As promised, I'll be writing a series of short blog posts about the T-Mobile G1, the first Android phone to hit the market. I purchased mine last Saturday and have been working through its features. These will be covered in later posts. Here, let's set the background.
From 2000 to I think 2005, I was an avid PDA user. I went through three PDAs, shown here in a group photo:
Ah, so many memories. The Visor on the left was my first PDA, a simple and well designed piece of equipment that I used with a fold-up keyboard to take field notes at Telecorp.
The Zaurus in the middle was an actual handheld PC running Linux; I quickly installed OpenZaurus so that I could perform various tricks, and I also ran Apache, MySQL, and PHP on it. Yes, that is ridiculous. The bottom part slid out to reveal a keyboard. Oh, it also took a CompactFlash card, so I acquired a CF wifi card and did a lot of surfing throughout the house.
The iPaq came at about the same time I switched my Linux laptop for a Macintosh. I had hoped that the iPaq's Windows Mobile operating system would provide a more stable and consistent runtime environment. Wifi was built in.
When the iPaq died, I faced the decision of what PDA to buy. At the top of my list was email and web browsing, which had become necessities. Fortunately, web services had really taken off by then, making SMS a de facto command line for many Internet services. So instead of a PDA, I bought a basic phone with high-speed internet capability. Here it is, two years ago.
It was much smaller and lighter than a PDA, and it allowed basic PDA-like functions. I could set calendar appointments and receive reminders via SMS. I could check email. I could do basic web surfing. I had a set of contacts, of course, which I would laboriously code into the phone. I could even look at (but not edit) my Google Docs and other services. In 2007 I began using Twitter and Facebook, mostly through the phone. In some ways that phone, with its relatively stripped-down interface, was like my beloved Visor. But without the fold-out keyboard accessory. And it began to really enhance my increasingly mobile lifestyle. I could catch up with email and tasks on the bus, for instance, or while walking across campus.
But as time wore on, phones began to incorporate other features such as GPS, and I realized that these other features were going to enhance mobility in significant ways. More on that in a future post.
Others have been comparing the G1 to the iPhone. I won't do that except peripherally. My comparisons will primarily be to my history of phones and PDAs. Look for these to come soon.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Reviews of the G1
As my Twitter stream shows, I acquired a T-Mobile G1 phone on Saturday. I'm still gathering my impressions, and will blog several mini-reviews over the next couple of weeks. Unlike other reviews, I won't spend a lot of time comparing it to the other devices I strongly considered -- the iPhone 3G and the Blackberry line of products -- but instead will discuss the progression that I took from PDAs to my previous phone to this one. As always, I'm thinking in terms of how this device will or will not support truly mobile work.
I was wrong about Jaiku
In the run-up to the T-Mobile G1 launch, I confidently predicted that the launch would coincide with the relaunch of Google's Jaiku service, which has been closed since Google acquired it. I noted how Jaiku could be the "killer app" for Android, providing location-based services with Twitter functionality and GMaps integration.
Well, here we are in the second week of November, and my prediction was wrong, wrong, wrong. Too bad. Google, get it together! Why don't you listen to me?
Well, here we are in the second week of November, and my prediction was wrong, wrong, wrong. Too bad. Google, get it together! Why don't you listen to me?
"Your business has accumulated a lot of stupid."
NotAnMBA has thoughts on how to take the opportunity of lean times to restructure your business. Less hierarchical, more networked.
GTD calendars
Stephen at HD BizBlog is selling the 2009 version of his DIY calendar along with other GTD collateral. Product description says:
This is a one-page-per-day DIY calendar page that is designed with the F-pattern for eye-tracking. This special design takes your natural eye movements into account, making it far more efficient for retrieving the important data that you have put into the calendar.I'm still surprised at how flexible the GTD framework has turned out to be. David Allen advocates fairly simple tools - desk calendars, index cards - but in an era of cheap customization we see lots of entrepreneurs bringing their own expertise to bear on the framework to create supplemental tools. GTD is like the Twitter of productivity systems.