Gadgets, Technology, Diet, Nutrition, Audio Books, and Random Thoughts

Goodbye, Treo 600

Filed under: Technology, gadgets, etc. — Tags: , , , , — Levi @ 2:31 pm March 7, 2005

I finally posted on eBay an auction for my Treo 600, a 512MB SD Memory Card, a Vaja case, and a GPS bundle. If you read this blog regularly, you know that this phone served me well for the last 8 months or so. I’m hoping to get one Meeeelion dollars for it. But considering the phone itself was purchased for a low price from a friend, I’d be happy with a lot less. Anyway, aside from the auction, here are some nice shots me and my wife took of the Treo and the bundled stuff (with her Fuji S2):


Update: Well, wouldn’t you know it! My auction went well, but the guy who won wanted to pay using bidpay. I had never heard of them, but apparently they use Western Union to transmit money. It looked legit so I said ok. But after he won and tried to send money, bidpay for some reason rejected the transfer. Twice. He asked to post it again so that he could start fresh and he would buy it and then try the same thing. I took a chance and did this. He bought it, tried to transfer money and again got rejected. Apparently this was the only way he could send money. He was located in the Ukraine. He had a perfect 60+ feedback, but go figure, this was the time his usual payment option decided to balk on him!

It reminds me of my first ever experience with eBay which soured me to it so much that I didn’t use it for at least a year. It was back in 1997 and I sold an old VCR to a guy in Texas. I checked my bank account for days after I deposited his check and when I saw it listed, I thought it was a done deal. So I sent off the VCR. A week or so later I get a notice from the bank that the check had bounced and they were charging me $5. I wrote the guy who said that he was moving and so had to transfer money out of that bank, but put money back in so told me to ask them to try it again. I did, and the same thing happened. I tried reaching him again about it, but was not getting a response. I wanted a money order in order to guarentee payment. Finally he wrote back (this was probably about two months after he had won) to say that he was being harrassed and that I was somehow being a jerk for asking for my money. He said it was my fault for sending him the VCR before his check had really cleared! He said he still intended to send the money, but of course I never got either that nor any further correspondence. I even had a friend who was a lawyer send him a letter mentioning legal action if he didn’t send the money, but still never got a penny. Thus I receive one of only two negative feedbacks on my account. The other one was from someone who bought something but never responded to several of my emails. I eventually had to give them negative feedback and of course they returned the favor. For this reason, I’m leary about leaving negative feedback unless someone does something really aggregious because it’s almost a given that they will do the same to you, which will hurt your chances of selling things in the future.

Anyway, I had to go ahead and relist the Treo. This time I put a much lower Buy It Now price of $399.99, which is actually less than what the auction was won for last time

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Where in the U.S. is Levi?

Filed under: Journal & Blog,Travel & Dining — Tags: , — Levi @ 4:09 pm March 4, 2005

The first year or so I was writing this blog, I wrote a bunch of entries about places I’d traveled. I haven’t written about these in a while, but came accrosss this site that lets you produce a list of U.S. states you’ve gone to, lived in, etc. I’ve actually had the idea to create a color-coded map myself, but in order to program something like this I would probably need something like Flash, which I don’t really know. Maybe I will set up something similar but with more fields, like “layover in airport only,” “born in,” “driven through,” etc. For now, though, here is my list:

bold the states you’ve been to, underline the states you’ve lived in and italicize the state you’re in now… Alabama / Alaska / Arizona / Arkansas / California / Colorado / Connecticut / Delaware / Florida / Georgia / Hawaii / Idaho / Illinois / Indiana / Iowa / Kansas / Kentucky / Louisiana / Maine / Maryland / Massachusetts / Michigan / Minnesota / Mississippi / Missouri / Montana / Nebraska / Nevada / New Hampshire / New Jersey / New Mexico / New York / North Carolina / North Dakota / Ohio / Oklahoma / Oregon / Pennsylvania / Rhode Island / South Carolina / South Dakota / Tennessee / Texas / Utah / Vermont / Virginia / Washington / West Virginia / Wisconsin / Wyoming / Washington D.C /

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Amazon.com will PAY you to buy a Sidekick II

Filed under: Technology, gadgets, etc. — Tags: , , , , — Levi @ 12:55 pm March 3, 2005

It sounds like a bad joke, right? It is a bit odd that Amazon.com is able to get these incredible rebates that allow it to sell advanced electronic equipment for little or no money, or in this case, giving you money back. $50.01 to be exact. Of course, you also need to sign up for a 1-year contract to T-Mobile. Actually, the Sidekick ONLY works on T-Mobile, so it’s not like you could ever switch to another provider.

