Blog

  • Do We Need to Rethink Mobile in a $10/gallon of Gasoline World?

    Automobile gasoline prices will probably hit $5/gallon in a few weeks were I live. This is high compared to most of the US. Many developed nations are already over the $5/gallon mark (see this CNN Global Gas Prices page). It is not unimaginable that gas will be at $10/gallon or more by the end of this decade. This affects more than just those of us who drive cars. Any fuel intensive industry (airlines, trucking, taxi, delivery services, etc.) is already hard hit and in for a lot more pain going forward.

    I wonder what this means from a mobile technology perspective? We are already seeing people changing their vacation plans to be closer to home. Some local governments are switching to 4-day work-weeks. Businesses are curtailing business travel. And, we can guess that conferences will see attendance drops as flying becomes prohibitively expensive and increasingly annoying.

    On a local level, we are seeing less drive-to-homebase (office or home) behavior. This means that we need to be more productive away from our office or home-office since we returning to home base less during the day if we have multiple stops. One can imagine that long distance business trips might become longer too as we try to combine what would have been multiple trips to/from homebase to reduce multiple long flights. We will, as the late great George Carlin might have said, have to made better decisions about the stuff we carry. As travel weight restrictions become more severe, those giant 17 inch LCD notebooks will probably go the way of the Dodo bird for travel that requires flying. The combination of a really smart phone with a good web browser and an Asus Eee PC class mini-notebook will probably become the norm. Microsoft hasn’t released anything new (XP doesn’t count) for this class of machines. And, even Apple doesn’t have a mini-notebook product in the market. Does this mean that Linux will become the defacto standard for frequent travelers with mini-notebooks? And, what about the smart phone? Windows Mobile’s browser clearly is not sufficient for many web-based tasks (especially AJAX ones). The iPhone has a great browser but is hampered by the lack of a physical keyboard. The Blackberry has not made its mark as a browser phone. Nokia’s phones with Opera are pretty good but not mainstream in the US (although it is mainstream everywhere else). That leaves the Google Android as a contender in the new travel challenged world.

    I know I’m thinking a lot about not only how I work away from home but how I get to and from my destination these days. And, one thing I know for sure is that as great as my 13″ Macbook is, I need something smaller, lighter, and easier to carry around even for local travel in and around my home area.

  • Why it is Hard to ID the “Best” Mobile Device


    Just for fun I decided to score my iPod touch, TyTn Windows Mobile 6 Pocket PC, and Dash Windows Mobile 6 Smartphone on 10 features. The highest possible score is 3 and the lowest is 1. So, a higher total is theoretically better than a lower one.

    If you look at the scores, you might guess that I carry the TyTn Pocket PC around most of the time. Unfortunately, that guess would be wrong. I always take my Dash Smartphone out with me if I am only carrying one device. And, if watched me wander around my home, you would probably see me using the iPod touch.

    The reason is that the my unscientific scorecard did not place weights on the ranked features. When, I am running around town, the most important features to me around the voice phone, one-handed use, RSS reader, PIM, and Email. When I am at home the most important features are web browsing and reading (but not writing/responding to) email. Email is a tricky one because when outside of the home I want one device that I can use for both reading and writing email. On the other hand, when I am at home, I just need to be aware of email and can wander over to a desktop or notebook computer to actually compose a response.

    The Pocket PC (touch screen) probably trumps the Smartphone (non-touchscreen) with its unweighted score when outside of the home. But, once weight is placed on one-handed use and (a feature I did not rank) durability, the non-touchscreen Smartphone wins. I hated using my phone in the rain when I used a Pocket PC Phone Edition device. I felt that the touch screen technology was just too fragile. The Smartphone, on the other hand, seems to be tough enough for most outdoor weather conditions.

    The big problem with the iPod touch and iPhone for my personal use is that they don’t have a physical thumb keyboard. As, I’ve mentioned many times before here, I still can’t type comfortably on iPod touch’s screen keyboard. That is why I never use it to reply to email or tweet on Twitter.

    There is no perfect mobile device for me yet. So, I’ll continue to use a couple of best-of-breed devices in different situations for now.

  • Windows Mobile Owners Circle Changed Its Name to TotalAccess


    Microsoft changed the name of its end-user brand loyalty site from Owners Circle to TotalAccess. Some, but not all of the articles that Tyson Greer, Jason Dunn, and I wrote have been moved to the tips and tricks section of this site.

  • OLPC 8.1.0 Build 703

    I didn’t notice until today that OLPC 8.1.0 Build 703 was released a month ago (June 5).

    What’s new in the official-703 (8.1.0) release?

    The big end-user change is that closing the lid now suspends the XO and opening resumes operation. I was shocked that it didn’t do this from day 1.

    The other big change is that applications (activities in OLPC-speak) are now updated separately from the OLPC Sugar OS itself. This makes sense but is a giant pain in the rear to perform. You need to save this separate download to a USB flash drive, reboot, let the updates install, remove the flash drive, and then reboot again. Yikes, Microsoft Windows is not as annoying as this for most application updates.

    The OLPC XO has been a huge disappointment. I should have bought an Asus Eee PC 701 instead last winter. At least my daughter might have found that more interesting and actually used it.

  • Google Docs Blog Looking for Eee PC/Small Screen Comments

    I’m not a regular reader of the Google Docs Blog. So, this is a bit dated (from June 18).

    Google Docs on the Eee PC

    One of the Google Docs team members bought an Eee PC, tried Google Docs on it, noted a few oddities, and now asks the public: What could we change in Docs to make the experience better on the smaller screen? Let us know by leaving a comment.

    One sidenote: Google Docs and many AJAX-y sites don’t work well on the OLPC XO. My recollection is that the cursor disappears when typing in a Google Docs text window. I should fire up the XO and confirm that this is still the case.

  • Google Talk for the iPhone


    What? Another site only for the iPhone? This time Google announced Google Talk for the iPhone. Just head to…

    http://www.google.com/talk

    …on your iPhone or iPod touch (my touch is in the photo above). If you have a Windows Mobile device, don’t bother. The talk link above just takes you to the normal Google Talk page that tells you to download the Windows XP/Vista client.