Blog
Thoughts and things I care to shareLazy Posting…
Ok, sorry, I’ve been slacking the last few days getting updates on the site. Busy at work, busy at home, and I’ve been thinking a lot about career directions. Been doing lots of fun unsupported stuff on my MDA, and I’ll talk about that soon (push-mail rocks).
Dual Windows Mobile ‘BlackBerry’ Style Devices
So there are two awesome thin new phones coming out soon that are similar in layout to traditional BlackBerry devices. Say hello to the Motorola Q (top), which you’ve probably read about, and the Samsung SGH-i320 (bottom).
The two phones both run Windows Mobile 5 and will be available in the coming weeks in the US. Both have recently been approved by the FCC for use in the USA. While we know that the motoQ is currently a CDMA phone and will be available from Verizon, the SGH-i320 is a GSM phone and could be used on either T-Mobile or Cingular (or some of the regional GSM providers) here in the States.
Unfortunately, the i320 is a tri-band phone (900/1800/1900) and would only really have decent coverage on the T-Mobile network as theirs is primarily a 1900 band network. Cingular relies heavily on the 850 band and has significant 1900 band holes everywhere. Cingular sells only tri-band phones that have both 850 & 1900MHz, or quad-band phones that support all GSM frequencies around the world. T-Mobile has recently rolled out a number of 850MHz towers and has signed a roaming agreement with Cingular for vast 850MHz streaches of the country, and in addition has also taken to selling quad-band phones or tri-band with 850/1900 band support.
At any rate, its great to see this style of phone coming out from two of the top three Windows Mobile phone vendors. Now all we need is to see an HTC version of this format, one that builds on the great layout that BlackBerry has demonstrated, and these two have copied.
For more information on either of these phones, check out these great articles:
- CoolSmartPhone (Samsung SGH-i320)
- Engadget (Samsung SGH-i320)
- PhoneScoop (Motorola Q)
- Motorola
What to say…
Interesting…
Ever since Dave Winer (Scripting News)started talking about quiting blogging, the A-Listers of the blogosphere have changed – at least the way I’ve been reading them. A couple of weeks ago, Robert Scoble (Scobleizer) invited a guest blogger, Bubba Murarka, to blog in place of himself for awhile. Now Russell Beattie (Russell Beattie Notebook) has posted his ‘claimed’ last post to his blog. About a month or so ago, he turned off comments on his blog, and the same time Robert announced Bubba as a guest blogger, he turned on comment moderation.
Strangely, about the time Dave announced he was thinking about quitting blogging, he turned comments back on – go figure.
So I’m not sure what to say about this – two weeks ago, I had decided not to post about this until I had some point, some interesting commentary on it. But with Russ getting out of blogging, and Robert and Dave pulling significantly back, I guess that I had to mention something.
So here is my perspective (from the ZZZ-List of course). The blogosphere is diversifiying, or growing, or aging or whatever you want to describe it as – for me, its diversifying. More people will come along and replace the voice of Russ, Robert, Dave, Doc and whoever else was on your ‘A-List’ of bloggers. While you can mourn their descision, I for one am glad that they are recognizing that their is another piece to life that may be outside the blogosphere at this time. They and others have brought lots of information, news, products, and most importantly, excitement to blogging that otherwise may not have been here.
And the best part is that they’ll be back in one form or another. Whether they admit it today or not, they will bring something new to the table when the time is right. Right now, I’ve found myself reading more blogs because of them. I’ve found Mathew Ingram, Kent Newsome, Richard Edelman, TechCrunch & MobileCrunch, Megite, and many, many more just from Russell, Robert, and Dave.
To Dave, Robert, and Russell, I want to say thank-you for the conversations you’ve brought to us. Talk to you again soon.
Blogging & Careers – My Take
Scoble (or was it Bubba?) had a post on Blogging and Careers yesterday. It started me thinking on how employees working for companies in the tech sector have more opportunity to blog during work. Some actually have it as part of their job – Robert Scoble for example. Others come to mind as well, mainly the A-Listers and so on, have more ability to blog during work and more importantly, to blog some of their work.
While I’m not ready to admit that I’m jealous, I do think that there is an important piece to blogging that many employers simply dismiss out of hand. The opportunity to blog about what you do and/or how you do it can help a blogger grow in their abilities. It can help expand a person’s writing style, imagination, and persistence. It will open doors that a person doesn’t even realize they have avaliable to them. Blogging does represent a window into a person’s character, and that is a good thing. In today’s environment where life is so fast-paced that people have trouble just keeping up with their work, blogging can offer an outlet for their ideas, passions and creativity.
Blogging can enhance your career in ways too numerous to ponder. One, for example is the simple availability to potential customers, and yes I view employers as customers. After all each of us have services to offer, and why not have a sample of these services and resources available to future customers?
There is more to blogging than many middle managers in corporate America understand at this time. It is a powerful tool for everyone, its as simple as that. Anyone can start and update a blog for free, and you can take it to many levels after that limited only by your own ambition. Blogging has not ‘peaked’ as some are trying to hint at – blogging has barely gotten started and will provide one of the best ways for those interested to promote themselves and their ideas. Come along for the ride and find out for yourself; your career and your personal life will be enriched.
Also, this article from The Boston Globe on the subject is a good read.
Corporate Blogging – Part III
You know, I never intended to have more than a follow-up to this topic (How can I encourage corporate blogging? on my old blog, and Corporate Blogging – Part II), but it has become a topic of interest to me. There are times at work when I believe that new ideas are simply “lost in the fog” so to speak. There were a couple of good posts on the topic of risk aversion several weeks ago by Robert Scoble and Kathy Sierra, in both corporate environments and personal lives.
