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August 25, 2007

Caved

Yesterday I was in meetings on main campus (our offices are in one of the not-main campuses… West? Lakeridge? Northbridge? Antarctica? I actually have no idea) and had 90 minutes between meetings. I was supposed to only have 30 minutes, but I found out I had missed yet another freakin' calendar change because my iPhone doesn't have Exchange Active Sync support. That was the last straw, so I caved and went to the AT&T store to get a Blackjack.

It did not start well - I had 5 minute "discussion" with the kid working in the store over whether or not my $30 a month family SMS plan I signed up for covered the iPhone. It started innocently enough, I just wanted to make sure the plan was in place and confirm that it covered up to 5 phones. And then it degenerated. To paraphrase:

Kid: Oh no, sir, you don't understand, the iPhone is magic and you have to pay 20 dollars a month for each phone for unlimited SMS.

Me: How can that be, the unlimited SMS plans was specifically offered to me online as an upgrade for my family plan. And an AT&T rep let me sign up for it for my iPhones.

Kid: Oh no, sir, you don't understand, the iPhone is magic and you have to pay 20 dollars a month for each phone for unlimited SMS.

Me: So are you telling me that not only am I going to get billed $30 bucks for this month, I'm going to get billed $180 for the extra 1800 text messages we sent above the 200 per month per plan?

Kid: <pause> Well, yes, but it is only an extra $10 a month for the two $20 plans and I can sign you up for those and make them retroactive.

Me: But what about this new phone?

Kid: <pause> Well, that is an extra $20 a month too.

Me: This can't be right. I can't understand why the iPhone is any different and wouldn't be covered by the family SMS plan. Which an AT&T rep signed me up for. That the AT&T web site said was something that worked.

Kid: Oh no, sir, you don't understand, the iPhone is magic and you have to pay 20 dollars a month for each phone for unlimited SMS.

Me: Why don't you check my account and see if I'm being billed for each SMS sent by my wife's and my iPhone?

Kid: <long pause> Huh, you aren't being billed for the SMSes.

Me: Great, now let's set up that Blackjack!

The good news is that after that, the kid was great - helpful, friendly. Actually, he was always being helpful and friendly, we just got off on the wrong foot because he (like everyone from AT&T I've talked to so far) isn't completely clear on how the iPhone plans/services really work. I guess you can chalk it up to growing pains, but unfortunately the customer feels the growing pains.

The other gotcha was that when I said I was going to use the Blackjack for Exchange, suddenly my data plan was $45 bucks a month because it was for "Exchange". Ah, well. And of course, in classic fashion, AT&T disables the ability to use the Blackjack as a bluetooth modem, which is what I have used every Windows Mobile phone for since they got bluetooth. At some point, I will have to buy a non-operator specific Windows Mobile phone so that I can use all the features.

The good news is that I now have access to my calendar/email/corporate directory again. The Blackjack is a very nice Blackberry replacement. I really like Windows Mobile as a mobile Exchange device - it is awesome. Plus I can use my bluetooth GPS & run my GPS enabled mapping software on it which I can't do on an iPhone.

The bad news is that I am now carrying two devices - because by God, you can take my iPhone when you pry it from my cold dead hands.

Comments

I had the same issue, but instead broke down and wrote a little Web application that uses Exchange web services to show my calendar on the iPhone. Works pretty well, I can send you the ASP.Net source if you're interested. Then you can remotely check your calendar for updates, without needing to sync it to the phone (not nearly as cool, but it's functional and I only have to carry my iPhone).
I use this in a combination with telling Outlook to send me SMS reminders for my meetings via some add-in, and I'm in iPhone heaven (well, as bast as I can until EAS comes to an iPhone in a galaxy far far away).

Ah - the pleasures of talking to Mobile Phone Operators!!

Surely a chap in your position in the MacBU has a direct line to 'The Steve'?

