PDA = A Good Read!

I have used my PDA as a “book” all the way back to my Series 3 Psion. I have no trouble reading from a screen – which is what most people complain about, however I suspect many have not tried using a modern PDA screen and reader program.

I was at a party last night and got talking about electronic books – so I passed my X51v round and everyone said how easy it was to read, and use.

Using a handheld is a green option,

  • Ÿ You already own the device – if you have a Windows Mobile phone – so no new purchase needed
  • Ÿ The electronic book is not printed on paper, bound, transported etc – a great saving in resources
  • Ÿ Storage of ebooks is very efficient – so you can carry a large library with you at all times
  • Ÿ Do you like reading at night? – If so you need a light on to see the text, however a PDA has an illuminated screen, no bedside light required – I know the device needs charging but I am sure that is not as much energy as running a lamp
  • Ÿ Paper books can be recycled but so can the PDA – eventually
  • Ÿ One downside is that you cannot lend DRM secured ebooks to friends – this is something the industry will have to sort

One bit of advice, I would not bother with the Microsoft Reader ebook program. I tried it out on my first WinCE handheld where it worked OK, but the real problems came when I changed my PC (and then my PDA), something I do several times a year because of my job. The program counted how many devices I had it installed on, and as I had it on my PC in the office, and on the one in my office at home, and a laptop, and maybe the office development machine etc it threw a wobbly and I stopped using it. Now the people from Redmond may well have solved those issues or not, but why bother going back and trying again when there are other reader programs out there. As I said eReader pro (www.ereader.com) is my favourite – and I regularly buy books from them. Mobipocket Reader is another option (www.mobipocket.com). Both offer versions for PCs and handhelds but eReader does not yet have a version for Blackberrys but they are promising one soon.

Both the readers can read the long established doc (not .doc by Microsoft word) format books – and it is easy to make your own ebooks from text files – there are a number of places on the web to find freeware ebooks, use Google or start your ebook collection by searching for Project Gutenberg.

An issue arises when it comes to commercial ebooks because both companies use different (incompatible) DRM systems – so once you buy into one system you are committed, so think carefully before you buy into a system. (Microsoft of course uses a third DRM system and I am sure there are other ebook companies using still other incompatible systems!) Have a good look at the various companies catalogues before you commit, so make sure they offer a selection of the books you like. Of course you could always put all the different readers on your handheld and buy from everyone.

This article is sponsored by Octagon Technology of Lincoln, England

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BBC Click – and Mobile Friendly Web Pages

I have just watched the BBC News programme, Click (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/click_online/default.stm) and they have reviewed a web site www.ubik.net. This site enables you to create web site suitable for display on a phone or PDA. So I have just been over there and got an account and here is the link http://octech.ubik.net. Light on content at the moment, but what an excellent idea for putting more content onto your PDA or phone.

There was also a service shown that helped find PDA friendly pages online – I have not looked at that yet, although it seemed to be for phones and will require call charges to work. The service is zabidoo.com/push.

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New PDA

As the holiday season draws to a close – it is time to plan the upgrade of my PDA.

At the moment I have a Dell Axim X51v PDA and a Blackberry Curve for email & telephone – and until now I have always had a separate PDA and phone as I have never found a phone with the capability of a high end PDA – until now.

PDA History

Over the years I have had a number of PDAs.

  • Ÿ Psion Series 3
  • Ÿ Psion Series 3A
  • Ÿ Psion 5
  • Ÿ The original Palm Pilot – with 2 MB memory upgrade from TRG
  • Ÿ TRG Pro Palm – with CF card slot, I had a 32 MB CF card and a CF wifi card for it, clip on modem and a full sized remote keyboard
  • Ÿ Palm Tungsten – I got probably the best folding keyboard with this PDA
  • Ÿ HP Jornada WinCE – worse PDA I ever had
  • Ÿ Dell Axim X30 – with wifi but only wep encryption
  • Ÿ Dell Axim X51v – first one – this suffered a major memory failure so I bought the current Dell Axim X51v. I bought a second Dell X51v as I had invested in several sets of dedicated leads and accessories for the unit, and although it had failed I did not want to waste that investment.
  • Ÿ The phone I had before my Blackberry was an MDA Compact from T-Mobile running Windows Mobile – but it had many short comings (however it is still in my desk as a spare unit).

