Archive for the ‘ mobile ’ Category

jaiku

I’ve been playing with Jaiku a lot lately.

My username there is Emory. So far, I like it a lot better than Twitter, though I wish they used OpenID (like every other web application should) and I hate maintaining Yet Another Buddy List.

The deal-sealer for me? They have a sweet mobile client for S60 V3 devices, so I can easily do status/presence updates as well as location from my N95. And it also tells you when a contact has an appointment or will be busy. It’s rather awesome.

Update: the latest version of the mobile client sucks the battery down on my N95 like you wouldn’t believe. I can’t go a workday without the battery getting low, and I went through all the usual steps to make sure it wasn’t something else, I promise it is the Jaiku mobile client.

E911 actually works, finds transplant patient at jazz festival – Engadget Mobile

E911 actually works, finds transplant patient at jazz festival – Engadget Mobile:

Luckily for him, his mother had a Sprint celly and the authorities where able to locate them while at a local jazz festival using the phones integrated GPS. Soon after being located, the boy was rushed to Children’s Hospital in Pittsburgh where the surgery was a success.

I wonder why they just didn’t call them, since they had to know their number, and also had to have a working phone with service to get E911 to work?

This story doesn’t make any sense.

Meet Me on Dearborn Street

smart2go from Nokia

Let me tell you about why I love smart2go from Nokia.

smart2go is Nokia’s free software for speaking to a Bluetooth GPS device on your S60 handset.

A lot of new handsets coming out soon, such as the N95 and the E90, come with integrated GPS modules. And there have been applications for using such a device on the market for quite a while now, but all of them are pretty expensive, so Nokia has been giving us “waypoint/landmark” and general “directional” location software for a few months with S60v3 devices. This has been a pretty clever move on their part, and I’m glad that instead of sticking with a half-assed deployment or “pilot” like they have done in the past, they’ve actually been spending some real resources on this type of thing.

So while I was getting ready for my trip to Chicago with Liz, I grabbed smart2go and installed it, and setup an inexpensive Bluetooth GPS (which I had next-day air’ed from Expansys/MobilePlanet, and wasn’t going to get to my house before we left, so my UPS dispatch told me where I could meet up with the driver, which is pretty nice of ‘em) and started using smart2go.

Now, the local services and such can be searched ad-hoc while in the application, so you can search for places to go eat, drink, and be merry, or find historical sites, businesses based on name, address, or category, things like that. Usually you only get this type of information when you’re paying hundreds of dollars for the privilege, the software is never cheap. But the way Nokia does it is on a subscription basis. You can give them a micropayment of $9USD or something for seven days of access, which is what I did. I then installed the maps using the Nokia Map Loader for places I spend time (DC/VA/NY/MA/RI/IL/IA/CA/UK/etc) and started checking things out.

Since you can get updates and such over the Internet via the WiFi on the phone or the data service from my operator (T-Mobile’s EDGE service in my case) the information is pretty current, though there are a lot of things it didn’t seem able to find that have been around for a while, but I was able to find them by address (which I looked up with Google Maps on my phone), and then set them as landmarks. I put in some of my contacts, since smart2go lets you search based on Contact information on the device.

The navigation part is pretty good, and uses a variety of voices. I went with English(UK) because the woman’s voice is easy to understand and she uses the word “MOTOR WAY” for highways and freeways, which I find charming.

While in Chicago I used smart2go to find the nearest Starbucks. Several times. I used it to find nearby places to eat, grab a snack, go shopping, and to find Levenger inside the Macys on Michigan Ave. I used it to find El stops (though usually asking a person was faster), and to help me see how far of a walk it would be to get between places (which usually meant I took a cab), and all sorts of other neat tricks.

And I’ve used navigation systems before, and handheld systems as well. They are all interesting and some are better than others, such as the Garmin nuvi line. But the idea of using such a thing on a mobile device never really appealed to me until I saw for myself just how nice it was to have, and for one really killer app that I think a lot of people forget about. I know I did.

You can send your current location to a friend, via MMS/SMS/Email, and they can trivially load that into smart2go, and come find you based on their location.