Give him a ring and tell him to sort out Exchange compatability for the iPhone! After all he did recently state Apple and Microsoft have a good working relationship! - Why don't you put that to the test. Although I have to say that I am very surprised the iPhone doesn't or didn't support exchange from the outset and they even haven't done anything about it yet...

There is Microsoft's next enhancement inline:
Exchange Active Sync for iPhone.

Hi Craig,

You do realize that the iPhone can work in some fashion with exchange? The unfortunate part of this is that Exchange has to accomodate it at the server.

I'm willing to bet that the folks on campus aren't going to make those changes any time this century. And it's a long century ahead of us.

Re: AT&T - I have a family plan, but each line gets SMS done on it differently, and that's always been the arrangement, that SMS was individual lines, not a family pool. The magic iPhone follows in that path, so I'm not surprised that Pimply Faced Youth was unable to grok the notion of an SMS pool.

Is there no way you can have Exchange push out cal changes to iCal and sync that iCal with the phone? Seems to me that iCal checks remote calendars all the time. The only downer is that iPhone doesn't network sync calendars.

Little steps. Rev1 phone. WinMo has been cursing me for over 8 years (EVEREX cassiopeia device. monochrome. WinCE, baby. Still have it and some gargantuan philips device as well, in storage somewhere.)

And now, from vmarks theatre, Craig and the Pimply Faced Youth!

CRAIG
Y'see here, kid, I have a phone. It's a good phone. I need all the same services, but in something that's not as nice. I'm not giving up what I've got.

PIMPLY FACED YOUTH
Would you like butter on your popcorn?

CRAIG
Just give me the same oily stuff you put on everyone else's.

I need my SMS pool, my minutes, my familytalk, and all the other goodies. And bluetooth. I need that personal area network.

PFY
But sir, the phone you have is magical and resists all logic or reason. You cannot have your shared SMS pool.

CRAIG
I'm sure that I can. (doing best impression of John Wayne, pissed off after 10 consecutive cold showers) I've the bill here, showing the history. You did it before, I'm sure you'll take good care of me now, right, son?

PFY
But sir, you don't understand. I can't do that. I would have to roll better than 20 on a 36 sided die, and then roll a 12 after that, and I just don't have that kind of magick. (see how cool I am? I spelled magick with a K. I could even be cooler if I spelled 'spelled' with a T. spelt.)

CRAIG
We're doing this deal. I'm taking this phone. I'm going to have both, and have all the services I want. And then I'm walking out of here.

PFY
Sir, you can walk out, but you'll be back. They always come back.

CRAIG
This has been a mostly pleasant exchange, boy.

PFY
Exchange? That's going to cost you, and I don't come that cheaply.

CRAIG
Sorry, son. This ain't a date. I've got the bluetooth modem set so it's not promiscuous, and neither am I.

Craig walks out of the shop, leaving the PFY in the dust, looking longingly at the clock until he can get home.

odd. I had posted a comment here yesterday. today it is gone.

July 4, 2007

Happy Independence Day

You know, being a Canadian and an American, there is a bit of cognitive dissonance in celebrating telling the British to shove it 231 years ago. After all, Canada still is a member of the British family - we still have a Governor General to represent the Queen and everything. On the other hand, I'd rather have the American three-tier system of government and the American "land of opportunity" entrepreneurial spirit than anything else, so I guess I'll just have to suck it up and say "Happy Independence Day!"

Speaking of cognitive dissonance, I find myself torn. I love my new iPhone - it is a great internet device, media device, and phone. On the other hand, I really, REALLY, REALLY miss Exchange ActiveSync - Windows Mobile 5/6 + Exchange 2007 is an awesome combination for mobile mail and calendar. The iPhone currently is lacking for someone who wants all the stuff that is great about iPhone AND to have a corporate life. So in the spirit of the 4th of July, I decided to have a little "iPhone SIM Revolution" tonight and see if I could get my new AT&T SIM from my iPhone working in my Samsung i320 (the original Blackjack - still an all time favorite of mine).

