Handheld devices


Mobile phone service Stitcher provides a selected list of news feeds that are read to you. The production quality of this service is very good, and works well for iPhone users. Sign up, and Stitcher sends you a link to their IUI interface in Safari for the iPhone. When you find the feed you want to read, you click on a link to play the Quicktime file in your browser, and someone starts reading you a summary of the news from sites including TechCrunch and Wall Street Journal.

Kindle: Amazon's New Wireless Reading Device

Kindle is Amazon's New Wireless Reading Device. The electronic paper device is a wireless electronic media reader that delivers content to you with EVDO, so you don't have to connect to a computer. After hearing about electronic paper years ago while I was working in Bell Labs, I've been curious to see what kinds of products make it to consumers and this is one of the interesting ones.

Price needs to come down a little in my opinion to make it worth while, but this may have some advantages over using mobile phone if you're doing a lot of reading. First and foremost is the industrial design factor. Controls for this device are specifically tailored to make book, magazine, and newspaper reading as effortless as possible. Will be eager to try one out one day. At first glance, the buttons, jog wheels and odd bevels seem appropriate, but it's not sexy. Someone on Engadget commented that it looked like a calculator and should have a TI logo on it.

I'm wanting this kind of experience on the iPhone. I keep thinking of the little tablets I used to see on Star Trek. Hopefully someday.

More info from the liveblogging coverage of Jeff Bezos' presentation at TechCrunch.

Nokia N810

GigaOm has an excellent entry on Nokia's long view of providing a device that is an open platform for the Internet. It discusses the gradual release of Nokia's N700/800 series of handheld devices, which are not released under any pressure to get them out fast, but rather to get them right. This is well conceived strategy and smart investment in R&D with open source software that I am hopeful will pay off for consumers in the future.

The article goes on to compare Apple's iPhone to CompuServe and Nokia to the Internet. Strange, that they say that because Apple promised an SDK, and by doing so, Apple are admitting that the tightly closed nature of the iPhone will limit its place in the long term. Their immediate focus on controlling the experience and selling units is obvious. It's very interesting to compare the strategy with Nokia's which has goals that are much further out, and which is willing to take a seemingly more measured release schedule.

I've found myself back in the market for a small smart phone again after my iMate Jam died from the numerous falls it took. (Note to cyclists, don't carry an expensive phone in a jersey pocket with food in it.) I sent back the Blackberry Pearl 8100 I was trying out a few weeks ago and am now on the hunt for its replacement.

My Phone and service requirements
I just want a phone that has email, web, calendaring and contact management and plays nicely -- syncs reliably -- with Mac OS X. Being able to read MS Office and PDF docs is a plus, I suppose, but not essential. Tethering either my MacBook or Lenovo Thinkpad are also possible uses I might consider useful, so cost for that service has to be considered.

Carrier service plans
I've compiled a cost comparison of service providers in the NYC area. This comparison looks for service packages that include the least expensive voice options and unlimited data from cell phone carriers serving the NYC area.

Note that there is a difference between Edge and EVDO service. Edge is capable of providing up to 200K upload at peak (more likely to get ~100K) while EVDO is capable of providing at peak up to 2.4mb upload (more likely to get ~600K). More information about Edge vs. EVDO at cnet. Also helpful was seeing this real world speed tests comparing Sprint and Verizon. I'm leaning towards Sprint after reading in bulletin boards that they appear to provide the fastest EVDO data service at the lowest cost.

Also worth noting is that choosing a Blackberry option would incur different costs. For example, TMobile has a Blackberry plan with unlimited data and 1000 minutes voice for $70.

Picking a phone
I have no idea what phone to use. Right now it's between the Treo 700p or 700w and the Blackberry 8700. The 8700 may be a viable option now since Daniel Pasco has come up with a solution for tethering a Mac to it, thanks to Alex for raising the bounty. Only downside to the Blackberry route is having to pay $4/month for proxy service unless you run your own, and I don't intend to do that.

