Archive for category Cell Phones

Leaving AT&T for Sprint….something I never thought I’d do

So I recently moved away from the iPhone 3G to a Palm Pre, and as a result from AT&T to Sprint. This is something that I never thought would happen but the more time goes by the better I feel about it. To start with, AT&T’s 3G service is a complete joke unless you’re in the middle of nowhere and that place happens to have 3G service which are usually mutually exclusive. Why you ask? Because AT&T’s network is oversaturated with all the new iPhone users hungry for data.

There were many times when I would have a full 5 bars of 3G but the internet would be ridiculously slow to the point where it was useless. Then there were times where the much touted Visual Voicemail was a complete failure and I would get voicemail notifications hours after people left them.

It seems since I left AT&T, things are getting worse, no doubt because of all the new iPhone 3GS customers jumping on top of the already strained network. As TechCrunch stated in a recent blog post, AT&T sucks big time.

While Sprint has its share of problems, the one thing they do have going for them is that their data network, well, it actually works! The best way to quantify this is the fact that while I had the iPhone 3G on AT&T, the most data I ever used in a month was about 50MB. On Sprint, this month alone (and I still have a week left before the the next cycle), I’m already at 1,650MB. Sure, I could have used that much data on the iPhone but in order to do it, I’d have to have put up with AT&T’s crappy data network and by the time stuff loaded I would have probably poked my eyes out with sharp pencils.

So what’s the solution? From what I’ve heard any other carrier except AT&T including Verizon, Sprint and T-Mobile haven’t completely dropped the ball with their data network and there’s actually a possibility you can make use of your fancy 3G smartphone whenever and however you want. While I’m still shocked to some degree I went from the #1 US wireless carrier to #3, the benefits are really starting to pay off.

Some other differences include less dropped calls on Sprint (even in bad coverage) than AT&T. Many times with AT&T I’d be sitting pretty with 5 bars of 3G and have a dropped call for no apparent reason. My wife still has an iPhone 3G and sees this occasionally, as do members of my family. I think it’s blatantly obvious that AT&T’s network needs an upgrade on the backend and not just the towers. They just recently upgraded the towers in my area so there’s always 5 bars of 3G (“most bars in most places”) but what good is that when the damn service is unreliable and doesn’t work half the time?!

Notice I didn’t mention anything about devices per se, and compare the iPhone 3G to the Palm Pre since I think that’s just personal preference. Both are excellent devices depending on what you want. At the end of the day, devices are extremely important in deciding what carrier I use but the reality is…devices can only be as good as the network they are on

Yes, I got an iPhone…the irony doesn’t escape me

iPhoneAfter writing a rather scathing post on the iPhone and posting quite a few negative things about it, I decided to put my money where my mouth is and give it a shot. It turned out that the AT&T store near me had quite a few in stock and not a ridiculous amount of people waiting for one so I got one on Friday, June 29th at 6:05pm!

The reason I decided to even give it a shot is I came to the realization that the only features I consistently use on any of my cellphones are the music, video, web browsing, email and chat. I’ve had many phones that can do a lot more than that but beyond the initial period where it’s fun to play with I’ve never used more than these five main things.

I’ll be posting my iPhone review in the next few days but having used it over the weekend some of the things I expected to be not so great about it are true and some things have impressed me.

It is by far the best iPod and perhaps the best media player out there. The 3.5 widescreen lends itself immensely to watch videos, movies, tv shows,etc. It’s also nice to be able to see full screen Album art of music, podcasts, etc. The controls are great, the sound and video are superb so the iPod part of the iPhone truly lives up to the hype.

The web browsing part is perhaps the second most stunning thing about the iPhone – especially when using Wifi as opposed to EDGE (Cingular’s network). It renders web pages exactly as they would on your PC/Mac. There are no limitations except no Flash (which they may or may not add later). This is very refreshing since you can for the first time do all the things you can on your laptop/PC on a mobile device including paying your bills, shopping, searching for stuff,etc. The dedicated Google maps app also adds a lot to the device in practicality.