I'm happy to report a roaring success - my i320 is working great, as is my iPhone - all it does is complain about "no SIM" on power up. The cool part is that my iPhone is now an awesome WiFi enabled iPod/Browser/YouTube device - it all works GREAT.

For my own reference in the future, after the break are the settings that it took to get data working on an unlocked Windows Mobile phone for AT&T.

Continue reading "Happy Independence Day" »

Comments

It occurs to me that if someone wanted, it would not be too difficult to hack a connection between the WS connections on Ex2007 and the iPhone. The tricky part of course would be then getting that to interface with the iPhone's mail and other applications.

However, what occurs to me is that post-leopard, they're going to want the iphone to connect to all that spiffy new groupware they're coming up with, so there may be more opportunity at that point, depending on if the Exchange team decides to get over its ongoing NIH issues and support CalDAV, and stop requiring Active X for the full OWA experience.

If they'd also FULLY publish the friggin' DAV spec, that would help you guys out a lot too.

I love the Mac BU, but damn, sometimes I think they should change the name of that company to "Sybil"

So, when are the posts coming back?

July 3, 2007

Oh the humanity

I actually found myself holding my breath a couple times during this vivisection of an iPhone.

Comments

July 2, 2007

I’m pathetic

The bottom floor of our new home was unfinished when we moved in at the end of March - it had 3 great big rooms, but the previous owners just never needed the space. I had it finished and turned into a fantastic home office. Work completed a few weeks ago and I love it - it is great to have a space of my own again.

I put in a nice LCD HDTV with every possible media type connected - a PS-3 (Blu-Ray/games), an Xbox 360 Elite with HD-DVD player (games/media center extender/HD-DVD), a Wii, an Apple TV, plus DirecTV. I have HD sources coming out my ears. A nice comfortable chair topped it off - I have couch potato nirvana in my home office.

What's my point, you ask? Well, last night I was having "Craig Time" - it starts every Sunday around 4 or 5pm - where I have no dad or husband duties - I get to putter in my office. So what do I do? I start to putter with my iPhone, and suddenly I look at the time, and I realize that I have been watching Starship Troopers (a favorite) on my iPhone for 90 minutes - while sitting next to a 46" LCD Tv. Oh, in a desk chair instead of my comfy chair.

I am pathetic!

(but my new iPhone is cool)

Comments

Gadget playing is fun, not pathetic. Starship Troopers the movie though....

I enjoy the blog, congrats on the new job

July 1, 2007

My iPhone Day One: Chuck E. Cheese report

Today is my first real day on my iPhone. So far I'm loving it - there are so many nice touches it is hard to keep track of them all. Sitting here typing this in Chuck E. Cheese, though, I sure wish it had games of some kind to kill time (my iPod games I bought last year wouldn't sync). And I miss OTA Exchange support already - IMAP doesn't appear to be enabled at work.

I am getting better with the keyboard by the minute, although this post was still a little painful to type. But the cool part is that I could do this post using the MovableType web interface!

Back to small hollering boy guard duty!

Comments

So ... speaking of OTA Exchange support: You guys going to be pulling any strings to settle that issue? :)

Microsoft does make Exchange ActiveSync available to to interested third parties.

Alas, our Exchange server are not open to the Interweb, and no push, so no work email. Maybe that's for the best - I can always VPN in if needed.

The UI is phenomenally good. Usability is great.

Still keeping my Windows Mobile phone as well, though.

Just checking out macmojo and found this blog post. Wanted to mention that I just got an iphone too and I'm typing pretty fast with it. Try www.iphonetypingtest.com

I'm at 32wpm.

Cheers!

Mike

June 30, 2007

My iPhone: Activated at Last, Activated at Last!

Man this thing is COOL. Still futzing with it, but it works. That number transfer thing really slowed things down, but it is almost done - I am in this funny state where both my T-Mobile and AT&T SIMs work, so I can place a call from the same # from two cell phones.

