abigail Sellen thinks its best use is in the home.
She said: "We noticed in our studies of family life that it was important to know - when you come home from work for example - are my kids still at school, have they left school yet, has my husband left work yet, shall I get the dinner on? This kind of thing. Actually knowing where your family is very important to family life."
This is more a new concept than a new technology, and the real version may still be a year or two away.
It would track the mobile phone signals of loved ones, then cross-reference which mobile cell they were in with pre-programmed locations, like the home, school, or workplace.
HAVE YOUR SAY
Let us know which of these tech toys you think will take off
Ms Sellen added: "This is not very specific at all about where people are, and that's deliberate. We don't want to invade people's privacy too much, so we deliberately keep things very coarse grained.
"If I'm at home I might want to know if my kids have left school, but I don't necessarily want to know exactly where they are."
Though targeted at home users, this technology could be very tempting to some bosses wanting track the whereabouts of their staff.
Home front
Getting the future of domestic technology right is notoriously difficult: whatever happened to the idea of putting the internet on the front of microwave ovens?
HOMENOTE
Homenote is a 21st Century version of the Post-It note, whereby you can text or e-mail your messages to a place rather than a person. Some might wonder, though, whether we really want e-mail in the kitchen.
Andy Reinhardt, a technology correspondent for Business Week magazine, says: "Everything takes longer than you expect, and people hold onto their old ways of doing things. There are sometimes good reasons for that.
"The danger, in a sense, is that we fall in love with the technology and we don't ask enough questions about its usefulness, or whether or not it actually improves life; it often does but sometimes it just makes things more complicated."
The next idea that really bowled us over at Click Online was a kind of interactive video and image bowl that reacts to touch. However the final product, if there is one, is still few years away.
INTERACTIVE BOWL
Microsoft researcher Alex Taylor explained: "What we hope to be able to do is take still images and video and be able to see them in the bowl and possibly also listen to music.
"We also hope to be able to drag the images around the bowl, making use of the physical properties of the bowl to be able to display things in certain places, and possibly let them sit at the bottom of the bowl for storage."
Microsoft's Cambridge research labs reckon that such objects could be covered in touch-sensitive "skins" next year.
The processors and projectors would be housed in the base of the bowl, and Bluetooth is already capable of transferring data from mobile devices wirelessly.
It could make an inspired, if expensive, addition to any coffee table, but dirty fingers or items scratching the touch-sensitive surfaces could mean the novelty factor might not be the only thing that wears off.
Picture this
The Digital Tapestry, an application created by Carsten Rother, automatically creates a tapestry from your favourite snaps.
DIGITAL TAPESTRY
Mr Rother told Click Online: "This software takes, fully automatically, a large collection of images, then takes the important bit from each image by doing optic recognition.
"For instance we do space detection, we detect other objects, like cats and dogs in home photographs. Then we stitch these objects together and collage them automatically into one image.
"This process will typically take a user about one hour with image editing software, or even longer to get great results. And this software does it fully automatically for you."
You can remove unwanted objects at a stroke, or even change the way they look simply by drawing in a few lines.
And although you can already achieve these results manually with existing software, this tends to be a time-consuming process.
The trick here is to find algorithms that do all the difficult work for you, even to the extent that you can view images in 3D.
Both these utilities are expected to be available in late 2006/2007.
PERSONALISED FACIAL SKETCH TECHNOLOGY
Already released in Japan and due for wider release next year, Personalised Facial Sketch Technology creates a caricature of any portrait snap.
It identifies key parts of the face, like the edge of the lips or eyes, automatically to create a cartoon version.
You can then use the results as emoticons for personalising instant messaging or e-mail.
Getting social
A final application, Snarf, may not be much to look at, but it attracted a lot of attention at the show.
It helps manage your Outlook inbox, and rather than sort by date, with the most recent e-mail appearing at the top, Snarf prioritises your messages based on your relationship with the sender.
So mail from the people you deal with often is automatically flagged up for your attention.
Marc Smith, the researcher working on it, says: "It's a lot like the experience I have when people come to my door at home.
"When strangers come to my door, my dog is likely to bark at them, but if you visit frequently my dog knows that you're a friend of the family and it'll stop barking and wag its tail.
"E-mail tools should know the difference between strangers and people you interact with frequently, and help you sort and prioritise your mail accordingly."
The automatic sorting can be overridden by various manual controls.
And you can also can check out this free application for yourself. As of December a beta version is available at the Microsoft Research website (although you should be aware that beta versions are not finished, and can cause problems on your computer).
Only a handful of projects were on display for just a few hours in Brussels to give Euro MPs and other VIPs a sense that Microsoft is not just churning out operating systems.
Whether the company is seen as a major innovator will depend in part on the whereabouts of these ideas in the years to come.
Click Online is broadcast on BBC News 24: Saturday at 2030, Sunday at 0430 and 1630, and on Monday at 0030. It can be watched on the website from late Friday afternoon. A short version is also shown on BBC Two and BBC News 24 as part of BBC Breakfast: Saturday at 0645. Also BBC World .
Story from BBC NEWS:
Addicted to Digital Media - iMate SP5m = My new favorite phone... almost
Addicted to Digital Media - iMate SP5m = My new favorite phone... almost
iMate SP5m = My new favorite phone... almost
Click here to know more about the latest i-mate™ SP5mI've been a long-time user of the HTC-developed Audiovox SMT-5600 Windows Mobile Smartphone (a.k.a. Scoblephone in some circles). It's dependable overall, syncs my mailbox, I can browse the web (to my wife's chagrin at times) and of course, sync my contacts and music directly to the phone.
But there's a new kid in town. A follow-up to the SMT-5600, HTC has partnered with iMate to create the iMate SP5m. With a QVGA (320x240) brightly lit screen, faster data service w/ EDGE, built-in WiFi and carrying over Bluetooth support, the phone has to be experienced when turned on. While EDGE isn't as fast as EV-DO or other true 3G high-speed networks, with T-Mobile, I get an unlimited data plan and can use it in most places as a wireless modem in a pinch.
Then there's the software- after beta testing Windows Mobile 5.0, I just couldn't go back to anything else. Simple grid layout of applications, snappy response, and sync improvements top my list of inviting features. I do wish that the WM Player was a bit more updated, but it plays music, and I can set songs as ringtones to really annoy folks at meetings.
Michael Gartenberg recently commented on the iMate's looks being sub-par when compared to a Motorola Razr. Sure, the Razr looks nice, but just about everyone has one. My wife has one- she likes it, but she's a different user from me. She likes the style, the Gwen Stefani ringtone that makes me want to strangle a cheerleader every time the phone rings, and doesn't mind the oddities of the keypad or clearly inferior screen. She's not interested in email or serious web browsing. She just wants a phone, and that's what the Razr is.
That's not to say the iMate is without its own warts. The keypad is ridiculously small. If I forget to lock the keys, the rolling stones start blaring out of my pocket, courtesy of the somewhat trivial playback buttons on the main screen. Someone decided to take 3-4MM off the main keypad to put these buttons in. Big mistake because now I'm fat-fingering the display if my fingernails are trimmed too short to use to select and tap a button. A big frustration IMO, but manageable over time. Battery life is good, provided you keep WiFi turned off most of the time (which I do- there just aren't any compelling services for it yet).
Gartenberg may give the Razr his cellphone of the year award, but I think it's time to split his categories. Michael does acknowledge, "If you're looking for a candy bar phone, with all the features of the Smartphone platform, this is the device for you. It just isn't much to look at."
And there I agree. The device has heft, but lacks the tactile/emotional response of the Razr. Texture and materials matter, even if it raises your BOM cost. Some understand this (in Cupertino among other places).
Next up: Using Cingular's EDGE service integrated w/ a Sony Laptop- a trip around the NJ coast & Manhattan.
