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October 29, 2005

Stowaway Bluetooth Keyboard

thinkoutside.jpg
I just got my cool Think Outside Stowaway Universal Bluetooth Keyboard, and I love it. The MSRP is $150, but Amazon.com sells it for $91.

It folds up to a nice 5.5”H x 3.9”W x .5”D and weighs only 160 grams - it fits pretty nicely into a jacket pocket. It unfolds into a full sized 18mm spacing keyboard, and works great with Windows Mobile 5 (Windows Mobile 5 supports bluetooth HID proifle) .

T9 is great for a few sentences, but with this keyboard, my SP5m is now a full mobile email device when I need it to be. Plus it is great for mobile blogging - I used to do short little photo blogs, but I can now write a whole lot more in the same amount of time.

I've included the specs from the manufacturers site in the extended entry.

Key Features


  • Write email and notes easily

  • Includes carrying case & detachable PDA / phone stand

  • Sleek, award winning design

  • 100% full size keyboard for touch-typing

  • Truly universal - works with almost all Bluetooth enabled device

  • Hassle free - Bluetooth technology removes the need for wires

  • Lightweight design; weighs less than 6 oz.

  • User programmable shortcut and command keys for fast access to other applications

  • Rugged polycarbonate construction for years of use

  • Rubber grip pads prevent keyboard from slipping while typing


Specifications

  • 18mm key spacing (horizontally and vertically)

  • 3mm key travel - same as the best notebook computers

  • English QWERTY layout (4 rows of keys)

  • Powered by 2 AAA batteries


Dimensions

  • Closed 5.5”H x 3.9”W x .5”D (139mm x 99mm x 13mm)

  • Open: 9.9” x 5.8” x .5” (251mm x 148mm x 13mm)

  • Weight: 5.6 oz. (160 grams)

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October 24, 2005

Mapopolis Rocks!

The real "whoo-hoo" factor for getting my SP5m and GPSlim236 set in when I discovered Mapopolis.

Having a bluetooth GPS and a QVGA smartphone with a 1GB CF card just screamed out for a navigation solution. And the cool part is that this entire solution cost about $800 (including shipping and the $99 mapping solution from Mapopolis) – which is on par with the navigation devices like the Tom Tom cost, only my solution doesn't just do navigation, it is a phone, an email and texting device, a 1.3mp digital camera, an MP3 player, and a laptop modem, too.

I spent forever Googling for a solution that would give me instant gratification (i.e., downloadable). Mapopolis gave me just that – they had a beta smartphone client (that went final on just the other day on the 20th) and downloadable maps.

The client is free, and they sell the maps. The entire US/Canada map set, including navigation support, was only $99. A great deal!

The software is great – lots of rich, cool features. First and foremost, navigation works well. Mapopolis recalculates its routes faster on my phone than my in-car GPS does – it’s amazing. There is a nice large readout showing the next maneuver, along with a real time map of where you are. The text-to-speech component is well thought through – you can set it to start giving you warnings based on the number of seconds until you have to make a maneuver, instead of a distance. The default is to start warning you 60 seconds in advance, and to remind you every 20 seconds, which is great. And as a nice touch, Mapopolis has US & UK male & female voices to choose from.

While you are navigating, there are several panels you can have up if you want to see other information besides the next maneuver, and then the next maneuver panel automatically pops up when you get close to the maneuver. The cooler panels are an ETA pane (that can be up all the time if you want) and a Pilot Data pane, which shows you a compass, your speed, and the distance to the next maneuver.

Mapopolis makes it super easy to find locations – address inputting is tied into mapping information, so by the time you enter the street number and the first few characters of the street name, you have found the location. There is a nice set of POIs that had most of the things I was looking for this weekend. And they nicely integrate everything you do into favorites automatically. The only bummer here is that integration with phone contacts doesn’t work, it just pops up “could not open contact database”.

I have a few wishes around favorites – I wish I could edit my favorite place names. I wish that I had more options to move favorites around other than “move to top”. Also 20 favorites is completely arbitrary, it should be a user setting. Finally, I wish that I could search the favorites, but that is only because I wish I could have a lot more than 20 :-). I probably wouldn’t care as much if the contact database integration worked.

There is a landmark feature that I have been struggling to use. It is a great theory, allowing me to add my own landmarks, but you can’t search them independently from the built in POIs, and you can’t edit them without scrolling around to them on the map and selecting them. Plus when they get into your favorites, they randomly stop working as a favorite.

The software looks GREAT on my QVGA display. 320x240 is terrific for navigation. There are a few spots where things look funky - any place a bitmap of a keypad key (like 1, *, #, etc) is used, it is messed up. It looks like the bitmaps were designed with a 220x176 display’s font spacing in mind. Text lines get crammed more closely together on 320x240, but the bitmaps don’t get resized.

The thing I find most inconvenient (if you are a traveler) is the way Mapopolis uses its mapping data. You download each state one at a time (would have been nice to have a single download). Each state is really a zip file of all the counties in the state. You are supposed to copy the counties you want onto your phone’s storage card, and then you have to manually select the ones that apply you. In my case, I copied Ontario Canada, Washington DC, and Virginia, and it is a huge pain to navigate around this long list. I am going to Seattle this week and will add the Washington counties, and that will make it even worse. In general, how am I supposed to know what county I am in when I am traveling? And you can’t just select all the counties because the POI search function takes forever to return any results. This is a problem they should have solved in the software instead of pushing it to the user.

While I ended on my gripes, I can’t stress enough what a great solution this is. Mapopolis provides a terrific solution – I love it!!

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Review of my new GPSlim236 & SP5m

I received both my SP5m and GPSlim236 about a week and a half ago. I am blown away by both devices.

