nokia

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I read a response to a Phorbes analysis on What’s wrong with Nokia by C-M Dumell and another one here. Basically Forbes have a crappy text saying that Nokia doesn’t Innovate which Apple does and then goes to shoot themselves in the foot (repeatedly) by saying stupid things they got wrong.

Or so i think. I didn’t read the article (that never stopped me from opening my mouth anyway). But it got me to write this, which i’ve been thinking about for a long time. And it boils down to what i’ve been thinking about Nokia and yet never whould have believed to actually be true, which is the following statement from Tomi Ahonen:

Innovation has nothing to do with usability.

Grakk.

This, pretty much encompasses half of the problem. It is horribly narrow-sighted.

The other half of the problem is manifested in statements from Colin Gillis from Brigantine Advisors in New York, like

They’re [Nokia are] going to need the types of devices that people can use to download applications and the kind of devices that people can be interactive with, the types of devices we’re seeing out of Apple.

I find it bemusing to listen to podcasts and reviews about what smart phone computing should be in the future when all these features have existed for i don’t know how long on handsets i’ve been using for ages. Like the noveau ability to add applications to your phone. Yee-haw. I had this with the “Fisher-price” 3650 (and yes, it was blue). It’s practically been a requirement for me since. And that applications should be easily accessible through application stores and installable over the air. We had the old-skool Nokia OVI long before Apple got their App store. Sure, Apple got the touch screen first, but Nokia got GPS, VoIP, WLAN, 3G, MMS, multitasking, PC synchronization, Exchange synchronization, cut-and-paste, a media player, “tethering” so i can use it to connect to the Internet, and user-replaceable batteries before Apple (and a few other gadgets like a flashlight, a golf stroke analysator and a bike computer, just to show off).

What Nokia doesn’t have is proper usability, sexiness and bling. The S60 UI on my phone is ugly, clunky, bulky, boxy, and just plain out of fashion. No, i change that. It never was in fashion, or if it truly was, i don’t remember when it was. Perhaps in 2003 when i got that 3650 phone.

Nokia smart phones seem like command line UNIX. You can do anything with two character commands, a heap of obscure switches and a set of pipes… if you can. iPhones on the other hand go well in cocktail lounges with long drinks, soft jazz and indirect, blue light. There’s very little jazz and overpriced mojito in an E90 Communicator. Also, Nokia has more phone models on market that i can comfortably fathom and Apple has, uh, two. Truly, i think this goes in Apple’s advantage. It makes communication so much easier if you can focus on just one thing. Which is the other thing Nokia must have got wrong.

How can it be that Nokia has had all these features out forever and ever amen but when Apple (finally) releases a product with these features, the assembled congregation applaudes the Church of Jobs with standing ovations? Because of the delivery. Apple has an uncanny ability to present their stuff so that everybody listens and think that what they hear is cool. Because it is. Nokia would really benefit from a Steve Jobs or a Barack Obama who can take the stage and make the people go “ooooh, that’s niiiiiiiice”. Nokias press events are pale stuttering men delivering epic epistles of boredom in tankero englis. Listen to Nokia’s The way we live next podcasts, you’ll see what i mean. I too subscribe to that podcast, but it’s not because of the presentation. It’s despite it (oh that’s right, Nokia also got podcast deliveries over the air to the device before Apple). The lack in presentation horribly overshadows the usefulness of the content. There’s this small company run by some friends of mine. They are excellent programmers. They have some excellent products. They are really nice guys. They just don’t know how to sell it. In the mega league, that’s Nokia when compared to Apple.

Nokia phones look and feel like they are innovated by a happy cadre of engineers. A happy cadre of engineers can take you to the moon and back, but they sure aren’t sexy. At the same time, i would not trade in my E90 for an iPhone. Not with their respective current feature sets. But i would appreciate my Communicator with iPhone’s looks, schwing and usabililty.

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All right folks, this post is going to contain a few more maybes than i usually include, but i’m excited enough to post early. And i promise i will post a follow up, or an edit to this posting. Happy?

One paragraph of background. Geotagging a photograph is the process of including the information of where a photo was taken, into the photo. It is the next big thing in digital photography. It’s currently not yet widely available (that is, most cameras do not have location data) and add-ons tend to be clumsy, expensive or both. Here’s how it might be different.