You may have read my previous missives about the Sidekick and T-Mobile, but if not, I’ll try to summarize my current thinking. The Sidekick is a nifty device. I happen to think that T-Mobile has conspired against its users by crippling it for some reason. My guess is that it is some corporate/marketing decision that wants to brand the Sidekick as a hip phone for young people that does some gaming and instant messaging, but doesn’t do stuff that’s too geeky, technical, or functional, because that would make it seem not as “cool,” right? Blech! I do think even so, it is a great device for people who aren’t that technically inclined, and really don’t like tinkering and learning about new programs. It’s very intuitive and easy to learn how to use. If you do get this phone, you really need to get the unlimited data plan, since the main reason to get the phone is for internet stuff like web browsing, IM’ing, etc., and the only T-Mobile data plan that will work with this is their unlimited data for $20/month. If you just want to get this device for mobile internet access and not to use as a phone, you will pay $30/month, which is actually less than what you would pay for unlimited data bundled WITH a voice plan on some carriers, like Verizon.

Considering that the cheapest you can buy a Treo 650 even with rebates is over $300, this does offer another viable solution for people who want a device oriented to real mobile internet usage. Of course the Treo 650 can do a bazillion more things than the Sidekick II, but for many people those things aren’t of interest. What I think is unfortunate is that the Sidekick COULD do so much more, but T-Mobile just doesn’t LET it by their refusing to offer applications that have already been developed.

Of course the recent news about Paris Hilton’s Sidekick being hacked has apparently driven even more people to buy the Sidekick. T-Mobile has been courting celebrities for the Sidekick for a while now, trying again to brand it with that hip, trendy image, and of course their commercials blatantly expose this approach as well.

I may have a solution for T-Mobile’s stubborn marketing department, though. How about a Sidekick geared specifically to people who can’t stand how the Sidekick is being marketed? They could call it the “Danger IPNet GSM1900″ and they could give it a new ugly exterior but open up the operating system and the USB port so that developers could openly create and distribute tons of applications. Yes, many of those buying the device would be over 30, but one day (if not already) we might have kids that slip into that prime target group for marketers. So don’t discriminate against us or we won’t buy our kids mobile phones. I guess the fact that carriers are more interested in getting new customers rather than holding onto old ones, though, indicates that they’re a bit short-sighted and so my ploy wouldn’t really work anyway…

Via Operation Gadget

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More in-depth reviews and comparisons?

Filed under: Journal & Blog — Tags: — Levi @ 10:23 am March 2, 2005

It seems like some people enjoy my in-depth reviews of gadgets and software and find them very useful. With this in mind I thought I’d remind those out there that might be developers or work in an electronics company that I’m very happy to review these but don’t have the budget to go out and buy gadgets willy-nilly. Sure software often comes with a trial-period, but often some of the features are crippled and/or the trial runs out in a matter of a week or two, and sometimes these things take a little longer, especially when I can’t devote my full attention to writing for a given period of time. I do have a day job after all!

So, if you your company has a product you would like to see reviewed, please let me know. I currently have a PC and a PalmOS device, so reviewing stuff that only works on other platforms (Mac, PocketPC, Symbian, Linux, etc.), is not possible.

Readers who find my reviews useful (or not!) I ask only for your feedback. Oh yes, and it wouldn’t hurt to get your support by hitting some links to my “sponsors” (aka advertisers) if that’s something you’re ok with.

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Digital Organization

Filed under: Technology, gadgets, etc. — Tags: , , , , , — Levi @ 12:37 pm March 1, 2005

I’ve never been the most organized person in the world. I’m not the least organized either. Sometimes I think I am an anal-retentive-wannabe. I feel a vague uneasiness when things are out of order, which is most of the time. Not that “out of order” means that things need to be perfect by any stretch. For example, here’s a picture of cubicle at work, which I haven’t actually cleaned for weeks:

Office Clutter(trust me it looks worse in real life!)

When I do clean up around the house, I feel like I can think more clearly. In this way I’m a little schizophrenic, or maybe just stupid. I know I feel better when things are clean and orderly, but I’m just too lazy or distracted to do anything about it! Maybe it’s a chicken and egg sort of thing.