Saturday, December 17, 2005
BetaNews | T-Mobile Plans for Growth, 3G in 2006
BetaNews | T-Mobile Plans for Growth, 3G in 2006
T-Mobile Plans for Growth, 3G in 2006
By Ed Oswald, BetaNews
December 16, 2005, 12:59 PM
T-Mobile USA has big plans for 2006, the company told BetaNews in an interview on Thursday. The carrier intends to complete the rollout of GSM 850, which has boosted its coverage area by nearly 40 percent, and finally establish its long-awaited 3G network. T-Mobile also believes it could top Verizon in Consumer Reports rankings of quality service.
The biggest benefit of GSM 850 would be increased coverage, mainly throughout the central part of the United States. However, the rollout would also include rural areas of the Northeast and West. Altogether, nearly 400,000 square miles of new coverage has been added during 2005, according to the carrier.
Several roaming agreements have been signed with various operators, most notably Dobson, Cingular, Western Wireless, Centennial, EDGE, and RCC, T-Mobile's senior vice president of Engineering Operations Neville Ray told BetaNews.
"We've secured this year effectively all of the 850 footprint that was out there," he said. "There may be some incremental increases next year, but they will not be significant."
The difference is already clear; large swaths of the Plains states now have coverage, and a T-Mobile subscriber could now drive roads like Interstate 80 from coast to coast with much fewer service disruptions than before.
Ray explained that the reason why 850 has become popular, especially in rural America, is due to its propagation characteristics. "An 850 signal does propagate further than a 1900 signal," he said, explaining that a carrier can build less towers yet still have the same network coverage.
In the U.S., 1900 MHz has been the most commonly used frequency for digital cellular service, similar to the 1800 MHz band in Europe. Although their European counterparts use 900 MHz for rural areas, stateside carriers have turned to the 850 Mhz band to maximize network coverage.
From here on out, all of T-Mobile's phones will be compatible with the new spectrum, and the carrier will soon begin to move current customers to these phones through its upgrade program. "We're moving our base as quickly as we can to 850 capability," Ray said.
The company also thinks this rollout will begin to battle the perception that the carrier has had troubles with expanding its coverage. "There will be large swaths of geography where they will now have service from T-Mobile," Ray said. "The benefits are significant for a large portion of our customers."
Eventually, T-Mobile's coverage map would be practically identical to Cingular's, erasing the advantage its rival and others like Sprint-Nextel and Verizon have over the nation's fourth largest carrier.
"The differences on the map would be where Cingular includes analog-only coverage on its marketing material," Ray said. "That's not an unfamiliar story for Verizon too. When you compare their footprint with our footprint, the biggest difference is analog. It's not digital service, GSM or CDMA."
Ray also spoke briefly to T-Mobile's 3G, or third generation, plans, and seemed to indicate that the carrier may be following a more accelerated plan towards next generation data services. Cingular announced the launch of its own high-speed HSDPA network earlier this month.
Ray revealed that 3G testing was already occurring in some markets, although he declined to provide specific locations, as the networks are not publicly available.
"We are very hopeful that by the end of 2006, and definitely in 2007, we'd be able to bring 3G services to the market. Some of this is auction dependent," Ray said, alluding to a large cellular spectrum auction to take place next summer. "We're hopefully looking at a 3G deployment in late 2006."
While Ray did not specifically say which 3G technology T-Mobile would adopt in the United States, the carrier may choose to go straight to UMTS, the technology its European sister companies are currently using.
The 850 expansion would not contribute to T-Mobile's rollout of 3G, Ray said, explaining that in the near term, the focus of 3G would be in the metro areas. "A lot of rural America is covered by the smaller players and not the big carriers," he explained. "So I think it will be some time before you see 3G services in many of those locations."
Ray added that he expects the company's image to benefit from the expansion and sees a bright future ahead for T-Mobile.
"I look at Consumer Reports placing us a solid second to Verizon, and I think our footprint expansion this year will even further solidify our position. And in some cases, we're rapidly closing in on first place."
T-Mobile Plans for Growth, 3G in 2006
By Ed Oswald, BetaNews
December 16, 2005, 12:59 PM
T-Mobile USA has big plans for 2006, the company told BetaNews in an interview on Thursday. The carrier intends to complete the rollout of GSM 850, which has boosted its coverage area by nearly 40 percent, and finally establish its long-awaited 3G network. T-Mobile also believes it could top Verizon in Consumer Reports rankings of quality service.
The biggest benefit of GSM 850 would be increased coverage, mainly throughout the central part of the United States. However, the rollout would also include rural areas of the Northeast and West. Altogether, nearly 400,000 square miles of new coverage has been added during 2005, according to the carrier.
Several roaming agreements have been signed with various operators, most notably Dobson, Cingular, Western Wireless, Centennial, EDGE, and RCC, T-Mobile's senior vice president of Engineering Operations Neville Ray told BetaNews.
"We've secured this year effectively all of the 850 footprint that was out there," he said. "There may be some incremental increases next year, but they will not be significant."
The difference is already clear; large swaths of the Plains states now have coverage, and a T-Mobile subscriber could now drive roads like Interstate 80 from coast to coast with much fewer service disruptions than before.
Ray explained that the reason why 850 has become popular, especially in rural America, is due to its propagation characteristics. "An 850 signal does propagate further than a 1900 signal," he said, explaining that a carrier can build less towers yet still have the same network coverage.
In the U.S., 1900 MHz has been the most commonly used frequency for digital cellular service, similar to the 1800 MHz band in Europe. Although their European counterparts use 900 MHz for rural areas, stateside carriers have turned to the 850 Mhz band to maximize network coverage.
From here on out, all of T-Mobile's phones will be compatible with the new spectrum, and the carrier will soon begin to move current customers to these phones through its upgrade program. "We're moving our base as quickly as we can to 850 capability," Ray said.
The company also thinks this rollout will begin to battle the perception that the carrier has had troubles with expanding its coverage. "There will be large swaths of geography where they will now have service from T-Mobile," Ray said. "The benefits are significant for a large portion of our customers."
Eventually, T-Mobile's coverage map would be practically identical to Cingular's, erasing the advantage its rival and others like Sprint-Nextel and Verizon have over the nation's fourth largest carrier.
"The differences on the map would be where Cingular includes analog-only coverage on its marketing material," Ray said. "That's not an unfamiliar story for Verizon too. When you compare their footprint with our footprint, the biggest difference is analog. It's not digital service, GSM or CDMA."
Ray also spoke briefly to T-Mobile's 3G, or third generation, plans, and seemed to indicate that the carrier may be following a more accelerated plan towards next generation data services. Cingular announced the launch of its own high-speed HSDPA network earlier this month.
Ray revealed that 3G testing was already occurring in some markets, although he declined to provide specific locations, as the networks are not publicly available.
"We are very hopeful that by the end of 2006, and definitely in 2007, we'd be able to bring 3G services to the market. Some of this is auction dependent," Ray said, alluding to a large cellular spectrum auction to take place next summer. "We're hopefully looking at a 3G deployment in late 2006."
While Ray did not specifically say which 3G technology T-Mobile would adopt in the United States, the carrier may choose to go straight to UMTS, the technology its European sister companies are currently using.
The 850 expansion would not contribute to T-Mobile's rollout of 3G, Ray said, explaining that in the near term, the focus of 3G would be in the metro areas. "A lot of rural America is covered by the smaller players and not the big carriers," he explained. "So I think it will be some time before you see 3G services in many of those locations."
Ray added that he expects the company's image to benefit from the expansion and sees a bright future ahead for T-Mobile.
"I look at Consumer Reports placing us a solid second to Verizon, and I think our footprint expansion this year will even further solidify our position. And in some cases, we're rapidly closing in on first place."
Review: Orange SPV C600 Review MSMobileNews.com - Windows Mobile News and Reviews (Smartphones and Pocket PCs)
Review: Orange SPV C600 Review MSMobileNews.com - Windows Mobile News and Reviews (Smartphones and Pocket PCs) Orange SPV C600 Review
Author: Brody on 01/01/1970
Orange SPV C600 Review
The SPV C500 was a landmark in the world of the Windows Mobile Smartphone for one real reason - its size. When initial photos were leaked there were a lot of people who complained about what they believed was an ugly phone that would be their next upgrade however when the size of the C500 was realised and the design slightly tweaked people started to look at it in a whole new light. I think it’s fair to say that the C500 has been the most successful Windows Mobile Smartphone to date. Early adopters of the previous incarnations of the SPV range started to see the average user with a C500; this market penetration has given Microsoft and Orange a platform from which to further expand their Smartphone portfolio with confidence. Step in the C500's predecessor, the SPV C600.