I would very much like to have my photos location-tagged, but i would not like to shell out lots of cash to have it done. This is especially true the few times i travel abroad. Yes i know i’ve been in Firenze or Amsterdam or Ljubliana or whatever, and i’ve taken photograps from there. But the geek in me wants to know exactly where i’ve taken these pics. Since the officially sanctioned way for me to get geo data onto my pictures would require an add-on which costs nearly as much as the camera itself — and this does not include a GPS unit (though it does include an Ethernet port and WiFi) — this really isn’t a viable option. I found a nifty device which is a location data logger. After you’ve done your photo trail, you insert your film chip into it and it writes the geo data straight into the picture. A rather nifty idea, though i’d feel a bit awkward of putting my photos into a box before i have taken a backup of them.

This is why i was particularly happy to realize that in fact i already have a solution deployed and that i’ve been using it for some time without knowing. Or rather, i’ve been using to a criminally low level, because i haven’t known better. Here’s the deal, and it comes from Yahoo! labs.

Step zero: You are a Flickr user. I am, so that was easy for me. And since you are a Flickr user, you have a Yahoo! identity, which you’ll need. You also need a Nokia s60 series or Motor-ola “smart” phone. Oh, and a digital camera which is not built into your phone.

Step one: Fetch and install Yahoo! research labs’ Zonetag software. Zonetag’s primary advertised usage is to location-tag photos taken with the phone’s built-in camera. This is not what you are going to use it for. You’re going to use Zonetag as a datalogger.

Step two: When going out to shoot, engage Zonetag. If you have a GPS, all the better. If not, Zonetag will use the cell identification data and hopefully (probably) have the geo data so that it knows where-about the cell is. Make sure you have location logging engaged (you will see a feature called “Upload log” with a size greater than zero if it works). Grab yer phone. And then, out you go!

Step three: Make sure your camera’s time is set correctly. Some software synch the camera’s clock, which is nice. The problem comes when you’re abroad and your camera only has the notion of “local time”, not GMT+timezone (stupid!), so if you’re downloading photos on the road, double check that your camera is still in time. Now photograph.

Step four: When back, or whenever, use Zonetag’s Location Logging > Upload log (xxx kb) function. This will send your location log to Zonetag’s server (insert privacy/paranoia alerts here, if you’re so inclined). Upload your photos to Flickr and tag them with “ZoneTagIt”.

Step five: Go to Zonetag’s Digicam geotagging web interface (this link will work for you if you’re a registered Zonetag user). Click Start the process and push the big orange button once. Allow Yahoo! some thinking time and it’ll tag all your photos that it can match to your Location log within a hysterisis of 20 seconds (see, i told you that you need to have your camera’s time synched). All photos that were successfully geotagged, will have its ZoneTagIt tag removed.

Step duh (this will not happen to you): All photos that weren’t successfully tagged will retain their ZoneTagIt tag. And since i yet haven’t found a way to batch-remove tags from photograhps, you’re left with 1102 photos that can’t be geotagged because you don’t have the location data. Thus, you’ll have to manually remove those tags. This of course will not happen to you since you followed what i wrote and not what i did, which was to use Flickr’s Organize interface, select all non-geotagged photos and tagging then ZoneTagIt.

The disclaimer/maybe bit: I haven’t actually managed to actually gps-tag my pictures. This is just how it should work. I managed to tag three pictures but i think they were all taken with my cell phone and i had some cell ID info embedded into them. This is the bit i will check and confirm mlater.

Caveat, and a bad one it is: I haven’t been able to upload my location log from my primary phone, a Nokia E90 “communicator”. That’s kinda sad, since the E90 has a GPS built in, and it tends always to be with me. My backup phone, an N76, has no problems with uploads, but with it, i either only get cell tags or i need to carry an external GPS unit. I might be able to use the E90’s GPS for that though :)

One final use for Zonetag is that it can upload your current location to Yahoo!’s Fire Eagle location broker service (here i could get into a rant about the stupidity that Yahoo! has a location service, Google has a location service, and a few others probably also has, but they don’t interoperate). I’m still waiting for a plug-in to send my approximate location data from Fire Eagle to my blog (and to Twitter) so it can notify where i was when i wrote (or tweeted) that. I’ve already established that such stuff is being made. I just haven’t seen it live yet.

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Communicator waves

Short version: this is a test.
Long version after the fold.

A Nokia Communicator could very well be the ultimate mobile blogging machine. It’s portable, it’s connected and it’s got a keyboard with all relevant characters on it. It’s got a camera and newer models even have gps receivers. I’ve even written the text to a blog post, namely my report from the R.E.M. gig from a month and a half back.

With this posting, i’ve taken things a step further: this one is posted straight from the E90, using the trial (and thus crippled) Wavelog software. The full Wavelog supports editing previous posts and storing images on picasaweb, which is nice.