The new phone / PDA combo I am looking at is a HTC Touch Pro (for the spec see www.htc.com) – it looks almost perfect for my needs, combining all the things I want in a single package. I will get the largest SD card I can for it and a spare battery but as it uses regular mini USB cables for charging and syncing, no more expense on dedicated cables and chargers. The last folding, full size keyboard I bought was bluetooth, so I am hoping that will work with the new handheld.

I am going to buy it (and insure it) sim and contract free. I have had really bad service from our telecoms supplier here in Lincoln, they even messed up my Blackberry contract, having promised it was a fair deal following a previous “mistake”. No names at the moment as I am looking into the options of reporting them for miss selling.

The plan is to but this sometime around the end of November – hopfully the prices will drop a little by then.

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Camping – Written 19.00, 18.08.2008

When I tell people we go camping for our holidays they always ask about the weather, and they can be very sympathetic when I tell them we had some rain.

Now as the Daily Mail has reported (for the record – I do not read the Daily Mail, Diana has been buying it because she is collecting the “Best of British” DVDs and the Children’s Encyclopaedia given away with it – but she cannot resist reading bits out to me, whilst she is reading it and I am doing something else. Just a moment ago told me about a woman who had sextuplets, I don’t care! And now she is showing me a photo of Fern Britain in a black bikini! Diana cannot bear the thought of simply buying the paper, getting the DVD, and then throwing the paper away).

Anyway back to my post, the Daily Mail has speculated that this will be the wettest August on record and whilst we have been away, we have seen some heavy rain. We put the tent up in the rain at Ayr, we took it down in the rain at Ayr, we put it back up and took it down later at the Dingwall campsite, yes, in the rain and we have put the tent up here in Beadnell Bay in the rain.

But we love camping. A couple of years back Diana found this great tent, made by Outwell and bought from Blacks, a Colorado 5. Two bedrooms, large groundsheeted living area, with large windows, storage pockets an entry door and a large canopy door on the side (for good weather). It is sometimes a challenge to put it up – it was raining and very windy when we got to Beadnell Bay and Jeremy had to hold the tent down to stop it becoming a big kite. But Diana, Jeremy and I can put it up in about 15 minutes which means we do not get very wet, The bedrooms and ground sheets are fitted once the main tents is up – keeping the rain off you. We carefully pack the car so we know where everything is and we can get the stuff into the tent reasonably quickly. Once we are settled in the living room is dry and warm – yes it really feels warmer in the tent compared to the outside, it is really well designed tent. So to be honest, although we would prefer it to be sunny and to only rain between the hours of 1 and 3 am and be dry by the time we get up, we do not care about the weather.

At this moment, whilst I am writing this on my PDA, I can hear the waves on the beach at Beanell Bay, as I could this morning at 6.30am when I was sitting outside the tent, in the brilliant sun shine, drinking my first tea of the day.

We stay mainly in Camping and Caravan Club sites as then we know the standard of site we will be using. They have very high standards of site and facilities, lots of hot water for the showers and washing up, clean working toilets, plenty of well maintained water taps and clean well looked after waste bins and even a washing machine and dryers if needed. And at every site we had ever been to with the exception now of Culzean Castle Site, helpful, friendly, polite wardens.

At the Culzean site we were treated to some spectacular sunsets. The Dingwall site, our personal favourite, was as good as ever.

We do not take a television or even a radio for use in the tent, although we all have various devices, PDAs, Diana has her laptop, Jeremy has his Gameboy DS, what we do most evenings is play cards or a family favourite Rummikub. WE spend time together without one of us having to go off somewhere in a hurry. I even severely restrict the number of business calls and emails I answered – leaving it to my Office Manager. We have quality family time.

So we like camping – we do not need sympathy if it rains.

PS I have posted this on my return home – and we did take the tent down in the rain at Beadnell Bay as well!

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Something to Read on Holiday

Bought an excellent book to read whilst on holiday – The Digital SLR Handbook by Michael Freeman.

I have a number of photo books by Michael Freeman that I used extensively when I was working in, and teaching photography. He writes really informative books on photography so when I decided I wanted something about digital photography he was the only choice for me.

