Seems to work with all the major carriers…
Yahoo now lets people upload pictures to its photo-sharing site from camera phones. [picturephoning.com]

a multi-tasked stream of consciousness or perhaps just emails to myself
Seems to work with all the major carriers…
Yahoo now lets people upload pictures to its photo-sharing site from camera phones. [picturephoning.com]
ICANN has added IPv6 support to its root DNS servers. The 128-bit address fields will ensure that IP addresses will be in strong supply for years to come. [Ars Technica]
WOW!
Korean handset makers are looking to introduce 5-megapixel phones within this year. [picturephoning.com]
Looks like a great addition to any travel or day pack… small and quite functional.
Here’s a hack-cum-product aimed squarely at the well-hydrated camera geek. The US$9.99-$14.99 Bottle Cap Tripod turns any 28.5- to 30.5mm-mouthed water or soda bottle into a tripod. [MobileWhack]
I’m always amused (perhaps too easily) when the bigger sites discover something you’ve known about for a pretty long time… Salling Clicker is an amazing tool to use if you’ve got a bluetooth connection between your Mac and either a Palm or mobile phone. Version 2.2, which was released yesterday and that I happily beta tested allows for additional controls and even lets you remote command your Slim Devices server… rock on!
Justin Ried of TheFeature has good things to say about a neat-sounding application called Salling Clicker that turns a Bluetooth device into a remote control for your Mac.
One of the really amazing features is that you can see not just ordinary information about the track you’ve got currently playing in iTunes – artist and song name, track length, etc. – but also the album art, directly on your mobile device. [Boing Boing]
Not sure how much I’ll get to use this right now, but certainly good to have handy for when it might matter…
Bay Area Free Wi-Fi Wireless Hotspots has a downloadable listings of San Francisco Bay locations: wiPod is a little database that you can download to an iPod to be able to scroll through and see free locations throughout that region. [Wi-Fi Networking News]
If you’ve been waiting for the Treo 600 on Verizon, today is your lucky day… It’s finally available for consumers (business customers had it waiting last week). There’s even a special wireless sync which will give you always on email, though I believe it’s the type that requires a PC (not Mac) be on at all times to redirect the mail coming in. I wish more carriers would offer a hosted solution, but Verizon is not my carrier anyway…
Today is also the officially launch of the next generation iPod. It’s a tad thinner than the current model, boasts longer battery life and uses the same click wheel of the iPod mini. If you don’t have an iPod… or have an old and lagging one, you’ve got to be psyched about this. Me… I can’t possible justify another iPod when my 40GB 3G one is all good for now.
Celeb Gossip, Extreme Sports and Sports News can all be delivered as magazines to your mobile… what you were expecting magazines about mobiles?? I looked around on their site, but it seems to be a B2B play for the time being so you’ll have to have a carrier who enables this for you.
Availing themselves of growing cell phone usage, three new magazines designed specifically for delivery via cell phone have just launched. [Adrants]
An interesting piece over at Forbes…
Just as thrifty theater-goers can save a buck by smuggling in their own Junior Mints, so too are cell phone users finding ways to download their own phone upgrades without paying a big margin to their carriers.
The very same phones that give users the power to download new services also give them the flexibility to find other ways of getting new content into those phones. For instance, an avid text messaging fan in Britain who owns a Nokia 6600 can save money by using a service run by an outside company such as Fastchat, which provides unlimited text messaging for a flat fee.
Such fee-dodging tactics are about to become a major threat to the cell industry, according to a new study by Mako Analysis, a British research firm specializing in mobile communications. New operating systems such as Symbian Series 60 are capable of working with all manner of extra applications.
“A savvy user can use this open operating system to completely bypass a range of services that are normally charged for by their mobile operator,” the report says. [Forbes.com]
Of course these issues raise the question of who owns the phone… You pay for it and lock into a service contract in most situations, but people are finding ways around the walled gardens often created to control the experience. The control is part of a two-pronged approach to both make money as well as limit the potential service issues.
An advanced user should be able to choose services that are of interest to them, and often do, though at an increase in cost due to buying unlocked phones from third parties rather than directly from the carrier – who lock the phones. When a phone is locked it allows the carrier to pre-program content and content partners as well as assure that whatever settings they need to input are there for these services to work.
If you’ve ever read Howard Forums, Mobitopia (or lurked in #mobitopia), Mobilewhack, My Treo to name a few, you’ve seen that many people are independently dealing with things.
From a user perspective, I personally think we should be able to use compatible hardware on whatever network we like. It should force the carriers to offer quality services that users want rather than just pre-loading WAP menus with things people don’t even know about let alone use…
I have yet to try this, but it seems the main limitation is the size of the SD card you carry which enables the compression size to expand. Looks like it is designed for the T3…which they say plays better than a PPC.
Carry DVD movies in your pocket. Turn boring time into fun right from your pocket, anywhere, anytime. Let your children have something to do and keep quiet while travelling. This software makes life easier with much more fun. Convert DVDs into palm video is simple and fast. Any movie less than 3 hours long can be compressed into a 128MB/256MB/512MB card. It’s a great application that justifies the purchase of your palm device. [Palm Movie]
Update – So I had downloaded this and gone to do something else. Upon coming back to my desk, I realized that this only exists as a .exe, windows only app. Guess I won’t be trying it out after all. Seems that the image on the page is a tad misleading since it seems like an Aqua screen…
Just signed up… what the hell right? If you know me and want to talk, you can send an email and we can give this a whirl. I’m still hoping that Skype is an interesting bit for Mac when it arrives and may switch over to it when that day finally comes.
