Category: Smartphone

Windows Mobile Smartphone

  • Windows Mobile 6.1 Mutterings Part 2: Smartphone Copy and Paste

    Windows Mobile 6.1 Smartphone Copy and Paste

    Windows Mobile 6.0 Amateur, um, Standard Edition (formerly known as Smartphone) doesn’t let you copy and paste text. This is fixed in Windows Mobile 6.1. Pocket PC/Classic/Professional Edition users have always had this feature and may now issue a smug look of superiority at Smartphone users who will need to wait a while more before getting this feature.

    I wonder if the resurgence of interest in touch screens caused by the iPhone’s popularity will diminish the market for touch-less smartphones though.

  • Windows Mobile 6: Application Sampler

    Another article I wrote for Microsoft.com’s Windows Mobile section went live. This one can be thought of as a kind of applications sampler. Despite my many (many many) complaints about Windows Mobile, it direction (or lack thereof), and basic platform design issues, one thing that is undeniable is that it probably has the richest set of add-on applications in the smartphone universe. The goal of my article is to give a quick but broad overview of the kinds of WiMo applications that are out there.

    Introduction to the World of Windows Mobile 6 Applications

  • Windows Mobile 6.1 Mutterings Part 1: Internet Explorer’s Brain Transplant

    Windows Mobile 6.1 Internet Explorer

    I haven’t played with Windows Mobile 6.1 myself. So, I’m not sure how much Windows Mobile 6.1 muttering I have to,um, mutter. But, here’s the first thing about WiMo 6.1 that interested me: Internet Explorer. The word is that WiMo’s brain-dead web browser is getting replaced by a browser that can deliver desktop experience (or as best as it can be on a tiny screen). Looks like the iPhone’s super Safari browser has pushed Microsoft’s WiMo team to finally bring the browser into the 21st century.

    The bad news is that 6.1 devices with the new browser aren’t scheduled to show up until the 4th quarter of 2008.

    The potential good news is that perhaps some of the ultramobile class notebook manufacturers many take a look at Windows Mobile for their Asus Eee PC class devices now instead of relatively gigantic Windows XP and ginourmous Windows Vista. The old Windows CE Handheld PCs were great. They should be brought back now that WiMo has a real browser to compete with the non-Windows UMPCs that are taking over the subnotebook market.

  • Leaving Windows Mobile 2003 2nd Edition and WEP Behind

    I’ve been running two WAPs (Wireless Access Points) for a while now. The second WAP is an old Linksys 802.11b with WEP to let older WiFi devices like my trusty Dell Axim X50v connect to the net. The real issue was the OLPC XO that didn’t have any connectivity except for WiFi. However, with the OLPC XO upgraded to support WPA, I’m beginning to think it is time to let the older WiMo devices lose their network connectivity. The WiMo 6 boxes all handle a WAP with WPA2 turned on fine. And, I guess the 6.1 devices will do as well (famous last words). So, it may finally be time to turn of WEP access around here.

  • Back to Basics: The Subtler Differences Between Cameraphones and Digital Cameras

    Dash cameraphone vs. Canon A710IS

    Discussions (and sometimes rants) about camera phone photos usually steer towards pixel count, clarity, and color. However, there are subtler differences between camera phone photos and digital camera photos. Take the two photos above taken using a T-Mobile Dash cameraphone (left) and a Canon Powershot A710IS point-and-shoot digital camera. I’ve resized both photos from their respective 1.3 megapixel and 7 megapixel resolutions so that both images are 320 pixels wide.

    The first thing you probably noticed is that when resized to the same width the Dash’s photo is much squarer than the A710IS’. Cameras vary slightly in aspect ratio. So, if something seems slightly odd in your cameraphone photos, compare it to the aspect ratio of the digital camera you normally use. Cropping the camera phone photo to match the aspect ratio you are comfortable with might help.

    Although I did not take the two photos at the exact same angle, you can still see that the camera phone photo seems flatter than the digital camera’s. Seeing distinct people (mostly heads here) drops off rapidly after a row or two of tables in the food court. The digital camera has a slightly wider angle of view even though I took both photos from exactly the same spot.

    So, if something about your camera phone photo doesn’t seem quite right to you. It may not be the resolution or even the sharpness of the photo. It might be some of the subtler aspects of  camera phone’s imaging characteristics that might be at play for you.

  • Windows Mobile 6: Connected Applications

    Did you know that there is an Encarta encyclopedia bot that you can talk to on Windows Live Messenger? That’s just one of the tips I wrote about in this new article on Microsoft.com’s Windows Mobile website area.

    Introduction to Connected Applications: Applications That Plug You in to the Wireless World