Orange currently has the C550 on the market so many potential customers may be wondering why the C600 is being released so soon, well the easy answer to that is simple - choice. The C550 is marketed as a music phone with multimedia hardware keys on its front. In reality the main difference between the C550 and the C600 is the upgrade in operating system on the C600 as it features the newly released Windows Mobile 5. Although appearing to be minor on the surface (more aesthetically pleasing menus etc.) the changes behind the scenes are numerous, for example the implementation of Bluetooth in Windows Mobile 5 is improved. Don't let that put you off the C550 (see our review here) however, given the choice I’d opt for the C600 every time. Developers will be looking to cater for the latest operating system after all.
The C600 is similar in form to the C500, its dimensions differ only slightly however there have been some minor changes on the outside. The first thing that people will notice is the inclusion of a joystick to replace the rocker that was present on the C500. The general consensus seems to be that a joystick is the way to go however the rocker did offer superb vertical scrolling which was great for reading messages, websites, e-books and other blocks of text. A joystick however is undoubtedly more suited to the games market, even if it has been a long time since we last saw a nine way joystick that included diagonal movement.
The outer casing of the C600 is a grey colour slightly darker than that of the M5000 (read our SPV M5000 review here) and features sharp edges to contrast the occasional smooth curve, I very much like the design of the C600, for attention to detail notice how the Orange logo has been extended at its top right corner so that, as it bends with the corner of the device, the logo appears square to the eye.
The joystick aside, the keys feel slightly more raised on the C600 when compared to the C500, they are easier to depress which, at first, can result in unwanted characters being selected however, as is the case with every new phone its all a matter of growing accustomed to the feel of the device, this didn't take long.
On its base the C600 features a mini USB socket for synchronisation and a 2.5mm headphone socket which provides both hands free and headphone functionality. The sides offer keys to alter earpiece volume, start the phone's camera and voice notes programs as always and the top houses the power switch as well as the loudspeaker. This layout is common with the C500 as you would expect of an evolutionary device.
Orange SPV C600 Review
As is the case with the C550, the C600 houses a 240x320 QVGA screen which eclipses that of the C500, you'll wonder how you got by with the C500 when you see it! The Orange homescreen is present as always, it works well but can be changed easily if you so wish.
A screen with a higher resolution provides a superior reading solution however, until many developers catch up, the change paired with the upgrade in operating system will undoubtedly cause compatibility issues. Luckily most developers are releasing Windows Mobile 5 compatible versions of their software with QVGA support so time will solve the majority of people's fears with regard to this problem.
Windows Mobile 5 requires Active sync 4, version 4.1 of which is now available directly from Microsoft (see here). Synchronisation is seamless as always with the supplied USB wire and Bluetooth synchronisation is also a possibility for a wireless connection to your PC.
The integrated camera takes stills at 1.3 MegaPixel quality which is fine for snaps but won't replace your digital camera, the stills are of a good enough quality to print assuming you have the correct lighting conditions, unfortunately without a flash, photographs in the dark are beyond the capability of the C600.
The C600 also records videos at a resolution of 176x144 at best in MPEG-4, H.263, and AVI which should keep the vast majority of user’s happy, duration being limited only by the amount of storage that you have available; this is great for capturing those embarrassing moments!
The headphones supplied with the C600 are of the same style as those that came bundled with the C500, they do their job sufficiently, doubling as both headphones and a hands free kit. Music played in Windows Media Player can be set to pause when you making and receive calls too which is a great function, especially when you consider that it starts up again upon completion of the call! This is something that has bee available on Smartphones for a while now but it’s still a great selling point.
The phone features a miniSD card slot which is essential for storing extra files, whether they be audio (MP3s, WMAs etc) videos (DivX, MPEG etc) or anything else besides! Other than multimedia files I use my memory card to store games, applications and satellite navigation software, having all of this in one smaller than average mobile phone is always both fun and useful.
Unfortunately the SPV C600 doesn’t have WiFi, it’s evident that it was a possibility; the gap in the very useful Communications Management program is proof of that. In the USA the Cingular 2125 is a very similar phone, the major difference being the lump at the top and the inclusion of WiFi (the lump being an aerial). I guess we can be thankful that the lump isn’t present on the C600 however WiFi would have been superb.
Another missing feature is 3G connectivity; I’d have loved to have put my new 3G SIM to the test however the C600 was never going to be a video calling device so I guess we’ll still have to wait for a 3G Smartphone. To clarify, a 3G SIM does work in the C600 however it doesn’t work at 3G speeds, it simply runs at 2.5G speeds when accessing the Internet etc. Whilst I’m talking about the Internet, Pocket Internet Explorer (PIE) runs in full screen mode in Windows Mobile 5 which is a huge improvement as the utilisation of as much screen space as possible is essential on a mobile device.
Windows Mobile 5 features a 9 item menu which is easier on the eye than the old list view; each position on the menu corresponds to a numbered key on the keypad too which can save you a lot of time scrolling.
To conclude, the Orange SPV C600 is an evolutionary device that takes another step towards the perfect Windows Mobile Smartphone, in my opinion all that is lacking is the inclusion of WiFi and 3G connectivity, were these two things present this phone would be wining awards left right and centre. As it is the SPV C600 is a pretty great phone, with each evolutionary step comes a more robust Operating System, set of applications and improved hardware, to be honest there’s little doubt that the C600 will be present in “best buy” lists for the foreseeable future and justifiably so. Given a choice of any Smartphone on the market at present the C600 comes top of my list and I won’t be alone in this choice, head down to your local Orange retail store and try it for yourself, you won’t be disappointed.
The Orange SPV C600 is available from Orange retail stores and via the Orange website from £0, how can you argue with that?! Click here to get your hands on one.
msmobiles.com - Skype for Pocket PC - 1.2 beta - released - the best VoIP gets better
msmobiles.com - Skype for Pocket PC - 1.2 beta - released - the best VoIP gets betterSkype for Pocket PC - 1.2 beta - released - the best VoIP gets better
December 17, 2005 [Pocket PC]
Before Skype the only voice over IP (VoIP) software for Pocket PC were some strange and difficult to use SIP soft-phones. Skype not only brought VoIP revolution to Pocket PC, but also due to the fact that it is (yet) not available for Symbian, it constitutes also a good reason to buy a Windows Mobile phone rather than Symbian.
The new version brings several very interesting improvements and can be considered as one of the most important releases of Skype for Pocket PC:
there are two versions to download. Version 1.2.0.89 is the preferred one for 400+ MHz devices, and 1.2.0.91, which says “recommended if your Pocket PC has a CPU of 312 MHz”, should actually read “312 MHz or less”. The second one has been optimized to work well on devices slower than 400 MHz. Otherwise, they are the same.
Lots of new things in this release — most importantly:
* supported operating systems: Windows Mobile 5.0 for Pocket PC and Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC.
* languages: English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Korean, Japanese
* supported displays: 240x320, 480,640, portrait and landscape, 240x240 and 480x480.
* supported networks: WiFi/802.11, 3G/UMTS or EDGE.
* voice quality improvements
* extended screen support
* Skype Voicemail: you can receive and send voicemail. The thing you can’t do, though, is update your greeting lots of bugs fixed - see the change log for details
Related links:
* download page of Skype for Pocket PC
* less official information about Pocket PC 1.2 Beta (you can post your comments there)
* very detailed change log of Skype of Pocket PC
December 17, 2005 [Pocket PC]
Before Skype the only voice over IP (VoIP) software for Pocket PC were some strange and difficult to use SIP soft-phones. Skype not only brought VoIP revolution to Pocket PC, but also due to the fact that it is (yet) not available for Symbian, it constitutes also a good reason to buy a Windows Mobile phone rather than Symbian.
