The Gadgets Page

September 28, 2007

Tracking Twitter

Filed under: PDAs and Phones,Software — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

If Twitter’s unreliability hasn’t worn you down, you’ll be happy to know that they have added a new feature called tracking:

You can follow friends on your phone through Twitter, but what about concepts? What if you wanted an update anytime anyone mentioned your name, your favorite band, “NYC,” “earthquake,” or “Steve Jobs?” In real-time? What if you were attending an event and wanted to know who else was there?

If anyone in the public timeline mentions the words “Steve Jobs,” you can have their tweets sent to you by tracking those words.

Turn on tracking: track Steve Jobs
Turn off tracking: untrack Steve Jobs

You can track many things at once. To turn off one, use the untrack feature, to turn them all off:

Turn off all tracked concepts: track off
Get a list of all tracked concepts: track

I am racking my brain to think of a topic that I’m willing to let any moron interrupt my day with and I haven’t been able to think of one. Quit adding features, Twitter, and get the IM and SMS to deliver messages in order and within an hour. Or deliver them at all. I’m sick of missing out on half of everything. We’re trying to have a conversation here.

Via: Twitter / Daniel Johnson, Jr.: Twitter tracking enabled Thanks, Daniel!


For more information about Twitter:

September 24, 2007

The Tiny Fully Functional PC: Sony UX 390N

Filed under: Laptops,PDAs and Phones,Reviews — Matthew Strebe @ 5:00 am

Sony VAIO VGN-UX390N 4.5I’ve been a fan of tiny full sized computers for a long time, and I’ve had one of just about every generation of hand held computing device that has ever come along. I bought all those devices because I’d hoped that one of them would actually be useful. There’s always a show-stopping problem: The handwriting recognition can’t be relied upon and there is no keyboard, or the computer is too large, or the keyboard is external and a hassle to carry along and hook up. Also, battery life is never sufficient to spend a day on the road.

It only takes one of these problems to make a small form factor computer useless. Unless it reaches the reliability of a cell phone, I can’t risk not having access to my e-mail, calendar, and tasks.

PDAs have never really worked for me because they can’t carry all the information I need, and nobody has ever really truly solved the syncing problem. PDAs don’t have “lite” version of Visio to jot down a quick network diagram, for example. Furthermore, no PIM on the planet comes close to Microsoft Outlook in organizational functionality. My entire “Getting Things Done” methodology is based on customizations I’ve made to Outlook, and in my old age I insist that computers do what they’re for: Make my life, the way I want to live it, easier.

So when I needed a new PC to run my “Getting Things Done” methodology that I’ve implemented with customizations to Microsoft Outlook, I knew that neither a PDA nor Apple’s forthcoming iPhone would actually work for me—I’ve already attempted to get my system working on both Apple’s set of applications and the major open source apps because I don’t like having a PC just for Outlook. Syncing just doesn’t move all the information I use, and terminaling into a desktop PC from the road is too much hassle. I just want to run outlook on a computer that I can break out in a meeting to record my commitments on.

So I’ve had my eye on the Sony UX 390 for a while. I didn’t buy earlier because I couldn’t swallow the enormous price tag and I was worried about hard disk reliability in a unit I was all but certain to drop. But recent experiences have shown me that it costs more to be without my data than a one time $2500 price tag, so I took the plunge—warily, and at Fry’s where I knew I could return it within 15 days if it wasn’t going to do the job.

Out Of the Box Experience – OOBE

Microsoft has defined an “Out Of the Box Experience” manager for Vista that is supposed to make you feel a rush of serotonin and cause you to pair bond to the computer like a duckling to its mother. The initiative is lovingly referred to as “OOBE”. So, since it apparently matters enough to have an initiative and an acronym, I’ll talk about the OOBE for the UX 390.

Firstly, the initial boot and setup on the device takes about 30 minutes. Once completely installed, you are greeted with the Vista OOBE manager, whose job it is to help you get connected to the Internet and then present the wide array of crapware that comes pre-installed on the computer. There are about fifteen overlapping dialog boxes vying for your initial attention, and six or seven notification area cartoon dialogs.

The amount of crapware in the OOBE manager made me suspicious. I checked the size of the C: drive, and astonishingly, 75% (not exaggerating) of the C: drive was full. Furthermore, the C: drive was only 23GB in size, not the 32GB of precious flash memory I was sure I’d paid for. A visit to the logical disk manager confirmed my suspicion: All that pre-installed crapware required a hefty 8GB restore partition.

