Iphi needs a plan

A collection of random, messy, personal thoughts and links, accumulated since 1999 by Joelle Nebbe-Mornod aka Iphigenie aka Superiphi, old style netizen, reader, walker, photographer, web innovation architect, and constantly curious mind

Great Stuff!


04

Dec

2010

I have more games than i can play, and I keep buying: 1. Downloads

In case the recent silence this last year around games has given anyone the idea that I am no longer all that much into it, let me clarify that.

All that has decreased is the time I have to play, not my curiosity or the amount I buy.

This year I bought an Xbox 360, so all I have done is increase the problem - the number of possible games to be curious about. I have bought about 10 games for this, and at least 4-5 games a month on average (if not a lot more, I am afraid to actually count the emails) for the pc… Many old games that can run even on a basic (work) PC to be played when travelling, games that were clever or good or original at the time.

So the list has grown. and keeps growing. I’m going to have to split it and organise many ways just so I can find what games I own, I am losing track.

As for playing, alas, havent played all that many :S

Let’s start with digital-only games - most of my purchases this year were digital, enough so that Impulse sent me a special “great customer” voucher:

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13

Aug

2009

How I shot my plans for a new phone by giving my old mobile GPS abilities

People who follow me on twitter or friendfeed cannot have missed the fact that I have been pondering buying a new phone for a few months now. Mostly the 2 things I wanted to add were GPS and Wifi (and some smartphone/3G functionality, I guess). Of course I am a slow and reasonable person when it comes to purchases over £100 (up to a year’s pondering, as it was with my camera) so I had to explore alternatives. I thought I would mostly play with some old gadgets as a way to learn a bit more about how I would use GPS (or not) to help me know what is worth it or not when buying my new device. But I shot myself in the foot because it works too well using 1 accessory and some java software… and it makes it harder to justify buying a new phone!

image My current phone is the clamshell Sony Ericsson Z710i - hardly an up to date phone, I bought it in April 2007. It has served me well, apart from some well documented (i.e. not just me!) occasional problems with random shutdowns (quite annoying when they happen when you open the phone to answer it!).

I have been considering a new phone, something small and smart with wifi and GPS and all up-to-date features. Alas nobody does a clamshell with everything (why?) so I was considering the Nokia E51 / E52 / E55, but also being tempted by an Android phone. A new phone is not cheap though, especially for people like me who dont like contracts (and if I take a contract it’s 12 months, not more)

So what did I do? I geeked out and bought 2 devices! (Please indulge me a spot of linking to amazon affiliate - one shameless attempt to fund a few pennies towards my geeky addictions smile)

1. Sony-Ericsson hands-free stereo GPS headset HE-100

 

At first sight it seems an odd idea - but then I understood: this is squarely aimed at people who like to exercise and listen to music. You get the wired stereo handset/FM antenna, with the addition of a tiny box which is a GPS receiver which allows you to track your workouts (speed, mileage etc.).

It’s very easy to use, as when you first connect it the phone detects it and suggests downloading the software. That software is basic: a mileage/speed tracker, a gps tracks tracker, a demo of (very basic) mapping (there are better options imo), and the very useful “mark my spot so I can find my way back later” type app. If the apps suit your needs this is as easy as it gets, no configs, no hassle, all automated.

Other software can often work with it, but you have to configure “GPS receiver” as a serial device, comm=AT5 or something along those lines. Not all GPS applications offer this, many are bluetooth only, so it does limit the choice a bit. I did find at least 10 that did work, though, so it’s not as limiting as it might seem, and of course on newer phones there might be more.

Pros:

- if you run, walk, cycle listening to music on one of those Sony music phones, this adds GPS with almost no additional weight or clutter
- powered by the phone
- super easy to use, and good reception as far as I could tell
- easily lasts 6 hours (i tested!) and probably a whole day
- quite a few apps can be made to work with it (it’s a “serial device” comm=AT5)

Cons:

- powered by the phone, so both it and the phone need charging every day (if you listen to music and keep the GPS on)
- only works on 1 company’s phones, and not all
- not all GPS apps can be made to work with it

2.Nokia’s bluetooth GPS receiver LD-3W

 

This is a small thin box about the shape of my phone but 1/2 the tickness (perhaps less) - it pairs via bluetooth on the phone and works with many applications automatically. I suspect if you have a Nokia phone there might be apps you can get via your phone direct, but for my phone I had to go browse around to find them. But find them I did, and every app that ran on my phone found it and worked with it (you would hope so, though, it is the point of bluetooth!)