Thank God Almighty, I'm Activated At Last!

More Later!

Comments

You know, it's funny how we have so little reverence for such speeches.

Used car salesmen turn national holidays into parodies, with the Lincoln on stilts bit, Independence day becomes 'Give me liberty or give me johnsonville brats', and so on.

There's no substitute for a really good, moving speech.

Sometimes, a soundbite doesn't do it.

"Well, I don't know what will happen now. We've got some difficult days ahead. But it really doesn't matter to me now, because I've been to the mountaintop, and I don't mind. Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has it place. But I'm not concerned about that now. I just want to do God's Will, and He has allowed me to go up to the mountain, and I have looked over, and I have seen 'The Promised Land'. "

Or "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!"

Perhaps I should instead say:

"I will use my iPhone on the seas and oceans, on the beaches, on the landing grounds, listening to music in the fields and streets, watching videos in the hills. I will never give it up..."

True, these historic speeches have made their way everywhere. For me, it isn't so much about lack of reverence (although I certainly am an irreverent bastard!) - it is that they are part of the culture and so I use them. It is remarkable the impact these speeches made - how they have become so ingrained into the culture.

And you are right – the sound bite is no substitute for the full impact of the original.

June 29, 2007

My iPhone: a call to the New AT&T

Two pieces of good news: my call was answered immediately (amazing!) by a very polite rep, and the other good news is that my account is in their system. It is just that it is "activating" and apparently "activating" can take up to 24 hours - not the 6 minutes the software said when it started the activation process. 6 minutes, 24 hours, why it's practically the same thing.

I really hate waiting.

Update 11:55pm
I got an e-mail from AT&T a couple of hours ago that was slurped into my junk mail folder, so I just found it. I guess the 24 hour problem is because of my phone number transfer. Still a huge bummer that I can't do anything with my iPhone in the meantime.

Comments

That sucks. I'm seriously considering buying one and paying the $175 termination fee just to have the tricked out ipod. We will see.

Some other providers were anticipating this and locked numbers from transfer. Or perhaps they had locked them months ago as a matter of course.

A quick phone call to a provider whose name shall not be named unlocked numbers for transfer, which then went through.

As for me, I've been with AT&T /cingular since before number portability was possible.

My iPhone: the first hour

Getting an iPhone had an underlying motivation - T-Mobile, a carrier I've been happy with for years, roams data in California (at least that is what my current phone shouts at me every time I sync my email). Not a big deal before, but now with my role at MacBU, I'll be down in California on a regular basis. Not cool to be roaming data at a gazillion dollars a megabyte. So a switch to AT&T was in my future - the iPhone was the catalyst. It is still a big leap, switching your number. And I think the transfer will cost me, too, because I got a new phone from T-Mobile last year - first one I have ever gotten from them in 6 years of being a customer, but you always get stuck with these two year commitments.

Backstory aside, tonight I was getting ready to head to Redmond Town Center where there are two AT&T stores - I figured I'd be able to get an iPhone there. As I was leaving, I got a call from one of our MacBU PM's (Han-Yi) who was in line at the Apple store. He told me that it looked like they had enough and wanted to know if I wanted one. So I figured it was a great opportunity to divide and conquer - I would stake out the Redmond AT&T stores, Han-Yi would see what he could do at the Apple Store. As I was getting in my car, I realized that I was about to go in the opposite direction from the Apple Store and that would potentially waste a bunch of time (I hate waiting ), and so I decided to bet on MacBU Mojo and drove straight to the Apple Store. My intuition paid off, there was a smilin' Han-Yi with four, count 'em, four iPhones - he found another MacBUer to go in with him. So then we figure - what the heck? In I go, and about 3 minutes later, out I come with my limit of two 8GB iPhones. Then we cackled off to the parking garage, each with three iPhones, and headed off for our respective weekends.