The new version brings several very interesting improvements and can be considered as one of the most important releases of Skype for Pocket PC:
there are two versions to download. Version 1.2.0.89 is the preferred one for 400+ MHz devices, and 1.2.0.91, which says “recommended if your Pocket PC has a CPU of 312 MHz”, should actually read “312 MHz or less”. The second one has been optimized to work well on devices slower than 400 MHz. Otherwise, they are the same.
Lots of new things in this release — most importantly:
* supported operating systems: Windows Mobile 5.0 for Pocket PC and Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC.
* languages: English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Korean, Japanese
* supported displays: 240x320, 480,640, portrait and landscape, 240x240 and 480x480.
* supported networks: WiFi/802.11, 3G/UMTS or EDGE.
* voice quality improvements
* extended screen support
* Skype Voicemail: you can receive and send voicemail. The thing you can’t do, though, is update your greeting lots of bugs fixed - see the change log for details
Related links:
* download page of Skype for Pocket PC
* less official information about Pocket PC 1.2 Beta (you can post your comments there)
* very detailed change log of Skype of Pocket PC
Friday, December 16, 2005
msmobiles.com - Cingular 2125 Windows Mobile 5.0 Smartphone Review
msmobiles.com - Cingular 2125 Windows Mobile 5.0 Smartphone ReviewCingular 2125 Windows Mobile 5.0 Smartphone Review
December 17, 2005 [MS Smartphone]
Its not really a surprise that Cingular stores don't have the Cingular 2125 in stock yet, most managers don't even know what it is, makes sense since the device was officially released just this week. Of all the managers we talked to, for the most part they simply couldn't get past the fact that the 2125 is Cingular branded, they believe all phones have to be a Nokia or Motorola. Here is a phone that makes Symbian Series 60 devices look like technology from the 80's. We got our hands on a Cingular 2125, and we are reviewing the hell out of it!
Cingular 2125 - Windows Mobile 5.0 Smartphone
Ordering is painful - When it comes to ordering a Cingular 2125, until they are in stock at your local store you are much better off ordering online or by calling Cingular. If you are willing to accept a 2 year contract, it can be ordered online for $299, if you want a 1 year contract, it will cost you $369, and you will have to call to order, or buy it from your local Cingular store. If you already have a contract and wish to simply buy the phone, it will cost $399, and it will be SIM locked, which means you cannot use the phone with other wireless carriers like T-Mobile, or European carriers like Orange, O2 or Vodafone. With a one or two year contract, for release there is a $100 rebate if you purchase an unlimited data service with your plan. The pain of ordering is due to the fact that not a single Cingular employee knew what the device was, I even had a store manager tell me there is no such device, and there wont be any Cingular only devices. Its a good thing we didn't listen to that jerk.
Smartphone Thoughts - Daily news, views, rants and raves
Smartphone Thoughts - Daily news, views, rants and raves
Small, Sleek, and WiFi Enabled: The iMate SP5m Smartphone Reviewed
By Mike Temporale on Tuesday, November 22, 2005
Product Category: Hardware
Manufacturer: i-mate
Where to Buy: Expansys
Price: $494.95 USD
Specifications: Windows Mobile 5.0, Quad-Band Smartphone Featuring QVGA, Bluetooth, and WiFi.
Pros:
* Beautiful QVGA Screen;
* Fast Data Access Over GPRS & WiFi;
* Dedicated music buttons.
Cons:
* EU power cable requires North American adapter;
* Poorly designed belt case.
Summary: The i-mate SP5m is the first of its kind to hit the street; a Windows Mobile Smartphone with WiFi built-in! Don't be fooled by its innocent looks, the SP5m is more than just a Typhoon with a new shell and WiFi slapped on it. It also sports a beautiful QVGA screen and runs the latest version of Microsoft's Windows Mobile for Smartphone devices, 5.0. The wildly successful Typhoon set the record as the smallest Smartphone on the market. It was a breakthrough device, providing users with the power of Windows Mobile, and a battery that wouldn't quit after a couple hours of use, all in an ultra slim package. Can the SP5m successfully build on the Typhoon foundation? You will have to read on for the full review and find out!
Brighthand — Motorola Q Coming to Verizon
Brighthand — Motorola Q Coming to VerizonMotorola Q Coming to Verizon
By Ed Hardy | Editor-in-Chief
Dec 16, 2005
The FCC has given its approval to the Motorola Q.
Typically, this would mean that all the details on this upcoming smartphone would be posted on this U.S. government's web site. However, because of a confidentiality request, this hasn't happened.
Still, there is an image in one of the test reports that clearly shows a Motorola Q with the Verizon logo on it.
Motorola had previously announced that the Q will be available first from a carrier that uses CDMA, but this is the first time that there has been any hard evidence that it would be Verizon.
What little information the FCC is revealing on this device can be found on its web site.
More About the Motorola Q
Its maker claims that the Motorola Q will be "the world's thinnest, lightest QWERTY phone".
Motorola Q It will have a tablet design, with a 320-by-240-pixel screen above a backlit keyboard.
This will be one of the first devices to run Windows Mobile 5.0 for Smartphone, and therefore will support the push email system Microsoft is developing.
The Motorola Q won't just be about email, though. It will be able to play music in a variety of formats and it will sport dual speakers.
In a slightly unusual move, it will have a 320-by-240-pixel (QVGA) that is in landscape mode by default.
A miniSD slot will offer additional storage for music, as well as other types of files.
It will include a 1.3 megapixel camera and Bluetooth short-range wireless networking.
Motorola hasn't given all the specifications on this device, but, according to a leaked description of this model, it will have 64 MB of RAM and 128 MB of Flash ROM.
msmobiles.com - Handango leaks information that Palm Treo 700 will be released at CES
msmobiles.com - Handango leaks information that Palm Treo 700 will be released at CESHandango leaks information that Palm Treo 700 will be released at CES
December 16, 2005 [Pocket PC phone]
In this story we mention Motorola Q, Palm Treo 700w and sales of pirated software at Handango...
Handango writes:
In early January, Verizon will be exclusively launching the new Windows Mobile 5.0 Treo 700, and we need YOUR applications to feature on our Verizon sites, as well as in our new 5.0 PPC InHand catalog. Additionally, your WM 5.0 applications will be sold through several other channels, including Microsoft, Dell, HP, Alltel, and Sprint. If you have not already done so, please email windowsmobile@handango.com with the following information on your 5.0 applications:
1. Application Name
2. Product ID
3. If the app is square-screen aware
4. If OTA files are uploaded and ready for InHand
For additional information on making your application 5.0 aware, please visit: Windows Mobile 5.0 Migration Guide.
In other words: "early January" means "at CES 2006" - the biggest in USA trade show about consumer electronics.
There are also rumors that Motorola Q smartphone will also be released at CES...
Speaking of Handango: it still keeps selling pirated software, another fresh example is here - but it's not a shocker - we were reporting about it before: obviously Handango has enough money to go 3GSM conference to Barcelona, Spain, but not enough money to ensure legality of their operation.
December 16, 2005 [Pocket PC phone]
In this story we mention Motorola Q, Palm Treo 700w and sales of pirated software at Handango...
Handango writes:
In early January, Verizon will be exclusively launching the new Windows Mobile 5.0 Treo 700, and we need YOUR applications to feature on our Verizon sites, as well as in our new 5.0 PPC InHand catalog. Additionally, your WM 5.0 applications will be sold through several other channels, including Microsoft, Dell, HP, Alltel, and Sprint. If you have not already done so, please email windowsmobile@handango.com with the following information on your 5.0 applications:
1. Application Name
2. Product ID
3. If the app is square-screen aware
4. If OTA files are uploaded and ready for InHand
For additional information on making your application 5.0 aware, please visit: Windows Mobile 5.0 Migration Guide.
In other words: "early January" means "at CES 2006" - the biggest in USA trade show about consumer electronics.
There are also rumors that Motorola Q smartphone will also be released at CES...
Speaking of Handango: it still keeps selling pirated software, another fresh example is here - but it's not a shocker - we were reporting about it before: obviously Handango has enough money to go 3GSM conference to Barcelona, Spain, but not enough money to ensure legality of their operation.