Today my subscription had expired, and all of my saved landmarks and services are there, and the existing map data is still available, so the only thing I lost appears to be the searchable services, which is fine when I know what I want anyway, or at least can look up the address. But I have to say, it is awfully nice being able to just type in “Starbucks” and find the nearest one to me. Nokia offers a variety of subscriptions for the service, but I change handsets enough that I’d probably be better off on the weekly and monthly options. I hate that every time I get a new handset I have to re-purchase software that I just bought six months ago. Developers really need to stop using the IMEI of the device to lock software. It is completely insane. Some developers will cut you a break or give you a freebie at times, but most don’t.

Now I don’t know many people with an S60 device and a GPS module. But that is something that could easily change as location-based services become more useful and attractive to people. Having solid mobile search to navigate meatspace with ease makes travel a much easier endeavor for people, and applications like Metro to help you know what form of mass transit you should be taking to get between destinations makes it a trivial task to get around in most cities.

smart2go is a fantastic application. It looks nice, has a good feel to it, and is pretty snappy though a hair slow at times. In all honesty it is probably slow, but compared to how s60 devices were a year ago, it’s hard to find fault with it today. Nokia managed to set my standards much lower than they should be with the 6600, 3650, 3660, 9500, and other handsets.

My only complaint is that when you’re traveling on foot (and you tell it so), it still gets completely spastic if you stop walking. Like, you know, at a Don’t Walk sign. It spins around all confused and trying to re-navigate paths. And when I’m on foot, I don’t need to be told that my next right is 200 yards away. Tell me when I’m about 35 yards away! But that is a pretty minor complaint when the rest of the application and use of it was so polished and easy.

Ultimately, I’m quite pleased with it. And I’m really, really looking forward to the E90. My E70 came through quite well on the trip though, and was an invaluable resource for messaging, capturing candids, and helping me find the nearest cup of cappuccino for my wife. And that alone was worth the nine bucks for the search subscription.

In case anyone at Nokia is reading this, your Chicago store stinks. The pretentious over-the-top video artwork was way overdone, and the staff was really not that familiar with your own product line. One of the people that worked there was pretty knowledgeable, but rather arrogant about it, and acted like he was selling Ferraris instead of Connecting People. I think the overall strategy of being snotty doesn’t suit you. Humanize this technology. Help people be better people. This notion of mobile-tech-as-bling isn’t becoming of you.

the Nokia E70 in review

I’ve gone back and forth on mobile email. I’ve had several different varieties of the BlackBerry device, used a GoodLink’ed Treo, and after taking a long break I’m trying to get back into using mobile email sanely.

I was having a hard time doing this on my N73, so I thought I’d pick up an E70 instead.

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It has WiFi, Bluetooth (of course), the S60v3 OS, a 2MP so-so camera, and a SIP client (untested so far), and also the Apple WebKit-esque browser and runs a wide variety of software for the S60 platform.

Mine isn’t operator locked and branded, so I don’t have to worry about not using self-signed certificates for network services and application installation.

So, we have my Levenger Shirt Pocket Briefcase, which lives in my back pocket most of the time, or in my front pocket with a big bankroll I get from all the donations I keep getting via PayPal for writing consistently great product reviews. Hint. And the Nokia E70, and a Nokia N73 for size comparison. And, what the hell, I tossed in a BlackBerry 7290 as well.

The E70 has a very serviceable keyboard.

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The keypad in “phone mode” is quite solid and good. I really like it a lot, actually. The keys feel solid and the joystick feels better than the one on the N73. There is also a button on the side for activating the Voice Recorder application, which I think is pretty awesome. You apparently can retask it for a push-to-talk application if your operator supports it. T-Mobile USA doesn’t support much of anything, so I’m not holding my breath, and honestly the day I take a push-to-talk on a phone from anyone is the day I throw myself off a bridge.

Folding out the E70 reveals the keyboard, of course.

It takes a little getting used to, and honestly I don’t think I’m as fast on it as the BlackBerry but this is mainly because the BlackBerry has amazing autotext functionality that S60 does not. For example, if you hit space twice on a BlackBerry, you get a period, if it thinks you’re typing an email address because you’re in a field that says “Email Address”, a spacebar will put in a ’@’ for you. Little things like that and only having a little bit of travel in the keyboard makes the E70 seem a bit too spread out. And if you have small girlish hands like I do, the E70 is a cinch to thumb on, but if you have bigger hands, the proximity of the keys and the shallow travel in the keyboard will be problematic, as the keys are very close to one another without the distinct separation between them that the Treo and ‘Berry have.

