Archive for the 'gadgets' Category

Behold the E71

I just upgraded to WordPress 2.6.1 through PuTTY for s60v3 on my phone! Somewhat pointless, I know, but so cool nonetheless.

PuTTY on the Nokia E71

I did a lot of research before buying a new phone, and I have to admit I’m pretty darn happy with my newly purchased Nokia E71. First off, it runs Symbian 60v3 which Nokia just acquired and is pushing to open source. It can read email to me in a synthesized British voice, automagically parses contact names for voice dialing, has a front facing 1mp camera in addition to the 3.2mp camera on the back, and the GPS supports turn-by-turn navigation software by Garmin and TomTom. Nokia’s browser supports some Flash content through Flash Lite and the PDF reader’s only limitation is really the size of the screen. The phone is a pleasure to hold at 10mm thick with a sturdy metal body. Of course the Symbian OS is a whiz at multitasking so no problem IM’ing, writing email, editing excel spreadsheets, taking video and surfing all at once. I can use the same bluetooth modem tether that I used for my old w810i with a few minor modifications to the chatscript. More on that later.

It has its flaws. The keyboard is small and wrapping your hands around the phone, while tempting because of its size, will kill the reception. GPS through Nokia Maps takes anywhere from 30sec to 10min to acquire a lock but Google Maps’ aGPS support makes it bearable. Of course, AT&T’s 3g network woes are annoying but I’m hopeful it will improve with time. The headphone jack is 2.5mm so I need to get a converter to use my new SE530s with it.

The amount of software out there for Symbian is amazing. Unfortunately, not a lot of it is free, but I have managed to find just about everything I need. Python for S60 1.4.4 was just released, so I’m sure I’ll be finding lots more to play with in the coming weeks. So far I’ve installed:

  • Google Maps
  • Google Mail – necessary for searching across 4+ years of GMail archives
  • CalSyncS60 – Google Calendar sync
  • PuTTY – ’nuff said.
  • ScummVM – Secret of Monkey Island on the Metro!
  • SIC!FTP – a decent FTP client
  • Slick- very nice IM client supporting Gtalk, AIM, Yahoo, MSN, Jabber, etc.
  • Twibble – excellent Twitter client
  • Qik – live video streaming from phone to web
  • Fring – Skype IM/call support

The fact that Nokia insisted on proprietary connectors (yes, even the USB cable is non-standard…) is frustrating and until someone gets sshd/vsftpd running on the phone, transferring files wirelessly is limited to bluetooth or FTP from the phone to the computer. I’m going to try to patch puTTY s60 to support ssh-xfer which would make things even easier. More on that later too.

There’s still a lot of geeky things to be discovered with this thing. Apparently the phone supports full disk encryption (!). And if all goes as planned, I’ll make my next post with Scribe.

Uniquely Biroid Lifestyle

Hooray for ballpoint pens! Today marks the 65th anniversary of the patent of the ballpoint pen by László & Georg Bíró; true life-hackers. László, a Hungarian newspaper editor, was inspired by the numerous annoying rips fountain pens created when marking up copies of his paper. Eventually he and his brother fled Hungary at the start of WWII and developed the Birome pen for production in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Incidentally, photos from Chloey’s and my trip to BsAs and Chile are now available in her photostream. They’re awesome.

As much as I love to type (until my wrists give out), nothing can replace a solid notebook and a trusty pen. I plan to take some time this evening to sit down and really enjoy my moleskin with one of the decendents of Bíró’s technical wonders. My personal favorites currently are the Pilot G-2 05/07 and the Uniball Signo 207 Micro.

Also, upcoming on the nonrat’l blog, I’ve more-or-less finished my clean upgrade to Hardy Heron and those notes will provide for at least three or four posts and patches on kernel 2.6.25, Tux-on-Ice, PATA cable detection, and iwlwifi led.c tomfoolery.

Another Tiny Contender

Update: Apparently they’ll be coming out with the DevBook (with touchscreen) later this year. I’ll be waiting for that.

The Everex CloudBook. While not a fan of Wal-Mart in general, I do this little linux lappy’s look.


CloudBook

Reminds me of my umpc Fujitsu P7010D which remains one of my favorite machines. I now have a more powerful 3.5lbs notebook so it’d be silly to blow $400 on this thing, but I’d love to have a computer to take on vacation and not have to worry about losing two-grand every time I take my eyes off of it.