I don’t think i would like to write lengthy pieces on a platform like this (that is, typing with my thumbs), but the possibility for, say, travel blogging, is exciting — though especially when it comes to travel blogging i would like to have my entries geotagged.

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På väg från en jobbkeikka i Lojo Outskirts till en lunch i Lojo Downtown tyckte mitt navigatorprogram att nu fick det vara nog. Först fick den inte tag på GPSen och efter det vägrade navigatorprogrammet att släppa ut mej.

Eftersom jag fastnat valde jag att starta om telefonen med strömknappen. Dålig idé.

När telefonen kom tillbaka undrade den i vilket land den befann sej och vad det var för datum. Sen ville den veta hur mycket klockan visade. Och sen var det nedförs.

De flesta program jag installerat var försvunna eller korrumperade. Telefonboken var tom. Mediafiler jag hade på SD-kortet fick telefonen att krascha och boota om. Und so weiter.

Nu har jag just kört in en restore från en en månad gammal backup. Få se om det ska fungera nåt bättre. Men lite ledsen är jag ändå på tekniken som ska bråka på såhär sätt.

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This is one of those days. Since i were on a course for a week, my Windows domain login expired. I managed to log in to my computer this morning but after lunch, my screen was locked and so was my account. So i try to give A and B, our friendly sysadmins, a call. Neither phone answers. Turns out that B is on holiday and i’ve got A’s number wrong. I can’t check the right number using Nokia’s Mail For Exchange, which gets the number from the company’s AD, because — well — my Windows account is locked.

So i give our service desk orchestrator P a ring, and she connects me to A who immediately answers and tells me that he’ll unlock my account and he’ll send me the new password over SMS. Well, immediately after congratulating me on the spectabulous way i’ve managed to lock myself out. I so agreed.

At a quarter past five there still is no SMS, so i expect dear Mr. A sent the new password to my work number instead of my personal number. Well, since i changed to another business unit, i changed my phone number as well (the BU used to be another company and we’re still under the old phone number series). But i can’t call A because i don’t have his number, i can’t check his number and i don’t want to bother P whose working day has ended anyway. No worries, i’ll contact him over Messenger.

Dig this: i don’t have my Messenger password. I know i changed it a while back and now evidently, i can’t recall it. On my Windows boot, i would have it cached, but … well, that’s right, my Windows bit is locked.

Last resort: fire up Linux, surf to Live.com, ask to reset the password. Live.com refuses to accept my captcha using Konqueror so i fire up the ‘Fox and ask Live to send the password request to my “alternative e-mail”. I’ve been watching my GMail account since. Nothing there yet. This is just one of those days. Thank goodness for my Linux partition.

Update: Turns out the reset-your-password message had been filtered as spam :) . The road to recovery starts… tomorrow.

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28.8.2007 – Täydellinen kuunpimennys, jos olet maailman toisella puolella (ja sitäpaitsi, täällä olisi kuitenkin pilvistä)

29.8.2007 – Nokia N81 & N82

31.8.2007 – Radio City nousee haudasta nettiin

1.9.2007 – Welho tarjoaa maksukanavia maksutta runsaan kahden viikon ajan

Tue 28-Aug-2007 | Anna palautetta!

At work, we’ve been wondering for some time how the contents of some Outlook event information marked private can become visible to somebody who you’re sharing calendar information as read-only, a common practice at our company. My colleague found an interesting tidbit in the Outlook help files today:

 Important   You should not rely on the Private feature to prevent other people from accessing the details of your appointments, contacts, or tasks. To ensure that other people cannot read the items that you mark as private, do not grant them Read permission to your Calendar, Contacts, or Tasks folders. A person with Read permission to access your folders could use programmatic methods or other e-mail applications to view the details of your private items. Use Private only when you share folders with people whom you trust.

(source)

 
So it seems that it is the Outlook client of the person who’s viewing your shared items that hides out the private data. Or put in more cryptological terms, if you are Alice and are sharing your calendar with Bob, Bob can, using his 1337 haxx0r skillz (or a Nokia phone) view all the details you have marked Private in your calendar.
 
Not Good. Actually, this is Not Good in considerable dimensions. From the user’s point of view, which is the one i consider the most important, what i mark private is private. As a user, i should be able to trust the software i use, and this feature just made a serious dent in the shield of trust. Outlook just looks trustworthy, but in fact it is only a front. From a technical angle, it is Exchange server, which orchestrates the sharing of information, should be the one to show or hide the data based on the relevant permissions of the viewer. After all, the Exchange server is the one that makes sure only authorized users and groups may access my other Outlook information…. or, is it only what i’m made to believe?