World's Most Expensive Stereo Components - Forbes.com
World's Most Expensive Stereo Components - Forbes.com
Lifestyle Feature
World's Most Expensive Stereo Components
Dan Lyons
See our list of the World's Most Expensive Stereo Components.
In the age of the iPod, does anyone need a fancy home audio system? The answer, if one is serious about music, is an emphatic "yes."
These days, music is portable and modular, served a la carte in a million ways a million times per day to millions of listeners around the globe. Whether through MP3 players, satellite radio or ripped from a CD on a PC, to many people the notion of having to sit at home to enjoy their favorite music is as archaic as using a mimeograph machine to make copies.
And if one is going to be listening at home, why spend too much money? After all, there are now enough peripherals for an MP3 player, such as Bose's Sound Dock--which costs around $300--that lets users plug in their iPods and deliver quality acoustics anywhere in their home. Not only that, but for less than $200 it is possible to walk out of a Wal-Mart (nyse: WMT - news - people ) or Best Buy (nyse: BBY - news - people ) carrying a mini audio unit from a reputable brand, such as Sony (nyse: SNE - news - people ) or JVC, which is capable of cranking out 400 watts or more of sound.
But for music connoisseurs, comparing a glorified boombox with state-of-the-art audio equipment is like saying that it's just as much fun to drive a $22,000 Pontiac Grand Am as it is a $200,000 Ferrari F430. The two cars fulfill the same basic function, but the Ferrari does it on such an infinitely higher level of performance and craftsmanship as to render all comparisons absurd.
Take for example the Ongaku amplifier from Audio Note Japan. This 27-watt power amplifier uses a single-ended triode circuit and is hand crafted in a Tokyo workshop by Hiroyasu Kondo, a world-renowned engineer who uses 20 pounds of silver throughout the amp, including silver wire in the windings of the hand-made transformers. This audio work of art delivers a level of sound quality unmatched by any other amplifier on the market--and for $80,000 it had better.
Think that's an expensive piece of stereo equipment? Try $135,000 for a pair of Alexandria X-2 loudspeakers from Provo, Utah-based Wilson Audio Specialties, or the $145,000 Evolution Music System from Krell Industries in Orange, Conn., which generate the kind of butt-kicking bass that doesn't just blow out windows but also knocks down walls.
Of course, many people may not need Rockport Technologies' 535-pound, $73,750 System III Sirius turntable to enjoy their old collection of LPs. There are enough more-than-adequate turntables--not to mention amps, preamps, speakers, etc.--that cost thousands less and still deliver excellent sound.
But no one "needs" a Ferrari F430, nor does anyone "need" to go from zero to 60 in 3.9 seconds. Still, if you afford it, why the heck shouldn't you? Not only do you get major bragging rights, it's also a freaking blast.
Lenovo ThinkPad Z60m laptop review by PC Magazine
Lenovo ThinkPad Z60m laptop review by PC Magazine Lenovo ThinkPad Z60m
REVIEW DATE: 11.14.05
BOTTOM LINE:
Though the widescreen display and titanium cover of the Lenovo ThinkPad Z60m aren't typical of a ThinkPad design, the quality, features—and keyboard—remain pure ThinkPad.
PROS:
Great performance. Terrific battery life. Titanium cover.
CONS:
Heavy.
COMPANY:
Lenovo
SPEC DATA
Price: $2,299.00 Direct
Type: Business, General Purpose
Operating System: MS Windows XP Professional
Processor Name: Intel Pentium M 760
Processor Speed: 2 GHz
RAM: 1024 MB
Hard Drive Capacity: 100 GB
Graphics: ATI Mobility Radeon X600
Primary Optical Drive: DVD+/-RW (Plus Minus)
Wireless: 802.11a/g
Screen Size: 15.4 inches
Screen Size Type: widescreen
System Weight: 7.1 lbs
EDITOR RATING:
By Cisco Cheng
The latest laptop from Lenovo, the Lenovo ThinkPad Z60m ($2,299 direct) is a far cry from the portable matte-black boxes business users are accustomed to. It's a hefty desktop replacement covered in titanium, with a 15.4-inch widescreen and a bulky weight of 7.1 pounds. The Z60m is a sturdy, impressive system—though not exactly road material.
Our test system was configured with a 2.0-GHz Pentium M 760 and 1GB of RAM, which boosted its scores on our performance tests. And a nine-cell battery gave it an impressive score on MobileMark 2005, coming in at 6 hours 3 minutes of battery life. For those who work with 3D applications, the Z60m has ATI Mobility Radeon X600 discrete graphics. Its gaming scores were above average for a notebook, so believe it or not, gaming is possible on this ThinkPad. (For more testing results check out the Lenovo's ThinkPad Z60m's benchmark chart.)
If the titanium cover is too shocking, you can opt for the traditional matte-black finish. The 15.4-inch widescreen has plenty of room for writing and viewing Web pages. Even though the "m" in Z60m stands for multimedia, the antiglare screen is more suitable for work than for watching DVDs. The transreflective screen found on the HP Pavilion dv4000 is better suited for contrasting images, such as high-resolution photos and DVD-quality videos. Not forgetting the security needs of business users, Lenovo builds in a fingerprint reader and includes TPM (Trusted Platform Module).
* Desktops and Notebooks for Every Budget
You can configure the Z60m with an integrated EV-DO antenna, but our review unit didn't come with one. The antenna is better suited for a smaller system that is likely to be carried out of the office more often, like the Lenovo ThinkPad Z60t. We tested the EV-DO on that system, and the throughput rates were very acceptable.
The keyboard continues to live up to the ThinkPad moniker, and a newly added Microsoft Windows key gives users access to all the shortcuts available in Windows applications. Like the smaller Z60t, the Z60m comes with three USB ports, a FireWire port, and a rarely seen S-Video port. The 3-in-1 card reader is a first for a ThinkPad; it accepts SD, MS, and MS Pro formats.
The ThinkVantage suite, included on all ThinkPads, has gone through a major makeover recently. With just a press of the Blue ThinkVantage button, the ThinkVantage Productivity Center pops up. You can launch maintenance tasks, manage your connections, back up your system, and more. A utility called Rejuvenation lets you restore your system while preserving vital settings like printer drivers, connectivity settings, My Favorites, and even files in your "My Documents" folder. The Away Manager gives the user more control over antivirus software and Windows utilities. Away Manager operates in conjunction with Whisper mode, which lets you maximize performance on selected tasks without affecting other applications.
Though we don't recommend commuting daily with the Lenovo ThinkPad Z60m, it's a very formidable desktop replacement notebook for your every business need—and for having a bit of fun.
Thursday, December 15, 2005
Forbes.com - Magazine Article
Forbes.com - Magazine ArticleWhere Not To Put Your Money In Tech For 2006
David Ng, 12.15.05, 6:00 AM ET
As shares of Google and Apple Computer reach for infinity and beyond, it's high time to take a look at some technology stocks whose futures appear somewhat less stellar.
By many accounts, 2006 will be rotten for Solectron (nyse: SLR - news - people ), an electronics-manufacturing-services company, as well as a host of chip-related companies, including Lattice Semiconductor (nasdaq: LSCC - news - people ), Novellus Systems (nasdaq: NVLS - news - people ), Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates (nasdaq: VSEA - news - people ) and Applied Materials (nasdaq: AMAT - news - people ).
Analysts are telling investors to avoid digital-video recording company TiVo (nasdaq: TIVO - news - people ) and the Chinese Internet portal Baidu (nasdaq: BIDU - news - people ). Also set to underperform are business applications providers Agile Software (nasdaq: AGIL - news - people ) and Mercury Interactive (nasdaq: MERGE - news - people ).
Of course, there's no guarantee that these stocks will perform as predicted. Just don't say we didn't warn you.
David Ng, 12.15.05, 6:00 AM ET
As shares of Google and Apple Computer reach for infinity and beyond, it's high time to take a look at some technology stocks whose futures appear somewhat less stellar.
