| Site Navigation |
| Blog Navigation |
| Search |
| Sponsored Links |
| Categories |
| Archives |
| Jailbreak |
I just jailbroke my new 3G iPhone! Now I can install my own apps on it without coughing up a 99, albeit measly, bucks to Apple. Take that, rules!
I need to get the SDK fired up and port Checklist Tree over to the iPhone…somehow.
| Posted July 21, 2008 at 11:58 pm in phones, random | No Comments | Permalink | |
| Tilt Crashing Issues Update |
So the crashing has been happening again; about once a day. I think I’ve isolated the problem to Pocket Informant 8. I’ve removed the software and it works fine now.
I’m using Agenda One to do my stuff now, and my phone seems happier.
Update teh 2nd: I turned the auto update feature for Agenda One to check every day, and lo and behold, my phone had crashed in the middle of the night (but also rebooted on its own, so it’s not so bad) so it looks like it’s not limited to PI8…any app that tries to open the Data connection when the phone is asleep and locked with a simple PIN type password. So I’m back to looking into this issue.
| Posted April 29, 2008 at 7:34 am in pda, phones | No Comments | Permalink | |
| Tilt Dutty’s 6.1 ROM crashing issues |
So lately, my phone has been crashing alot. It was new since I got the Dutty 6.1 cooked ROM from xda-developers.
Short story, don’t use the 1.64.08.21 radio ROM with Dutty’s 6.1 if you have North America service, it’s a UK radio ROM that probably doesn’t work right here for whatever reason. Maybe it’s the network, maybe it’s the Tilt. Who knows.
The latest (most recent) radio ROM I know works is 1.64.06.04. It’s a World Wide English (WWE) ROM. Use that one.
Summary:
Tilt + ATT Wireless + Dutty’s Official 6.1 + 1.64.08.21 = BAD.
Tilt + ATT Wireless + Dutty’s Official 6.1 + 1.64.06.04 = GOOD.
| Posted March 18, 2008 at 8:28 am in pda, phones | 2 Comments | Permalink | |
| Tilt A2DP Issues |
So here’s my setup:
I put a bunch of workout-type music on my MicroSD card and threw it in my phone. It was working OK until it started dropping the audio out constantly…it was something kinda random yet somewhat predictable.
Anyway, I had a hunch to turn discovery off on the phone, and it resolved instantly.
Just in case anyone else was having this problem.
| Posted March 3, 2008 at 11:55 pm in phones | No Comments | Permalink | |
| CDMA Moto Q, Xv6700, Treo 700wx reviews. |
So at work I’m working on an application that has to run on Windows Mobile 5 smartphones. Long story short, it’s going to make cops’ jobs a little easier (and maybe, just maybe, a certain cop in Marana PD will actually do his job instead of sitting in their cars on yahoo all night waiting for strippers to arrest…seriously man, bust some red-light runners or some drunk drivers or something) and eliminate a paper to computer transfer job that has to be done back at the station. Simply put, more efficient cops. Anyway, for the project, Verizon sent me 2 kinds of phones, the Moto Q and the Xv6700, and Sprint sent me a Treo 700wx to test it on.
Xv6700
So far I like this phone the best. This is a UTStarcom PocketPC phone (also branded as the PPC-6700 on Sprint and Alltel). The sound quality is pristine, and it has a slide-out keyboard with nice big keys (because we all know that people don’t really have thumbs that are less than a square centimeter in shape) that I can type seriously fast on. The only problem with this phone is that the processor is a little bit slow, clocking in at 400 MHz (XScale) it’s a little less zippy than I’m used to, coming from a 624MHz Dell Axim x51v. The slow speed doesn’t bother me too much, it just strikes me as odd that my application loads much faster on the Axim. The EVDO interface is pretty fast too; I haven’t done any formal speed tests, as testing Verizon’s EVDO speeds is beyond the scope of this review, but needless to say it mets my needs. The other con about this phone is that Alltel doesn’t carry it anymore, which really bums me out.
Treo 700wx
This one is the second runner up. I’ve always liked the Treos, even back when they were Palm devices. It has all the nice qualities of the Xv700, but since the processor is a different type (Samsung 300MHz) I can’t really do a speed comparison. I will say it’s comparable in speed to the Xv6700. This phone would be tied for first place except two things. One, the keys on the thumbpad are just too small for most men to manage. I get “fatfinger” errors all the time with this thing (as my girlfriend will attest, seeing some of the atrociously spelled text messages I’ve sent her from Treos) and it can be annoying. It does have the advantage of one-handed text entry if your fingers are small enough for it. The other issue is the square screen. The screen is a 240×240 screen. I really don’t understand this…they could have easily made the phone just a little longer and put in a 320×240 standard PocketPC screen, or at least made it 320×320 like the Palm Treo models. It’s a little disappointing, but the sound quality is great, and this device is a solid performer.
Moto Q
This phone really blows. If Motorola was going to try to make a “budget smartphone” they should have told people this. The voice quality on this phone is terrible compared to the two above phones, and even terrible compared to my Motorola e815 (Alltel). My girlfriend’s T-Mobile sidekick sounds better for voice quality than this unit. This isn’t an issue with the phone, but with Motorola. I’d pay $10 more for the phone to have a quality speaker in it. Maybe they can release a Q “pro edition” for $50 more that has a better speaker and a faster graphics processor/cpu. Which brings me to my next point: the Q has serious problems with page tearing when doing transitions and renders UI elements slowly. If I have a page with 10 text boxes on it and hit the down key 5 times, the phone does not keep up with me. This is terribly annoying, and it happens in Internet Explorer too. I’d have tested Opera if I could have made it run on that toy. The only pro about this phone is that it has the thumbpad built into the front, and typing is a little easier than on the Treo for me because the buttons are more spread out. It does not make up for lacking a touchscreen though; navigating this phone is extremely difficult. Don’t buy this phone until Motorola fixes the bugs!
Verizon also sent me some PN-820 phones, but because they lack a QWERTY keyboard, they never left the box. I just told the client “no” with my laughter.
| Posted May 18, 2007 at 8:55 am in phones, reviews | No Comments | Permalink | |
| Finally got it unlocked |
So I now have an unlocked GSM phone. It took a lot of time (by someone else, thx) on the phone with the fucking cell provider, but yesterday I finally got the unlock code for it.
So now that it’s unlocked, I plan to test and review the GSM service providers in the Tucson area using prepaid accounts. Since Alltel seems to have fallen behind in the “cool phones” department (basically, they don’t have any intention of carrying a full PocketPC WM5 phone…I want the UTStarcom PPC6800, but Alltel’s CSR tells me that they will not carry it and they’re gonna move people to the Treo and Moto Q [there'll be a post reviewing both of these in a few minutes], two phones that don’t meet my needs) I’m looking around to unload my contract on someone and check out Cingular/ATT’s 8525 in a few months.
Anyway, I’m reviewing/testing Cingular at the moment and I’ll post my review of it once I’ve burned through this prepaid card. So far I haven’t had much trouble with it, but T-Mobile will be reviewed too (though they are my arch-nemesis) because per my girlfriend who worked as a T-Mobile CSR, the problems I had with T-Mobile’s service have been resolved. Either way, worst case scenario is I’m out 25 bucks to T-Mo and no shit head lackey there will get a commission.
Anyway, stay tuned.
| Posted May 18, 2007 at 8:35 am in phones, random | No Comments | Permalink | |