Monthly Archive for October, 2005

Samsung i730 EVDO Pocket PC


Samsung i730 EVDO Pocket PC
Originally uploaded by JoshB.

I realized that I hadn’t posted many photos of my new favorite wireless gadget that I’ve been raving about.

This is actually Tom’s unit, the one that drove me over the edge after I got to play with it. Check out the results of the speed test on the screen. :-)


Channel 9 Guy Beanbag Staple Surgery


Channel 9 Guy Beanbag Surgery
Originally uploaded by JoshB.

Had to repair a hole in his bottom - he was spewing those little staticky styrofoam pellets all over my cube!

Now you can see why I never became a surgeon. At least he’s got a leg up on being Frankenstein’s monster for Halloween!


Firefly DVDs Arrived!


Firefly DVDs Arrived!
Originally uploaded by JoshB.

I ordered the Firefly DVDs (The Complete Season) from Amazon after seeing Serenity. One of the best shows I’ve seen in a long, long time.

Run, do not walk, to your favorite DVD place and buy or rent. It’s great.


Infinite Bloglines


Infinite Bloglines
Originally uploaded by JoshB.

Picture of me looking at a post I made with a picture of Bloglines mobile on my i-mate JasJar. In Bloglines mobile. On my i-mate JasJar. *boggle*


Scott Adams has started a blog

The Dilbert Blog

’bout time.

Subscribed.


Blogging Academy Podcast #7: “What is a Wiki?”

I’ve posted Blogging Academy Podcast #7: “What is a Wiki?” over at BloggingAcademy.com.

This week’s topic? Wiki 101. What a wiki is, what they’re good for, how to use one, how to set one up, and how to protect one from unwanted changes.

Head over and have a listen if you’re interested.


I’ll Buy the First Digital Camera That Can Post Directly to Flickr

Everyone’s coming out with digital cameras with WiFi capabilities these days. But they’re all disappointing. Kodak’s EasyShare ONE camera can do WiFi, but only if you stick their WiFi SD card in it, which besides being a total hack, limits you to the 256MB memory on the SD WiFi card. Nikon has announced a couple of cameras with WiFi, but they only work with a computer that’s running Nikon’s proprietary software, making WiFi more of a cable replacement than using it to make the camera a real network device.

Now Canon has the new Powershot SD430 Wireless:


You can do a little more with this one, like automatically transfer photos as you shoot, print wirelessly, and control the camera from your PC, but all of that requires Canon’s proprietary software, and is still only making using of WiFi as a cable replacement.

I want a camera that can act as a real network client, and post to online photo services like Flickr. I don’t care if it comes from a manufacturer or from the hacker/maker community. As soon as WiFi in a digital camera becomes more than a gimmick, I’ll drop some cash on it. I can’t be alone in this desire. My challenge - make my life easier - help me streamline the process of getting the photos off of my SD card, and onto Flickr where I can share them, blog them, and do something useful with them!

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I haven’t gone to showing partial posts in my feed

At least, not on purpose. Something is weird in Blogger, and sometimes, posts are showing up as truncated/shortened in my Atom feed when you read TinyScreenfuls in an aggregator.

I’m trying to figure out what’s going on, but I just wanted to let you know that I haven’t switched to partial posts in my feed. I still believe in full posts in the feed, and I usually unsubscribe from a site that doesn’t offer them.


Windows Mobile Team Blog : Virtual Earth Mobile

Jason Fuller, author of the great Virtual Earth Mobile app (which I’ve posted about before) that allows you to view and search MSN Virtual Earth map imagery on a Windows Mobile device like a Pocket PC or Smartphone has written up a great post on the how and why of Virtual Earth Mobile. I love VE Mobile on my Samsung i730 - the speedy EVDO data connection makes it quite snappy and easy to use.

A lot of what he talks about in the post was discussed at the PDC session on Virtual Earth, and it gave me lots of ideas for mobile friendly apps that could take advantage of Virtual Earth. If I ever get around to coding any of those apps, Jason’s source for VE Mobile will be the first place I start. Jason also explains why “Find Contact” is greyed out in VE Mobile on my Windows Mobile 2003 SE device - apparently, the database function to pull a contact’s address is new to Windows Mobile 5.

If you’ve ever been interested in how Virtual Earth interprets searchs and displays map results (it’s surprisingly simple - it’s all one big grid), or how easy it is to code up a really cool application on Windows Mobile, don’t miss this post.

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TinyPodcast 2005-10-21

EDIT: There was some file corruption with the MP3 I uploaded, but it should be fixed now. If you were having trouble, please re-download. Sorry about that, and thanks to Dave for catching it!

Here’s this week’s show. You can download the MP3 file directly (right-click, save as), or subscribe to the TinyPodcast RSS feed in your favorite podcast aggregator to get the show delivered automatically to your computer and MP3 player. This week’s show is about 20 MB, 40 minutes, as usual.

Brian and I catch up after I was out of town on vacation last week. Review of my Samsung i730 and speedy Verizon EVDO data service (it was awesome, and kept me connected the whole time I was gone). Coverage of Apple’s announcement of the new iPod with video, and my wait for one. Brian’s experiences using the i-mate JarJar for a few weeks. Plugs for upcoming appearances by Josh: “Get Connected” radio show on Oct. 22, presenting at Podcast Academy/Portable Media Expo on Nov. 10.

As an extra special comedy bonus, listen for the part where I get locked out of my computer while we were recording this show. :-)

As always, we love to get feedback! You can email us at tinyscreenfuls@gmail.com or call our voice feedback line and leave us a message - 206-339-TINY. Let us know how we’re doing - good or bad.

Thanks for listening, and stay subscribed!