Now for lots of good reasons I do not have a digital SLR but use a Canon Powershot S2 IS – an excellent bridge camera, quick to use, flexible, creative and light to carry when walking. Many things in the book were not applicable but it covered the things I want to get to grips with really well. Top of the list was histograms and exposure – and I have been working on that and have seen an improvement in the exposures. I also want to start to use Photoshop on my images and he has some good things to say about that.

The final thing I got from the book (so far as I have not read it all yet) is that my next camera is likely to be a Canon G9 so I can shoot in RAW. So out goes the idea of a Nikon P60 as a lightweight walking camera (lost interest in that when I found out it does not have live view of the exposure) and in comes the G3 – the only thing holding me back on that is that it uses battery packs not AA cells. Well I am not going to buy it tomorrow so by Christmas there may be something else on the market that does what I want in a compact digital format,

  • Compact size
  • Viewfinder (absolutely essential)
  • SD cards
  • AA cell power
  • Short zoom 5x optical at least
  • RAW and jpeg (now)
  • Image stabilisation
  • Live view
  • Manual exposure
  • Some useful modes – snow and foliage are two I use on my S2 all the time
  • Hot shoe (well it is a low priority)

Well it is “my” wish list.

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Asus EEE – Glad I Packed It

I hadn’t planned to bring the Asus EEE on holiday – but at the last moment I threw it in the boot of the car (and as it is solid state I could throw it).

I do push my PDA to the limits and expect it to perform as a laptop but there are a few things it cannot do which the Asus can do when connected to the internet.

For the first thing I have been able to post to this blog – there is PDA interface to post to WordPress but it is limited – but using the Asus I have been able to post with images and manage my site, (I was planning to post my Coast to Coast Experience but the holiday seems to have got in the way of that happening – you will have to wait for that a little longer.)

The other thing I have been using our timeshare wifi for is posting images to my Flickr pages – www.clivecatton.co.uk – something that I get round to all to infrequently, I still have images from the top of Ben Nevis from last summer that I still want to post – this year the pictures are up there.

Anyway we are off camping again tomorrow so the Asus will go back in its padded backpack (Tamrac Travel Pack 71 – free with my Amateur Photographer subscription) and go back in the boot.

A client of mine is giving the Asus a real travel try out – he is having a months holiday in Australia and asked me to spec him a laptop for the journey so he could keep up with email and stuff for his business whilst away – as well as using it for Skype, editing the digital photos and other computer chores. I suggested the Asus – and when he returns I’ll tell you how he got on with it.

I sorted out several other hi-tech things he needed, he already had a Pocket PC for carrying his Outlook etc with him – we suggested and configured that for him. I configured a memory stick for use in a Windows PC with Portable Apps – but also as a storage device of essential documents which can be used in Asus under Linux. I backed his Outlook PST file this stick and uploaded the data to the Essential PIM Portable Application, loaded on the stick – plug the stick into a Windows PC to access your Outlook data whilst on the road. He also took an 8gig stick with him as a backup device for digital photos.

Business and personal “on the road computing” is something that I specialise in at Octagon Technology – and is something I enjoy setting up and using – it is also a good excuse to upgrade my kit on a regular basis!

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Elgin Cathedral

We went to Elgin today – to see Elgin Cathedral. Diana had been there when she was six or seven and had been very impressed by it, so we were going back to have a look.

As we entered the town there was a sign saying it was an “Historic Cathedral Town” – and that was the the only sign we could see for the Cathedral. We parked and tried to find the Tourist Information – there was a sign for that and we followed it, but we could not find the Tourist Information. There were a number of information sign posts – showing where the post office, town centre and other things were but no Cathedral sign.

So out with the PDA, Memory-Map and the GPS unit – the cathedral was marked on the OS map and the GPS took us there. (See here for my mobile tech kit.)

There was sign for the cathedral which we found eventually, and if we had been coming in from the other side of the town we would have seen it – of course we would have seen it if we had given up, got the car and left Elgin to go to Aberdeen instead – as we were leaving the town!

Come Elgin council get your act together – it cannot be hard to put a few signs up – where the tourists can see them.

The Cathedral was impressive – we shall go back next year and have a good look round. The Biblical Gardens next door to the cathedral were excellent and well worth visiting Elgin for on there own.

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