Fast forward to home. I unbox my iPhone. Ooooooo. It is as beautiful as it looked online. I power up my iPhone. Ahhhhhh. The slider is way cool - you can make emergency calls without activation. I dock my iPhone - everything pops up beautifully on my computer. I go through all the steps to set up an account and I take the big leap to do my number transfer: I push "Activate." I wait... I wait... I wait... and 5 minutes later I get:

Your activation requires additional time to complete.
You will receive an email confirmation sent to xxxx once your activation is complete

It's 45 minutes later and I can't use my brand spankin' new iPhone for anything. I can't sync anything. I can't do anything. It just sits there, staring at me, taunting me, laughing at me.

Talk about a freakin' let down. Hopefully something magic will happen in the coming hours.

I hate waiting.

Comments

One wonders if there was a surge in emergency phone calls.

"Yes, what is your emergency?"

"HALP! My iPhone-goodness will not activate"

"Good-bye, sir. Emergency services is not a technical support line."

July 5, 2006

Samsung launches the SGH-i320

Samsung announced the launch of their SGH-i320 yesterday - due out in Europe this month. I got my hands on one last Thursday and I've been using for the past 5 days straight. First and foremost, you have to tip your hat the design team at Samsung - the device is incrediblely well made, and I am still amazed every time I pick it up at how small and light it is (111 x 59 x 11.5 mm, 95 g).

The device is a delight to use day to day, especially for messaging: XT9 is a kick-ass feature, and the Picsel file viewer for mail attachments is pretty hot. All my extra software works well (except for the beta version of Slingbox mobile for Windows Mobile smartphone which gets really confused by the landscape mode of the display). The stereo speakers sound pretty good, and thanks to T-Mobile now supporting EDGE, I can even stream high quality music from my MusicNow account (albeit the web site is annoying to navigate on a320x240 display). The camera is pretty decent, and the ability to shoot 320x240 movies is really cool (athough the movies are little jerky sometimes). After 5 full days of usage, I give it the official two tired thumbs up!

I expect Samsung to kick some serious global butt with the i320. Sadly, it lacks the 850 band and there isn't a CDMA version (yet), so the only major carrier that could take it in the US is T-Mobile.

Comments

May 14, 2006

Qtek 8500 - Windows Mobile meets the RAZR

It's been coming for a while now, but it's finally arriving this month - the HTC "Star Trek" phone, which will be branded by Qtek as the 8500. Expansys in the UK says they'll have it May 19th.

It's another music-themed devices from HTC, with built in music buttons. The cool accomplishment is the size & weight: 98.5 x 51.4 x 15.8 mm, weight 99g. It packs Windows Mobile 5, quad band, micro-SD slot, bluetooth and a 1.3megapixel camera. £306.34, full retail, early adopter penalty included - not bad at all.

I have been using smartphones from HTC since we (back when we was Action Engine) launched our software with Orange on the SPV back in fall 2002, and I ongoingly impressed with how they keep refining and improving their designs. Can't wait to try the new one!

Comments

March 6, 2006

Samsung SGH-i310



Unless HTC can pull a rabbit out of their hat, I found my next smartphone on engadget mobile - the Samsung SGH i310. This puppy has some serious kick ass features - 8GB harddrive, 2 megapixel camera, dual speakers, TV out (?!), microSD, and A2DP stereo bluetooth, which I think allows it to broadcast stereo music to a bluetooth enabled stero, but heck if I know.


Ships in H2 of course (I'm always freakin' waiting forever) in Europe (so Expansys UK it is). I think the Google translation of the press release summed things up the best: "This product it will dance most first is the plan which becomes the poem which from Europe in this year second half of the year". Amen!

Comments

October 24, 2005

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!

Comments

October 9, 2005

The iMate SP5m: A Long Way Since the SPV

i-mate_sp5m.jpg
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

Comments

August 14, 2005

Nokia N90 Now Shipping



I've been waiting for this phone for a while now. The mania has begun - the phone has hit Ebay (from what appears to be legitmate sellers, not from x5jkskska999 with a history of buying one set of stamps). For a mere $1220, one of these bad boys can be yours.