The email part is so-so, especially for me being such an avid Blackberry user. It does work as advertised but isn’t the most fully functioned and typing long emails on the touch-screen keyboard is nowhere near as nice as using a dedicated keyboard. But the biggest upside is that HTML emails are rendered perfectly as if you were using Outlook or a desktop client. This is a huge improvement and something that no Blackberry or Windows Mobile device supports at this level.

Chat is perhaps the biggest letdown on the iPhone because they currently don’t have one on the device. There’s a lot of speculation that it will be added soon as a software update but I’ll believe it when I see it. Currently only chat-like functionality is using SMS which costs money, which in turn sucks.

The phone part of it is great but a step backwards from current phones out there. There’s no voice dialing (which I use a lot), there’s no speed dial because there’s no buttons – instead there’s a list of favorites, there’s no MMS (which I never used) and some other basic things.

The fact that it runs on EDGE is also a letdown since it’s much slower than other 3G networks like Verizon or Sprint have. But it’s designed to switch between EDGE and Wifi pretty seamlessly so anywhere you have a WiFi connection you’re going to be surfing along fine. In the end it’s a safe bet that also due to a recent issue with Qualcomm 3G chips not being allowed into the US, 3G cellphones may experience delays in being released in the US at least.

In the end, and I’ll save more for the review, the iPhone has to be thought of as an absolutely stunning iPod with fantastic web browsing, excellent email and decent phone functionality. Also the user interface is a pleasure to use and makes you wish all things could be this easy to operate.

 I still haven’t decided whether to keep it or return/sell it but so far so good.

11 iPhone Gotchas (Drawbacks)

Want an iPhone? Of course you do. It looks sexy, it’s innovative, and–for a while at least–it’ll be the ultimate status symbol. But in the fog of iPhone hype, it’s easy to lose sight of the fact that the latest Apple sensation will still have its share of disadvantages.

read more | digg story

All-in-one iPhone looks nifty, but should you put it on hold?

The iPhone’s battleground is outside the home, where for nearly a decade, digital alchemists have searched for the ultimate hand-held gizmo: a true all-in-one device that will not only make phone calls, play music, e-mail, manage an appointment calendar and take pictures but also surf the Web. This type of device has been done many times but never well.

read more | digg story

Blackberry 8830 launches on Verizon Wireless

One of the best Blackberry devices that gives you both CDMA/EVDO (Verizon’s network in US) and GSM/GPRS roaming when abroad (basically what the rest of the world uses) has launched on Verizon Wireless. If you’re on Verizon Wireless and have been waiting to jump on the ‘berry bandwagon then this is the one you’ve been waiting for. Apart from the global roaming capabilities, it has the latest BB 4.2 OS, an amazing screen, sleek and lightweight form factor as well as the new trackball nav.

Go get it while it’s hot

5 Problems With the Upcoming Apple iPhone

iPhoneOk, lets get it out of the way. This is only my personal opinion and should only be taken as such especially by the Apple faithful.

So where to start? Well as everyone probably knows a while back now Apple commander-in-chief Steve Jobs announced the iPhone and the Apple world collectively starting weeping with joy. Mind you a lot of folks who aren’t real hardcore Apple users were also mesmerized by the shiny device that Steve demonstrated on the stage. I think for maybe the duration of keynote most people were probably slowly reaching into their back pockets for their wallet ready to plop down whatever money Apple was asking for….but then we were all told the dirty specs and pricing behind the iPhone which really, for me personally, made it a non starter.

Let me elaborate:

  1. The iPhone runs on EDGE which is Cingular’s/AT&T’s 2-3 year old data network that maxes out at theoretical speeds of 75-135kbp which really isn’t saying much. To translate that into common terms we’re talking about a maximum speed of approximately twice the speed of dial-up (remember that? some of you may be too young!) but on average as fast (or as slow) as dial-up. Now this wouldn’t be a big deal except well, our friend  Steve-o decided that he wanted to put a full fledged OS on the device with a swanky Safari web browser, Google maps and more. If you don’t know where I’m going by now, you may never get it but I’ll say it for your sake: EDGE is too slow for the iPhone. You will have time to run home and browse a website on your PC while you wait for your faithful iPhone to load a website. Other mobiles work around this by using proxies to compress content such as the excellent Opera Mini browser but no, Apple wants you to browse the wonderful world wide web with all its annoying ads and flash based content at a speed that they themselves couldn’t honestly say was sufficient with a straight face.
  2. Touch screen isn’t new and is horrible for typing. No I haven’t used an iPhone but guess what, the whole touch screen thing has been done for years with Palm and Windows Mobile devices. The fact is manufacturers stayed away from them because it just is not the best interface for typing more than 2-3 words. Although Steve made fun of Treos and Blackberry devices in his keynote, was he also calling the millions of users out there who use them and love them idiots? Reality is that using a touch screen for typing is just not as easy as with a dedicated keyboard. If you want to illustrate this to yourself (assuming you’re somewhat proficient in typing) go ahead and type something on your computer’s keyboard….see nice and easy right? Now find a flat surface, preferably a coffee or dining table and pretend there’s a keyboard on it (you can even cut out a piece of paper that looks like a keyboard if you want) and try using it as a keyboard. Notice something? Even there were “touch screen” keys there it doesn’t feel right. It’s because we rely a lot on the tactile feel of buttons, this lets our brains know that we’ve succesfully pressed the button and also allows us to learn typing without looking thanks to muscle memory.  Add to that the fact everytime you need to input something the keyboard has to take over the whole screen of the iPhone so you can tap on it which really takes away from the user experience. So in summary, good luck typing more than a few words on your iPhone  using the touch screen keyboard without having to constantly stare at it and watch every button you press.
  3. Corporate integration is non-existent. This may not matter to most users but it seems Apple is comparing their iPhone to the likes of Blackberry and Windows Mobile. Both of these platforms are if nothing very capable when it comes to corporate integration. Both work flawlessly with Microsoft Exchange syncing not just email but your calendar, address book, notes, tasks and more. Apple’s offering? Yahoo IMAP email! Because I’m sure hundreds of thousands of people were jump ship and start using Yahoo IMAP email for their business purposes. Also although Apple calls their Yahoo IMAP email “push email” it’s not even close to it. The IMAP protocol is inherently push because all email is stored on the server so your email client stays connected to the email server, this both eats data and battery life since your iPhone has to keep a constant connection with Yahoo’s email server. Windows Mobile has a slightly more elegant method and of course Blackberry has the best push email method which truly “pushes” the email to your device which is one of the reasons Blackberry battery life is so good.
  4. No removable battery. So I guess Apple feels that since you can’t remove the battery from your iPod why should you from the iPhone? Problem is that the iPhone is meant to be both your MP3/video player as well as your cell phone. My 5G iPod itself doesn’t have such stellar battery life and that’s with a tiny screen with mild usage. Now think of the iPhone’s massive screen, super thin form factor (where the battery is) the multiple radios onboard (Bluetooth, GSM/GPRS, WiFi) and I wouldn’t be shocked if the battery life in certain conditions would fall under an hour. Of course people will argue that this is the price that is paid for such an “amazing” device but alas when your battery dies on you unexpectedly, and trust me that it will at some point, you will be forced to pull out your charger in the middle of nowhere and hunt for a outlet. Meanwhile, those “dumbphones” as Steve Jobs likes to call the competition can easily slip out one battery and slip in another ready to go or even a higher performance battery if needed. To me this is one of the bigger glaring flaws with it and something that will come to bite Apple in their posterior as people start using the iPhone
  5. It’s hard putting the price of the iPhone down as a problem since it’s subjective. For some people $1,000 is chump change but I think more than the sticker price what is going to work against it is the 2-year contract supposedly required with the purchase. Anything can happen but as of now we’re looking at ~$599 for the 8GB iPhone with a 2-year agreement with Cingular/AT&T. So what does that mean? Apart from the usual monthly $39.99 or whatever voice plan you have you will also need to make sure you pay for the data which currently looks to be around $20 EXTRA a month. For those of you who do not currently have a phone that requires a data plan, this will be an additional cost you need to take into account…$20 * 24 months = $480 over two years alone just for data. They may still come out with a cheaper data plan but so far that looks to be it.

I could go on for quite some time on this but these to me are five of the main issues with the iPhone. I know a few people are annoyed that it’s not an open system that people apart from Apple can develop software for, although for its worth I think that’s the least of their problems.