Many times new ideas and technologies get brushed or set aside for reasons other than the obvious. By obvious, I mean something that does not fit the company’s goals, budget, or needs. To be more clear, people are afraid of change. They get too comfortable, too ‘clingy’ to their way of doing things – that’s corporate mentality as well as personal mentality. Last week I was surprised to find an openness to the idea of blogging one of our Disaster Recovery exercises. Not only on my personal blog (which I struggled with), but also as an exercise in communication during the test itself.
Now that does not come along too often, where a virtually unknown, untested technology or idea is embraced without any upfront research and fact-finding. For a corporate IT geek like me, that simply stunned me, right down to my shoes. It was quite an exciting way to start the exercise to begin with, and more so to see many team members utilizing the tool, updating with content, status, news, successes, issues, etc… What I’m really interested in at this point is what the feedback on the idea will be at our post-test meeting next week. Simply getting feedback about how to do it better next time will be the reward I’m looking for, because a simple, free, easy-to-access blog is a great method of communicating information during an event like the one we tested for.
But what about day to day? Not every day is a disaster (thank God), and not everything is critical information that needs instant dissemination. However, the need for simple many-to-many information publication is needed nearly everywhere in a corporate environment. The idea of departments being able to provide information to each other in a more casual way can, in many instances, allow more detail to be incorporated, and more thought in the structure of what needs to be said.
One important lesson that nearly everyone in corporate America has learned, is that mass-mailed email is read by almost no one. We all find them irritating and unnecessary; often they have more in common with Junk Mail than anything useful. And that’s a sad thing – we all have important jobs, and work hard to communicate information to each other. And what is always the number one complaint? That none of us communicate as well as we could.
This is where corporate blogging could really shine. Every department should have a main blog, and probably many personal blogs under it, or that contribute to it. Similar to going to ZDNet or CNet and sorting through dozens of RSS feeds for news on this or that, each department should publish its own unique information. There is always someone in each group, team or department that can or would take an interest in writing up the status of the day and publishing it for the rest of the corporation. Blogs also bring a solution to the problem of corporate Junk Mail. Because you can peruse the information at your leisure, it no longer has to interrupt your work – you can plan to read the information when you are receptive to it: morning, lunch, breaks, whatever. That also means that when a mass email is sent, it would actually have meaning, and would be important enough to stop what you’re working on and read it.
So in the end, blogging in a corporate environment can provide a much more dynamic and streamlined method of publishing information to the users of that information. Keeping email for person-to-person communications, where you can be more specific in the communication. It also seperates out another communication tool that many in IT fear – Instant Messaging.
Technorati tags: corporate-blogging, instant-messaging
Updated – Pocket Informant 2005 Rev 5
Web Information Solutions, Inc. has released revision 5 of their popular Pocket Informant 2005 software for Pocket PCs. Since I’ve been sequestered in a dazzling data center environment for the last few days, I missed this release until I got to my home email. For all the details on what has been updated, go here!
T-Mobile SDA Reviewed by PhoneArena
Enthusiast site PhoneAreana has a full-on review of the T-Mobile SDA Smartphone. With a QVGA screen, Quad Band GSM/GPRS/EDGE, WiFi, Bluetooth 1.2, 1.3MP camera, MiniSD, and music controls on the keyboard, this phone is a fantastic device. This device does work with bluetooth keyboards, headsets and many other items.
T-Mobile and the BlackBerry 8700g
T-Mobile has finally announced the BlackBerry 8700g, one of the new BB devices that supports EDGE. Cingular launched their version about two weeks ago, if I remember correctly. Found this news on RIMarkable this morning. Good news to those who will be looking for the latest in BB devices. Having the 8700 available on both of the nationwide GSM carriers is a good thing.
Another Orb Convert
Back to Reality
So now that our Disaster Recovery exercise is complete, its back to our regulaly scheduled program. I’ve got a few things on my list to get done that I have been meaning to touch on.
One will be how well the T-Mobile MDA worked as a modem for my laptop (before it crashed), another is a review of Pluck, a freeware news aggregator that I’ve used for well more than a year, and some other not-quite-yet-formulated ideas swirling in my head.
Earlier today I had crafted a great post for the blog on my MDA, and just as I posted it, Opera mobile for Pocket PC dumped the post and exited! Frustrating, because I typed a good post on the small keyboard, and because up to that point it was working quite well. I tried to start Opera again to no avail – it just wouldn’t load. I’ll probably need to reboot the MDA to get Opera to load again, so I’m losing interest right now.
On the home front, we’re going to be meeting with some of the contractors for our new townhouse, picking out tile, carpet, colors, appliances, etc… this week, so that’ll be fun. More opportunitiy to spend money (ugh), though we’ll be keeping it realistic.
Towards the end of the week, we’ll be having a quarterly departmental meeting somewhere offsite. This usually is interesting, though the last one would have been hard to prove otherwise. During one of the group meetings, I get to talk about RSS, and maybe we can mention our DR Blog. The introduciton of new ideas and new technologies can be so hard in a medium sized corporation. Everything is so static. Its actually embarasing that the some of the corporate management team is more energetic and enthusiastic about new ideas and technology than some of the IT staff!
At any rate, its back to the “grind” as we get back to the real business of IT at work, and I can get back to focusing on my interests here on the blog. I’d been trying to post while at DR, but it didn’t work as well as I had hoped. I had the time, was connected to the ‘net, but had no inspiration to write.