Archive for May, 2010

Motorola Milestone still in daily use

It has been four months since I got my Milestone/Droid, and I am still using it daily, well most days. It is not as if I haven’t played with other phones over the past four months, but I keep going back to the Milestone. It is just such a good all-round performer, with a large, beautiful, capacitive touch screen, fast processor, Android 2.1, and best of all a large qwerty keyboard. And Motorola has been good in providing regular firmware updates over the air. Only yesterday they announced that the Milestone will be getting Android 2.2 shortly. The Google Nexus One is the only other phone that has received the latest Android update to date.

My favourite Android apps used on the Milestone are ChompSMS, Twitdroid, WordPress (with which I update my blog directly from my phone), Scan2PDF (with which I can scan a document using the camera to PDF) and best of all Touchdown by Nitrodesk with which I sync my corporate emails, calendar, tasks and contacts. Touchdown syncs with pretty much any ExchangeServer, but I use it to sync with my company’s Lotus Notes server via Lotus Notes Traveler.

I saw the first local mention of the Milestone in the Sunday Times over the weekend, so South African consumers should be able to get a Milestone on contract soon. Go get one, you won’t be disappointed.

Blackberry 9800 slider coming next month?

Did you know that RIM sold nearly 11 million Blackberry smartphones during Q1 2010? This places them 4th in terms of units sold behind Nokia, Samsung and LG. Not bad for a company that sells only smartphones. You could say RIM is now the world’s 4th largest mobile phone manufacturer. It shows the growth in smartphones as well as RIM’s success in expanding their market. Nokia sold 150 million phones in the same period, so RIM has a way to go still though.

I have had a few Blackberries over the years. Best one was the Bold, worst one the Storm. That clickable no-multi touch screen of the Storm made interacting with the phone slow and painful, while the aging Blackberry OS did not lend itself to touch screen operation. While Blackberry is still renowned for its excellent email capability, as well as Blackberry Messenger, the OS has fallen behind the likes of Apple OS, Android and WebOS. Browsing on a Blackberry is very unsatisfying, youtubing even more so.

All of that is about to change I hear with the release of the Blackberry Bold 9800 next month. This will be a Blackberry with a difference, sporting a capacitive touch screen and a slide out portrait qwerty keypad a-la Palm Pre, as well as the new version 6 of the Blackberry OS. Version 6 is rumoured to have a new Webkit based browser (same technology as used in WebOS and Apple OS browsers) as well as support for multi-touch and pinch to zoom. Details are a bit sketchy still, but this promises to be a phone worth keeping an eye on. I might even buy one, if I can get both my corporate emails and gmails in HTML format on the phone that is.

WebOS tablet? yum yum

I hear HP may be launching a table, codename Hurricane, running Palm’s WebOS, later this year. Please let it be true. HP did say it has big plans for WebOS, and it did scrap its Windows tablet plans. It could look like this:

Cool Nokia N8 coming to SA also


Apparently SA can expect the sleek Nokia N8 in Q3 2010. I don’t all the specs yet, but what I do know is that it will run Symbian 3 which promises to be proper improvement on the current version running on all of Nokia’s S60 phones. With support for hardware accelerated graphics, multiple home pages, pinch to zoom, etc. The N8 will have a 3.5inch touchscreen, a capacitive one, not the usual resistive one like in the N97. This is a major step in the right direction I think, which will make the Nokia and Symbian significantly more user-friendly and responsive. Anyone who has used an HTC HD2 will attest to the difference a capacitive touchscreen can make. The HD2 is the first, and probably the last, Windows mobile phone with a capacitive screen, and it is a pleasure to use compared to its resistive screen predecessors. The N8 will also have HDMI output which means you can stick it directly into you HD TV and watch Youtube on your TV in HD. It will also have a 12MP camera! The rest of the N8’2 spec will be reasonably high-end including a 680MHz processor, which used to be top-end, but there are already a bunch of phones running 1GHz processors on the market today. The N8 looks pretty cool to me. I hope Symbian 3 handles full HTML format emails. You know what would make the N8 even cooler? A physical qwerty keyboard. So gaze upon this leaked picture of what might turn out to be the qwerty endowed version of the N8:

Palm coming to SA says Alastair

Alastair says the Palm Pre/Pixie Plus will be in SA within weeks. Iti Distributors (I think) is bringing them into the country officially. I would like to know who they are going to market the phones, and are they going to supply them to the local mobile network operators which can make them available on airtime contract upgrades. Let me know if you hear anything more Alastair.