Pro:
- longer battery life than the previous solution
- excellent reception (based on other people’s tests, i have no idea how to test)
-works with more apps
- bluetooth, so can work with all brands

Con:
- heavier
- additional gizmo to carry (and lose!), and additional charger (unless you have a Nokia phone using the same charger)

(in the US? try: Nokia LD-3W Wireless GPS Module but it is a silly price!)

What I used it with?

I tried a few apps but ended up with 2 that seem to do what I wanted at the time (tracking where I am). I have not yet tested any of the “directions to goal” or “voice directions” apps because usually I dont need that.

The two applications I found best (out of a totally random, short and biased “if you dont make sense within 1 minute you’re off my phone” test)

1. GPSJ

http://www.gpsj.eu/

reconfigurable GPS information screen with direction pointer, compass, heading, distance to the waypoint and many more,
compass with waypoint pointer,
track map with panning, zooming and pointing,
location of 20000 town&cities in Europe,
the rest of the world downloadable,
detailed POI databases for bigger countries (eg. about 100000 POIs in Germany; maps of other countries generated on request),
track export to the following formats: GPX, Google and CSV.

GPSJ can import and export tracks. It costs 7 euros per phone. The security around the installation caused me some grief (o2 connection dropped partway through and I couldnt redownload, so had to wait for support to email me the file)

2. Track My Journey

http://www.trackmyjourney.co.uk/

TrackMyJourney is a website set up to manage, view and share tracks recorded from GPS devices. TMJ-Mobile is a Java mobile phone application that uses GPS data to provide a number of functions, including navigation, location tracking, map display and route plotting. It receives its location coordinates by communicating via Bluetooth with a separate GPS receiver, or via the phones internal GPS if supported. The phones built-in GPRS/3G/GSM data connection is then used to send its location over the internet to the TrackMyJourney website where you can then share your location and recorded tracks with your friends.

TrackMyJourney requires you to register on the website, then you can get the software via your mobile. It is probably seamless on a smartphone but it was a bit annoying with my old phone, i dont have email set up so had to type it all in etc. The software is extremely full featured, works with maps from OpenStreetMap, and I was impressed enought to donate 10 euros already. Although I now see the software comes in a lite and a pay-for version, so I am going to go and haggle with the developer!

Now that I know all this, which would I buy?

I’m not much of a jogger/cyclist, so the cool features of the Sony headset are a bit lost on me - although it was quite nice while travelling on the train listening to podcasts and watching my progress. Since I am not sure I would stick to the Sony brand for my next phone, the bluetooth option seems smarter.

Although since I have both, I can see plenty of times where I would still pack the Sony instead of carrying an extra device, especially since my 2 programs of choice happily work with both devices.

Note: There is a new version of the Nokia bluetooth GPS (LD-4W see left), it is smaller, has a better chip, but less battery life. It’s a tough call which of the two is the best buy, I’d probably go for the older model (the one I have) and the battery life.

 


19

Sep

2008

I’ll be…. It’s talk like a pirate day again!

Check the official site and find something fun near you (if you are lucky)

Get some help on youtube

Enjoy!


13

Sep

2008

Online Story Find: Shade

On the tor site - A story of magical realism and refugee camps.
I enjoyed the description of the life of a camp, and the lovely poetic miracles - although not enough is known of the strangers and what their powers are to totally make sense, but that is ok in a short story.
I could not help but to think that in a way what the strangers do is just like what most of the western countries and organisations do - whisk in, do a couple miracles, and waltz away.

The story is available to read, print or download

http://www.tor.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=story&id=4231


31

Jan

2008

Software I wouldnt do without, January 2008 rehash

I think there have been less changes in the last year in spite of finding and testing dozens of tasty things thanks to donationcoder.com.

So what’s changed?

