How many devices do you carry day to day? - General Topics

Basically my question is what my title is. I was intersted to know what devices people carry with them on a daily basis..
Since the G1 has been released my Tilt has become a windows mobile pda only.
So Everyday
G1
Sony digital camera
Usb Drive 128mb for small documents
16gb Ipod Touch
Jabra Bluetooth bt8040
Helio Mysto (work line)
and occasionally my tilt for when i need to edit office documents until something better is released for the G1

HTC Diamond
Qtek S100
Sony Ericsson k750i
and i think it's too damn much

HTC Diamond
iPhone 16 GB 3G

simple nokia n82 with 8gb micro sd card...

I always think that I have to carry only ONE device that cover all my needs instead of bringing with me an Ipod, Nextel, Cell phone, beeper, PDA, etc.......
So when I first saw O2 Exec (Universal) in 2005 I decided that this device will be the only one I really need for my work and entertainment, and till some REAL succesor appears I will continue with Uni as my main device!!!
And when a succesor appears I will carry only ONE device.

Hi,
I only carry one phone with me, apart from my laptop, when I am at work, of course.
This means that the phone has many tasks:
- act as a mobile phone
- give me access to e-mails, browser and Messenger
- entertain me: movies, ebooks, games, emulator
- keep all my contacts, tasks, appointments
I own several phones, all able to do the job and I enjoy switching between them:
- Universal
- Blue Angel
- VDA GPS (aka Toshiba G710)
- HP iPaq 514 Voice Messenger
The Blue Angel I don't use any more, since I got the Universal. The screen needs to much care against accidents and the resolution is not so good in comparison.
And yes, the Universal is the phone I like most. It has everything I need: great screen, great battery endurance, fast, keyboard,...
I only take the HP 514 with me, when I need a tiny phone or when I go to some rougher outdoor events.
I use the VDA GPS when I am mainly driving, because the keyboard is very ergonomic to be used whilst driving (i.e. type "D" and get all recent numbers from contacts starting with D). It is also a very discrete phone (for meetings), looks expensive (it wasn't) and does not give you a nerd-tag right away (as opposed to the Universal). And of course it is nice to have built-in GPS.
Cheers,
vma

Kaiser & iPod. All I need.

HTC Touch Pro and an 8GB flash drive. Thats all. The TouchPro does everything i need. Music, video, internet, communication, office, navigation, organisation. I bring my laptop only when im going to someones house or so.

HTC Trinity as primary phone
HTC Alpine for email, software only runs on WM2003, well the version I have does.
Creative Zen Touch, 20Gb
Fuji FinePix
8Gb Flash Drive
Usually only the Trinity goes out and about most days. It has enough music for the odd quiet moment. and the camera is good enough for snap shots.

XDA Stellar and that's it (sometimes my laptop if I'm doing 'real' work).
I run an 8 gig card and use the phone as a phone, pda, sat nav, mp3 player, games machine, push e-mails, etc etc etc. The only real downside is using it as a phone in the car when also using sat nav and someone calls when you need the map the most!
My battery is usually dead by 3pm if I have a hard day out of the office, so I have an HTC brand car charger (nothing else keeps up).

My T-Mobile Vario II does most of my daily work but I tend to have a laptop with me on week days as well which the Vario acts as a modem for most of the time (unlimited-ish HSDPA with WnW; why then pay for hotspots as well?!)
Because the Vario is doing so much every day as it acts as my phone, email access etc I tend to always have my 80gb Zune to entertain me on the commute.
Back at home I've just put my O2 XDA IIs back into service. Since I flashed it to WM 6.1 and started running the developer preview of Windows Sideshow on it, it makes an amazing remote control for my Media Centre PC in the lounge.

I carry my ASUS EEE 701 and HTC Diamond if I'm going out by car, otherwise, Diamond only.
The EEE is very small and runs real windows. It does the heavy lifting wherever possible.

Always with me:
- Asus P750 + 8GB microSD
- Qtek 8500 + 2GB microSD
- iPod Classic 80GB
- Sony 8GB flashdrive
And most of the time also my laptop Asus Z53s

inside my pocket:
htc polaris wm6.1 with 4gb micro sdhc-my primary phone(for family & friends)/pda
motorola L7- secondary phone(work related calls)
inside my bag:
ipod 30gb-for my multimedia storage(music and videos)
pqi 4gb thumb drive- for documents
itech arrow x- BT headset for my 2 mobile phones
billionton BT usb receiver- for transfering files between desktop and ppc

Stealth with USB cables for games & entertainment, CDMA mobiles for communication, Sony Ericsson for browsing & VC, external HDD, extra Mini SD.....without them it's considered day off....

Just my PPC (by now an experia X1) and sometimes my TabletPC. Why more?

PPC only...

I only really carry my TyTn II with an 8GB MicroSD card inside. Sometimes I carry my laptop with me but only when it feels like working.....

Phone: Touch
MP3 Player: Touch
News: Touch
E-mail: Touch
Office: Touch
Videos: Touch
Web: Touch
GPS: Touch
Oh, and my Plantronics Pulsar 260's !
Used to be my Moto Razr & Palm T|X.

Related

connecting xdaii to a projector?