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Nokia 3110 (anno 1997)

 Nokia 3110 Classic (mobil.se)

Nokia 3110 Classic (anno 2007)

3110 Classic är en lite enklare modell med 1,3 megapixel-kamera, fm-radio och Nokias eget Series 40-gränssnitt. (link)

Beror väl vad man jämför med. Inte den gamla 3110:an i alla fall.  Men hur gick det nu såhär? Numrorna tog väl slut. De attraktiva åtminstone . Men det var ju tal om att Nokia skulle börja ge sina telefoner namn och inte att de skulle göra så här…

(Nokia hoj: lediga 3-serier: 3130–3190, 3240, 3260, 3270, 3290, 34xx (minus 3410), 3500, 3540, 3550, 3580, 3630, 3640, 3670–3800, 3820–3990)

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Ai-va?

Ibland känns det så härligt. Man tycker att man borde skriva nåt intelligent om, i detta fall, Steve Jobs’ nylansering iPhone, men vet att Bob X Cringely ändå kommer att göra det inom en vecka så varför bry sej (dessutom skriver han mycket bättre än jag).

Alltså. iPhone är en snärtig liten leksak. Nokia har redan hunnit skälla ut den för att den inte har 3G. Det var dumt gjort för i höst ska det komma en 3G-uppdatering till iPhonen. I höst ska oxå iPhone releasas i Europa. Före det får man den bara i USA, med ett två-årskontrakt hos Cingular (TCO: $1936). Som förresten säljer material i Real Media-format, inte Quicktime (= Antagligen har den redan 3G-egenskaper, precis som nya Maccar i “hemlighet” redan utrustats med 802.11n-nät, det krävs bara en firmware-uppdatering och så är den igång. Vad de borde ha gnällt över, precis som Phil Törrönen Torrone, Cory Doctorow och en hel del andra, var att iPhonen är en sluten plattform. Steve tycker att folk som inte kan koda inte ska göra kod för en telefon och få den att phukka upp sej. Apple vill sälja saker som fungerar. Vilket är precis emot vad Nokia gör, nämligen telefoner och utvecklingsverktyg för telefonerna. OK, Symbian C++ suger purjo i jämförelse med många andra utvecklingsmiljöer, men tanken är ändå att Jormas butik säjer här är en lur, koda till den. Och Steves butik säjer här är en elegant designergrej som ser otroligt snärtig ut och håll du dina håriga kodartassar borta från den så hålls den snygg i fortsättningen oxå.
iPhonen är inte en PDA och inte en “smartphone” (vad det nu egentligen ska betyda). En sån ska man kunna utöka med programvara man anser smart eller assistera digitalt ens liv. Faktum är att man inte ens kan synkronisera iPhonen över WLAN eller GSM. iPhonen är en iPod med vilken man kan ringa och surfa på nätet. Och inget illa med det i sej, men själv skulle jag nog vara gladare om man kunde få lite kustomkod till den. NFS över SSH, tex. Eller Netstumbler. Eller Skype. Men sidu nej. Vad Apple kan tänkas göra är att ge söndagskodarna och vardagsaporna ett verktyg i jämförelse med Konfabulator/Yahoo! Widgets, Opera Widgets, Nokia Widsets (alltså “widgets” men uttalat med finsk brytning) eller SuperKaramba för KDE. Faktum är att Apple kört med sina widgetar i tid och evighet. Fast nåt sånt är ju inte publicerat.

Det finns mycket mer att skriva om iPhonen, ss debatten om ett touch-screen är bättre eller sämre än riktiga knappar men nu får det vara nog. Mer om iPhonen överallt.

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My PC Suite broke. Or rather, the Synchronization bit, which was the one i needed and used the most. Having a telephone that doesn’t carry my calendar and my contacts sucks. Which is the same as having two calendars and two sets of contacts, which equally sucks.

Enter the Mail for Exchange, the Exchange synch plugin from Nokia. This software is marketed for the Business Users of Nokia phones, i.e. the E-series, but since E-phones tend to be S60-phones and my N71 is one too, i decided to try it out.

When downloading, Nokia wants you to tell which phone you have.  I chose the “smallest” E-phone, the E50, since neither the E50 nor the N71 have WLAN (which, yeah, sucks). The installation took a few attempts since my phone memory was so full — can somebody tell me why it’s reported that i have one meg of memory free when i have about one meg of material on my phone’s sixteen-meg “c-drive”? Also, the first synchronization went pretty much haywire as i chose not to delete the entries from the phone prior to the initial sync.  Don’t do that if you’re thin on memory.

But now — hey presto! — over-the-air synchronization works beautifully! How excellent :)

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