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10

Feb

2007

Links

Some favorite lesser known links which I regularly read for ideas, inspiration, news or keeping up with friends

Links

Books & arts

Ideas & more

Software


22

Dec

2006

Software I wouldn’t do without - January 2007 rehash

I have made such a list a few times in the history of this site. What is interesting is that about half that software has stood the test of time, the other half didn’t as my needs changed or I found a better alternative…

My Classics

Acronis True Image - I had DriveImage but it let me down, This is a lot friendlier as it lets you get single files out of partition backups and works most of the time without even a reboot. I am a bit annoyed as they totally changed their lineup and I went from having the “pro” version to only being able to upgrade to the “home” version. Not that big a deal except the “business” version has a feature I really want, the clever support for restoring on different hardware. And there’s the principle of the thing, so I might check the competition (paragon, O&O etc.) again
Total Commander - the tool i have owned the longest and still use. Does everything
Wirekeys - I dont use its features as much as i should. Lots of shortcuts and tools to simplify your life. I really should make the effort to add a new feature to my “learned” list every week
Object Desktop - lots of tools to customise windows. I have had it since OS2 times but might stop renewing this year as all the new transparency in almost all the toolsseem to cause problems on my ATI system (i tend to play games in a window!).
Penguinet - great little tool for ssh, scp. I have also used the freeware Tunnelier on my less used pc
Regrun - watches what is happening on my pc and blocks anythig suspicious
Ashampoo Burning Studio - I like it as a quick and easy CD/DVD burning tool
Ulead PhotoImpact - a good graphics editor that I find easy to use. Have had it since version 3 and about to upgrade to v12
Spinrite - disk failure insurance
No Hands Backup - i like the way that backup program thinks smile
Ace Money - simple financial program. Worked better than the commercial offerings for me smile
Jriver Media Center - my media player this year. Does a bit too much (i’d prefer it didnt try to “play” slideshows with my images) but has a few wonderful features such as the smarlists, good rename/retag options, and media server options.
Opera - my browser of the year. Just works ery nicely out of the box, no need for a million add ons to make it useful
Local Website Archive - web page archive capture. I use it all the time, for recipes, articles, software finds, order receipts… it’s the only one that works with opera, firefox and about every browser i have used. I just wish it could capture selected snippets only, and multiple pages at once, as the workflow is a bit clunky for me.
ACDsee - the best workflow I have found for scanning and tagging all my negatives
Flexible Renamer - the best renamer i have found, thanks to its preview function (http://hp.vector.co.jp/authors/VA014830/FlexRena/)

other software I use:

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11

Dec

2006

My new scanner has arrived

Finally! The scanner I bought, after much research and thinking and much temptation to spend £500, is the more reasonable Canon Canoscan 8600F. And here’s my first scanned slide, all the way back from 1988, at a market in Morocco…
image
To be honest this is my third scan of this slide since it actually had a few scatches. and i resized it a little as it was a bit too big for showing on a site…
If anyone is curious here is the scan file http://iphi.net/pics/photography/Scan10001.bmp - i did let the scanner do a medium amount of scratch correction, and here’s the first scan without any correction http://iphi.net/pics/photography/Scan10001_uncorrected.bmp . Both are 22Mb so download only if you are curious!
So far I am quite pleased with the canon software tool that came with it. It did a great job of detecting all 7 negatives on the 2 strips i put in, then scanned them all. With medium scratch/dust correction it took about 6 minutes per scan at 2400 dpi - I dont think i need to go that high for most of my slides. If you look closely you can see that it didn’t quite get the negative edges correctly, although I suspect that if I paid more attention putting the strips in and if i paid more attention when using the tool, I would get a better result.
I actually got a better result than with Silverfast SE which also comes with the scanner, but that could be wrong settings in SF. It insisted to scan only 600dpi so it was hard to compare. And it didnt have the scratch reduction tool, but again there might be a way.
I was told to give vuescan a try but vuescan didnt want to know about the 8600F just yet. oh well. in a few versions maybe.
Anyway, scanning tips and software suggestions most welcome smile


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Joelle Nebbe-Mornod aka Iphigenie aka Superiphi, early netizen, reader, walker, photographer, web architect, technology executive, entrepreneurial and generally curious mind - find out more...

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