Normally, you’d just leave a recovery partition in place. What’s 8GB on a 200GB disk anyway, right? Oh, wait. This is a 32GB disk. And it’s a solid-state disk that I paid $600 extra for. The customer literally must take that partition off because there’s really no room for Vista, Sony’s requisite management apps, Office 2007, and anything of yours if you don’t. Leaving it in place isn’t an option irrespective of the cost or waste.

Sony placed that recovery partition there so that they wouldn’t have to spend $1 to include recovery discs. If you do the math, presuming that the Flash disk costs $600 (the price difference between this computer and its HDD based sibling), that’s $160 of your money so that Sony doesn’t have to spend $1. Thanks, Sony!

In sum, it took me 4 hours to burn my own recovery DVDs, remove the recovery partition (1.5GB of it was mandatory, and remains there still), and restore from DVD You can’t de-select any of the crapware during installation either, so you’ll waste time both re-installing it and subsequently removing it.

The initial boot and gauntlet of EULAs, web page redirections to partner sites, etc. takes an hour to slog through, then it took another 3 hours to remove all the crapware, and another 3 hours to patch it up to date an apply the Sony patches for the crap I hadn’t removed. All told, it took me a solid 12 hours before I could do anything with the device.

So on a scale of 1 to 10, the OOBE on this device is about a -5, all thanks to crapware. The only way it could have been worse would be if the device had actually been broken.

If the recovery partition were a reasonable 1.5GB in the first place, I wouldn’t have bothered with any of this. Compare that to the 30 minutes it took from first boot until my MacBook Pro had copied over all my data and applications from my old PowerBook and was up and useful. Its no wonder Apple is schooling Microsoft and Sony.

Beyond the OOBE

So the day after you buy it is when the fun begins. The first cool thing you’ll do is enroll your fingerprints in the fingerprint security manager for logging in. There’s two types of biometric fingerprint security: Actually secure, and Kid Sister secure. Actually secure fingerprint sensors do live finger detection that can’t be fooled by a Jello mold of your finger (this does) and stores your prints in the device firmware, exchanging only salted hashes with the operating system rather than storing the hash of your fingerprints on the hard disk where they can be compromised. Unfortunately, the sensor on the UX 390 doesn’t do that second part. So what this means is that it’ll keep thieves and relatives out of your data, but not the government.

Irrespective, it’s way easier than typing a password for logging on and just as secure, so it’s a big plus on a computer where you want to minimize use of the keyboard. Enrolling fingerprints is easy and smooth. It’s a slick feature, especially for a computer whose keyboard is painfully small by necessity and which won’t always be exposed to accept passwords.

The device has Bluetooth, WiFi, and Cingular EDGE network built in. EDGE is sort of “2.5G” in terms of network speed: Faster than 2G, but nowhere near the speed of the 3G Verizon or Spring EvDO networks. In my tests, the device does between 144 and 200kbps, which is basically 1/3 the speed of my EvDO card. You can call Sony tech support and get them to unlock the device for you so you can put a T-Mobile SmartCard in it to get on their much less expensive EDGE network, which I strongly recommend if you live in an area with good T-Mobile coverage because it’s much cheaper for unlimited data. EDGE seems to do much better with connections while moving than EvDO, however—at full freeway speed it kept up without disconnecting all over Metro San Diego.

Another unfortunate problem is Cingular’s crappy software. While it works just fine, the “Power Manager” provided by Cingular sucks up 15% of the devices CPU power whether the radio is in use or not, keeping the fan running constantly (which I’m sure obviates any benefit derived by the process’s name). Killing the process will let the computer idle down so the fan can stop running. I used Windows Defender to prevent Sony’s garbage from running and just wrote some batch scripts I keep in the start menu to enable the WWAN radio when I need it.

The screen is beautiful, but the resolution of the screen is so high and size so small that people whose presbyopia has set in should not even consider this computer. I love the resolution, but my older friends are unable to see anything on it without reading glasses.

The touch screen is very accurate, and quite useful. Unfortunately, Microsoft hasn’t released the Vista version of Tablet PC, so you have to dig through some configuration panels to enable little niceties like tap-and-hold being used for right-click. Why this feature isn’t built into all versions of Windows is beyond me. Otherwise, the computer works just fine as a pure tablet, and the handwriting recognition is the best I’ve ever seen, interpreting my chicken scratches correctly about 90% of the time (not quite enough, but still the best ever).

Most importantly, the screen slides up to reveal the world’s first entire PC keyboard implemented as a thumb board. It works amazingly well, but you will get hand cramps trying to write the great American Novel on it. It’s for URLs and email replies, which it works perfectly well for that, and the blue backlight makes it useful at night.

