Category: Phones
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Blackberry "8830 World Edition": some initial impressions of the CDMA/GSM phone
Continue Reading: Blackberry "8830 World Edition": some initial impressions of the CDMA/GSM phoneToday I received my new Blackberry “8830 World Edition” and I thought I’d record some initial reactions. As past readers know, I live in Vermont where we don’t really have decent GSM coverage (and can’t get the iPhone) and are, in fact, likely to have even less GSM coverage now that Verizon will be purchasing GSM provider Unicel and, per Engadget and others, will be converting all GSM users over to CDMA.
This is obviously not a good thing for those of us who need to travel outside of North America.
My previous CDMA-only Blackberry 7290 became essentially an extremely expensive paperweight the moment I left these shores. Because I do travel, I have had a “backup phone” that is a Cingular GSM phone (with a New York number) that I used when outside of NA. However, it’s rather a pain because: 1) it’s a different phone interface than I’m used to; 2) it’s a different number than people know and I have to get into forwarding; 3) it doesn’t always seem to work abroad; 4) Mitel has been paying two separate monthly fees for me; and perhaps most importantly to me 5) I don’t get my email…
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Telephony *disrupted*… Blackberries do NOT like being submerged in water (nor do digital cameras)
Continue Reading: Telephony *disrupted*… Blackberries do NOT like being submerged in water (nor do digital cameras)Note to self: Blackberries don’t like water!
Last Friday, I took most of the day off as vacation so that we could leave early to go camping for the weekend. I did work for an hour or two in the morning and so I had my old Blackberry 7290 clipped to my belt when we drove off to Little River State Park in Waterbury, VT. We set up our camp site and then drove down to the boat launch to put our tandem kayak in the water. We got the boat all ready, moved the car up to the parking area some distance away and were basically ready to go.
It was then that I noticed the Blackberry was still on my belt. Eager to get on the water and not really wanting to walk all the way up to the parking area to put the BB in the car, I said “Okay, no problem, I’ll just put the BB in the small waterproof ‘dry bag’ fanny pack where I keep my wallet and digital camera.” I’ve been using this particular dry bag for years and never had any problems with it. It’s been a great way to bring a camera along and…
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Remote VoIP teleworker sets serve as an Internet connectivity warning device…
Continue Reading: Remote VoIP teleworker sets serve as an Internet connectivity warning device…Here’s a great side benefit of having an IP phone in teleworker mode hanging off of a system somewhere out there on the Internet – you have a close-to-instant warning system about Internet connectivity issues.
Take this morning… I walk into my home office and see that one of my phones has come out of its sleep status and the backlight is on and showing "CONNECTION PENDING…" with these black square boxes next to it. I glance at another IP phone: "PLEASE WAIT"
Oh, %#$#?!. It’s going to be that kind of Monday morning!
Yes, indeed, as I woke up the PCs, I did indeed have no connectivity. Couldn’t get to any websites and all the IM clients were cycling waiting to get connected. After doing the usual power-cycling of the cable modem and verifying that I could get an address but couldn’t ping beyond the next hop router, a relatively-quick call to Comcast brought the word that there was a "partial outage" in my area and that connectivity might be going up and down for the next two hours.
Great. Wonderful way for a home office worker to start a Monday.
But it did remind me of one great…
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iPhone meet kitchen mixer – Will It Blend?
Continue Reading: iPhone meet kitchen mixer – Will It Blend?Okay, I’m sorry, but I just find this way too funny. Do I refer to this as “DisruptED Telephony”?
Tip of the hat to Chris Brogan for tweeting it and Doug Haslam for posting it.
Kudos also to Blendtec, maker of mixers, for coming up with this “Will It Blend?” series of videos. I admit that I did watch some of the others in the “Don’t Try This At Home” category. Fans of a certain recent movie release might enjoy what happens to a Transformer… suffice it to say that it… um.. transforms, rather permanently.
Obviously this particular video is probably also doing well for Blendtec… so far since it was posted yesterday there have been almost 241,000 views of the video at the time I am writing this.
Technorati tags: phones, blendtec, willitblend, apple, iphone, humor -
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ZDNet blogger to return his iPhone… because it doesn’t have enough *phone* features!