Don’t get me wrong I’m not naive or ignorant, I know the hordes of loyal Apple fans will still run out to their local Cingular/AT&T or Apple stores in June to get their iPhones. All I will say is make sure you can return it in 30 days because I have a feeling some of you may end up doing so. Good luck.

First public beta of JiveTalk for Blackberry released

I just tried out this killer multi-client chat app and it truly is an evolution from previous chat applications for the Blackberry. It’s currently in public beta so it’s free during this time, although not sure what they’re thinking of charging once it’s officially released.

I highly recommend anybody who is remotely curious – no anyone who HAS a Blackberry – go to www.beejive.com/download on your Blackberry browser and download the version that’s appropriate for your Blackberry.

Give it a shot, at the very worst you can just delete it when you’re done or the beta ends.

Enjoy!

Windows Mobile 5.0 System Processes Memory Consumption

One of the main problems with Windows Mobile 5.0 devices is that they don’t have a lot of RAM available to users so you can’t run a lot of applications at the same time, and on top of that some applications aren’t good about returning the RAM they use after they’re done.

RAM in Windows Mobile 5.0 works in the same way as RAM on a PC. It’s volatile storage which means that if power is lost everything in it is erased. It’s used to load running programs and store info temporarily. Windows Mobile 5.0 devices also have ROM which can be compared to a hard drive on a PC and is used for persistent storage. So essentially, much like a PC whenever a program runs on a Windows Mobile 5.0 device (for the most part) it is copied from ROM to RAM and then executed. The code then remains in RAM until it is done and then it’s supposed to free that RAM for something else – except it doesn’t always seem to happen too well. Keep in mind, releasing this free RAM and memory management in general is the responsibility of the application NOT Windows which is why things get messy with third-party apps. 

In any case, I am very much in love with my Cingular 8125 which runs Windows Mobile 5.0 but I got frustrated with the constantly vanishing RAM so I sent an email to the Windows Mobile Team blog, who actually work on the development of the system.

This a great email response from Mike Calligaro of the Window’s Mobile Team. Its pretty self-explanatory.

What do you think? Is Mike’s explanation valid? I think if what he says is true that we need to pick up our pitchforks and go after the OEMs such as HTC for sticking us with a paltry 64MB of total RAM…most of us start with only about 22MB available after a soft-reset and if 10MB+ is “supposed” to be used by the OS then we’re left with 10MB or even less.

Leave a comment and let me know what you think.

—–Original Message—–
From: Me
Sent: Friday, April 28, 2006 8:15 AM
To: Windows Mobile Blog Team
Subject: (Windows Mobile Team Blog) : WM 5.0 System Processes Memory Consum=
ption
Importance: High

Hi,

I would normally accept OS memory allocations and system process memory foo=
tprints as a necessary evil but something just does not seem right.

I have a HTC Wizard device running the latest AKU2 ROM (OS 5.1.195 Build 14=
847.2.0.0)

I start off with about 22MB of free memory after a soft-reset and now after=
using the device for about 8 days, I’m consistantly floating around 7-8MB =
free.

I ran Task Manager (similar to MemMaid) which looks at running processes an=
d memory footprint. Guess what I found….the top 4 memory hogs are ALL WIN=
DOWS MOBILE 5 SYSTEM PROCESSES!!

So in reality it doesn’t matter which apps you are running from third-parti=
es because it’s WM5′s own system processes that are killing your memory.

Here’s my top 4:

GWES.exe – ~3MB

Filesys.exe – ~ 2.5MB

Shell32.exe – ~ 2.5MB

Device.exe – ~ 2.0MB

Total = 10MB!!

VoiceCmd also takes up about 2MB and the rest of my apps/plug-ins take up

—– Reply to Original Message—–
From: “Mike Calligaro”
To: Me
Sent: 5/8/06 4:43 PM
Subject: RE: (Windows Mobile Team Blog) : WM 5.0 System Processes Memory Co=
nsumption

These numbers feel about right to me. It takes code to run an operating sy=
stem, and code uses RAM. All of the processes that you’ve listed below are=
system processes.

GWES is the windowing system. A large number of the system bitmaps are loa=
ded into GWES. Bitmaps (pictures) take up a lot of space. Also, every app=
lication that creates a window causes GWES to allocate space to manage that=
window. Font data is also loaded into GWES. The more fonts used, the mor=
e space GWES will use.