By many accounts, 2006 will be rotten for Solectron (nyse: SLR - news - people ), an electronics-manufacturing-services company, as well as a host of chip-related companies, including Lattice Semiconductor (nasdaq: LSCC - news - people ), Novellus Systems (nasdaq: NVLS - news - people ), Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates (nasdaq: VSEA - news - people ) and Applied Materials (nasdaq: AMAT - news - people ).
Analysts are telling investors to avoid digital-video recording company TiVo (nasdaq: TIVO - news - people ) and the Chinese Internet portal Baidu (nasdaq: BIDU - news - people ). Also set to underperform are business applications providers Agile Software (nasdaq: AGIL - news - people ) and Mercury Interactive (nasdaq: MERGE - news - people ).
Of course, there's no guarantee that these stocks will perform as predicted. Just don't say we didn't warn you.
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
South Korea Standardizes Cell Phone Connectors (MobileBurn)
South Korea Standardizes Cell Phone Connectors (MobileBurn)South Korea Standardizes Cell Phone Connectors
News by Brad Kellett on Wednesday December 14, 2005.
Note: Sponsored advertising links, if any, are in green.
Click Here
The three mobile service providers in South Korea - SK Telecom, KTF, and LG Telecom - have agreed on a new standardized data/charge port that will be required on all new handsets released in the country.
While the traditional argument is that having different ports across different brand cell phones will promote sales of accessories, the three carriers rationalize their decision by saying that standardized connectors will allow development of more value-added services and actually increase sales of accessories. Regardless of the marketing impacts, this is definitely a boon for consumers, as they will no longer have to buy all new accessories when upgrading handsets.
The three carriers have signed an MOU (Memorandum of Understanding), though a deadline for standardization has not been announced.
News by Brad Kellett on Wednesday December 14, 2005.
Note: Sponsored advertising links, if any, are in green.
Click Here
The three mobile service providers in South Korea - SK Telecom, KTF, and LG Telecom - have agreed on a new standardized data/charge port that will be required on all new handsets released in the country.
While the traditional argument is that having different ports across different brand cell phones will promote sales of accessories, the three carriers rationalize their decision by saying that standardized connectors will allow development of more value-added services and actually increase sales of accessories. Regardless of the marketing impacts, this is definitely a boon for consumers, as they will no longer have to buy all new accessories when upgrading handsets.
The three carriers have signed an MOU (Memorandum of Understanding), though a deadline for standardization has not been announced.
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
First Look: New Windows Mobile 5.0 Pocket PCs and Smartphones! :: Buyers Guide 2006
First Look: New Windows Mobile 5.0 Pocket PCs and Smartphones! :: Buyers Guide 2006T-Mobile SDA II Smartphone
T-Mobile's new SDA II is a Smartphone with a a 195 MHz processor and with 64 MBs of RAM and 64 MBs of flash ROM memory. This device has four notable features: A QVGA screen, an integrated 1.3 megapixel camera, built-in Wi-Fi, and 4 large buttons to control music playback.
The SDA II's 320x240 pixel, 65K color display measures 2.4 inches diagonally, just slightly larger than the screens on earlier models. I was quite impressed with the screen's sharp and crisp display of text and graphics; excellent for watching movies and album cover artwork while listening to music.
The SDA II has exciting features, including a very readable QVGA screen and build-in Wi-Fi: features not normally found in a Smartphone.
The addition of a high resolution camera is another welcomed advancement over other current Smartphones, which have lower-resolution VGA cameras. At 1.3 megapixels, it has 4 times more resolution and takes much better pictures. The file size of the image is larger and e-mailing them to friends will take more resources, but they provide a more satisfying end result. I took some impressive pictures with this camera in low-light conditions-by far the best images I've taken with any embedded camera I've tested.
The camera is also capable of capable of recording movies with sound that can be sent via MMS (Multimedia Messaging Service) or Outlook e-mail. There are three file formats that the video can be encoded in: Motion-JPEG AVI (playable using Windows Media Player), MPEG-4, and H2.63 (playable using Quicktime players). You can use AVI video format and Outlook to e-mail a video to a friend with a Windows Desktop computer. However the AVI file is much larger than files saved in the MPEG-4 or H2.63 formats. If you are sending videos from phone to phone via MMS it's best to use MPEG-4 or H2.63 because these formats are supported by most video phones on the market today.
The mini-SD card is stored underneath the 1,150 mAh battery. next to the SIM card slot. I was disappointed in the layout because with a music device it's nice to have easy access to change the memory cards. That said, it's still a "Plays for Sure" device and you can always re-sync with your desktop to change music frequently.
One of the things that are immediately noticeable on the MDA II is the four large round buttons on the front panel, below the display. Three are used for music playback (play/pause, skip/next, and skip/previous) and one button that looks like the letter "T" in the form of an "@" sign that launches Pocket Internet Explorer and connects the device to the T-Mobile site on the Internet. The three music buttons are not very readable and I had difficulty making out the symbols. I hope they paint the raised symbols black on the final version of the device, to make them readable.
Above the round buttons and immediately below the display are four small rectangular buttons used for menu navigation. The far left and right buttons activate the soft keys; middle left is the Home button, and middle right is the Back These buttons are very tiny and are difficult to use. I found myself using mini joystick for most of my navigation when I could. However, the left and right soft buttons still had to be used to activate menus. Since I use the mini-joystick to control music anyway, I think it would be better if the rectangular buttons were larger and the music buttons smaller. I also found the dialing keypad a bit difficult to use because the buttons are so small. I had to use my finger nail to press the keys and my fingers sometimes covered two keys at the same time. This slowed down entering text via predictive T9 text input. It would actually be better if the rectangular buttons were switched with the round buttons. This way it would be much easier to navigate and since the music buttons are used that much anyways. Even so, I also used the mini joystick to control music playback was easier to use than the buttons.
I was impressed with the MDA II's built-in connectivity options. With Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and EDGE/GSM/GPRS, all the bases are covered. Windows Mobile 5.0 provides integrated support for Wi-Fi, and this is the first Smartphone I've see with Wi-Fi built in. It's a much-welcomed feature, especially for those who have wireless networks at work or home.
The MDA II's good features far outweighed some of the minor issues I had with the buttons. The screen, connectivity, camera, and strong audio output make this a very desirable phone!
Bottom line:
The MDA II Music has exciting features, including a very readable QVGA screen and built-in Wi-Fi-features not normally found in a Smartphone. The quality of the images the camera took impressive me. If you don't mind the smaller menu navigation buttons, this is an excellent choice device.
These are the first Windows Mobile 5.0 devices we've gotten to test. If the features they included and the quality they display are any indication, we can look forward to a bright Windows Mobile future as more innovative devices become available.
HTC: Premier designer and developer of Windows Mobile devices
HTC is the Taiwanese company that works with HP, Dell, Audiovox, and other vendors to design and manufacturer most of the Windows Mobile devices available today. HTC doesn't sell devices directly to the consumer.
We list the HTC Universal in this review because we tested a device we got from HTC through Microsoft, before any vendor announcements had been made. As we went to press with this issue, branded versions of the Universal were available through T-Mobile (MDA Pro) and I-mate (JASJAR). We expect that the device will be offered by other vendors as well.
The PPC-6700 is Sprint's version of a different HTC device, the "Apache." Sprint is the first U.S. wireless carrier to introduce the device, but we expect it to be offered by other vendors.
HTC also had a hand in the design and manufacture of the other two devices in this review: the Axim X51v and the iPAQ rx1950. However, Dell and HP have exclusives on these devices: you won't see them with another vendor's brand name on them.
A Cautionary Note Concerning Windows Mobile 5.0
We are an enthusiast magazine and as such like to share the excitement and vision of Windows Mobile computing. However, please take note. As we complete this Buyers Guide, Windows Mobile 5.0 devices are just beginning to ship.