Some weird things about the keyboard are they rearranged some keys a bit. I have no idea why they did this other than to be easier for people to reach commonly used symbols, but if you’re making a QWERTY device I think people expect to have the symbols in the right place. On the other hand, having no room for / + = and ” as well as commonly used accent characters in a small space was surely hard to pull off, and since you’re looking at the device and its keyboard anyway, it doesn’t really annoy me too much. The keys are in the vicinity of where you’d expect if they’re not exactly there, and you don’t spend much time hunting around. It isn’t like you’re going to touch-type on this thing.

So, why mobile email? And why on S60 instead of the BlackBerry or a Treo?

Will, simply put, I like the S60 OS a lot better at the end of the day than the Treo or the BlackBerry, and if I wanted BlackBerry email I could get that on the E70 anyway, and the PIM functions on the BlackBerry are archaic and the GoodLink’ed Treos have a disconnect between your server-side PIM functionality and the built-in functions which makes synchronization a bit of a pain in the ass if you’re not using Outlook and Exchange.

I use IMAP. I like it a lot. The S60 IMAP client has gotten very good over the years, and it even does IMAP-IDLE pushes now, though Apple’s Cyrus server in Mac OS X Server doesn’t support IDLE, so I can’t use that. I have scheduled email checks every 30-60 minutes or on-demand for when I don’t want the interruptions. I like the option to really send emails that aren’t one-sentence long because I’m really just not interested in carrying a laptop everywhere I go anymore.

Another thing I like a lot about the E70? It doesn’t spastically flash LEDs at you like a neon sign outside a liquor store coaxing in the alcoholics with promises of gratification. In fact, in the current firmware, you can’t even turn it on if you wanted to. There is an LED, it just isn’t being used today. No idea why. Don’t care.

So the E70 has two primary modes of operation, one where it is flipped closed and awfully phone-like. The design of this is quite good though it could have been more elegantly designed while still retaining a professional, almost un-interesting appearance. I also don’t like that has such a plastically feel. The upside is that it feels sturdy, not frail at all. And the hinge mechanism for the keyboard fold-out maneuver is solid. You’ll hear no complaints about the feel of that piece from me.

When you crack it open the screen rotates into a different orientation for you, as expected. Apparently the earlier firmware was really slow about this, but the version I’m running (2.0618.07.10) seems to be very responsive to me. There are the odd hangs now and then, and it is my hope that Nokia is still refining the firmware on this device because it is still in the 2.x range, and typical wide-release production firmware is 3.x from Nokia.

Now before we go on a bit, I’d like to tell you that I know I’m using a very strange theme. I like it because it is so odd. It clashes nicely, if there is such a thing. Since it is so easy to do, I swap themes every other day or so and there are hundreds and hundreds of them available and I like mixing it up a bit.

So, with the flip closed and the device in “Hello my name is mobile phone” mode, we have an active standby display that is user-customizable and lets you view a mailbox on your dashboard there, and also assign shortcuts to some of your most used applications.

For those unfamiliar with the S60 UI, the bottom left and right corners are soft-key mappings depending on what application you’re in, or in what context they’re visible. Usually it’ll be things like “New” and “Back/Exit” or “Options” and “Write” when I’m in my IM client, you get the idea.

Screenshot0013.jpg

Now, since I’m lazy, I haven’t redone this screenshot yet. I took it while it was in the middle of re-drawing the screen after opening it up, so this may lead you to believe I was being too kind about the redraw time. I’m not going to lie, it isn’t instant!, but it is quite quick and doesn’t really slow me down any.

Screenshot0012.jpg

Getting online with the E70 is a cinch, I use my mobile operator’s data service (T-Mobile USA EDGE) and it is plenty quick for pulling and sending emails as well as browsing. And the E70 also has a built-in RSS reader, so I can put my favorites or my current high-priority feeds in there but I usually just use NewsGator Mobile web interface, even though I have some gripes about it. I’ll save that for another time.

But when you’re at home, or the office, and have WiFi available, of course it is faster. And of course you’ll want to use that, especially if you’re on metered data service. I have a flat-rate unlimited EDGE connection for USD$19. I don’t go out of my way to use WiFi but I use it at home.

The real reason this device has WiFi though, is for the SIP client allowing for VoIP calls on the handset itself, which is pretty bitchen, though I haven’t had the time to set it all up yet. I’m very curious how well it will work, though from what I’ve read online, people are having good results with it.

