Nokia N800 Articles
I’ve written more than a few Nokia N800 Articles and figured that a central location listing them might be appreciated.
Luggage-Delsey Helium Breeze 21" Suiter
This 21" carry on is fantastic!
I just spent 14 days overseas with this bag and a backpack. The corners are all reinforced so it should hold up over time. Another reviewer seems to confirm the durability with 2 years of use. While gone I moved hotels 3 times and checked this luggage for the longer flights. My sport coat and dress shirt remained unwrinkled (vacation trip, not business). I put my dirty underwear, socks and undershirts in the outside pocket for the return trip. Sadly, it wasn’t searched. My traveling buddy brought a HUGE bag, so placing gifts and souvenirs in his bag on the way home worked out for me, but that won’t always be the case.
If you’re traveling for 1-4 days and don’t expect to bring big gifts back, this size is a good choice. If going international, you might want a little larger version. I’ve gotten the 26" version of this same bag for future longer trips. How’s that for an endorsement?
The luggage has straps to hold clothes in place and the removable shirt area on the top should allow 3 folded dress shirts to remain unwrinkled. The extensible handle is nice, but the inside of the bag is impacted by it – heck it has to slide away somewhere.
Check that the extra external bag strap on works. In the store where I bought this, they only had 1 working strap for 3 of the bags. I wanted to latch my backpack to this roller when transporting them together. This 21" size is a little small for my huge backpack to work that way. I just set it on top and used the handle on both bags to keep them together for easy rolling.
The Delsey "Helium Breeze" line seems to be where the jump in quality happens for Delsey without the pricing of the "Pro" line.
Highly recommended.
Sony CyberShot DSC-W55 Camera
4.0 out of 5 stars Great snapshot camera, February 18, 2008
I bought this camera for an international trip. It worked as expected.
Things I loved:
- Video mode for capturing sound and the "feel" of a place
- ISO 1000 non-flash mode
- EXIF data included in JPG files
- Fantastic battery life – I took 300+ photos daily and the battery barely dropped below 90% capacity (recharge nightly for heavy use days)
- Form factor
- Automatic focus works almost every time
- easy zoom switch
Changes I’d change:
- Stiffer "mode wheel" – it was changed easily when putting the camera in my pocket
- higher ISO modes – 1000 wasn’t high enough to capture the night Chinese New Years parade in Kowloon China. I have lots of blurry images. ISO-3200 would have been nice at night.
- include a mode that prevents digital zoom – limit it to optical zoom capabilities
- motorized lens cover and zoom; seems this will be the first thing to break
- Menu isn’t intuitive to me
- Add a quick resolution change mode for 7, 5, 3 MegaPixel resolutions. By default, I use 3, but for fine art, I’d like to change to 7 without diving into the full menu system.
- ‘’Memory should be SD, not Sony memory stick’’
- ‘’Plug for transfers should be USB, not proprietary’’
- ‘’Battery charger should be over USB, not external or proprietary’’
- ‘’higher optical zoom’’ 3x isn’t quite enough.
My next camera will:
a) avoid the Sony memory stick-based cameras and go with a SD, Mini/MicroSD based solution for compatibility with my other portable devices (Nokia N800 Portable Internet Tablet) and built-in laptop ports.
b) support higher ISO modes for better night time pictures without flash
c) USB for charging and file transfers
d) more than 3x optical zoom.
N800 Keyboard
Ok, I acquired an iGo Blue tooth keyboard today. Getting the keyboard and Nokia paired took more time than it should have. I found a number of instructions on the internet that didn’t work for first 5 times. Here are the steps that finally worked for me:
- N800 Control Panel
- Bluetooth Keyboard
- Generic 105-key PC and English USA
- search for new devices
- Keyboard
- Enter discoverable mode by pressing CTRL and BOTH Fn Keys simultaneously until the green LED flashes.
- N800 discovers the keyboard
- Select it from the list
- Note the code provided – mine was 4 digits
- Select Pair
- Quickly on the Keyboard,
- Enter the code (hold the blue Fn key to enter the numeric code #### and <enter> key. Keep the Fn key down for all. (If you aren’t quick enough entering the code plus <enter>, try again. You may need to re-enter discovery mode on the keyboard again too.
In theory, you’ll be paired now. If so, it will be fairly clear. If not, you’ll get an error. When entering the Try Again for pairing, I never got it to work – always had to start over from the beginning.
- There was no software to be loaded.
- There was no need for Windows at all.
Review of the Keyboard
Well, I’m pretty particular about my keyboards. I’ve been using IBM-101 keyboards for over 10 years now and no other keyboards have made me happy. For portable keyboards, I only have experience with a Palm-Pro keyboard which I traveled to Japan with many, many years ago. It was ok, but not a replacement for my IBMs.
Ok, this iGo is portable. It is mostly full sized when opened. The keys feel soft and the lack of a number row drives me crazy. Occasionally, keys get repeated on the N800 when only hit once. I’m guessing that is from the blue tooth connection. Some of the keys aren’t in the right places – at least not for my touch typing. In the end, there really wasn’t much choice for a keyboard for the N800. I guess this will have to do, since using the other input options are simply terrible for non-trivial typing.