Windows Mobile 5.0 is a major upgrade, several years in the making. Based on the nature of software in general, and Microsoft's track record in particular, you should proceed with caution before purchasing a Windows Mobile 5.0 device. With most new and complex high-tech products, bugs, unanticipated problems, and "gotchas" are discovered. Third-party software that worked on your current Pocket PCs and Smartphones should work on Windows Mobile 5.0 devices, but there is always the possibility that it won't until the vendor updates it.If you are a cautious sort, wait. Check out online forums and read about what Windows Mobile 5.0 users are saying. Wait for our next issues' reviews of new devices and reports of existing problems and workarounds. On the other hand, if you like being in the mobile computing forefront and enjoy having the latest and greatest, then go ahead, upgrade your iPAQ or Dell, or purchase a new Windows Mobile 5.0 device. As fixes and minor updates to the software become available, you should be able to get them for free, from your device manufacturer. (Hal Goldstein)
Monday, December 12, 2005
BBC NEWS | Business | China's rich fuel mobile revolution
BBC NEWS | Business | China's rich fuel mobile revolution China's rich fuel mobile revolution
By Charlotte Windle
BBC Shanghai business reporter
University student, Ma Dingming, has just purchased his second mobile phone this year.
The phone, made by Taiwanese company Dopod, cost him $848. The phone he bought earlier in the year cost him $867.
"I've bought the new phone because it's the latest model," he says.
"It is really more of a PDA so it has a high CPU frequency and larger RAM than your average phone and a Microsoft operating system that enables me to take notes, surf the internet and log onto MSN chat rooms."
Ma financed the purchase of the two phones with his monthly allowance, as well as with money received from relatives last Chinese New Year, when it is common to give children and young people "hong bao" - envelopes filled with cash - as part of the festivities.
Flexible sales methods
China's increasingly wealthy middle classes and tech savvy youngsters are the main reasons why companies, including Nokia and Motorola, have invested billions of dollars in establishing manufacturing and distribution networks across the Chinese mainland.
In 2004, the Chinese purchased 92 million mobile phones, an increase of 15.8% over 2003, making China the largest mobile phone market in the world.
The International Data Corporation forecasts that the market for mobile handsets will continue to grow, with more than 400 million handsets sold between now and 2009.
In the first half of 2005, the top five brands on the mainland were Nokia, Motorola and Samsung, followed by local companies Ningbo Bird, TCL, Konka, and Lenovo.
But, perhaps surprisingly, the market share held by China's domestic producers is falling, down from 34% at the beginning of the year to 30% at the end of the third quarter.
Furthermore, Lenovo's mobile phone division is the only domestic handset maker is profitable so far this year.
"The main reason for the success of foreign companies is their success in developing more flexible ways of selling their handsets," according to Alan Hsieh, managing director of International Data Corporation China.
Third generation mobiles
Domestic brands insist on selling through their own distribution channels.
They have their own branches in every province in China, where they employ thousands of salespeople who then sell to retailers.
Nokia and Motorola, on the other hand, use individual agents who then sell to retailers.
This agent system cuts costs and enables them to reach more effectively into smaller cities in more remote areas.
The government has not interfered with this shift in favour of foreign handset makers.
It is, however, keen to push China's home-grown intellectual property in the field of mobile communications, in particular its home-grown 3G, or third generation mobile standard known as TD-SCDMA.
The standard is still being tested, which is why China has been slow to divide up its 3G licenses.
New standards
The Chinese government must decide whether to push ahead with TD-SCDMA which is not commercially proven but whose developers claim will use only a fifth of the bandwidth of the next best alternative, the European standard WCDMA.
It seems unlikely that China will opt for the American standard, known as CDMA 2000, given that its developer, Qualcomm, levies a hefty charge for its use.
Whatever China decides, it will have to make the decision soon.
"The government will act no later than the second quarter of 2006," says Steven Qin, business planning director for Shanghai-based Panasonic partner Cosmobic Technology.
"After all, the network needs to be fully operational in time for the 2008 Olympic Games."
The most likely outcome is that the European standard, W-CDMA, will be adopted by the state-owned China mobile, which operates 70% of China's mobile phones.
However, it seems likely that at least one of China Mobile's 4 competitors will be forced to adopt China's home-grown standard TD-SCDMA.
If the standard proves successful, China hopes to export TD-SCDMA to other developing markets.
Story from BBC NEWS:
By Charlotte Windle
BBC Shanghai business reporter
University student, Ma Dingming, has just purchased his second mobile phone this year.
The phone, made by Taiwanese company Dopod, cost him $848. The phone he bought earlier in the year cost him $867.
"I've bought the new phone because it's the latest model," he says.
"It is really more of a PDA so it has a high CPU frequency and larger RAM than your average phone and a Microsoft operating system that enables me to take notes, surf the internet and log onto MSN chat rooms."
Ma financed the purchase of the two phones with his monthly allowance, as well as with money received from relatives last Chinese New Year, when it is common to give children and young people "hong bao" - envelopes filled with cash - as part of the festivities.
Flexible sales methods
China's increasingly wealthy middle classes and tech savvy youngsters are the main reasons why companies, including Nokia and Motorola, have invested billions of dollars in establishing manufacturing and distribution networks across the Chinese mainland.
In 2004, the Chinese purchased 92 million mobile phones, an increase of 15.8% over 2003, making China the largest mobile phone market in the world.
The International Data Corporation forecasts that the market for mobile handsets will continue to grow, with more than 400 million handsets sold between now and 2009.
In the first half of 2005, the top five brands on the mainland were Nokia, Motorola and Samsung, followed by local companies Ningbo Bird, TCL, Konka, and Lenovo.
But, perhaps surprisingly, the market share held by China's domestic producers is falling, down from 34% at the beginning of the year to 30% at the end of the third quarter.
Furthermore, Lenovo's mobile phone division is the only domestic handset maker is profitable so far this year.
"The main reason for the success of foreign companies is their success in developing more flexible ways of selling their handsets," according to Alan Hsieh, managing director of International Data Corporation China.
Third generation mobiles
Domestic brands insist on selling through their own distribution channels.
They have their own branches in every province in China, where they employ thousands of salespeople who then sell to retailers.
Nokia and Motorola, on the other hand, use individual agents who then sell to retailers.
This agent system cuts costs and enables them to reach more effectively into smaller cities in more remote areas.
The government has not interfered with this shift in favour of foreign handset makers.
It is, however, keen to push China's home-grown intellectual property in the field of mobile communications, in particular its home-grown 3G, or third generation mobile standard known as TD-SCDMA.
The standard is still being tested, which is why China has been slow to divide up its 3G licenses.
New standards
The Chinese government must decide whether to push ahead with TD-SCDMA which is not commercially proven but whose developers claim will use only a fifth of the bandwidth of the next best alternative, the European standard WCDMA.
It seems unlikely that China will opt for the American standard, known as CDMA 2000, given that its developer, Qualcomm, levies a hefty charge for its use.
Whatever China decides, it will have to make the decision soon.
"The government will act no later than the second quarter of 2006," says Steven Qin, business planning director for Shanghai-based Panasonic partner Cosmobic Technology.
"After all, the network needs to be fully operational in time for the 2008 Olympic Games."
The most likely outcome is that the European standard, W-CDMA, will be adopted by the state-owned China mobile, which operates 70% of China's mobile phones.
However, it seems likely that at least one of China Mobile's 4 competitors will be forced to adopt China's home-grown standard TD-SCDMA.
If the standard proves successful, China hopes to export TD-SCDMA to other developing markets.
Story from BBC NEWS:
Sunday, December 11, 2005
Selecting a new Windows Mobile device
Selecting a new Windows Mobile device
Articles : Windows Mobile, posted 10-DEC-2005 00:03, by Darryl Burling
I’ve been a fan of HTCs devices for a while now – I’ve used a couple of their previous generation of phones and they’ve performed well and have been very hardy. I’ve been watching the new generation to see what it offers and have been thinking of upgrading to a new Windows Mobile 5 device. So when I had the opportunity recently to have a trial run with four new devices now available in New Zealand and running Windows Mobile 5 I thought I might write a buyers guide of sorts highlighting the points that I found were key to making the decision for me.
