Archive for May, 2006

Orange and the Nokia 6111

I had been toying with the idea of buying a contract phone for a few weeks, and on Saturday (After seeing my brother’s new Nokia 7360) I took an hour off work and went shopping.

I had a few problems:

a) I know nothing about phones: I don’t know what 3G is (well, I have some idea), I don’t know about compatibility with other devices, and I don’t know which are the cool models.

b) I wanted to spend £25 a month and have plenty of call time to talk to Caroline, but at least 200 texts a month.

c) I have no idea which network is “the best” - as in best for coverage, deals, prices, service, etc.

Networks

So, I spent the morning looking on the Internet, then went out to the Orange, Vodaphone, and O2 shops (luckily, they are all next to each other on Southport’s high street.) and picked up a load of brochures. At thispointt I would like to thank my boss for letting me sit off and compare all the contracts for most of the afternoon.

But both Orange and O2 had pretty convincing deals, offering the same phone (the Nokia 6111) for the same price. One had a few more minutes, one had a few more texts, and they both had some nice extras for the 18 month contract.

I was beginning to get a headache.

Orange

I am always one for following my gut feelings. I have been an Orange customer since the late 90’s, Caroline uses them and their website is better (very Web 2.0, don’t you think?).

So, I signed me up for the 100 minutes (including the Magic Number: I can add a number every six months, to which I can call the person for an hour, and only pay for a minute), 50 land line minutes and 1000 text messages (with free insurance and answer machine!). Check out Orange’s deals here.

But back the other half of this two-pronged dilemma: the phone.

Nokia 6111

At this point my head was killing and I was well aware that I had been missing from work for half an hour and should probably get back soon, so I tried to make things simple.

“I want something small that I can talk to people on, and maybe sends andreceivess text messages”. I hate having to carry a mobile phone, but unlike Chris (who campaigns against owning a mobile - I agree with him when he says he hates getting all those none-essential calls) I like to know that people can reach me if they need to.

Of course, the smaller the phone is, the less features they tend to have. “If you are into photography then these phones [the ones he is about to show me] only have one megapixels cameras so the quality isn’t going to be that great…”. I smiled to myself and went “Yeah, I am, but I have a perfectly good digital SLR…”

So, he picks up two: some Samsung and the Nokia I already had my eye on. I had pretty much sold the 6111 to myself before I got to the store, so I had to justify it to him (he seemed to be a Samsung guy) so I put it down to two things: I know how to use Nokias, and I already have a data cable for them.

I bought it, and it’s very nice.


Maybe it’s just me, or are slidey phones really cool? I can recieve a call and answer it in on swift motion by putting my hand in my pocket and opening it up as I pull it out. Then end the call by pushing the keypad back. Sadly, hardly anyone has called me yet, and when they have, I have been playing with it anyway, or no one has been around to see.

My favourite feature, however, is the fact that I can plug it into my USB port (via the £30 cable!) and copy MP3/AAC to it, and use them as ringtones - so I currently have Modest Mouse’s anthemic “Float On” whenever I get a call. Unfortunately, there is only 20mb of storage, with no Mini SD port - but a built in MP3 player. It just doesn’t make sense to me. If only Nokia released a good looking MP3 phone…

The other thing that annoys me is that the phone will not charge when it is connected to a computer, the same way that the Motorola Razer V3 does .

Also, whilst the camera may have a sensor the size of a pin head it still produces a reasonable photograph, when compared to the majority of camera phones I have played with (including the Motorola Razor) - click the photo for the full 864 x 1152 image.

I was also pleased to read (whilst I haven’t tested this out yet) that the phone supports XHTML - and on that note, I was wondering if anyone knew a way of testing mobile (is it still WAP?) sites without having to upload them to a server and connecting to the Internet?

But it’s early days, I’ve got another 18 months with it. Anyone else have any experiences?