Screenshot0029.jpg

The SMS/MMS/Email messaging application is standard fare, though S60 has gotten so much better about this over the years it makes my head spin. It used to be horrifying. It has improved dramatically, actually making email management and triage useful instead of something that makes me want to beat my head against the wall.

Screenshot0010.jpg Screenshot0009.jpg

Know what I can’t do though? I can’t move something from Inbox to @ACTION. I don’t know why. I think it has to be a bug that you can’t move messages from one folder to another in the S60 email client. It has to be, right? Surely this is something that was just overlooked during QA. That would make this device fantastic as a triage device. In the meantime you could use an application like Profimail though I really like to use the integrated client whenever possible.

The archive function is good, you can copy messages into folders locally on the device, of any variety. By default it only retains X numbers of messages you send out, so you can raise that threshold if you want to archive both sides of a text/mms conversation, or whatever.

I presently have over 900 SMS and MMS messages saved as copies on my handset. I’ve had an S60 device for quite a while. And if you store your messages on the storage card (mine is 1GB) you can move it from handset to handset and always have your same message library available to you. Nice!

Again, I know the theme is a bit in-your-face, but this is the visual indicator and alerts for new emails and SMS messages:

Screenshot0008.jpg

The icons in the grey bar towards the top, in order of appearance are: WiFi » Bluetooth » new email » new SMS.

Missed calls and such will also show up there.

The calendar functionality in S60 sucks. If you don’t believe that, you’re wrong. And iSync on Mac OS X used to work better than it does today, but it has always been flakey. All-day events show up as 00:00 – 23:59 “meetings” on the handset when they’re synced over from my Mac. You can make a proper all-day-appointment (or, in S60 parlance, “Memo”) on the handset, and even sync it back to your Mac and then sync again and have it stick around, but you cannot initiate an all day event in iCal, and have it sync over as a “Memo” on a S60 device.

But I found a really nice-looking and very flexible application that touches the same event database as the standard Calendar and Task application, which uses more of the functionality of the backend engine as well as having a much nicer UI.

To top it all off?

It sees 00:00 – 23:59 meetings as “anniversaries”, which isn’t the same as a “memo”, but it’s good enough for me. No more twenty four hour meetings. I’d like to take this time to shill a bit for the developers and the application, SBSH and Papyrus for S60

Screenshot0003.jpg

Isn’t that nice?

So the vast majority of my tasks live on 3×5 cards along with project materials and all the other things I work on. The only thing I use “tasks” for on my mobile phone are things I want to be reminded of without booking an appointment to do so. This will be things like “Don’t forget to ask so-and-so about blue,” and “schedule time to do whatever”, if I’m not convinced I’ll have it on a card (cuz sometimes I write these reminders on the go and may not have the relevant materials with me).

If you don’t know what I’m talking about when I say “project card”, “context card” or “action list,” you may want to read about how I use track projects and process workflow in my paper on the subject.

I really like the E70 a lot. I think the camera kind of sucks but I like having one for those situations I need to capture something, and I don’t expect Nokia to go all-out on a nice camera for such a device. Indeed, I’m glad it is there at all, and 2MP is about the lowest I’m willing to go anymore, since the N73’s 3MP camera gets very good results.

The 2MP camera is perfect for capturing whiteboards, index cards, notes, sketches, doodles and other things to share, as well as emergency candids.

While the E70 has a media player and can do videos and audio, I don’t really use those functions that much, and the N-series devices do it better. But if you’re wondering, you can in fact play music off the E70 and use headphones via a Pop-Port adapter or use Nokia’s music headphones, which have a nice mic lead on them so you can listen to music and take calls without unhooking yourself. You can push audio over via Bluetooth or with a card-reader, so you can easily enough shove some podcasts or favorites onto the E70 and take it with you. The memory card lives under the battery door, but not under the battery. This is alright, I guess, but I usually want my memory cards a bit more accessible.

It folds up into a reasonable shape and size while still having a full QWERTY deck available on-demand, and feels like a phone when you’re talking on it, instead of a saucer like the full-format BlackBerry devices. Bluetooth audio seems a bit fuzzy to me compared to other handsets, I’ve tried a few headsets with it and had similar results. The audio quality on-handset is quite good, however. I really like the sound reproduction on this device, and find calls to be very clear and clean.

