Category: Mobile Devices

  • The Dash’s Battery Died Faster Than Any Other Phone Battery I’ve Used

    I’ve had my T-Mobile Dash for about a year now. I don’t switch phones very frequently although I often do have a couple of phones to play with. Why? I usually find a specific phone I like a lot and stick with it for a while. The Dash is a great phone and I haven’t seen anything that might make me switch away from it. I almost switched to the TyTn, but I decided a while back that I prefer phones that can be operated with one hand and one I don’t mind using in the rain. Touch screen devices do not meet those requirements.

    I noticed my battery was discharging faster than usual a couple of weeks ago. At one point, it was down to 40% at 2pm in the afternoon with minimal use. At first I thought one of my connected apps might be the cause. Email and my RSS reader came to mind first. Adjusting their update frequencies helped but did not resolve the problem. So, I started taking a closer look at my battery. I always fully charge my phone in the evening and then turn it off until the next morning. I started checking my battery level right after turning the phone on. The first time I checked my battery was at 78% right after turning the phone on. Remember it was 100% the evening before and the phone was turned off during the night. I tried this again to make sure it wasn’t a fluke. And, yep, the next morning, the fully charged battery was around 80% first thing in the morning.

    My next guess was that something during the start cycle was burning up the charge. So, I plugged in my phone while it booted up. It showed 100%. So, I unplugged it and headed to the office. A few hours later, it was down quite a bit. It lasted longer during the day but still didn’t look normal. I tried this booting while plugged in the next morning and saw similar results. It finally dawned on me that this one year battery had already gone bad. So, I ordered a spare battery. And, yep, my battery was at 80% around 4pm in the afternoon. Phew. I am heading Seattle for the Microsoft MVP Summit and don’t want to worry about my phone’s battery.

    I’m still surprised by the Dash’s battery lifespan. I’ve used a lot of phones. And, I think all of their batteries are still in pretty good shape. Still, it is a back to basics lesson to consider battery issues before looking at other possible causes for odd phone behavior.

  • Northwest Airlines Mobile Friendly Site – Any Other Airlines?

    NWA Wireless

    I rarely travel these days (having spent the 1990s traveling once a month or so). So, I always need to check what is going on with airlines and other travel entities. Northwest has a mobile friendly website at…

    wireless.nwa.com

    Since I’m too lazy to go check the other airlines’ sites, let me know if what other airlines have mobile friendly websites.

  • Definitely Need a ChargePod

    ChargePod

    Fellow MVP Sven Johannsen pointed me to the Callpod Chargepod (Amazon affiliate page) multi-device charger (manufacturer page). I’m traveling to Seattle to attend the Microsoft MVP Global Summit and wish I had known about this thing earlier. The sad thing, though, is that charging six devices at once is not quite enough 🙂 But, it sure would help!

  • Dell Says it Will Join the Sub-notebook Fray (Bring Back Windows 98SE!)

    Looks like Dell is playing the me-too catch-up game (from Information Week)…

    Dell Gears Up To Enter Mini-Notebook Market

    The first question is what price will the Dell entry be set at and what features will be available. Asus gambled and took the early mind-share. HP seems to have raised the bar (feature-wise) — although some claim the $749 version is priced too high. The second question is whether or not June is too late to enter the sub-notebook game. The third question is whether Apple and Lenovo (who currently own the high-end sub-notebook mindshare with the Macbook Air and X300, respectively) will enter the low-priced sub-notebook market.

    Finally, Microsoft has got to do something to create an OS for the sub-notebook market. Windows Vista is just to gigantic to squeeze into the flash-storage-no-hard-drive boxes. Keeping Windows XP would just an admission of defeat for them. I hope Microsoft comes to their senses and bring back the Windows CE (Windows Mobile) Handheld PC concept updated for the 21st century. Failing in that, they should Open Source Windows 98 Second Edition and let hordes of talented programmers tighten it up and bring it up to date for the sub-notebook market. My old IBM Thinkpad 240 ran Windows 98SE like a champ in a mere 128MB RAM. It would probably take up less space than the Linux distro Asus currently uses in the Eee PC.

  • Evernote: Notes on your Desk and Phone without Syncing

    Anything that lets me avoid depending on ActiveSync or WMDC is a good thing. So, I was pretty excited to try Evernote’s desktop (Windows and Mac) client, free web service, and Pocket PC client that lets me access my notes everywhere without depending on ActiveSync. You can read my commentary about it on the O’Reilly Mac Center at…
    Evernote: Notes Everywhere – Mac, Web, Phone

  • More HP 2133 Mini-Note Reviews: Brighthand and PC World

    I’m still debating whether to buy the Asus Eee PC 900 (unreleased) or the soon-to-be-available HP 2133 Mini-Note. Here are two more good reviews for anyone else considering the HP Mini-Note. Brighthand’s review…
    HP 2133 Mini-Note Review

    …includes some interesting benchmarks against other sub-notebooks as well as a video comparing an Asus Eee PC running Windows XP booting up side-by-side with an HP Mini-Note running Windows Vista. The Mini-Note takes twice as long to get to a usable screen – about 90 seconds.

    The PC World video review…

    HP’s New Mini-Laptop Versus a Tiny Asus Eee

    …also compares the Asus Eee PC with the HP Mini-Note, but not in the benchmark sense that Brighthand does. PC World focuses more on the physical aspects such as the keyboard (HP’s is better) and the more solid HP casing.

    I wonder if it might make more sense for me to buy the HP Mini-Note model running SUSE Linux instead of Windows XP or Vista. Linux should screen on a box with the specs the HP Mini-Note has. Hmm.