With the age of the personal computer, we have a whole new non-physical realm to deal with in terms of organization. We need to organize information, whether that’s in the way of files, email, bookmarks, whatever. In this area, which I’m admittedly sometimes more familiar with than the physical world, as disturbing as that is to contemplate, I’m not that better. Often it gets to the point where I’m getting warnings of only having 100MB of free space before I think, hmmm, I better clean things up. Certainly having done this for a couple of decades now, I may be a little better than the average person, but it is still a struggle, and one that seems increasingly challenging as my roles in the physical world becomes more substantive.

My main organizational issues right now center around two key parts of my digital life – email and bookmarks. Thankfully when it comes to RSS feeds, Bloglines has allowed me to get pretty organized, although of course I’m woefully behind at actually keeping up with all of the blog entries that I should be reading.

I first started collecting email back in ’92 when I got my first email account in grad school. Somehow I decided that I wanted to hold onto these emails and because not a whole lot of people had email back then, my correspondence probably amounted to a hundred or so messages per year, maybe less. So every six months or a year I’d spend a half hour saving these to text files with a specific naming format including the name of the recipient, sender, and the date, plus a, b, c, d, etc. for multiple messages for a single day from/to the same person.

This continued until the Internet Bubble of the late 90′s made the flow of email so great that the time needed to do this expanded from 30 minutes to a whole day. So, the last archive of this kind happened sometime in 2000. By that time I had also started using Outlook as my email client and while it was probably just as easy (or difficult) to archive messages than it had been with Pine or Eudora, my laziness had gotten the better of me. Then in 2001 I started dating my now wife, and since then my time for such tasks has decreased even more!

In 2002 I started using a portable device to read email while away from the computer – The Danger Sidekick. Because of T-Mobile’s nonsensical resistance to allowing users to sync their Outlook data on the device, I was at a bit of a disadvantage.

Luckily, last summer, this changed dramatically when I bought my friend’s Treo 600. Around this same time I found a company (1and1)that among other things hosts outlook data so that you can access it remotely either via “Outlook Web Access” (a web interface to Outlook), or via an actual Outlook client or via a regular IMAP email client. 1and1 had by far the cheapest plan at only $6.99 per month and so far I’ve been pretty satisfied. After doing some searching, I finally settled on an excellent IMAP client for the Treo called ChatterEmail that let me synch whatever folders I wanted to. It’s still not practical to keep thousands of full messages from years of correspondence, it isn’t impossible. But ChatterEmail doesn’t use external cards the way some others do (Snappermail comes to mind). Still, for my needs, I felt ChatterEmail’s advantages outweighed this disadvantage, especially since it’s rare that I go searching for email that’s older than a year.

So, now that everything was more or less set up, what did I do? Not much. I know many people use an extensive folder system, even directing their email into various folders when they are received. I was never that big a user of folders, although I did use them in a minor way. So, recently, this lack of using such a powerful email organizational feature was gnawing at me and I figured I needed to come up with some strategic ways of using folders. What I came up with, ironically, involves more manual work. But at least it promotes organization. Basically I let things lie in the inbox for a while – sometimes it could be for an hour, sometimes for days or even weeks – but eventually sooner or later I have to go through and “clean house” which involves just going through the last umpteen messages and deleting stuff I know I don’t want to keep and taking other stuff and putting them in the appropriate folder. Luckily, I keep most personal mail from friends and family in my inbox, so don’t need to anything with these. This folder is synched with my Treo. I keep the last 3-6 months of messages in my inbox, and archive the rest going back a year or so to a separate folder which is still accessible on my hosted exchange account (but not the Treo). Last night I went through all the messages in my inbox and this archived inbox and created three or four folders for additional subjects that I figure I might need to go back and look at some time in the future: blog-related stuff, registration information, online purchases, posts with links to various references that I eventually want to read relating to photography, the Treo, etc. Currently I’m not synching these, but I figure eventually I can download these to the Treo very easily as needed.

Aside from all this on my hosted exchange account, I have some earlier Outlook data that I didn’t transfer because I was worried about using up the 500MB that the account gave me when I signed up. Even though they increased it to 1GB, I’m still a little reticent if for no other reason then having to go through an additional three or four years worth of email in that file. I guess eventually I should go ahead and put the stuff up there…

I’m surprised that there aren’t more tools out there to help people archive old email, and even keep it around for searching purposes. There’s a lot of information contained in years of email messages that could be useful to people. Old addresses, phone numbers, names, etc. It’s very easy to look up my name on the Internet and find up-to-date information about me because I have this blog and post messages online in various places. But most of my friends don’t have this kind of net-visibility, and so if I lose track of someone and they change their contact info, it’s sometimes next to impossible to find them again sometimes, unless of course they find me from something I’ve written and send me a line, as has happened a few times in the last year or so. The ability to create an archival structured document or set of documents, like a bulletin board with threads (something maybe along the lines that Gmail does?), could be really powerful. The main challenge in my mind would be not chaining it to a single program. Maybe creating something in xml or a similar standardized protocol so that developers could create many different viewers for it.