I’m using a Euro-spec E70, so I’m using GSM 900/1800/1900 on this one. I can’t comment on the US-specific release with 850 in lieu of 900. I don’t know how well it works on Cingular because I don’t care. When Cingular lets me have unlimited unfettered data service for USD$19 I’ll start paying closer attention.

Having an email and messaging device that isn’t obnoxious and with a nice OS under the hood has been really quite pleasant. It has freed me up from my desk a lot, and has allowed me to stay in touch a bit better with people that are important to me, and since it isn’t an office email device, I don’t feel like I’m being taken advantage of by The Man. No work email gets to my handset. I probably would check office email now and then if I could, but my employer doesn’t allow such things unless it is on a company-monitored and supplied device. Nothanks!

Now that the more immediately useful parts are out of the way, I’d like to conclude with a few things for the nerdery:

Screenshot0024.jpg

Yes that is the Python shell. Turns out there is a pretty complete Python implementation for S60, and so I’ve been playing around with that a bit making little widgets and learning more about the language. I have been hearing an awful lot about Python lately and decided I may as well look into it a bit more seriously. I use it a bit for the Jabber to AIM gateway I use and also use Python a bit at home, but never really hacked at it much.

Nokia actually gives you access to UI elements, Bluetooth, the Messaging system and other bits via the Python implementation. It is really quite ready for application development and prototyping.

But of course where there is QWERTY, there is a PuTTY.

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So if you’re ever inclined to login to a remote host to do a little troubleshooting, use a proper IRC client, or show off, you can do that too.

I’ll be interested to see how the new Nokia E90 Communicator will compare to the E70. I know I’d like the display a lot better and the camera is much better, as well as having an integrated GPS and Navigation system. So I’ll probably want to upgrade when I can, but in the meantime, the E70 has been a real treat to live with for this past week.

I purchased mine from MyWorldPhone. And I ordered one from CellHut.com, and I wouldn’t ever recommend them to anyone I liked because I canceled that order and they still haven’t given me back my $420. I’m going to have a very strongly worded conversation with CellHut tomorrow afternoon.

Thoughts on iotum Talk-Now for BlackBerry

There is an interesting thread on BlackBerry Forums (which is an amazing resource every BlackBerry user should be reading now and then) about a Presence application for the BlackBerry (and other platforms) called Talk-Now. There are a couple of big problems with this, which I pointed out in the thread.

Simply put, I have zero interest in maintaining yet another set of relationships with people.

First of all, the mobile space already has two very viable and already deployed and operational systems for handling presence and messaging. XMPP/Jabber and WV/IMPS.

So far, Jabber/XMPP isn’t heavily integrated into handsets very well. It is very much a separate application in user-land that doesn’t have the tight integration you really need with presence application. The implementations of Wireless Village/IMPS I see today are much better for such things. For example:

On many Sony Ericsson and Nokia handsets you can actually see the availability of a contact in the address book. So as you’re getting ready to call someone, you can see their presence right then and there. And you can opt to send them a message instead of calling them if they’re busy.

I would really like to see better implementations of XMPP on S60 and other handsets, however. I think that even having it integrated into the S60 Messaging application would be far preferable. But on the BlackBerry that disconnect still exists, and having an entirely different architecture and non-open system (which they say will be rolled into XMPP eventually) makes it even less attractive. XMPP is everywhere. And it can be everywhere. And the fact that it is federated makes it even easier to deal with, since you’re able to deploy however you want and allow communications between organizations with ease.

Why iotum trumpets the lack of messaging as a feature is beyond me.

The one thing I will give them credit for is that they say that they can set this availability and presence based on the metadata of the end user. Time of day, calendar, free/busy status, and other bits that are glued together. That is nice, really. But to not use XMPP or WV for sharing this information out is remarkably shortsighted for a product that otherwise wins out on features in spite of requiring an MS Windows architecture to be effective.

The problem is, how are they going to be any better or different from open standards once they mature on the handset? The user experience for these existing standards is already quite good, and I don’t see how they can expect to monetize their offering against the services that are actually pre-installed on handsets and supported by Operators themselves.

What happened to PocketMac?

PocketMac used to be this really responsive, fantastic company to deal with.

But lately they’ve been really a pain to deal with. The weird marketing emails, etc. And when I followed their instructions to unsubscribe from their spambot, I got a nice delivery failure.