Continue Reading: ZDNet blogger to return his iPhone… because it doesn’t have enough *phone* features!Interesting post yesterday at ZDNet, “Apple seems to have forgotten the phone in the iPhone“, where blogger Matthew Miller writes about his disappointment after 10 days of iPhone usage. Since I can’t get an iPhone because of where I live, I’ve only very peripherally been following iPhone news (figuring that when I can eventually get one it will be improved by then). Of course, you could not have missed the predictably huge initial reactions about the device being “magic”, but now we are starting to see real and more honest appraisals as people actually get to work with the devices. In Matthew Miller’s case, here is his list of what the iPhone is missing related to telephony:
- Low volume speakerphone (basically useless at max volume through mono speaker)
- Mid volume speaker
- Tough to speed dial (at least 5 presses/slides to call one of your )
- No smart dial (filtering of contacts as you enter letters or numbers)
- Reception issues (full signal to no signal in same area)
- No instant messaging application
- Non-removable battery that cost $86 to replace from Apple
- Weak Bluetooth radio (profiles and reception with headset)
- No DUN (Bluetooth or cabled)
- No custom ringtones
- No MMS functionality…
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YouTube video shows the Sun / Mitel collaboration – voice/data hot desking via card…
Continue Reading: YouTube video shows the Sun / Mitel collaboration – voice/data hot desking via card…One of the many cool things I’ve been hoping to find the cycles to write about coming out of Mitel Forum last week is the collaboration occurring between Mitel and Sun Microsystems. First announced June 19th, there are really two components to the collaboration: 1) the Multi-Instance Call Server (MICS) that can have up to 200 instances of our 3300 ICP call control software running on a Sun server; and 2) a very cool integration of a SunRay thin client computer into the base of one of our phones. With the phones, a user can simply insert their “Java card” into the base of the phone and the user is automagically signed onto the computer and to the phone. Pull the card out, the user is logged out. Insert another user’s card and the computer and the phone are logged in as that user. It takes the “hot desking” we’ve had for years and extends that to now also include the PC. As I said, it’s very cool!
The good news is that I can actually share a bit of the experience with you courtesy of Sun blogger Craig Bender, a.k.a. the “Thin Guy”, who writes the Sun Ray Blog. I…
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The truth about the iPhone and other devices – in the end, it all comes down to batteries…
Continue Reading: The truth about the iPhone and other devices – in the end, it all comes down to batteries…In the end, it all comes down to *#$%#$?@ batteries! I was greatly amused to read today David Berlind’s ZDNet Blog post, “iPhone redux: Is it time for the battery life equivalent of a ‘nutrition label’ (see example)“.
His statements are entirely true. We as an industry do need some kind of “truth in labeling” decree about battery life. I loved his diagram that he came up with (shown on right).
This point was vividly driven home to me a few years back when for about a year or so I was the product manager for Mitel’s wireless portfolio and was involved with the rollout of Mitel’s IP-DECT solution in Europe. Never in my life did I expect that so much of my time in the product launch would be consumed in dealing with issues around batteries! Being a “software guy”, I really had very little understanding of the nuances of power consumption and their impact on battery life. It was definitely a great learning experience! As David Berlind says:
Not only was plenty written about the iPhone’s potential battery life issues, the truth of the matter is that there’s only so much you can ask a battery to do.
Batteries…
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Happy iPhone Day! (Unless, of course, you live in Vermont, Alaska, Maine or other rural places…)
Continue Reading: Happy iPhone Day! (Unless, of course, you live in Vermont, Alaska, Maine or other rural places…)Unless you have been living under a rock for the past six months, you would know that today is the day that the Apple iPhone becomes available. Actually, it is not until 6pm local time today, which seems a bit odd but it does provide a way to hype things all day as there will undoubtedly be endless news reports about the people standing in line to get an iPhone. The hype is almost endless, it would seem. Quite frankly, I don’t see how the iPhone will even remotely live up to all the expectations that have been placed on it. It slices. It dices. It solves world hunger and cures cancer! Well, okay, maybe not… but the hype would almost bring it to that level. I have to expect that over the next few days the blog posts will naturally turn to peoples’ reviews of the product and the inevitable let-downs.
I, of course, won’t have a chance to experience an iPhone anytime soon. As I wrote previously, those of us who live in states without AT&T coverage are just out-of-luck. (Also noted by a local Apple retailer.) I guess the good news is that by the time…
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Do you prefer a softphone or an IP ("hard") phone? – Jeff Pulver’s Question of the Day
Continue Reading: Do you prefer a softphone or an IP ("hard") phone? – Jeff Pulver’s Question of the DayOver on his blog, Jeff Pulver asks “Do you prefer softphones or IP phones?“, which is a great question to ask. What do you think?
I left a comment there and then started writing a longer blog entry – but I just don’t have the time to complete that particular entry, so I’ll have to stick it in the queue for a future article. In the meantime… do head on over to Jeff’s site and leave any comments you have. It’s definitely an interesting question.
Technorati tags: softphones, voip, jeff pulver, phones -
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MAKE: Turning an antique phone into a USB headset (and therefore Skype phone)
Continue Reading: MAKE: Turning an antique phone into a USB headset (and therefore Skype phone)Through a link from Phil Wolff, I learned that Bruce Stewart has posted at the Emerging Telephony blog about someone turning an antique phone into a Skype phone (which actually points to a post on the MAKE Blog). Okay, so as best I can tell, it’s really a glorified USB headset, but I admit that the geek side of me finds it rather a fun idea. Bruce links to a page on the Instructables site that has more pictures and instructions.
(I’d note that while the articles say that it is an “antique Skype phone”, it really looks to me like it’s a USB headset, so it could really work with any VoIP program.)
Fun stuff…
Technorati tags: skype, etel, make, voip
