Archive for February, 2003

Demo 2003 Report


2003
02.20

Demo Report. A good report of what is hot at Demo 2003. Eileen Gittens told me that the interestings things were:

  • Lifescape. A photo management. Liked their CEO.
  • Mock 3. 3-D from 2-D photos.
  • Big Fix. Security company
  • Digital Sun. Doing a wireless sprinkler control add-on

t68 User Guide


2003
02.20

t68 User Group. It is amazing how bad the manual is for the Sony Ericsson t68. Fortunately, the Internet saves the day. Here’s a great how-to site to help setup the POP3 mail feature for instance.

The Final Word On International Calling


2003
02.14

I never really finished this full analysis, so here it is. This is for traveling to Canada and also calling into Senegal. Here is the strategy I ended up using:

  1. 10-10 Phone Rates. This appears to be a fantastic and honest site that analyzes the cost to call out using the 1010 dial around services. The net is that you save quite a bit over the traditional carriers. For calling to Switzerland, the best is 1016868 and then the number. For calling to Canada it’s the same 1016868 seems great as does Everdial, but you have to register there first
  2. Telestial. When you are in country, you need a cell phone, so use Telestial to get a global SIM for about $90 if you aren’t going to a major country. Otherwise, if you are, then get into that country and buy a prepaid account. In the UK, that is Fresh at www.carphonewarehouse.com as an example.
  3. Save on Phone. Once you have a cell phone for emergencies, don’t ever answer it, you are just using it for urgent things. What you want to do is to get a dial-around service. That is, you call a local access number in that country, it then calls you back from the US using a very low rate. Cognicall seems to have the best rates for doing this from Canada at $0.12 and $0.31 or so from Switzerland using a mobile phone if you are using that Global SIM.
  4. Save On Phone – Calling Cards. If you are calling from within the US, the best choice is one of those nationwide cellular plans I think. Otherwise, see the list from Saveonphone, right now Cognicall looks pretty good because there is no monthly fee.
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Ski Boots


2003
02.13

Ski boot reviews.htm. Mason Flint, an old buddy from Microsoft, told me that the best thing to do is to get great boots and then rent the best skis each season. makes sense to me. Here are some boot reviews.

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Santa Cruz Blur


2003
02.13

I’ve been looking for a mountain bike for a while and had my heart set on an Ellsworth Truth. Seemed perfect, but then the Blur came along and now there are too many choices again. But, here are some reviews of it that make it sound so sweet:

  • MTB Review. Awesome reviews, right now 4.96 out of 5 overall with 24 reviews in.
  • Santa Cruz Blur Review in Mountain Bike November 2002. I?m lucky I work for a magazine that embraces the idea of comparative testing, because it would be difficult not to compare every bike I test from now on to the Blur. Everyone keeps talking about the new revolution in suspension; well it isn?t on the horizon anymore, and it?s available with custom-made titanium hardware and aluminum pivot shafts for hundreds of dollars less than either the heavier Specialized Epic (Which we?ll test next month) or the Intense Spider XVP frames. This is the only XC bike on the market that can tackle terrain that XC bikes aren?t supposed to be able to tackle. The Blur is incredibly versatile, and its arrival establishes Santa Cruz as the industry?s current suspension leader.
  • ConsumerGuide – Santa Cruz Blur Recommended. The Blur is one of the most exciting things to happen to suspension in years. It?s a virtual pivot point bike, a new breed of suspension bikes that attempts to solve the old problem of making a suspension that moves only when you want it to by moving the main pivot point.
  • What phone should I buy?


    2003
    02.13

    Steve ask for phones. Great question steve about what phone to buy. It’s an incredibly complex question, even if you just live in Seattle. Here’s an update on it, for more, you can search this blog for the occasional irreverent entries. First of all, I’m going to assume you are more or less like me, want something cool, but not too expensive. I’m assuming you don’t want one of these hybrid PDA/smartphone things. That’s a whole different set of issues.

    First the methodology that I use:

    1. Carrier. Bill Malloy points out that coverage and dropped calls are the beginning, middle and end of the customer experience. Sort of the PC gospel of make the software easy and fast. I’ve tried lots of services, not specifically in Union Hill, but Seattle and Bellevue. Here is what I’ve found that coverage quality in rough order is: a) Verizon, b) Nextel, c) AT&T TDMA and T-mobile and d) Sprint and AT&T GSM. I haven’t tried Cingular in this area. This is just one mans opinion of course.
    2. C|Net Phones has the best reviews of phones and a good overview of what’s coming and the best place to buy seems right now to be Amazon Cell Phone Store, they have amazing rebates like the Internet days of old. . When looking through this, make sure to check the user ratings. Very revealing is the percentage of lovers and haters. Sometimes this is more interesting to read than the reviews. Right now, if you are a power user, I wouldn’t get any phone that doesn’t have a color screen and a camera which weighs more than 4 oz. The current hot models are by network:
      • LG VX4400 on Verizon. The upcoming Samsung is according to Paul Jacobs over at Qualcomm incredibly cool, but late. So if you can stand it, wait for the camera phones. As usual, most of these phones were supposed to make Christmas, but slipped, so this seems like when many are launching.
      • Motorola T720 on Verizon or T-mobile. What I am using right now. Verizon has good coverage and the phone is nice. The display is pretty good too. It is tri-mode on T-mobile and you can use pretty much anywhere in the world.
      • Sony Ericsson t68. The screen is nearly invisible in the sun, but it is tiny, tiny, tiny. Connie likes it for that reason. It is also a world phone and has bluetooth, IR, so you can geek out to your hearts content
      • Motorola i95cl. Nextel’s color phone, it is bigger and larger than the rest, but it does have this DirectConnect, so you and Christine can stay in touch all the time. I’ve used its brothers and it is big and reliable.
      • Samsung SGH-S105
      • . Haven’t tried this yet, but it got great reviews on Cnet. Cool color screen.
      • Sanyo SCP-5300 on Sprint. This is a camera phone. Has good reviews. I haven’t tried it myself, but folks seem to like it.
    3. Rate Plans. This is the great confusing mess. Pretty much everyone has about the same rate plan right now. The sweet spot seems to be the $40 plans in terms of minutes. I actually haven’t found that many difference. Cingular has a rollover, so the minutes keep accumulating. AT&T One Rate is more expensive, but the GSM plans are very cheap. Most of the others are identical. To me, the biggest difference is whether these are one or two-year agreements. With a one year, you can replace the phone in a year, which given the technology changes is a good idea. I try not to do anything that is more than a year. Also, if you switch rate plans in mid stream, they reset the one year clock. Interestingly, the lowest cost thing to do is to bounce between carriers because new customers get the phone rebates but old customers don’t when you are buying a new phone. So I’d advise studying the web sites carefully.

    Steve had a number of other criteria which I don’t use but will cover here

    • Sound quality. I really haven’t found in the last year that the phone is the main problem with sound quality. It is more the network.
    • Hands free system for car. Pretty much no one sells these anymore. Most folks just use a hands-free ear piece. The main reason is the models are spinning so fast. I don’t think you can use the new Nokias with the old cradles, so I haven’t had a cradle in my car for four years now. Also, the speakphone sound quality was always kind of bad at least for me.
    • Address book. Everyone has 500 numbers in the phonebook now, but don’t even think about trying to sync with Outlook unless you have a few days of time. It is amazing that the firmware here is so bad.
    • Bonus: plays games. Just about everyone does. The color screen really adds alot. Prince of Persia rules!
    • Bonus: productivity apps. If you mean email. This is another sad story. Suffice to say, that this is incredibly hard. On the other hand, SMS seems to be working pretty well on most US phones now. Now if I could only get Connie to use it :-)
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Second Life


2003
02.13

Crazy on-line world. Must to be fun to have a second virtual life. I can’t wait for Philip to get the thing out of beta. Echoes of the gay 90s (not a bad description of the 1995-2000 era IMHO).

Skis for Me and the Kids


2003
02.12

Now that we are on our third season of skiing, its pretty clear that I and the boys love it, so maybe its time to get off the rentals. Something tells me that the spring clearances will be great this year because of the recession and poor skiing out here. So, here’s to some more shopping. First, looking at reviews:

Where are the Cycling Blogs?


2003
02.12

Pack Fill – A Cycling Blog. Amazingly, this is the only google search hit for someone writing about bicycling and cycling with a blog. How sad. Actually, I’m the first hit. OTOH, this guy is a category 2 road racer, so I have to show a lot of respect

Ericsson T68 Unlock


2003
02.11

Connie has an Ericsson t68 and is going overseas. She will need to use a local carriers SIM card, but her phone is locked. Here is what I found out about unlocking:

  • WirelessAdvisor.com Forums – Do you provide, or need, unlocking services? Read this. Be aware that T-Mobile and Cingular will provide you with your subsidy (SIM-) unlock code and instructions for free. For Cingular, call Customer Care at 1-800-393-7267. For T-Mobile, send an e-mail to simunlock (at) t-mobile (dot) com. You will need your phone’s IMEI number, which can be discovered by pressing *#06# on your GSM phone or by looking under the battery. It is a 15-digit number and is unique to your phone. AT&T historically have not given out unlock codes for GSM devices.
  • Logos Unlimited Remote Unlock Procedure. This ones says you must use Windows 98 and the instructions seem pretty complete. It is 20 pounds to unlock and upgrade to latest firmware. Seems like a good deal, but I have no idea how legitimate folks like these are. Could just take your money :-(