This is an automatically generated Delivery Status Notification

Delivery to the following recipient failed permanently:

unsubscribe@pocketmac.net

Technical details of permanent failure:
TEMP_FAILURE: SMTP Error (state 9): 452 <unsubscribe@pocketmac.net> Mailbox
size limit exceeded

Nice. Way to go, guys. You got so many unsubscribes that your mail server started rejecting them.

You’re not imagining it, iSync really is broken for S60 V3 devices.

iSync via SyncML on S60 handsets is broken.

Badly.

It used to be that iSync would push over a little binary that ran a daemon to negotiate iSync communication between your Mac and your S60 handset, which dutifully listened for iSync connections and did a sync.

Now, this process has been broken from the start, due to completely obliterating speed dials and contact groups on the handset. It also blows away custom ringers on contacts and groups because it completely trashes the database on the handset with each sync.

There are not many options to mitigate these problems, save the speed-dial problem. You can use a different handset (hah!) or some software for Windows PCs to manage the actual contacts and numbers on the SIM itself, and SIM-dial those contacts with ease.

Once you have your most important contacts put to positions on the SIM you can dial them easily from any S60 handset by dialing “(SIM position)#” which will then pull the number up for you, and then you just hit the Talk (green) button. Works well, it is just very difficult to manage the SIM contacts from the S60 handsets out there. I don’t know why Nokia doesn’t do something about that.

I’ve been suffering in near-silence with the way that iSync thrashes the contact database on S60 handsets for years. I would love to use contact groups to manage my interrupts depending on what profile is active on the handset—you can set the handset to allow people in the Family group to call you after 10pm, for example. But you can’t do that when every time you sync your handset to your Mac the Family group gets blown away. Thanks, Apple.

But once Apple started using SyncML natively from iSync direct to the S60 handsets we lost yet another feature that I was taking for granted:

All day appointments.

If you have an All-Day appointment in iCal, iSync now gets them into the handset as appointments from midnight to 11:59. Yes. And it totally sucks. Hard. Your only option is to stop syncing over All-Day appointments, which makes it awfully hard to check your calendar for vacations, holidays, and when you’re not going to be available for an appointment and you’re surfing your calendar at the Doctor’s office or something.

The handsets prior to S60 V3 can be configured to do things the old-fashioned way with the old iSync agent by changing some of the iSync plists, but the iSync application for the handset doesn’t work on V3 devices and will just crash out on my N73 and my E70. So here I am, with handsets I love except that Apple breaks them when Mac OS X touches them.

To recap:

  • iSync eats contact groups.
  • iSync eats custom ringers for groups and contacts.
  • iSync eats your speed-dials (but you can use SIM dialing of course)
  • iSync eats your all-day appointments and breaks them into 24-hour appointments.

It is absolutely infuriating. You’d think I was asking for a pony, but I’m not. I just want working synchronization to modern handsets.

RIM co-CEO sees no threat from iPhone | MacMinute News

RIM co-CEO sees no threat from iPhone | MacMinute News:

A story out of Reuters today reports that Research In Motion’s co-CEO said in an interview that Apple’s iPhone doesn’t pose any threat to the company’s consumer-geared BlackBerry Pearl.

This also in: Mercedes isn’t threatened by Porsche’s new Cayman.

Most of the time, these two devices couldn’t be more different. They are geared for completely different markets.

But I think it is very naive to think that the iPhone will not cannibalize the entire market that wants a media-rich device that is easy to use and elegant. The BlackBerry consumer line lacks the cachet of the iPhone, and always will without significant re-investment in a consumer line of devices, which RIM will not do or seems wisely unwilling to do. The Pearl line is supposed to be individual-friendly, and provide solid messaging for the masses. But their software is clumsy, their user interface passé and dull, or completely confusing depending on who you ask, and the complete lack of real media capabilities on the entire BlackBerry line will hamstring them in the consumer market.

To be more clear—I feel strongly that RIM knows full well that they cannot continue to make handsets forever. They know that need to get out of the hardware business, and focus instead of infrastructure and software to move email the way they do.

Every other competitor they have is going this route, and they are going to start winning with more variety in devices. If RIM plays this right, they can continue to dominate the mobile email space without lifting a single handset above their heads.