WebOS update coming

To my Palm readers, I hear there is an WebOS update coming soon.

HTC HD2 – not too big, just too late

I used to think my Motorola Milestone was big. That was until my brother in law lent me his HD2. He went back to his Blackberry Bold as his wife only chats to him via BB Messenger. Hear that RIM? Guess it is exactly what RIM wants. Anyway back to the HD2. That thing is big man. Could have its own zipcode it’s so big. An SA Airlink pilot can land a plane on it it is so big. But it is surprisingly thin and light, so not too uncomfortable in your pocket.

The second thing you notice after the size, is the screen, which fills the entire front of the device. It is a 4.3 inch screen which I think makes it the biggest mobile phone screen out there. And with 800 x 480 resolution it is a thing of beauty. Brilliant for watching youtube videos. Don’t need no reading glasses for this one gramps. To top it off the screen is capacitive not resistive like Windows Mobile touchscreens have been since the iMate Jam. The capacitive screen coupled with the superfast 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor (which is as fast and snappy as it sounds) makes the HD2 very responsive. Scrolling through your mailbox is a pleasure and applications can be launched in a blink of an eye. It must be the fastest mobile phone available today. Certainly the fastest I have used. It begs the obvious question, why now only. This is the type of hardware that Windows Mobile has been lacking – a fast processor and a fast screen. Actually makes Windows quite usable, especially in its HTC Sense disguise. Too late now. Microsoft is bring Windows Phone 7 out soon, so Windows Mobile is basically dead.

Unfortunately as with all its Windows predecessors the battery is not really up to the task. I had Lotus Notes Traveler running on it the first day, in full push mode which kept a GPRS connection live all the time, and by lunchtime the HD2 was ready for bedtime. Switched Traveler to manual sync mode, installed Bandswitch to auto drop the GPRS connection when idle, which helped somewhat. Still if you are going to buy an HD2 you may want to invest in a long life battery. Like this one:

And Windows being Windows you are still going to have to manually switch off the wifi and bluetooth to stretch that battery.

The HD2 comes with a good set of software including the usual Office Mobile with mobile versions of Excel, Word and Powerpoint. Not as good as Documents to Go on Android (which even has track changes if you need it), but it is free. Also comes with the free Adobe PDF reader, which is the only slow thing on the HD2, and it comes with Opera 9.5 which is a pretty good web browser. Not as good as the latest breed of Webkit browsers on Android, iPhone and Palm, but usable, and with the HD2′s monumental screen, you are unlikely to complain about the browser. And then of course there is a huge collection of Windows Mobile software available, but not via Microsoft’s Marketplace which only has a few hundred. Don’t expect new Windows Mobile apps though. The dev community has already turned its efforts to Windows Phone 7 Series.

Did I mention that the HD2 does not have a physical keyboard? It has an onscreen keyboard like many of the new mobile devices since the iPhone. It works ok, but I still prefer a real qwerty. As an interesting alternative try Swipe, which is a new onscreen keyboard app for WinMo (so much for no new WinMo apps). Allegedly lifted from a Verizon Omnia II this keyboard app lets you drag or swipe your finger over the screen instead of poking at it. People are saying that it is the best keyboard for the HD2. Going to give it a try myself. Check it here. Looks similar to SlideIT, but is free.

Unlike most of the phones I spout forth about on this blog, the HD2 is actually available in South Africa from the mobile networks on contract. So, if you want the fastest mobile phone with the biggest screen and you don’t mind that it runs a defunct and clunky operating system, go get the HD2. You will not be disappointed. If you can’t bear Windows Mobile, then go get its newer Android sibling the HTC Incredible, aka the HTC Desire. Or even the Google Nexus One. Both has excellent, but somewhat smaller than the HD2, screens. Both run the latest Android and both have the self-same Snapdragon processor. Neither are available in sunny South Africa via contract yet, but can be picked up for a song (an expensive song at ZAR9000 or US$1200) from internet retailers. Or you can wait for the HTC Supersonic, which rumour has it will be exactly like the HD2 except it will run Android.

 

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