hi all..
i have pocket slides and want to connect the xda to a projector for presentations, is there a cable available to do this...
cheers
Tony
There is a backPack module for the XDA II which has an internal battery, a CF slot and a video output port. The video output port connects to a supplied cable for either Supervideo/Composite Video/or VGA output.
I bought one two days ago and used it for a presentation today at a PDA user group meeting in KL Malaysia. Was very happy with how easy it was to use and the quality of the images being presented.
Ed
wow...cool
thanks.. but what make, and where did you get it...
thanks
maxd
The BackPack is an O2 product, details are on their website. Where to buy it from depends on where you live I guess. I'm in Malaysia and the unit has just hit the streets here though I believe it has been available in other countries for a while.
Ed
Could I ask does it come with any software or driver?
Thanks
Btw if you look on www.expansys.com you'll see a I-mate and a O2 backpack.
The I-mate backpack is cheaper, but afaik, 100% the same
Yes it does come with additional software and driver.
Two main types of software.
1. Screen Mirror: An application that mirrors (displays) everything you do on the XDA II screen on the projected screen. Very handy for tutorials on software and other XDA II features. I used this to demonstrate some new software at PPC users group meeting in KL on Saturday.
2. Presentation software: For Projecting pdf and powerpoint files. I demonstrated (at the same user group meeting) the features of the powerpoint presentation and found it was crisp, clear, good color retention and very easy to use. Some nice features in this software too. You have an on screen mouse pointer, you can also draw on the screen with multiple color pens. Both the pointer and drawings appear on the projected image as well. But perhaps the neatest feature is the ability to display the powerpoint slide plus your speaker's note on your PPC screen but only display the powerpoint slides on the projected screen. I think that is a very useful feature.
The drivers and software are inluced on a mini CD.
Ed
There are a couple of things I would like to see improved on the hardware side of things.
1. There is no way to charge the battery in the BackPack without attaching it to your XDA II. I would prefer to see an AC socket on the packpack itself so you can leave the backpack on charge and still be using your XDA II.
2. When you insert a CF card into the BackPacks CF slot a little plunger sticks out. The plunger is pressed to remove the CF card. I found the plunger sticking was a bit annoying for a right hander like me. Holding the XDA II in my left hand (so I can use the stylus in my right hand) places the CF slot plunger into the meat of my palm. It doesn't hurt at first but after using it for most of the day it was certainly annoying.
Ed
Screen mirror
Does the BackPack use the built-in ATI Imageon graphic accelerator?
Would it be possible to use higher resolution (640x480 on TV and 1024x768 on monitor) in all PocketPC applications?
I know this feature is not supported by default. But higher resolution in all apliccations is not supported on Toshiba e800 too, but with some hack you can use higher resolution in all applications.
There are applications for all PocketPCs which emulate higher resolution (using subpixels like the cleartype does). It these emulators you can see that most of applications (word, excel, internet explorer, ...) work correctly in higher resolution.
So my question: - is (or will be) possible to use your MDA2+BackPack in higher resolution (for exapmle for large XLS tables or for web browsing) on TV or VGA monitor? This feature would really be great! Imagine yourself sitting in a softchair, wireles keyboard in your hands and MDA2 connected to your TV showing XDA-Developers website in a full resolution !
It is possible to connect backpack to the TV and play divx?
ednap said:
Two main types of software.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
****, no TomTom on the PPC screen and a Divx on a external LCD ?
It is possible to connect backpack to the TV and play divx?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
well if your tv have a VGA subD input because as far as i know the backpack dont have a RCA or svhs connector
Rudegar said:
It is possible to connect backpack to the TV and play divx?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
well if your tv have a VGA subD input because as far as i know the backpack dont have a RCA or svhs connector
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
... not the backpacki itself, but on the cable (VGA connector) is also the S-Video connector.
But the question remains: will I be able (using some hack) to use all PocketPC applications in HiRes on external monitor (similar hack as for Toshiba e800)?
Sorry by my badly english.
Whichever frames per second have the video signal? 2, 15, 60...?
One divx in TV with 2 FPS would be very bad :-(
hhhmmmm
i doubt that the backpack with vga out would be any kind of limiting factor when it comes to fsp it would al come down to what refreshrate it's running on the top of my head my guess would be 60Hz
this give a max fsp of 30fps
of cause if a tv of any kind of being used it 100% depend on if it's PAL or NTSC
so if your xda can play divx at an ok fps then your external screen should be able to aswell
I have been having backpack for few days. It works at the most to 2.5 FPS. :-(

Backpack

I have an XDA2 that I have upgraded to Windows mobile 2005.
Does anyone know if the backpack expansion pack (that allows a CF slot, second battery and VGA output) will work with windows mobile 2005.
I do not want to buy one and then find out that it will not work with my new Windows Mobile 2005.
Thanks in advance.
Cheers
Steve Jubb
battery pack
Hi. I have the 2i on win05 and all works fine. the battery pack is fantastic. got mine on e-bay. The mirror function is a top pice of software, i play films from the cf card through my 2i onto a tft screen in the car for the kids. And the battery is a top up not an add on so you gain a 900ma extra battery (1 day with all radios on).
Hope this helps. gingerchristopher.
Hi thanks for the reply.
Is the 2i the Apline version of the XDA2?
I was not aware that you could get Windows mobile 2005 on it.
Did you upgrade it yourself from windows mobile 2003SE?
cheers
Steve Jubb
AFAIK, no wm5 for 2i ... CMIIMW
Sory got mixed up with forums. its on 2003 not 2005. my universal is on 2005. doh sory to confuzzle anyone.
ginherchristopher
how are you setting things up to get adecent frame rate for video playback, I can only manage a few frames per second
if you mean using the tv or monitor out then it's
the max it's made for photos and powerpoint not movies or games
If you set the refresh rate to 00.01 and use a realy low grade movie.
Its not as bad as it sounds, it is watchable. eather that or just use the screen on your alpine.