With SIPphone, users get a phone number, free voicemail to email, free conference calling, free SIP-to-SIP calling anywhere in the world, very cheap International dialing, and the option of a virtual number in the US or the UK so they can receive calls from the ‘traditional’ phone network.”
In addition to additional format support, I’d suggest more platform support as well. Most people using windows are not buying media center PCs which this is catered around and there are certainly people using older windows versions, not to mention Mac and Linux PCs.
I still like the Portable Media device idea, have to wait and see what else comes aroung. Archos seems to be the mindshare leader in my book. Perhaps a more powerful Palm based OS6 device will be able to handle this duty…
This new Creative unit is the first product that MS hinted at early this year. It’ll be interesting to see how well it does in the marketplace. The price is kind of high and since you’re locked into using Windows Media Video instead of Microsoft’s own AVI, DivX, and/or MPEG, I’m curious if there are enough legitimate users of wmv to create a market for this. I bet if the device played more video and audio formats (why not add ogg support?), they’d sell more.
[PVRblog]
This is a totally cool way to access the SD slot on a Palm without removing it and having to use a card reader… works on Mac as well as PC.
TreoCentral gives a short, but very positive preview of the latest version of Card Export II, a bit of software that emulates the USB Mass Storage standard that, this time around, lets your Treo 600 plug-and-play with your PC just like a USB flash memory drive. What that means to you is that simply plugging your Treo into any random machine will enable you to copy data back and forth to the SD card without installing any drivers, greatly easing the hassle of just trying to copy a few bits of data off a work or friend’s machine. Card Export II is $15 to purchase, but they do have a free trial.
And for what it’s worth, Card Export supports many different Palm devices, not just Treos.
Read – Treo as a flash memory drive [TreoCentral]Read – Product Page [Softick]
[Gizmodo]
Paging through the latest Fortune I came across an ad from PalmOne featuring the Treo 600 with GoodLink. The ad highlights Sprint, ATT, Cingular, T-Mobile and … Verizon Wireless. Can’t imagine what might be holding this back now. Perhaps just some pressure from Palm to VZW, to get it going already?
Nothing too revolutionary, but still good to see.
palmOne today introduced a resource center for Mac enthusiasts who want to get the most out of their palmOne handhelds and smartphones. New web pages highlight using iPhoto, wireless syncing and many mac friendly applications. [PalmInfocenter]
I’m sure that the 411 business has taken a hit since the adoption of the internet in consumer’s homes came along and enabled a self-service model for free. Since then there’s been an advance in 411 – enhanced 411, which gives interested parties more information (for a greater fee of course) for things like directions, movie times and even in some case restaurant reservations.
Today, it occurred to me that there is a pretty simple advance that could be made for all callers, especially now that mobile phone penetration is so high, as well as the continuing growth of smarter (not necessarily smart) phones which allow for richer messaging services. I think this idea could work for people whether they were calling from a mobile or landline and could be quick to rollout if the carriers felt they were interested in making a bit more money from something we already use.
Here it is — yours for the taking telecom industry!
Instead of just offering an option to have the number dialed, why not send the information as an SMS or even an email with vcard so you could save it for future calling from your phone/device. Landline calling would require a simple registration to identify where you want the information sent. I’d pay the additional fee (probably 25 to 50 cents) so I could have the information for future reference.
Just think of the number of times you’ve called for a number more than once. You probably didn’t have a pen which is why you called again… you do have your mobile, if that’s how you called and you can certainly grab the email later on if not.
From a carrier perspective, it should be a simple add-on. You know who we are, what number we are calling from and what the capabilities of our devices are to best send the information. Landline operators (most if not all offer wireless) and should be able to just pump more messages through the existing gateway. Receiving an SMS usually gets you paid… whether a number of messages are included with a plan, or on a per message basis.
That’s about it. Bring it on!
Planning on doing more than just watching the fireworks this weekend? If you’d like to try and photograph some of the action, you might want to check out the links at PhotographyBlog first… It might not be a simple point and shoot exercise, but can certainly be done well if you are careful with your camera settings.
I’ll give Sony credit for the industrial design on this one before saying that once again Sony decides to seriously limit their own potential. This beauty only plays ATRAC3, so you can bet no one will buy it other than good little Sony Employees. I guess if Sony could stop their own internal conflicts (no easy task) they might be able to succeed as a content creator and distributor with some very nice players.
The Japanese consumer electronics maker said the 20-gigabyte device, which is its second hard-disk drive gadget aimed at unseating Apple and can store 13,000 songs, will be launched on July 10 in Japan, by mid-August in the United States and in September in Europe.
Dubbed the Network Walkman NW-HD1, it marks a major upgrade to the legendary Walkman brand and the announcement comes on the 25th anniversary of the introduction of Sony’s groundbreaking portable music player — July 1, 1979.
It is expected to sell for around 53,000 yen ($487) in Japan and less than $400 in the United States, Sony said, undercutting Apple’s 40-gigabyte device, which sells for $499 and can hold up to 10,000 songs. [Yahoo! News]
Here’s a great list of applications for Palm users, Treo or no Treo.
In my quest to prove just how wonderful and powerful the Treo 600 is, here is a list of the software that I’ve added to it (not the utilities that came with it). The latest additions have an asterisk next to the name. [The Shifted Librarian]
Just caught this on Gizmodo… NYC will have to wait for TWC to get their testing done, though I don’t know anyone lucky enough to be on the list or if these are even in consumer’s homes for testing. When I last checked it was going to be sometime in the Fall.
Already testing in San Diego, Cox Communications cable TV service is getting ready to roll out HD programming in quite a few markets, including Phoenix, Arizona, and will bundle an optional Scientific Atlanta 8010 high-definition DVR for only $10 more… [Gizmodo]