CellHut: Wake-up

I really wanted to pick up a new handset while I wait for the Nokia N95 to come out. So I thought I’d give an E-Series handset a spin, to supplement my N73 as a general media device. The N73 is great, but it kind of sucks for email and messaging. I played around with Eric’s E70 and really liked it a lot, so I thought I’d give it a shot.

I shopped around and 3 stores I went to online said they were sold out. Must be some crazy E70 shortage or something.

I went to CellHut and saw that they had them in stock. I was quite pleased with myself for finding such a fine operation that carried the product I wanted and had it available.

I called them up to confirm. I spoke to a woman that said yes, in fact, they have them in stock and would be happy to sell me one. I started giving her my name and other important information but she couldn’t understand my last name. The “DBE” part kept freaking her out. Dee Bee Eee. “Dee Dee Bee”? “No, Dee Bee Eee.” “Bee Dee Bee”?

Ugh.

“Can I just place the order online?” “Of course!” she said, so I hung up and went to the webpage and clicked “buy me” and dutifully used Google Checkout to pay for the next day shipping, the handset, checked my address info, etc etc.

That night I got a notice from UPS. Yay! My handset is on its way. This morning I opened my MacBook and checked the UPS site and it still said Billing Information Received.

Well that’s weird.

I called CellHut up and asked them what gives? I got a tracking number, but no merch attached to it! They dig around a bit and tell me that they actually don’t have any E70s. I pointed out that it said on their site that they were in-stock. The fellow on the phone told me that they had a shipment come in Thursday, and that they thought it would have an E70 in it.

First of all, how you can run a business and not know what you’re getting from where is beyond me. Secondly, don’t tell me it is in-stock and ready to go if it isn’t. Insane.

So the dude said that someone would call me in the afternoon with the status update on my order, and so I wait. Eventually someone does in fact call and brings me the good news. Gratz! We just got some E70s in stock! We can ship your order! I ask to get my shipping bumped up to Saturday Delivery, and the dude on the phone takes my billing information again, and adds another 6 dollars to my order for Saturday delivery and then thanks me for my business and I think to myself, “Well, crisis averted. This will be a great weekend of fun and tinkering,”

Tonight I’m catching up on some email and such (hello, #joiito) and I glance over at my pine session and see something about an order being canceled. Canceled? I thought, surely they mean the first order, cuz they must have redone the sale to handle my shipping.

It doesn’t look like it. Because the reason in the email notice says “backordered.”

Backordered, eh?

I call up CellHut, again, and talk to a guy eventually who says that yes, they’re backordered, and don’t have any. At this point I’m incredulous. I just can’t believe that any company that runs a retail operation can really have no idea what they’re getting and sending out. I tell the guy on the phone flat out, that this is insane, and that I’ve been jerked around for the last two days and I’d like to really know what is going on. He puts me on hold and runs down to the warehouse.

Yup. Backordered. None in stock.

So I told him to cancel the order. Even if they were the last place on Earth that had an E70, I wouldn’t buy it from them. I just can’t stand being lied to over and over again. I don’t have the energy and patience to chase after people that need babysitting to sell me something!

So I went to MyWorldPhone, which can be hit-or-miss apparently, but I’ve never had a problem with them. I ordered the E70, with next day shipping (so I’ll get it, I guess Tuesday or Wednesday because of the holiday weekend) and still paid less than CellHut with Saturday Shipping for a handset they don’t even have. Twice.

Online bankers support tighter security

Online bankers support tighter security:

More than nine out of ten (91 per cent) bank account holders are willing to use new authentication methods that go beyond the standard ’username-and-password’, if their banks decided to offer stronger security, according to vendor RSA. In addition, trust in the online channel continues to erode. Some 82 per cent of account holders are less likely to respond to an email from their bank due to scams including phishing – up from 79 per cent in 2005 and 70 per cent in 2004 – and more than half say they are less likely to sign-up for or use online banking as a result. In addition, 44 per cent of account holders said they have become increasingly concerned about other types of attacks (besides phishing), such as Trojans and keyloggers, over the past six months.

I’ve been thinking a lot about this and all I can think of is why don’t they leverage the existing mobile devices that the vast majority of their customers have, to act as a form of secondary authentication?

Why not utilize mobile handsets as a computational device to generate secrets for the user, or even be a delivery mechanism for a secondary PIN when performing online transactions?