Nokia N800 Review
The Good:
- WiFi (802.11g) w/ WPA support
- Nice web browser and RSS reader I’m addicted
- Form factor, the size is nearly perfect.
- Screen resolution – double what the Apple iTouch has
- CLAW IMAPS/SMTPS email (SSL/TLS encryption)
- Standby battery time over a week with minimal use
- Swappable Disk memory – SD, MiniSD, MicroSD supported (really just SD)
- Maemo-Mapper Rocks even without a GPS connected if you plan ahead a little; I’ll never need a paper map again
- MP3 and Video playback via mplayer; there are other solutions too.
- Linux computer for all that means
- PBReader for ebooks
- PDF Reader
- OM-Weather on the desktop
- Maemo-Recorder for sound recordings on the go
- Skype and Gizmo included. 3 months of free SkypeOut. Skype works as well for this thing as it does on PCs. Sound quality is comparable.
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The Bad: - Text entry sucks without an add-on or remote keyboard
- No PIM – I hear GPE or a PalmOS emulator cover this nicely.
- Package Manager Hell – dependencies get out of whack quickly
- MP3 playback battery life
- Nokia Charger – NOT USB.
- No screen protective case
- No RJ45 Ethernet – must use WiFi or blue tooth.
- Scroll wheel would be nice, but using your finger on the screen works well too.
Text entry is the main problem with this device. There are 5 ways to enter text.
a) finger touch keyboard that you have to toggle between numbers, letters and symbols – not an ALT key.
b) stylist touch keyboard that also requires toggling
c) handwriting recognition
d) remote in from another computer or
e) blue tooth keyboard
Yes, this system is a nearly complete Linux computer with most of the great things that means except full X/Windows. I’ve been using Linux since 1993 and found the lack of quick, accurate text entry troublesome. UNIX systems need typing. A portable USB keyboard would really help. That isn’t supported at this point, but because it is Linux, someone is working on it.
A little background … I bought the N800 after researching options for months. I looked at the iTouch, Windows Mobile, Blackberry, and tiny PCs. I needed a laptop replacement with WiFi to keep me connected as I travel the world for leisure. Long battery life, lite web browsing, and IMAPS email were at the top list after wifi. VoIP/Skype is a bonus. The Nokia does that and more. The web browser isn’t the normal "portable" limited version. It shows most websites correctly. I have more viewing problems using my desktop browsers when locked down. I haven’t found the settings to control cookies or javascript in the browser, nor have I found a TOR client yet. For my purpose, it has been a reasonable choice and certainly was the most cost effective solution.
After seeing the Asus Eee form factor, I may recommend that PC instead. You get a full PC in a fairly small package, Linux/WinXP and no specialized software to relearn. Things that you are used to will simply work. By the time I have my N800, blue tooth keyboard, and charger, I have almost as much stuff as the Asus Eee brings self contained. AND the N800 IMAP doesn’t quite work the way I like yet. Also, the Eee price is almost the same as I spent for all the N800 + accessories + SD memory.
For day trips, the N800 is clearly the better form factor for mapping and longer battery life.
Memory expansion/swapping it key. There’s 2 SD slots available. 1 internal near the battery, the other swappable from outside.
Getting IMAPS working took a little hacking and a few days. Seems the built-in email program didn’t support entry of my complete password. A few special characters were stripped. I had the same problem with WPA key. Also, the IMAP password is stored in a plain text file. Unacceptable. I switched to CLAW email and was able to connect, but still don’t have other subscribed IMAP folders working. The good news is my password is encrypted in some manner.
There’s no PIM included. The included contact manager is worthless – like Motorola’s phone contacts. It seems to have been written by a college kid over a weekend. VCARD? What is that? LDIF import/export is what we all need. This is Linux.
There’s a whole list of applications available for it. You add "repositories" and can select what you want to load. I’ll bet some packages will conflict with others and I’ll be in package manager hell in no time. I’ve already run in to "incompatible package" errors trying to load some applications – like GPE the most talked about PIM for the N800. This is common in the Linux world since any developer can create a completely custom development system that will almost never match your system. You can also load .DEB files provided they don’t conflict.
Free applications are the rule here, not the exception. You’ve entered the Linux hacker world which is a good thing. Updates will be nearly constant which may or may not be good.
I’ve been pleasantly surprised by some of the other capabilities. Maemo-Mapper is fantastic has a map replacement, but you’ll need much more disk memory than the 128M included. I ordered 8G and 2G upgrades since I planned to replace my 60G Zen media player. After a few hours of listening to music, the battery was nearly spent. I’m used to 11 hours of playback time. Standby time is what this device is designed for, not MP3 playback. The amount of battery on standby is impressive, but not endless. After just a few days, the device needs to be recharged. I did use the mapper for 45 minutes while driving. It has already replaced my Atlanta area key map. I’m in another test now. Turning the device off between use with morning and evening use for email and news web browsing. After 3 days the battery charge doesn’t appear to have dropped. Nice. This will help as I track through South America later this year.