My XDA Prophet for sell

First of all I apologize for using this forum for business.
But this place has been a home for me since I’ve owned xda devices. And not only a home but a lot of help and learning resources!
And I will make a donation to this forum once the device is sold since it has been the resource for all the upgrading I’ve done to the device.
This device has been used for one month. And I used it very carefully so it is in excellent condition. Like brand new. Never overcklocked. I am not a havy user.
The important thing about the device is that it is CID unlocked! And it has never been SIM locked.
It means you can install any OS rom into device. Upgrade or downgrade!
And use any sim card from any provider.
Also I’m selling with tons of software with registration.
Technical Data:
IPL 2.09
SPL 2.15.0000
GSM 02.19.21
OS 2.15.13.27
Latest DoPod Rom Installed.
XDA Neo Windows Mobile 2005 Pocket PC Phone NOT LOCKED
(HTC Prophet, I-mate, Qtek S 200. IN LANGUAGE OF YOUR PREFERENCE) English, German, Danish, French, Russian, Chinese or any language currently available from manufacturer.
Included in a box
XDA Neo Pocket PC Phone Black
1200 Li-ion Polymer Rechargeable battery
110-220 V Charger
USB Cable
Stereo Head Phones with Hands Free Microphone
Nylon Caring Case
2 Stylus’s
Installation and Application CD
Manuals
I am asking 600.00 USD with shipping and 2 years warranty.
Also available with:
BT GPS Mouse 18 Chanel
Motorola BT Stereo Headset
Samsung BT Hands Free
Platonic BT Hands Free
512 SD Card or 1 Gb Mini SD Card
New generation computing, communication, multimedia and navigation, All-in-One in palm of your hand!
XDA Neo Pocket PC Phone offers the latest technology, high speed multimedia OMAP – 850 processor for the highest quality multimedia experience with video, full graphic 3D gaming and audio processing.
Watch movies and video clips with DVD quality and 3D Sound! Play your favorite 3D games with full graphics and video rendering!
On my own device I have played good old Quake 3, Need for Speed Underground, Tomb Raider, Racing Spree Pocket PC Edition, and Age of Empires and could not get away from it or tell the difference from high end Desktop PC gaming experience! Watched 4 full, high quality movies on long 8 hour flight without replacing or recharging the battery!
With XDA Neo you can listen to your favorite music in any possible audio format and watch video clips in all available formats! Tired of synchronizing your MP3 Player with PC? Listen to your music streamed over the air directly from your PC into your XDA Neo with Bluetooth or WiFi built in technology!
Download new music from the internet Music Clubs and Multimedia distributors directly into your XDA Neo. Watch and Listen to live feed video, music or radio directly from the internet! Now you don’t have to be tied to home PC to get new music or video streaming!
Make your own movie clips and photo albums with built in QSVGA 2.0 Mega pixel Camera that will capture high resolution photo and unlimited 30 frames per second video in 7 available formats with resolution up to 1200x1600 pixels!
4x zoom will allow you to take distant shots or make a portrait photograph with Micro Mode!
Bluetooth and WiFi Technology allows you to access Internet and Intranet sites and FTP servers at any wireless access point your journey may bring you! Browse, view, edit and transfer data on your home or work networks!
Download Manager allows uninterrupted downloads!
Push Mail connectivity allows you to access your company Exchange Server, receive and compose your e-mail directly on XDA Neo!
MSN Mobile provides access to MSN Online with Hotmail and Messenger Services that will allow you to e-mail and chat with your favorite contacts.
(Touch Screen keyboard offers fast and comfortable text input with stylus.)
Connect any wireless Hands Free Bluetooth unit for hands free calling in your car or on the go!
Need directions on your way? Connect Bluetooth GPS Receiver and any Navigation software will guide you to your destination step by step!
Add wireless Bluetooth Stereo Headphones to experience wireless audio streaming!
With Infrared sensor on your XDA Neo Pocket PC Phone
Transfer Data (Files, Music, Video and applications) between PC, another PDA or Mobile,
Control all your infrared enabled Home or Office Electronics! Can’t find that remote again?
Your Pocket PC Phone will flick and browse your favorite TV channels! Can you do that with your existing phone? Small but need future.
NEW! Control security of your home, office or car! Software based future will allow you to program, set, activate and deactivate WIRELESSLY multiple Alarm Systems installed in your home, office or car! Start your car from your phone! Also Vehicle Maintenance and Mainboard Programming software available.
Built in and NOT LOCKED to a specific provider, GSM Quad Band Phone supports 1900/1800/ 850/900 bands and offers you Mobile connectivity any where in the world, with any carrier! Europe, Asia, South and North America. Place your prepaid or contract SIM Card in the XDA Neo and you are connected and on-line!
Microsoft MSN Mobile, Microsoft Outlook and Multimedia Messaging Tools will provide you with E-mail, Video, Picture Messaging and SMS over the EDGE and GPRS Over the Air Access Technology!
Clear reception with powerful built in antenna guaranteed! I have never lost the signal with seamless carriers cell tower switching.
Built in speaker offers clear Loud Speaker Conversation.
Sensitive microphone and built in software allows Voice Activation, Voice Dialing and Voice Commanding for Application of XDA Neo Pocket PC Phone.
65K 240x300 TFT Touch screen offers brilliant reflection of colors that make watching a movie on the phone preferable to your large screen TV!
128 Megabytes of storage memory allows you to install all the applications you want.
SD Memory Card slot available for additional memory cards up to 4 GB. For Video, Music, Documents, Applications and raw data storage. Hot Swap- change Memory Card without turning off your phone!
Control your XDA with included stylus just by taping the screen or use Hard Buttons or Voice Command.
Overall design offers strong durability and soft feel in your hand! Soft Black Mate finish with chrome buttons gives a very elegant look to XDA Neo.
Built in software brings your office into your pocket!
XDA Neo comes with preloaded Microsoft Office Mobile Edition that includes:
Microsoft Word Mobile
Microsoft Excel Mobile
Microsoft Power Point Mobile
Microsoft Outlook Mobile
Other futures:
Windows Media Player
Internet Explorer
Pocket MSN
Contacts Book
SIM Manager
Download Manager allows uninterrupted downloads
ClearView PDF Viewer
Microsoft Voice Command
Photo Album
Notes
Zip
Calendar
Tasks
PIM
Calculator
Third market software included:
TomTom Navigation 5.21 with All Europe Maps!
MarcoPolo Navigation with All Europe Maps!
Pocket Controller- Control your pocket pc from PC
Sprite Backup Professional – Allows you to make a full back up of your Pocket PC Applications, Messages, Phone Book, Text and Image Data.
SPB Clone- Clone your OS and restore on same device
SPB Back up- Allows you to make a full back up of your Pocket PC Applications, Messages, Phone Book, Text and Image Data.
WisBar Advance – Pocket PC Desktop Customization
SPB Pocket Plus- Application Launcher, Battery and Memory Display Plug in
SBSH Pocket Breeze- Calendar, Tasks, Messaging, Contacts and more.
PhoneAlarm- Call, Messages, location logging and Phone Profile
Zip- File compression and decompression
Pocket RAR- File compression and decompression
Photo Contacts Pro- Set Personal Photo and ring tones to your contacts, groups and etc.
Pocket Video Player- Plays all format Videos on Pocket PC
Pocket Divx- Plays and converts video and audio files on Pocket PC and Phone
Conduits Pocket Player 2.71 - Play your music. (Bluetooth Stereo Headset Support)
Deset Pocket Video Maker- Convert your movies into Pocket PC format
Resco File Explorer – View Pocket PC Content just like on your Desktop PC!
Resco Registry Editor -speaks for it self!
Resco FTP Viewer- speaks for it self as well.
Resco Network – Browse network PC’s
Resco Picture Viewer- Browse, organize and edit Photos and Videos in all available formats!
Resco Audio Recorder- Record and Playback high quality Audio in all available formats!
Resco Radio- Internet Radio
Resco Screen Capture
And much more!
And the lost thing, you don’t have to pay tax on this purchase!
Will ship internationally with additional applicable Shipping and Handling charges.
Will accept Check or Money Order as well as a Bank Transfer.
Item will be shipped as soon as payment is received and cleared.
For Check payments allow up to 10 days to clear check. (Time frame may vary depending on bank)
Please contact me if you have further questions.
Will be happy to provide after sells support over the e-mail.
Reviving the dead!!
Lol
See the price??
Amazing!!!