Where to begin with this phone?

  • 1600x1200 (2megapixel) camera, with Carl Zeiss lens (way better than the "Ralph's Acme Plastic Lens" usually on camera phones) - and autofocus to boot!
  • You can shoot 352x288 MPEG4 videos - not the 640x480 of my kick butt Canon Digital Elph PowerShot SD500, but a big improvement over earlier camera phones.
  • Bluetooth, Java MIDP 2, and XHTML - but even more cool: HTML with support for a good portion of JavaScript 1.5, so typical internet HTML pages will work
  • Internal display is 352 x 416 w/ 26244 colors, external display is 128 x 128 w/ 65,536 colors
  • It's running the latest Symbian OS 8.1a kernel, with Series 60 2nd Edition Platform on top
  • Not bad general physics: 173g, 112x51x24mm, 3 hours talk time, 12 days standby

For the general marketing info, see Nokia's site. The Series 60 site has a lot of the technical details.


Comments

July 31, 2005

Motorola Q



Motorola just announced the Motorola Q. This is KICK BUTT device - 115 grams or so, pretty much the weight of my iMate SP3, and is way way better. From Motorola's web site:

• Thinnest QWERTY device in the world - 11.5mm
• Full, ergonomic QWERTY keyboard, 5-way navigation button and thumb wheel
• Video clip capture and playback
• Connectivity via Bluetooth, IrDA and mini-USB; compatible with Motorola's line of Bluetooth-enabled wireless headsets
• Multi-Media Messaging (MMS)
• Dual, stereo-quality speakers
• Audio formats supported: iMelody, MIDI, MP3, AAC, WAV, WMA, WAX, QCELP
• Image formats supported: GIF87a, GIF89a, JPEG, WBMP, BMP, PNG
• Video formats supported: H.263, MPEG-4, GSM-AMR, AAC, WMV
• Mini-SD removable memory card slot
• Large, high-resolution display (320 x 240 pixels, 65K TFT)
• 1.3 mega pixel camera with photo lighting
• PIM functionality with Picture Caller ID
• Advanced speech recognition and speakerphone

Sign me up!

Comments

July 16, 2005

Nokia 7280


Okay, this is one WAY COOL phone. I got it for K.T. this week, and it is a slick device. It's loaded with all the cool stuff you'd expect in a phone - like a VGA camera, bluetooth, a boatload of memory (50+mb), and a XHTML browser. It is nice and small (3 ounces, 4.53 inches long x 1.26 inches wide x 0.75 inch thick). It has decent talk time (4 hours) .

Now, let's get to the cool & whacky - no keypad! You just move your finger over the spinner, and off you go. It is pretty slow going to dial numbers, but once everything is in (and you can easily sych all your Outlook contacts into the phone over bluetooth), it isn't bad at all. It definitely isn't a phone for sending text messages - one might get homicidal about 2 messages into an exchange.

One other added bonus of the thing - the display has a mirror finish, so when the backlight goes out, you can use the display as a mirror.

K.T. totally digs it. Good job, Nokia, turning a phone into such a stylin' fashion accessory. I haven't been able to convince her to upgrade to a new phone in 2 years.

Note on 7/17/05 6:30am: on date night last night, I got to see the full impact of this phone on someone who hasn't seen it before. You would not believe how people oooo and ahhhhh and grab their friends to show them. Freaky.

Comments

July 9, 2005

The Samsung SPH-V7800



I found this camera/phone/computer while trolling for info on ATI's site for how to get an Apple Cinema Display 30" monitor to work with their video cards. This phone is SWEEET - a 5 megapixel camera with a 3x optical zoom and flash on one side, and on the other, a phone with a 240x320 pixel 262,000 color 2.2 " TFT display & stereo speakers. It is currently only in Korea, dammit, but I will hunt it down - I must hunt it down!!

Comments