Speaking of charging. Leave it to Nokia to require a specialized charger – NOT USB. That simply sucks. Now I get to carry a USB charger, Nokia charger and Sony charger AND a wifi router around the world. Perfect.
A belt clip would be nice too. As a nerd, I really miss my status symbol on my belt.
Nokia N800
Ok, so with all the traveling that I’m planning to do this year, I didn’t want to drag a laptop along, but still wanted to be relatively connected and recharged.
So I bought a Nokia N800. Comes with a worldwide charger and very long standby time for a device like this – 10 days. I know 14 days doesn’t work – recently left it in standby in my car as I went to Hong Kong for almost 2 weeks. I got to reset the date/time upon return.
The N800 is turning more and more into a multi protocol mobile communication device for WiFi connections. If you have a cell phone with a data plan, you can connect via bluetooth and usae it. I don’t.
First thoughts:
- For the first day, I couldn’t get it to connect to my household Wifi. Thankfully, the 2nd day, it connected WPA2 and life was good.
- The web browser is really nice. Not just nice for a hand held, but nice for any platform. I have more trouble with Firefox on my laptop than I did with the built-in N800 browser.
- I spent toooo much time the first 3 days trying to find acceptable input methods (typing, stylist, handwriting recognition). I’ve decided to teach it the old Palm Graffiti. Well, that didn’t work – too much overlap between upper/lower/numbers, since letters and numbers aren’t entered into different parts of the screen.
- First thing I needed to do was upgrade the firmware from OS2007 to OS2008. Fairly easy and it seemed to be helpful with app compatibility.
- 2nd thing became obvious quick – I needed more disk. The included 128MB SD simply wasn’t any where near enough. Ordered an 8GB MicroSDHC.
- The default apps are lacking. Basically, it is a web browser with trivial video and audio playback. Oh, and you can IM lots of ways. I don’t IM, so who cares?
- That isn’t to say it didn’t come with other applications – it did. Email, SIP client, GoogleTalk, Skype, and a bunch of games that are worthless to me.
- The built-in contact manager is worthless. I’d be embarrassed if I were Nokia. Phone is an optional entry for each contact. Crazy. Even after I setup the SIP client, it insisted on using gtalk for phone calls. I HAVE A PAID SIP VOIP SERVICE! Let me use it!
- Ok, so I started grabbing free applications for this baby.
Camera for quick picts | MPlayer for audio/video | GPS Mapping Software 3 kinds |
ssh – fire, wheel, unix, ssh …. | a bunch of normal Linux tools | Weather |
Claws for email | FBReader (an ebook and other file format reader – text if beautiful on this device) | PalmOS Virtual Machine |
Voice Recorder (for quick voice recordings) | DiskUsage | Password Safe |
rsync/grsync – fire, wheel, unix, ssh …. | HP 42 Calculator | FM Radio |
- The built-in video camera appears to be worthless. I loaded an app to snap pictures with it. Grainy is putting it nicely. For video conferencing, I could see where it may be nice, but I don’t do that today.
- FM Radio app – recently learned that the headphones are the antenna.
- GPS Mapping – there seems to be a bunch of software for this available. Probably due to the N810 having built-in GPS. Before I ran out of storage (128MB), I was able to get 1 size of detailed maps for Hong Kong and Atlanta. The zoom was bad, but what do you want when you’re missing 20+ detail levels? Can’t wait for that 8GB SD to arrive.
- I really need to get the SIP client working ASAP. I’d hate to be stuck without Skype-out as my phone when I’m out of the country. Also, wouldn’t it be cool if someone called my house and I answered when in Costa Rica or Hong Kong or Germany? That alone makes it worthwhile!
- IMAPS and SMTPS is working, but doesn’t work with my IMAP server folders … yet.
Ok, so what’s wrong that can’t easily (read free) be corrected?
- Sucky contact management – I’ve never seen anything this bad. Heck, an XLS file with autofilter is better. It is unacceptable for a pocket device with Skype, SIP, and email capabilities NOT to include a contact manager at least as good as Palm had in 1996!
- Text entry – the finger tip entry should be the default, not handwriting recognition or peck for letters. Palm Graffiti won’t work.
- Bluetooth N800 Keyboard for data entry, typing.
- How to delete the apps/games that I don’t want? Some that are part of the OS?
- How to reorder the applications in their lists and re-group them?
- Hotels have 100BT connections, not WiFi in the rooms – what am I to do since there’s no RJ-45 port? Ordered a tiny wifi router today.
They did do some things besides the browser well. 1-click installs using normal Linux tools, USB Drive when connected to a PC, SD memory (and all the smaller versions with SDHC up to 8GB), RSS feeds, Google search on the main page, World Clock shows local time based on where you click. There’s a bunch of GPS and phone connectivity stuff that I don’t plan to use too. Bluetooth connections for these devices is expected.
I’ll add more to other articles as I learn more. I’ve got to get a usable PIM app on this thing QUICK.
How much did this thing cost me? Nokia N800 Costs.