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My Awesome Big Brother Blog

Check it out at big-brother-seven.blogspot.com

Flickr Goes Gamma.

Flickr, Yahoo’s recently aquired photo sharing site, has - in the last few hours - gone into it’s Gamma release. Judging my the Web 2.0 for the “perpetual beta” I wasn’t expecting any Gamma.

But, I’ve been messing around with it for half an hour, and I can’t really find any changes that justify a paragraph on. It’s Flickr, it was fine as it was.

One thing I have just noticed is the search box: it will now search through the titles, tags and descriptions of the photos in your, your contact’s or everyones. A very neat feature.

View the Flickr blog here.

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Introducing The Macbook!

After months of speculation and delays, it is finally here: The Apple Macbook.

The Macbook, Apple’s replacement to the iBook G4, looks to me like a big step up. In the same way that the Intel Mac Mini wipes the floor with the PowerPC version, the Macbook seems to leave that “consumer” tag behind.

I could have guessed the specifications: 1.83Ghz or 2.0 Ghz Intel Core Duo processors with 512MB RAM - so no surprises there. The 13.3″ super-shiny widescreen display (1280 x 800) is a nice touch (the old 1024 x 768 12″ screen was one of the reasons I didn’t buy an iBook).

But black? I heard about this a few months ago via macrumors.com - where there was speculation that they may go for an iPod Mini look (brushed, coloured, aluminum) or all out coloured plastic (much like the original iBooks) - but in an attempt to match the recent iPod Video/Nano facias the Macbook is also available in a nice glossy black finish.

When you see the pictures you will realise that this is no Dell job. The black really does look nice, and slightly more discrete than the white model of yesteryear (is this an attempt to get back in to the business market, a la the Powerbook G3 “Wallstreet”?). Sadly however, the white model (2.0Ghz Intel Core Duo, 512MB RAM, 60GB SATA disk) retails at $1299, where as the black model with an additional 20GB of hard drive, costs $1499. As far as I’m concerned, it’s not worth the money.

But, I suppose in an attempt to push professionals towards the more expensive Macbook Pro ($1999) they have only included a 64Mb graphics card. Smart move, I’m sure, but I’d pay another $100 for an extra bit of graphics power before buying the Macbook pro.

Of course, the Macbook comes with all the features you would expect from an Intel Mac: combo drives, built in iSight and 802.11G Airport Extreme card and that Front Row controller thing. What the hell, I’d have one.

For more information, check out www.apple.com/macbook

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To Do List: Summer 06.

I, thankfully, have now finished university until October.

People always suggest getting a full time job for the summer, but I shrug that off for a few reasons:

  • I have always gone to Europe for two weeks in June.
  • I already work part time, and possible over time somewhere I enjoy.
  • I want to enjoy the summer.

Seeing as I’m not going away this summer (Instead, Caroline and I are going to Paris in September, for her 21st) I thought I’d try and do a couple of month’s work experience. I would have really enjoyed that but there were two problems: most of the web development companies in my area look pretty bad (I was browsing Google local, and some of those sites look as though they were last updated in 1997) and I didn’t get chance to make any enquiries.

Due to this I have devised a list of things I want to achieve this summer.

  • Spend lots of time with the Mrs.
  • Finish all outstanding projects.
  • Get fit.
  • Redesign thebohomofos.co.uk.
  • Cycle across Ireland.
  • Find a drummer.
  • Make some money.
  • Learn Ruby On Rails better.
  • Brew some beer.
  • Start my final university project.
  • Redesign blog with Wordpress.
  • Take more photographs.

Tall order?

Everything you ever wanted to know about AJAX

Bas Wenneker at Solutaire.com has posted a comprehensive list of AJAX (Asyncronous JavaScript and XML) links. You can check it out here.

Vitaly Friedman’s Web Developer’s Handbook is also an essential bookmark.

Via Digg

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Hello?

Things around here have been really really busy recently: coursework, exams, work.

I’m coming back soon.