First thoughts of the Nokia N95 & I’ll, in the future, publish a lot of Symbian info

First thoughts of the Nokia N95 & I’ll, in the future, publish a lot of Symbian info
Now that the HTC folks have announced they will not release the HTC Omni in the next three months, that is, there is no real successor of the HTC Universal (my current workhorse and main Pocket PC) and, frankly, none of the current Pocket PC’s (or Smartphones) appeal to me (I already have several previous-generation PPC’s and SP’s and the current HTC models don’t offer significantly more than, say, my Universal or Vox), but I’m (still) severely addicted to electronic toys & gadgets like smart phones, I’ve decided to get the Nokia N95. After all, I needed a new toy (Yes, it’s certainly HTC to blame for my decision – why on earth did they have left us high and dry on the upgrade path?)
I received it about a week ago and now I understand why a lot of, otherwise, Windows Mobile freaks (for example, the folks over at MobilitySite) publish so many news items / articles on it. Despite it being over half a year old, the Nokia folks have managed to pack in a lot of functionality into this phone. Frankly, my HTC Vox (s710) MS Smartphone (which was released about the same time as the N95), hardware-wise, seems still to be in the stone ages compared to this beauty (much heavier, much worse camera, no GPS, no 3G (let alone 3.5G), no 3D hardware acceleration, no TV out, no FM radio, impossible to set the brightness level (the Vox is far too bright in a completely dark room), no call recording / answering machine support etc.) – except for, of course, the QWERTY keyboard.
Unfortunately, there are some problems with the N95. The battery life is pretty bad, for one. While, sometimes, I only charge my TI OMAP-based (and, therefore, non-3G) phones (OK, I don’t use them much for for example Web browsing and such – I mostly use my Universal for that because of the VGA screen) once a week, the N95 requires far more frequent recharges – at least a daily one.
The size of the RAM memory is another question. While the 22-23M RAM available after boot is enough for a LOT of things under Windows Mobile, multitasking in Symbian seems to be much more memory-hungry, particularly if you use the built-in, indeed excellent Web browser. If you open some (not very big) no more than two or three pages in the factory browser, the background tasks (for example, media player) inevitably shut down. In addition (still speaking of the browser), you can’t keep more than 3-4 pages in memory; they will need to be reloaded if you go back to them. Even the pretty much memory-hungry Internet Explorer Mobile behaves better and uses less memory on Windows Mobile, let alone other browsers (for example, the at least twice more memory-friendly Opera Mobile; and I haven’t even mentioned Opera Mini, which has at least two orders of magnitude less memory usage). Fortunately, both Opera Mobile 8.65 and Opera Mini work in a far more memory-friendly way. That is, if you do plan to multitask (a lot), never ever think of getting the N95.
Speaking of the built-in browser, it indeed rocks. It’s using a narrow character set like Thunderhawk and is really able to crunch a lot of text into the visible screen estate without the need for horizontal scrolling. Also, as opposed to almost all Windows Mobile browsers (except for the slow & memory hog Minimo, the, currently, unavailable NetFront, the still slow and buggy jb5 and the unofficial and the somewhat outdated (no full page view), Russian Opera Mini 2 Mod), it allows for in-page text searching – a feature REALLY missing from mainstream Windows Mobile(-compliant), recommended browsers (Opera Mobile, IEM and the official version of Opera Mini). Also, it has really good standards compliance. While the results it presented in the Acid2 (CSS2) test were a bit worse than those of Opera Mobile or Minimo, it, otherwise, turned out to be pretty cool – for example, it has passed all my AJAX (and also the CSS1) tests.
The A2DP support, while it certainly had no quality problems with any stereo headphones (as opposed to the Microsoft BT stack on Windows Mobile) I’ve ever tested it with, has severe AVRCP problems with the Plantronics Pulsar stereo headphones: you can’t just restart playing a title from the 590A. This seems to be an issue with Nokia’s A2DP-enabled products in general: the 5300 also had, albeit different, AVRCP issues with my Plantronics 590A (but, of course, not with Nokia’s own headphones). That is, it’s still pretty sad to see neither the MS BT stack-based Windows Mobile (sometimes severe sound quality problems) nor the Nokia / Symbian platform (AVRCP problems and, after a while, drop-outs) support Plantronics’ products well.
The (stereo) speakers are of very good quality and are VERY loud. Much better than on my HTC Wizard, HTC Universal, HTC Vox, Oxygen, x51v and even the Fujitsu-Siemens Pocket Loox 718 / 720, which, so far, had the best, loudest speaker.
The (Java) MIDlet support is excellent (much better than under Windows Mobile) and is hardware 3D accelerated. While there’re few real MIDlets making use of the hardware 3D acceleration support, it’s still nice to have a device around that does support MIDlet acceleration. (More on this in my forthcoming MIDlet Bible.)
As far as the generic (non-A2DP) Bluetooth support is concerned, it, unfortunately, lacks advanced features; for example, it doesn’t support BT PAN at all (not that the MS BT stack would on Windows Mobile – actually, it was only some weeks ago that one-direction (PAN server) support was, finally, added by some XDA-Dev hackers). It can’t use other computers in DUN mode and, as it seems, it can’t connect them via a wireless serial connection either. Note that I had no file exchange problems with neither Widcomm- nor MS BT stack-based Pocket PC’s, which is certainly good news if you take into account that this isn’t necessarily the case, not even on the Windows Mobile platform.
Wi-Fi-wise, p2p connections work, should you really need something like BT PAN. Otherwise, it isn’t as good, compatibility-wise, as that of Windows Mobile. I’ve encountered far more situations where it either didn’t connect or just disconnected after 10-20 seconds than with my Vox (the Vox having the best Wi-Fi support so far). The rumored 2.x ROM update, which should be released next month, is stated to fix this problem.