The computer’s 1.5GHz Core-Mono CPU isn’t enough power to run Vista in its default configuration. You’ll notice near continuous disk access when you boot, and booting is slow. Disabling Vista’s desktop search service and file transfer compression service eliminates these problems, dramatically increasing the overall speed of the computer. I also disabled Windows Restore to improve performance and free up disk space. Properly tuned, the computer runs Vista just fine.

Docking the UX-390 turns it into a first-class desktop computer. You will want to disable the small screen so you have a bigger desktop (The Intel video adapter is weak, and won’t let you increase the resolution when driving both screens simultaneously). Additional docks are available of the shelf at the Sony store—I put one at the office and at home so I can just carry the computer between locations. The other accessory you’ll want to buy is the six-hour extended battery. With it, you can work all day without worrying about battery life. Without it, the computer will give up on you about mid-afternoon.

Once you’ve slogged through the OOBE, the Sony UX-390 is far and away the best PDA ever built. It’s small enough to wear on your belt if you don’t mind looking geeky. It’s even a reasonable desktop computer when you dock it. It’s expensive, but a worthwhile investment for people who need a real computer with them on the go.

September 17, 2007

High-Speed Internet on Airplanes

Filed under: Laptops,PDAs and Phones — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

The FCC has approved the use of cell phones and high-speed Internet on airplanes.

FCC approval and actual ability are two different things, however:

The FCC already had approved a high-speed Internet service provided by Boeing Co. Called “Connexion” which uses satellites to get air passengers online. The service is offered by some international carriers, including some flights to and from the United States.

But airline industry officials say cash-strapped domestic carriers haven’t bought into the service largely because of the cost — an estimated $500,000 per jet to install the needed equipment.

The FCC on Wednesday voted to allow airlines to offer high-speed Internet connections through the frequencies used by seatback phones. It would cost roughly $100,000 to outfit a plane with the necessary equipment.

In the end, we will be the ones to pay the $100K investment. Is it really worth ten or fifteen dollars a flight to access the Internet? Depends on how long the flight is. For me, I won’t even pay the cost to access the Internet at the airport. I get online with my Treo and by-pass their overpriced wi-fi access. I’ll probably just play with my Nintendo DS for a couple of hours on the plane instead of trying to get airline Internet access to work.

What I really wish the FCC would do is finally admit that electronic devices don’t really affect the airplane and quit making me turn off my devices when we are taking off and landing.

July 31, 2007

How To Use A Rotary Phone

Filed under: PDAs and Phones,Retro Gadgets — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

When I watched this video, a wave of nostalgia hit me. It has been about five years since I’ve heard a dial tone or a busy signal. When Mike and I moved to our present house almost five years ago, we never had our phone line connected. We just use our cell phones. At first, I was worried about not having a phone line in the house, but after this long, I realize that I don’t need it.

I kind of miss the dial tone, though.

Via: adfreak: When will we see a PSA for the iPhone?

July 30, 2007

Treo Google Maps Update

Filed under: PDAs and Phones — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

Google Maps on the TreoIf you have been jealous of those cool Google Maps features on the iPhone, but you’re “stuck” with your Treo for a while, you’re in luck. All those features are available on the Treo. Andrew at Treonauts explains all the cool features and how to access them:

I installed Google Maps on my Treo, but I’ve found that it is only helpful to a point. My contacts addresses have to be exactly like the information in Google for it to be able to find their house. Additionally, Google Maps’ information is only as accurate as the phone book, so if it’s a new company or if the restaurant just went out of business, you won’t know about it.

Of course, whether you’re on the iPhone, the Treo or your computer, that is the case. Google Maps isn’t the be-all and end-all, but it is a good start if you’re in a pinch.

July 27, 2007

Does Apple Really Expect This Thing To Stay In My Ear?!

Filed under: PDAs and Phones — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

Apple iPhone Bluetooth HeadsetThe Apple iPhone Bluetooth Headset has been released into the wild and people are unboxing them and using them all over the Internet. I have absolutely NO desire to buy one, even though I know it would work with the iPhone swimmingly.

Does Apple really expect this thing to stay in my ear?!

Sure, I’ve seen those Apple commercials with people dancing and gyrating wildly with Apple earbuds. The earbuds stay in their ears because they are ANIMATED, not because they are real.

Are there that many people out there whose ear cavities can support the earbuds, much less the headset?

Am I alone in this?

Do those Apple earbuds work for the majority of the population and I’m just sporting mutant ears? I would blame my ears if there weren’t so many companies out there making different earbuds. Does Apple not care about the customers with “weird” ears?