The GPSlim236 lasts for about 8 hours of constant usage (just tried it yesterday), and has a high-quality antenna - I can get signal with the device in my jean jacket pocket while in the car. It is a rockin' little device.

The SP5m is AWESOME! The QVGA screen is unbelievably clear - I can't go back to 220x176, I won’t. QVGA is the future.

HTC did a great job with the design. I was worried that the top tiny little set of navigation keys would be hard to use, but I don’t have any troubles.

The media controls are nice, and the built in speaker sounds pretty good. Windows Mobile 5 has Windows Media Player 10 Mobile which is a nice player, I have to say. I loaded up 125 songs on my miniSD, and now have my own “iPod Shuffle”. My big wish is that phone manufactures that wanted their devices to be used as MP3 players would add a standard 3.5mm plug for headphones.

Having WiFi is nice, too – with a 320x240 screen, it is almost a decent web surfing experience.

I have been working on running down the battery, but it looks like their specs of 5 hours of talk time are right – I can use my phone for hours, including using it as a navigation solution, without a problem. More on navigation in my next blog!

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October 23, 2005

1GB miniSD

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I got a new 1G SanDisk miniSD late last week - for 77 bucks from Amazon! It has turned my new SP5m into a combination GPS navigator and ipod shuffle. More on that later - but man oh man, 77 bucks for a 1GB miniSD - soon, they will be paying ME to take the memory off their hands.

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October 9, 2005

The iMate SP5m: A Long Way Since the SPV

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I just ordered the new iMate SP5m (okay, I'm doing a little too much technology spending tonight, I'll concede the point), and holy cow, HTC has come a long way since the first one - the SPV launched by Orange back in October of 2002.

I remember how cool the SPV was when I got my first one back when I was at Action Engine. Then came the E100 in June 2003, with the slightly cooler design, followed by the E200 running the new, improved Windows Mobile 2003 in October of 2003. The SPV500 (same as my iMate SP3) was launched by Orange after I left Action Engine. And now here it is, 3 years later, and the 5th version, called the SPV 600 by Orange, is here. My iMate version should be here in 2 or 3 weeks, from Expansys in the UK.

The badass 2005 version runs Windows Mobile 5.0 and has 64MB of RAM, bluetooth, a MiniSD card slot, quad band GSM/GPRS/EDGE (oh yes, just when you thought the US had stopped being non-standard in using GSM frequencies, we added 850MHZ, too!), a 1.3 megapixel camera, and - wait for it - Wi-Fi!

For fun, I've collected all the versions here... happy 3rd birthday, SPV!


SPV-ActionEngine.jpg orange_spv_e100_01.jpg orangespvE200.jpg Orange_SPV_C500.jpg

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Holux GR 236 GPS

GR-236_side.jpg
I just ordered this bad ass little gadget off of eBay - it is a bluetooth GPS receiver. But no ordinary bluetooth GPS receiver: with 9 hours of battery life, bluetooth & USB, less than 2 ounces - it fell immediately into my "must have tiny gadget" category (on, and as an added bonus, it can perform 60,000 feet high, moving 700 knots, while pulling up to 4Gs - if I wanted to use my Holux + Sony T laptop to get driving directions while renting a Soviet MIG fighter jet, say).

I discovered it while trolling the internet for how to GPS tag my digital photos. Sadly, things aren't there yet, although I could use this device (using a USB-to-RS232 cable) with my Nikon D1-X, but the Canon website doesn't even have a MATCH for GPS - so no hope of a bluetooth enabled Digital Elph in the nearterm, I guess. Which sucks - I would definitely carry the Holux with me everywhere, and then I would have a permanent geocoding of all the pictures I took.

Hello, it's 2005, what the heck is wrong with all these camera folks - bluetooth & NMEA GPS protocol support, people, let's get to it!

I stole the specs from the eBay merchant's page and reformatted them so I could read them, they are in the full body of the entry...

Holux GR 236

General Stats
- Tracks up to 20 satellites
- Snap Start: <3 sec(at < 25 minutes off period)
- Update rate: 1 HZ
- Antenna Type: Built in Patch Antenna
- Minimum signal tracked: -159dBW
- Dimension: 46.3 × 67 × 19 mm
- Weight: < 56g
- Lithium-ion battery lasts for more than 9 hours of use
- Operation Temperature: -10C to + 60C
- Store Temperature: -20C to + 85C
- Operation Humidity:5% to 95% No condensing

Position Accuracy Non DGPS (Differential GPS)
- Position: 5 - 25 m CEP without SA
- Velocity: 0.1m / sec
- Time: 1 usec sync GPS time

EGNOS/WAAS/Beacon
Position: < 2.2 m, horizontal 95 % of time
< 5 m, vertical 95 % of time

Acquisition Time
- Reacquisition: 0.1 sec. averaged
- Hot Start: 8 sec. averaged
- Warm Start: 38 sec. averaged
- Cold Start: 45 sec. averaged

Protocol & Interface
- Compatible with Bluetooth devices with Serial Port Profile (SPP)
- Bluetooth™ version 1.1 compliant
- Bluetooth™ Class 2 operation (up to 10 meter range)

Output terminal: Mini-USB (TTL Level)
- NMEA Protocol Output : V 2.2
Baud Rate: 9600 bps
Data Bit: 8
Parity: N
Stop Bit: 1
- Output Format :
Standard : GGA, GSA, GSV, RMC
Optional : GGL, VTG, SiRF Binary

Dynamic Conditions
- Altitude: 18,000 m ( 60,000 feet ) max
- Velocity: 515 m/sec ( 700 knots ) max
- Acceleration: ±4G, max
- Jerk: 20 m/sec, max

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