As I mentioned above, bookmarks (or “favorites” in MS parlance) are my next target area for organization. Again, I used to be better about these when there didn’t seem to be as much useful stuff to link to. I still have the remnants of a decent system bookmarks categorized into folders. However, I’m sure many of these are outdated – either long gone or simply out of date or not of interest to me anymore.

For a while now, I’ve been using My Yahoo! as a way to have an online store of bookmarks that I could access from wherever I am, and also to synch my bookmarks from home to work. It also got around what had become a separation of different bookmarking systems between MS and Netscape, although luckily these systems never got incompatible enough to really hamper the transfer of data from one system to the other.

Since becoming more involved with RSS feeds and using Bloglines as a way to manage the feeds I read, I have been yearning for a similar system for bookmark management. I have lots of feeds where there is some article that has so much detail that I either want to keep it for later reference, or simply to read it at a later date (because it’s too long for my slow reading speed, making it necessary to set aside a good chunk of time to read it). Bloglines allows you to clip individual entries and put them into hierarchical folders. This is great for managing such stuff, but unfortunately its interface is not all that friendly to mobile devices (even though it has a specifically mobile version of its site, some functionality is missing and they haven’t made any improvements for at least 6 months, despite clamoring from many users), and besides, you can’t insert your own links. For example, there may be a great entry by a blogger that links to something of interest, but also contains many other links. In Bloglines you can only save that entire entry, not just the link of interest.

I have played a bit with sites like del.icio.us, and furl, but it seems to me that they are either just inelegant compared to Bloglines and/or your browser’s bookmark system, or their interface is more about “social bookmarking” (sharing links with others), than it is about managing your own. There does seem to be some developers using the del.icio.us API to allow one to import and export your bookmarks, so I will need to look into this. It does seem a little odd that this isn’t a feature of del.icio.us to begin with, but whatever. I think this is just one of those areas thats just going to be a constant work in progress.

But then again, isn’t organization constant work? You can set systems up so that future work is minimized, but there’s always some work to do, and due to all the new kinds of information out there, people will always need to do the work to figure out what the best ways to organize things will be. For example, in the last five years or so, people have been able to rip their music to MP3, and this requires organization both within the ID3 tags and possibly also within a folder structure. But MP3′s are just the beginning. Photo collections are yet another big organizational task now that digital cameras have become affordable to most. Now that digital video has become more accessible to the masses with the proliferation of processors and hard drives that can handle the much more demanding content, this stuff will need to be organized as well. The next jump up to high-definition digital video will be even more demanding but eventually will be available to anyone with $500 to spare.

I think all of this begs a separate but related question: do we continue to manage all this ourselves on our local systems? Obviously the push has been more and more towards storing these things online, at least as an important option. This is being done not only so that one can share the content and information, but simply to access it no matter where you are, as long as you can connect to the Internet – a feat that is becoming almost ubiquitously easy, although you might need some hard currency to do it in third world countries. Having all your data online is of concern to privacy advocates and to simply to those who are paranoid about losing that data. Privacy is a valid concern for many, especially considering recent events around the T-Mobile Hacker’s breaking in to the Danger servers and getting access to Paris Hilton’s personal info on her Sidekick. And as always, it’s important to make copies of your data for local archiving in case of connections or servers going down, as they will do from time to time. It may be wise for such companies as hosting companies and the like to establish not only their own backup systems but backups that allow their own customers to maintain an up-to-date copy of what’s on the server. Perhaps offering this as special software would actually decrease their backup storage resources required, although it would at the same time increase their bandwidth usage costs.

Right now we are still at the beginning of the information age when it comes to information management. Those who are tech-savvy can manage their information with a good deal of effort and planning. Those who aren’t tech-savvy have much more of a challenge. Companies have by and large not seized the opportunity to cater to both sets of users to provide them with a much more seamless way to manage all this stuff both locally and online. Certainly we are moving in this direction, but I think we still have a long way to go before the average non-techy can simply have all their data organized and managed, backed up, and synched to whatever computer (or portable device) they happen to want to use, view, share, change, etc. at any given time.

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