The four devices I’ve used in the last few weeks are the i-mate branded Jasjar, K-Jam, and Smartphone SP5 and the Telecom branded Apache. Here is an overview of each one (links go to our Geekzone Smart Devices Database where you will find more information and other names for these devices):
i-mate Jasjar
Device Type: Pocket PC Phone Edition
Form factor: Clamshell
Keyboard: QWERTY with Number row
Processor: 520MHz Bulverde
Screen Resolution: VGA – 640x480
Wireless: GPRS/GSM/UMTS (3G), 802.11b WiFi, Bluetooth
i-mate k-jam
Device Type: Pocket PC Phone Edition
Form factor: Pocket PC with sliding keyboard
Keyboard: QWERTY (no number row)
Processor: 200MHz OMAP
Screen Resolution: QVGA – 320x240
Wireless: GPRS/EDGE/GSM, 802.11b WiFi, Bluetooth
i-mate Smartphone SP5
Device Type: Smartphone
Form factor: Candybar
Keyboard: Numeric/T9
Processor: 200MHz OMAP
Screen Resolution: QVGA – 320x240
Wireless: GPRS/GSM, 802.11b WiFi, Bluetooth
Telecom Apache
Device Type: Pocket PC Phone Edition
Form factor: Pocket PC with sliding keyboard
Keyboard: QWERTY (no number row)
Processor: 416MHz Bulverde
Screen Resolutionv: QVGA – 320x240
Wireless: CDMA/EVDO (3G), 802.11b WiFi, Bluetooth
It’s probably worth noting here that these devices run different versions of Windows Mobile 5 (a point I came across fairly early in the process). The Jasjar and the Apache both run build 14354 while the K-Jam and SP5 run build 14402. Other than some minor functional differences in the start menu, what the differences are between the two versions I don’t know. From my experience the Jasjar was the least stable of the devices - not that they were unstable devices, but that I experienced a couple of issues on the Jasjar I didn’t experience on the others. FWIW the Apache was more stable than the Jasjar which leads me to think that the Jasjar’s instability issues (few that they were) were not related to the OS as much as the device itself.
To try and make this as even as possible I’m going to have three types of notes on each device. The notes are based on a decision making process rather than just raw stats, so they’ll be a little more subjective than you might find them.
You may have a different opinion on many of these things depending on your usage. I’m after a device primarily for data, but also for a phone – and I only want to carry a single device.
So here goes!
i-mate Jasjar
There were a few things that I really liked about the Jasjar. I loved the keyboard – not that it was better or worse than the other keyboards, but it was certainly better than the PDA2K. The screen is really nice. It displays text clearly and has lots of room for text, and it displays pictures well. It also has UMTS (3G) support which means high speed WAN connectivity (where available). It has an SD Card slot – and is the only device out of all the ones I evaluated here that did – which means it has higher storage capacities. The Jasjar also has a 3.5mm headphone jack for listening to music, etc using whatever headphones you like. The stylus was really good too.
There were also a couple of things I didn’t like about the Jasjar. It was big - really big. If you have to hold the thing up to your head for a phone call you will probably get tired of holding after a while. But seriously – you’ll need a Bluetooth headset if you plan on using it as a phone. I found that the keyboard was quite large compared to the other devices too. When using it I found that I needed to put the screen flat and then hold the device at a specific angle to be able to reach the keys in the middle of the keyboard with my thumbs – if you have smaller hands you’ll need to put the device down or do wrist gymnastics to reach the center of the keyboard. Finally the Jasjar was really hard to do anything with if you only want to use one hand. Even the simplest task such as checking the time is impossible one handed and the absence of buttons when the device is in a tablet form factor also reduces your ability to work with it one handed.
i-mate k-jam
This device seems to have most of the good features of the Jasjar, but in a fraction of the size. The k-jam is small. It’s the same size as the Jam, with just a little more depth (actually about 5mm more – which is arguably not just a little). The extra depth is to account for the slide out keyboard, which is my second like. The size of the keyboard was also a big plus – its smaller than the Jasjar, but bigger than the PDA2K. In fact as a thumbboard – I’d say its probably about the perfect size – big enough for big thumbs, but small enough for people with smaller hands to manage.
Things I don’t like about the K-Jam: I loathe the stylus. I wasn’t a fan of the stylus on the Jam, but this is worse – a short telescopic stylus would be OK if it always extended when you pulled it out, but it doesn’t and you need to use a second hand to extend it or use the 2cm long closed down version which is frustrating. Fortunately – with a keyboard you almost never need the stylus. The second thing I would like to see more of on the k-jam would be more buttons. It would be nice to have an OK button - although I mapped the IE button to OK and the mail button to start which helped. I also preferred the numbers to be separate keys (ala Jasjar) rather than shared. As with most phones, the k-jam sports a tiny 2.5mm headphone jack – meaning restricted headphone selections. Finally, if you’ve got an investment in SD cards, you will need to drop that for miniSD cards for this device – which for the moment means you are limited to 1Gb miniSD cards (bigger cards are on the horizon though).
i-mate SP5
The SP5 is the successor to the SP3/SP3i phones that were running Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition. The SP5 is a candybar phone first, but with the smart capabilities of the Windows Mobile range. Thus you can install applications on it, surf the internet, synchronise PIM with an Exchange Server and enter data on it. The SP5 includes two key new features in addition to Windows Mobile 5 that were not in previous Smartphones – WiFi support and a very nice QVGA screen. The screen on this device is gorgeous – brilliant colour, high resolution and very crisp edges.
One of the reasons I’ve not owned a candy bar phone since converged Pocket PC Phones came out is that data entry on these devices is really hard without a decent keyboard or touch screen. This hasn’t changed (although it might with the Motorola Q). The other issue with the smartphone platform is the lack of mobile office applications and their viability. This is really a killer for me.
As something to consider, I found that Wi-Fi was not really a big benefit – the device is really too small to seriously use for browsing the internet – and the T9 keyboard is just too slow and cumbersome to work with for more than simple data/URL address entry. This situation is exacerbated by issues such as having to enter WEP keys and similar niggly issues.
Having said all of this – this is by far the nicest smartphone I’ve ever used.
Telecom Apache
The apache shares many of the nice features of the k-jam. It’s the same size, same keyboard size (keys are the same as the Jasjar though), similar camera, screen and form factor, however, it has some unique things about it too. It has better buttons than the k-jam – including an OK button. In addition the keyboard has slightly larger keys, which many people will like. It also has CDMA EVDO support meaning stupidly fast WAN speeds (easily eclipsing the UMTS support of the Jasjar), in addition to Wi-Fi – in fact it almost negates the need for WiFi. The camera on the Apache also has a macro mode which some may like.
There are two things that I find negative about the Apache. It has an aerial – and it’s big and ugly and not aesthetically pleasing. The second problem with the apache (for me anyway) is that it functions on another network – meaning a change of phone numbers for me (again). Neither of these are insurmountable issues and when you consider the CDMA EVDO support as well as the improved button layout support, it weighs in at much the same place (YMMV).
Conclusion
So having been through all these – the issues for me came down to size and keyboard support. In short this translates to practicality.
In the end after using each one of these devices as my only device for a short amount of time (between a couple of days and a week) I decided to get an i-mate k-jam.
The Apache was knocked out as work pays the bill and they weren’t keen on switching networks (yet).
The 3G support and the screen of the Jasjar was tempting, but the trade off of size is a big price to pay for the luxury of a nice screen.
3G support is a nice to have, but I don’t need video calling and much of my data is consumed in email or RSS for which GPRS support is fine. For the times when I want to do more, there are plenty of Wi-Fi networks around, and GPRS is an easy fallback. If you happen to be in an area where there is EDGE support – the i-k-jam radio stack supports this – talk to your local provider about access to these networks.
The SP5 was a really nice phone, but just too hard to work with for more than reading email on a consistent basis.
If you are happy to use two devices, you might consider a SP5 and the Jasjar as a great combination. I used these devices together for a couple of days and the small size of the SP5 is a great compliment to the Jasjars capabilities. However, if you want to use two devices and want to use these two together you probably have too much money or work for a telco. Between the two of them you’d be paying NZ$2500 – or as much as a really good laptop.
My conclusion from my time with these devices is that they are all really good devices and serve a variety of needs really well. Take your time to select one though - they are not cheap.
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