The camera – particularly when taken into account it’s a phone camera – is very good, particularly when used as a video camera. I especially like the fact that, in video mode, it uses the really advanced and great H-264 (a.k.a. MPEG-4) coding, as opposed to the M-JPEG most even high-end (Canon's expensive SD/IXUS range etc.) point-and-shoot digital cameras. For example, even the latest Canon 870 IS camera (the one I’ll purchase as it has far better optics than its predecessor and has wide angle – see the just-published DPReview HERE) burns around 1.7MB every second at the best quality setting (640x480 / 30fps). The N95 burns about 20 Mbytes every minute – that is, about five times less than M-JPEG encoders – using the same VGA resolution and 30 fps, with compression artifacts not really visible during regular playback. Another comparison: low-end digicameras like the HP R717 burn 13 Mbyte a minute with QVGA (320*240), 30 fps, pretty low-quality videos. The lack of stereo (or even better) microphones is really a shame, though (not that any point-and-shoot, "real" digicams had stereo mikes – you need to use a “real” videocamera for that).
The screen is equally bad outdoors and/or in direct sunlight than those of the current Windows Mobile phones. Quite a letdown after the bright, old 176*208 Nokia screens like that of the Nokia N-Gage, which were perfectly visible / usable outdoors and even in direct sunlight. Instead of pumping out 16 million colors, Nokia should pay attention to making their screens more usable outdoors. Fortunately, the AllAboutSymbian folks declared this problem has also been fixed in the successor, the N95 8GB.
Fortunately, the screen doesn’t have polarization problems in Landscape, unlike many Pocket PC’s (all Casio transmissive color screens; the Dell Axim x50v / x51v etc.). This, and the fact that the minimal backlight level you can set is pretty low make the N95 a great bedtime device – very few gadgets are better in these two respects (the HP iPAQ hx4700 being one of them – it has even lower minimal backlight level and the same lack of polarization issues in Landscape).
Gaming-wise (let’s not forget: the N95 will be compatible with all N-Gage platform games from next month, meaning a lot of high-quality games), the hardware has both pros and cons. First, the pro: it has is excellent 3D accelerator and, again, it’s officially part of the new N-Gage platform. Then, the cons: it has pretty bad controls. Even worse, I’d say, than on most Pocket PC’s (OK, I admit the Pocket Loox 720, the HP iPAQ 2210, 38xx, 39xx, 5450 and 5550 are even worse, D-pad-wise). The sole reason for this is as follows:
it’s very easy for your thumb to accidentally press the two Menu buttons, located to the left / right of the D-pad. There isn’t anything worse than accidentally pressing them during playing a game. Fortunately, games, in general, pause themselves in these cases, so, you can still return to playing them.
if you prefer playing in Landscape (fortunately, the built-in games all support this orientation; so do some MIDlets), the multimedia buttons on the left won’t be of real help: they are very hard to press. According to the latest reviews, the latter problem, to some extent, have been fixed in the N95 8GB.
the Action button isn’t very easy to press either.
I can’t comment on the phone part (particularly recording phone calls and/or using answering machines – the biggest problem with most Windows Mobile phones) as yet as I’m still awaiting T-Mobile UK’s official unlock code so that I can use the phone outside of the UK. This is why I’ll only elaborate on the data capabilities later; most importantly, how the HSDPA support really fares, compared to my Windows Mobile devices. And, of course, I’ll also comment on the call recording capabilities.
All in all, so far, the N95 has turned out to be a VERY positive surprise and, if it records my phone calls without problems, I’ll give my HTC Oxygen to my wife and promote the N95 to be my main phone.
BTW, All About Symbian has just published a quick review of the Nokia N95 8GB, the enhanced version of the N95, which will hit the shelves REALLY soon - certainly worth reading.
Finally, an important announcement
I’ll continue publishing a LOT of information on the N95, particularly software-wise (the above is almost exclusively hardware-related) – that is, Symbian-related stuff. That is, in my future roundups, I’ll also elaborate on the comparable / related Symbian s60 products as well, starting with my MIDlet Bible, which will be published, hopefully, tomorrow. Note that the charts (main chart; 3D games Compatibily Chart and JBenchmark Chart) of it already have excessive information on the MIDlet support of Symbian. This will help
both Windows Mobile and Symbian software developers in learning how the software titles on the other platform behave, what functionality has been implemented etc. Currently, my full software roundups and Bibles are, for Windows Mobile developers, probably the number one source of information on what they should implement / work further on (at least this is what I’ve been told by most Windows Mobile top developers and I, knowing the detail of the information contained in these articles, I don’t think they’re just flattering me ). Adding multiplatform coverage will further help developers on adding features they may have not been aware of because they may not have the necessary means / time to know what a completely different, alternative mobile platform offers. This applies to developers of both platforms, of course.
originally Symbian (or, WM) users learning the new / other platform and finding software titles that offer the same (or similar) functionalities they got used to on their old (other) platform
users that have devices from both platforms will find these tests useful. As has already pointed out, the N95 beats most (if not all) Windows Mobile devices in many respects – and, of course, vice versa (for example, the GPS locking speed of natively SiRFIII-based devices, the AVRCP compliance with my Plantronics 590A A2DP headphones or the, in general, better software availability on Windows Mobile); hence, I think in the future the N95 will be always in one of my pockets (along with some of my Pocket PC’s and MS Smartphones, of course). This will greatly help them in deciding what platform / device to use for a given task.
Recommended reviews
MobileBurn
My-Symbian
Gizmodo
Nice review. I've just bought an N95 too and agree with most of your points.
But I gotta say the screen isn't really that bad, the daylight readability is quite acceptable - at least it is a transflective not transmissive like the Kaiser or the G900!
But hey you've not mentioned anything about the GPS?
wywywywy said:
Nice review. I've just bought an N95 too and agree with most of your points.
But I gotta say the screen isn't really that bad, the daylight readability is quite acceptable - at least it is a transflective not transmissive like the Kaiser or the G900!
But hey you've not mentioned anything about the GPS?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks, I'll re-compare it to my devices.
BTW, the Kaiser is transflective too (not sure about the G900), as are all 2.8" QVGA HTC devices. It's just that their screen is pretty hard to read outdoors. Still, they are transflective - still much better screens than real transmissive screens like that of color, old Casio models.
wywywywy said:
Nice review. I've just bought an N95 too and agree with most of your points.
But I gotta say the screen isn't really that bad, the daylight readability is quite acceptable - at least it is a transflective not transmissive like the Kaiser or the G900!
But hey you've not mentioned anything about the GPS?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
BTW, how much did you pay for your N95? (Is it the "basic", N95-1 model?)
Menneisyys said:
Thanks, I'll re-compare it to my devices.
BTW, the Kaiser is transflective too (not sure about the G900), as are all 2.8" QVGA HTC devices. It's just that their screen is pretty hard to read outdoors. Still, they are transflective - still much better screens than real transmissive screens like that of color, old Casio models.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi
I'm very interested in buying the Kaiser. Is the screen really good readable in direct sunlight?
Thank you very much in advance.
Sincerely
JCD.SAG
Menneisyys:
You 100% sure the Kaiser is transflective? Every owner I talked to said its not? I am not doubting you but I need to make sure, as I dismissed it purely because of the screen. But... even if its transflective, if it is not readable in daylight then it might as well not be.
My Hermes is obviously 2.8" too and is definitely transflective, very readable in daylight.
I bought the N95 from Mobiles2yourdoor.co.uk for free, £35 a month on 12 months contract, £175 cashback. Yes it is the basic N95 (I think its refurbished too), not the latest sexy 8GB model.
So, any update on the GPS front? I am still trying to decide which sat nav software to go for But definitely not TomTom because it STILL can't use the internal GPS receiver.
How is the Nokia N95 an upgrade from the HTC Universal
Compared to the Kaiser I would say that the only advantages of the N95 are the camera (5MP, but with extremely bad noise reduction) and video recording ([email protected] with good sound quality). If you want a VGA screen then wait for the ETEN M800 but if the video recording capabilities of the N95 appeal to you then Nokia do not yet have serious competition, AFAIK.
(My i-mobile 902 can do VGA recording, but at a very low bit rate, i.e. the end result is comparable with Video CD quality.)
UPDATE (10/28/2007):
As promised, I've started publishing (comparative) info on Symbian / the N95. The first article, the MIDlet Bible, has already been published. I'll pblish an article on the just-released, EXCELLENT Opera Mini 4 beta 3 tomorrow and will publish the long-awaited Multimedia Bible next week. Both with extensive Symbian-related remarks.
I'd like to thank "Beck" from the sprites & bites blog. In addition to sending me the phone even by her leaving without a single mobile phone for one and half a day, she was really helpful in receiving an official T-Mo UK unlock code for the device and sold the phone really cheap - she didn't try to rip me off in any way. That is, a big THANKS to her, and, if you, sometime, would trade with her, I can assure you she's 100% reliable and is an excellent seller.
Thanks again for the N95, which, otherwise, I couldn't have afforded (at its recent street price) because, after all, I've only bought it to have another toy I sometimes write about, not a(nother) Windows Mobile device I constantly use.
Finally, don't forget to check out her above-linked blog if you're interested in desktop console gaming (currently, it officially discusses the MS Xbox 360, the Nintendo Wii and the PS3) and her occasional mobility-related posts.
I’ve continued playing with the phone. First, some short remarks and, then, I discuss call recording.
The memory problem IS an issue and makes (occasional) running of the built-in browser a pain in even if you only want to see one page. For example, its memory requirements very often result in the application the browser was invoked shut down. This is really a pain if you, for example, clicked a HTML attachment in Messaging or a download link in Opera Mini. Then, there won’t be anything you can return to after having finished reading the HTML mail or downloading the file. Therefore, the built-in browser, no matter how great it is, is pretty much useless (but not on S60 3rd ed. Devices with substantially more free RAM like the N95-3 or the N95 8GB.)
The battery life turned out to be much better than I thought at first. If you don’t actively browse the Net use Wi-Fi etc. all the time and aren’t in a 3G area, you may end up having to recharge the device “only” every second day. Yeah, still much worse than the battery life of the HTC Wizard or any other TI OMAP-based Windows Mobile device, I know.
Compared to the HTC Universal Pocket PC, it has a little bit more tolerance to really low-level signals. When the Universal displays around one bar signal level, GPRS is sure to be interrupted. Not so with the N95, it was able to pretty surely
Unfortunately, the same can’t be stated about its being able to use 3(.5)G (UMTS / HSDPA). In that (at least in using 3G), the Universal seems to be better – it is clearly more sensitive. (It’s another question the Universal can’t make a usable connection with one UMTS bar visible. It’ll constantly switch between the two (GPRS and UMTS) modes, rendering Net access (and sometimes the entire handheld) almost useless – an inherent problem with Windows Mobile, unless you manually disable all kind of 3G support.
That is, if you plan to use your handset exactly at the boundary of 3+G UMTS (HSDPA) and pre-3G (GPRS. EDGE) coverage areas, there might be better handsets out there than the N95.
Bluetooth Dial-Up Networking is implemented REALLY cleverly and in a much more superior way than under Windows Mobile because it allows accessing the Net on the N95 while another client is actively using it as a modem. This really rocks. See THIS for more info on Windows Mobile’s (clearly inferior) approach.
Finally, the question of call (auto)recording – compared to Windows Mobile: In this area, the N95 is orders of magnitude better than most (but not all!) Windows Mobile handsets because 1, it does allow for recording the other party 2, while it does beep every 15 seconds (as opposed to what the manual states, that is, 5 seconds), this is only heard by the local party, not the remote one. The remote party doesn’t hear a thing – not even the initial beep about 2 seconds after starting the recording. This also means you do NOT need to use any beep filter applications (BeepOff, which, currently, doesn’t have an S60 3rd-compatible version AFAIK or the beep filter function of Ultimate Voice Recorder itself) and you can even use the built-in Recorder app (in the Office suite) to (manually) record your conversations. No beeps will be heard on the other end of the line.
I’ve played a lot with the call recording facilities and thoroughly tested the already-mentioned built-in Recorder app (which needs to be manually started and lacks memory-saving output formats), VITO AudioNotes for Nokia S60 3rd ed 1.31 and the well-known Ultimate Voice Recorder (UVR) 4.01.