I think I'm actually leaning towards the Treo 700p. Treonauts has a nice table comparing the current Treo phones. I know it's a downgrade (or maybe a sidegrade) from feature set of a Pocket PC, but I want absolute synching reliability and am willing to trade off some functionality for the peace of mind that comes with a Palm device talking to a Mac. I've had an iMate Jam Pocket PC phone synching with Mark/Space's Missing Sync and it's worked pretty well, but flaked out occassionally, requiring re-installs. My wife is now using one of the HTC Wizards (the 8125 on Cingular) and it seemed to be synching nicely, but MissingSync stopped connecting all the way all of a sudden this morning for her. Typical. I just don't want to waste time constantly tweaking my phone to get the address book and calendar synched up. I want something that just works and I can't wait around for the Apple smart phone that people have been predicting with confidence for over a year now. Of course, now that I'm ready to buy a new phone, I'm sure Apple will release the damned thing. Anyway, Pocket PC is out for me.

The only other real contender for me is really the Blackberry. I liked the push email, but am not sure I need or want to be that connected and available. After trying the Pearl 8100 for a week, I was also pretty unimpressed with the user experience. That Java UI that Blackberry users tout as simple and genius is a hierarchical mess to me. I'm a former Sidekick I, SK II, and PPC user so I have different expectations for ease of use. The SK UI is simply the best on any smart phone I've used. The PPC was fine because it was familiar, albeit in that Microsoft kind of way. And I wasn't very happy with SureType on the Pearl 8100. It worked remarkably well until you got to forms, especially password entry. There's no predictive typing for passwords, so you're left to do multi-tap entries there. Yuck. The real show stopper is that there's presently no Mac synching support with the Pearl yet. I'm tempted to hold out for the 8800, which will provide a full QWERTY keyboard and better Bluetooth support so we Mac users can tether using something like the Fibble.org script. But it'll still be a Blackberry experience and I've never synched a Blackberry with the Mac so I don't know how that goes, i.e. if it's reliable using Pocket Mac's software.

So I'm back to weighing the cost of experience vs. features and functionality, and what do I find myself looking at? On the surface, to a Mac user the Palm Treo 700p looks the logical choice -- the one running the Palm OS and not the Windows Mobile OS. But it's a step backward. If simplicity and reliability are the most important factors with all service speed and cost issues being equal, I personally think the Palm OS wins for now. That comes after trying quite a few smart phone OSes. But I also have to remind myself why I left the Palm platform in the first place -- I was an early adopter of the Treo, having owned the gray flip top 180g. The OS at the time was the reason I left. I couldn't have email, web, and IM apps running simultaneously. I don't think that's an issue anymore. One downside is that the 700p won't be upgradeable to the faster EVDO Rev A. For that reason alone the 700w might be more attractive or any of those HTC Wizard devices that every carrier seems to sell.

So anyway, I'm letting all of this information soak in for a while before I consider making the leap again. It's been a while since I've had to pony up extra dough for a smart phone, and for the extra service charges. Luckily my TMobile contract period is over so I can go the rebate route using Wirefly.

Any suggestions on the right phone to select for a Mac user would be greatly appreciated.

PocketSkype is free and simple to use software that enables you to make Skype voice calls using your WiFi-enabled Microsoft PocketPC based handheld computer from any WiFi hotspot. PocketSkype is a thin version of Skype, developed specifically for PDA devices, making Skype mobile with the same core features of regular Skype software including free Skype to Skype worldwide calling to any Skype user, ability to participate in free Skype conference calling, instant messaging, access to the Global Decentralised Directory, online presence and contact lists.

FrogPad is a one-handed keyboard to be used with USB Keyboard compatible PDA's, Pocket PCs, Tablet and Wearable PC's, and other mobile applications.

Electronics/computer gear weblog.

Brighthand reports that a PDA cradle is being manufactured by Synosphere that will let you connect a PDA to fullsized keyboard, mouse and VGA monitor. Pictures of the "Blue Dock" are available from the Synosphere site. Very nice indeed. As PDA's get smaller and more powerful, I find it easier to get away with using one in place of a notebook computer for very basic web, email, MS Office work and occassional telneting. I don't forsee a PDA really replacing my desktop any time soon, but for now it's functioning a bit like all those lightweight Internet machines that failed to survive, but with a tiny bit more functionality.

"Synosphere's Blue Dock is the world’s first PDA docking station that allows pocket handhelds to function as a primary computing platform. - No need for an additional workstation or laptop - Easily dock compatible pocket handhelds - Create, modify, and edit data - Experience Email, the Internet, and network resources."

big thanks to the owner of this park slope access point for the free wifi. u rock!