WiFi on a Blackberry? Take GPS instead

  • 13th Feb, 2008 at 3:59 PM
world within, hellcatz, gaudi boss, waving, mosaic heart, cute bear, small_quiet, caricature, cat smile, cloud wisp, sunny, braids, corset, snark maiden, heart, plane feet, me, silly, food cooking tomato, relaxed, full steam ahead, dayclock, pink with a yellow brush, angel, A team, nz, calli_squirm, abtract
I got to play with both the new BlackBerry Curve models for IT Pro recently and now the review is up. The design of the Curve 8300 enabled RIM to fit in a full size QWERTY keyboard and a large enough battery to deliver the excellent life BlackBerry users are accustomed to, while still producing something small enough to carry everywhere with you. Adding an extra radio for GPS or Wi-Fi on these devices means even more options but has RIM managed to keep the impressive battery life as well? And as you can only have one extra radio - which one should you choose?Read on!

Talking to my PC: calling and recording

  • 26th Jun, 2006 at 9:10 PM
world within, hellcatz, gaudi boss, waving, mosaic heart, cute bear, small_quiet, caricature, cat smile, cloud wisp, sunny, braids, corset, snark maiden, heart, plane feet, me, silly, food cooking tomato, relaxed, full steam ahead, dayclock, pink with a yellow brush, angel, A team, nz, calli_squirm, abtract
I've always been uncomfortable sitting at my desk, talking to my PC via a headset; it just hasn't felt like making a phone call unless I have a phone clutched in my hand or tucked under my jaw. While I'm sitting in the comfy chair with my leg up to rest my knee and working on a laptop (or two - I miss the multiscreen thing), I've found it much easier to use a headset with a mobile phone or the DECT phone from Simon's desk. I'm set up to record from the phone on my desk onto a tablet PC or a digital recorder, which doesn't work from the mobile phone. How could I get the recording and the headset to make it easier to take notes and record the interview I had to do today? Mark Anderson of SNS is one of the smart people I get to enjoy talking to and I didn't want to miss anything I couldn't type fast enough. And how could I keep the cost of a transatlantic call down? Simon suggested Skype, and the Skype voucher we'd picked up at a recent conference and the handy Skylook software he found which records to MP3 and saves the recordings as an Outlook message (and adds all the Skype dialling options to Outlook). At first I thought that was a bit gimicky and wished it recorded into OneNote. I'd still like to record it into OneNote but having it in Outlook and therefore on any PC I use will actually be pretty handy. And I'm very impressed with the sound quality - using the standard microphone socket on a Toshiba Portege R100, it's very clear and there were maybe two three-second sections of the conversation where I heard any distortion. I shall do this again. But I may not hand out my Skype numebr widely; I'd rather have a handset to pick up to see who's calling than a pop-up cluttering my screen.

Bluetooth your iPod?

  • 15th Jun, 2006 at 2:01 PM
world within, hellcatz, gaudi boss, waving, mosaic heart, cute bear, small_quiet, caricature, cat smile, cloud wisp, sunny, braids, corset, snark maiden, heart, plane feet, me, silly, food cooking tomato, relaxed, full steam ahead, dayclock, pink with a yellow brush, angel, A team, nz, calli_squirm, abtract
The Blueeye plugs into the audio jack of an MP3 player, sends the music to your mobile (by Bluetooth) and mutes the music when you get a call. Doesn't look like much, but it sounds nfty.

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