I’ve created a chart of these apps:
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"lightbox_error": "The requested content cannot be loaded. Please try again later.",
"lightbox_start_slideshow": "Start slideshow",
"lightbox_stop_slideshow": "Stop slideshow",
"lightbox_full_screen": "Full screen",
"lightbox_thumbnails": "Thumbnails",
"lightbox_download": "Download",
"lightbox_share": "Share",
"lightbox_zoom": "Zoom",
"lightbox_new_window": "New window",
"lightbox_toggle_sidebar": "Toggle sidebar"
}
You’re supposed to directly compare the contents of this chart to that of my Windows Mobile VITO AudioNotes review. Note that, in the meantime, Resco Audio Recorder has also received MS Smartphone support. A quick, textual comparison & explanation follows:
Records to the card: of course, all of them do. In here, I’ve listed the directories they record to. As can clearly be seen, VITO AudioNotes uses exactly the same directory structure than under Windows Mobile, clearly separating incoming and outgoing calls. This is certainly good news – as we’ll later see, the other two solutions don’t store the direction of the call.
Format: in here, I’ve listed the output file format. As can clearly be seen, the built-in Recorder produces very large (one megabyte / minute) files unless you do know the call will take less than a minute OR are ready to always begin a new recording when the first times out; in this case, you can also use the most memory-effective MMS (physically, AMR) output format. The two other apps are far better in this respect, particularly UVR, which also allows for recording directly into AMR, unlike VITO’s app.
Distinction between incoming and outgoing calls?: as has already been mentioned, only VITO’s app supports this. However, I still don’t consider this to be a stumbling block with UVR as it’s, in general, very easy to decide who was the caller, particularly if you follow my advice below on trying to defer speaking with some 1-2 seconds.
Boot-time loading?: on Windows Mobile, both Resco and VITO automatically start themselves. With PMRecorder, you can easily do the same by creating a shortcut to its main EXE file (and, then, just minimizing PMRecorder’s main window upon restarting your handset). On Symbian S60 3rd ed, only UVR is able to auto-start itself, VITO isn’t. That is, you will always need to start the latter manually.
Shut down by the OS?: as with Windows Mobile, Symbian also shuts down background tasks when the memory starts to run out. This happens on the memory-constrained N95(-1) (NOT the 128M RAM-equipped N95-3 or the N95 8GB!) a lot of times.
Under previous S60 editions, there were call recorder apps that registered themselves (and, therefore, run) as services, not as high-level applications prone to be shut down. UVR has also followed this line. Unfortunately, that’s no longer the case – UVR will be shut down on the N95 too pretty early. Fortunately, this can be very easily spotted if you let it display its icon at the bottom of the screen – if it’s hidden, then, you know it needs to be restarted.
VITO’s app, on the other hand, was a VERY nice surprise: it isn’t shut down and keeps recording flawlessly. I’ve done some VERY serious tests mass program starting tests, spanning some 15-20 minutes, to be absolutely sure this is the case. VITO was never shut down. That is, if you don’t want to continuously restart UVR, go for VITO – it will surely be in the memory, ready for recording. A big thumbs up for the VITO folks!
Caller ID (or, if it lacks, phone number, including the case of unknown other parties) in the filename?: a decent call recorder app (as all the three recommended Windows Mobile call recorders) should make a Contacts database lookup, based on the caller / callee’s phone number, in order to insert her or his name in the file name, instead of the phone number. Both specialized apps support this.
Results of problematic chars in the contact name?: just like on Windows Mobile, Symbian apps refuse to record calls where the other party can be found in your local Contacts database and her or his name contain invalid characters like slashes (/).
As can clearly be seen, neither UVR nor VITO’s app knows how to deal with these cases – they simply won’t record anything. With UVR, this is particularly painful, as it DOES show it’s recording the conversation.
Results of beep elimination?: UVR (as opposed to the, in this regard, weaker VITO app) offers beep elimination, which is highly useful on (some) other models, where the other party does hear the beeps denoting being recorded. As, on the N95, beeps aren’t transmitted to the other party, the need for such an app isn’t so important on the N95. Therefore, you can safely turn off UVR’s beep elimination functionality (set Options / Settings / Warning beep to On; it’s Off by default) if you can put up with the beeps every 15 seconds. Note that I didn’t find this necessary: while some people complain of UVR’s beep elimination making the conversations a little bit stutter upon beeps, I haven’t run into this situation on the N95. Both parties were absolutely OK and pause-less with beep elimination on; so was the recording.
Visual feedback when (in)active?: UVR displays an icon at the bottom of the screen (this can be disabled); VITO doesn’t. With UVR, this is of particular importance because you’ll see at once if UVR gets shut down.
Lagging at start: along with the following, this row explains whether the recording starts at once, or, there is some kind of a lag, making the first (few) seconds unrecorded. While VITO’s app excels at this (no lagging at all), UVR has lost this test: it starts recording some 1.5-2.5 seconds after the call has been answered.
Note that you can’t fix this problem with URL by, for example, making it record to the internal memory (as opposed to the card) or disabling the beep elimination functionality.
Cutting at end: the situation is the reverse when the opposite case (“does the recorder app finish recording prematurely; that is, (long) before the call is hung?”). VITO’s app, unfortunately, doesn’t record the last 1.5 - 2 seconds. Make sure you keep this in mind when you want to be absolutely sure everything is recorded – try to insert a pause if you are to hang up the call and not the other party!
Other goodies: just like the built-in Recording, UVR is also able to password protect recordings and is able to do some similar niceties. VITO’s only real advantage is its ability to append a new recording to existing ones (both MP3’s and WAV’s). Of course, I haven’t listed essential functionality like playing back recordings.
Verdict: if you do need call recording, N95 supports it almost flawlessly. As neither UVR nor VITO AudioNotes are perfect, you will want to carefully compare their (dis)advantages and your needs to pick the one that better suits your needs.