Filesys is the file system. It is equal parts Microsoft code and OEM code,=
but 2.5M feels about right, especially if you had a storage card inserted =
when you took that number. It is the file system that stores data in inter=
nal flash and storage cards. Because flash is considerably slower than RAM=
the file system uses a chunk of RAM as a “cache.” When you want to write =
something to the flash, the filesys will store it in the cache and let you =
get on with your business quickly. Then it slowly writes the data out to f=
lash. A sizeable chunk of the RAM you’re seeing is used by these caches. =
An OEM can configure how big the caches should be, but this is a tradeoff b=
etween RAM usage and performance. If you use too little RAM, the device wi=
ll go too slow.

Shell32 is the user interface of the system, including the today screen. A=
ny today screen plugins you have are loaded in Shell32′s space, as is the b=
ackground image.

Device contains all of the device drivers on the system. Device drivers ar=
e the code that make the hardware work. Without them, your device is nothi=
ng but a hunk of plastic. Device contains, minimally, the Display driver, =
backlight driver, audio driver, keyboard driver, battery driver, usb driver=
, camera driver, Bluetooth driver, wifi driver, and cellular radio driver. =
Remove the display driver, and your screen wouldn’t work anymore, etc. Al=
though all of these drivers are written by the OEM, running more than ten f=
undamentally important pieces of code in 2M seems reasonable to me.

Mike

HTC Wizard (Cingular 8125) Registry Tweaks

Cingular 8125One thing that I HAVE been spending a lot of time with recently is my new Cingular 8125 – based on the HTC Wizard. You can read the review on my site to learn more about it.

The thing is since I’ve had the device, I’ve started to really enjoy it more and more for the simple reason that *gasp*, it’s Windows. Granted there are several problems with Windows in general, biggest ones being security and stability BUT one of the advantages of having a Windows OS on your PDA/handheld device is the familiarity you automatically have with its functionality.

The Windows Mobile 5 devices have among other similarities with its big brother Windows is the registry. A tree data structure that provides a central location for both system and application components. Where there is a registry, there is flexibility – sounds corny, but I didn’t mean it to.

Many adventorous people have slaved away at finding all kinds of goodies from editing that lovely registry and I’ve decided to post links to the best resources I could find.

What You Need:

A registry editor software. Windows Mobile 5.0 does not come with any type of registry editing software because frankly users are not supposed to be snooping around and messing with stuff in there.

Some potential candidates are:

  • Resco Explorer 2005 – This costs $ BUT it is my favorite and highly-highly recommended. It not only gives you a very friendly registry editor but an amazingly versatile file manager AND a Today screen plug-in to monitor system resources. The only reason you shouldn’t get this is if you’re just trying to make this difficult on yourself
  • Total Commander – This one is free and I haven’t tried it but I believe it serves its purpose quite well. I have heard this one is not for those who are not as technical as they would like to be but hey, it’s free.
  • PHM Registry Editor – Older app that is also free but again, nothing comes for free so the interface is not as user-friendly as Resco.

Download one of the above apps and install it onto your Cingular 8125 (or any HTC Wizard based device).

Before we get to the good stuff, I have to put out a disclaimer like everyone else does, that making changes to your registry can be potentially harmful to the device and can lead to (rarely) a corruption of data or having to restore your device to the original factory state (called a hard reset).

Where To Get The Info:
Now to the good stuff. Here’s a link to an amazing site called xda-developers.com. They have a page up with most if not all of the tweaks that are really important.

HTC Wizard Registry Tweaks at XDA-Developers.com

Happy Tweaking! I’ll post more stuff about my Cingular 8125 as time goes by including more tips, tricks and recommendations for software.

Back with a vengeance and the Cingular 8125 Review

Well I think the last post on here was quite some time ago and I feel bad that I haven’t had time to post anything new since then. I’m going to try my best to post frequently on here so to keep things flowing rather than being so stagnant. Work has been busy and I was in Houston for a couple of days but now I should be able to allocate some time to post on here.

I’ve also posted a review of the Cingular 8125 (HTC Wizard) so check that out.