Of course, I don’t recommend this option either…

V-Moda Vibe Duo Earbuds at Amazon.comI guess the best bet is to go with a wired headset that’s made for ears like mine like the V-Moda Vibe Duo Earbuds. They have buds that will work with my ears, a microphone for talking on the phone and they aren’t white. I see white earbuds everywhere and I just want to be the one person on the street who doesn’t have a pair of white wires handing from her head.

The worst part is that I feel a little betrayed by Apple. They went to all that trouble making the cellphone of my dreams and didn’t bother making earbuds that would work in my ears. Mine are going to end up staying in the original box untouched.

July 23, 2007

Pimp Your iPhone with ColorWare

Filed under: PDAs and Phones — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

The iPhone in Candy Apple Red

You can make your iPhone whatever color you want if you are willing to send it to Colorware for weeks on end and shell out $150 to $200 extra. You could also buy your iPhone from Colorware and they will send it to you fully customized.

Everyone is commenting on this. You can see some examples of what people have imagined for their own phones here:

My problem with this is the dock. You can pay extra to have your dock colored as well, but that just reminded me of the iPhones I’ve been oggling at the Apple Store. The display iPhones have been constantly manhandled and squished back into their docks for three weeks now and quite a few of them are scratched along the bottom because of it. With an extra layer of paint from Colorware, will the iPhone even FIT into that snug dock anymore?

One other caveat: Doing this to your iPhone may void your warranty with Apple. According to Colorware’s website:

ColorWare Inc. is not an authorized reseller of Apple Inc. products. ColorWare Inc. replaces all existing Apple Inc. warranty policies and procedures with a ColorWare Inc. warranty, the documentation for which is included with all products purchased from ColorWare Inc.

That’s for the products that are sold through Colorware, but if you send in your iPhone, you may just kiss those Apple Genius’ goodbye.

I really like the look of that red iPhone, but I think I’ll pass. The image of scratched red paint is not appealing at all.

July 19, 2007

Doncha Wish Your Cellphone Was Hot Like Me?

Filed under: PDAs and Phones — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

The most important rule of parody is to keep it SHORT. Fortunately, the folks at Geek Entertainment TV understand this and made this absolutely perfect parody of Doncha for the iPhone.

Doncha wish your cellphone was raw like me?
Doncha wish you spent more than half a G?
Doncha?

I haven’t gotten myself an iPhone yet, but there is one in the house now. Mike purchased one and he is happily surfing and playing with it as I type this. I thought maybe I would skip the first gen iPhone, but the more I play with his, the closer I come to getting one of my own.

After spending almost half a G on my Treo 650, the step up to the iPhone is going to be an easy one.

July 18, 2007

How To Put Your DVD on Your iPod or Treo

Filed under: PDAs and Phones — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

I have tried EVERY software available for the PC to try to get DVDs onto my Treo. I have had absolutely no success. I wish I had more to show for my work other than a list of programs that DON’T work.

On the Mac, however, there is FINALLY a way to get your DVDs to play on your Treo (or any other Palm device). You need three programs:

  • Handbrake: To convert your DVD into an iPod playable file. (Open Source – Free)

  • Quicktime 7 Pro: To convert your iPod MP4 into an MP4 that your Treo can recognize. ($29.99)

  • Kinoma Player 4: To play the video on your Treo. ($24.99)

My biggest problem was the free program, Handbrake, works perfectly converting my DVDs to an MP4 that I can play on Mike’s iPod, but I don’t carry his iPod around with me. I carry around my Treo. When I tried to play the MP4 files from Handbrake or the movie trailers that I downloaded from iTunes, they wouldn’t work on the Kinoma Player.

I don’t know where the blame is, but the fix came when Apple upgraded their Quicktime Pro. You now can take an iPod playable file and export it to MP4, which plays beautifully on the Treo using Kinoma.

The cool thing about Kinoma Player 4 is that it can play videos from YouTube. ALL the videos from YouTube, not just the ones that Apple has deemed worthy. It’s another small way that the Treo is technically better than the iPhone. The tiny 320 X 320 screen on the Treo, however, is not.

I really wanted to be able to give a tutorial for both the PC and the Mac, but I was unable to get the PC version of Handbrake to work. This video is a detailed tutorial of the conversion process on the Mac.

Click here to see the video

Download this video for your iPod

July 5, 2007

Centel – The First Cell Phone Advert

Filed under: PDAs and Phones — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

If you have a totally hot wife waiting for you to come home, you better call her if you’re going to be late.

Via: TV commercial for a mobile phone from 1989. (thx,

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