abubasim said:
How is the Nokia N95 an upgrade from the HTC Universal
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nope, it's not an upgrade from the Universal, but from the HTC s310 (Oxygen) Smartphone, which I've bought in order to be able to record all my phonecalls. (Phone clal recoding is very important for me so that I can put them in my diary. It's great fun to listen to 20-30-year-old phone calls.)
I've only bought the N95 because Omni wasn't announced / released, I wanted to some new toy I can play with and I had some money to burn. In addition, "beck" sold it to me quite cheap (along with the official T-Mo UK unlock code) - so, my desire for new toys was fulfilled
abubasim said:
Compared to the Kaiser I would say that the only advantages of the N95 are the camera (5MP, but with extremely bad noise reduction)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Fortunately, edge hardening can be switched off; then, the effects of noise reductions can't be spotted on all shots (only on a part of them showing, say, lawn).
abubasim said:
If you want a VGA screen then wait for the ETEN M800
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's, unfortunately, quite a bit inferior to the Omni specs. The Omni is a real upgrade to the Universal; the M800 isn't.
wywywywy said:
Menneisyys:
You 100% sure the Kaiser is transflective? Every owner I talked to said its not? I am not doubting you but I need to make sure, as I dismissed it purely because of the screen. But... even if its transflective, if it is not readable in daylight then it might as well not be.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It depends on what you call "transflective". The Wizard screen (which, I think, is exactly the same than the one in the Kaiser - after all, both are HTC and both are 2.8" QVGA - why would HTC radically change its screen between models?) is transflective, but next to unreadable in full sunlight. I'm, however, absolutely sure the Wizard's screen isn't transmissive because, being an ex-Casio / HP Jornada 680/720 user, I know how transmissive screens behave outdoors / in sunlight. They are ABSOLUTELY useless, in no way can you make out anything on the screen. Unless, of course, you put for example your coat on your head, creating a small dark room
Well, the Kaiser is certainly better than as transmissive known models like the Casios in this respect. At least, something is readable on its screen. Definitely not a, say, Nokia N-Gage, the transflective iPAQ hx4700 / h2210 or the Pocket Loox 720, let alone a reflective screen like that of the iPAQ 36xx/37xx/38xx series, but still not as bad as old Casios.
All in all, technically, the Kaiser's screen is (or, should be) transflective.
(Also cross-posting this disclaimer as a collection of answers to the questions I’ve received on different forums.)
UPDATE / DISCLAIMER (10/28/2007): Some people have misunderstood the meaning of these articles (see for example XDA-Developers, HowardForums, MoDaCo).
Note that I'm only comparing the two platforms and NOT telling anyone to get an N95. I'm not a Nokia fanboy - if you want to see how real Nokia fanboys write and what kinds of reviews(?) they publish, look at some Symbian sites (no names mentioned ). No offense towards the reviewers of these sites, of course. If you know they’re, along with their verdicts and comparisons to other platforms, heavily biased, you’ll find their articles worth checking out. Otherwise, prefer reading my articles and direct OS comparisons and don’t let fanboys misinform you.
My reviews are to the point and do emphasize the problems with both platforms (as opposed to those of some Symbian pages), Symbian and Windows Mobile alike. As I’m, I think I can state this without being laughed at (after all, I have everything a decent WM guy should have: an MS MVP, the Nominations Manager at Smartphone & PPCMag etc.), one of the guys that knows the most about Windows Mobile (programming-wise too), I think I’m able to objectively compare operating systems.
An answer to another common question (some people thought I’ve purchased the Nokia to be a successor of my Universal): I've bought the handset NOT to be an upgrade from the Universal (it’d be pretty hard for a QVGA device to be an upgrade from a VGA one, wouldn’t be?), but from the HTC s310 (Oxygen) Smartphone, which I've bought in order to be able to record all my phone calls. (Phone call recoding is very important for me so that I can put them in my diary. It's great fun to listen to 20-30-year-old phone calls. That is, for phoning, I don't buy anything that isn't call recording-capable - this is why I've bought an, otherwise, very incapable phone (HTC s310) to be my current main phone.) As an s310 replacement, the N95 REALLY excels and offers WAY more in every respect (except for battery life and size).
I've only bought the N95 because Omni wasn't announced / released, I wanted to some new toy I can play with and I had some money to burn (that is, to get some new gadgets to play with). In addition, "beck" sold it to me quite cheap (along with the official T-Mo UK unlock code) - so, my desire for new toys was fulfilled That is, I haven't meant at all "the N95 is better than the Universal in every respect" - again, we're comparing apples and oranges.
I also recommend my remarks & comments HERE in the Comments section.
Menneisyys said:
It depends on what you call "transflective". The Wizard screen (which, I think, is exactly the same than the one in the Kaiser - after all, both are HTC and both are 2.8" QVGA - why would HTC radically change its screen between models?)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well it definitely isn't the same one as in the 2.8" QVGA Hermes.
wywywywy said:
Well it definitely isn't the same one as in the 2.8" QVGA Hermes.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks, good to know HTC has messed this up royally.
A friend of mine has just ordered one; I'll definitely take comparative screenshots when it arrives.

New Android Pad ...not bad

Superpad 10.2" Tablet PC w/ Google Android 2.1, Webcam, GPS, HDMI, USB, WiFi & 2 Micro SD Card Slots
This 10.2" Android Superpad keeps you connected and entertained everywhere you go! It includes a built-in GPS chip which allows the Superpad to be used as a GPS device. Along with the touch screen, it comes with a digital pen that can be used for drawing or note-taking. The Android 2.1 software delivers multi touch capabilities and access to watching videos, playing games, and browsing the web.
$ 174 .99
Found on Buy.com....Any comments?
Regards
I also am curios as to what everybody thinks on this. I just saw the e-mail about it.
For $175...it is really cheap. The quality must be questionable otherwise I do not know how it can be that cheap.
I could not find an info on CPU...is it 1Ghz or less.
Regards

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