Friday, October 26, 2007

REVIEW: T-Mobile Sidekick LX

by Sascha Segan

Even in the world of mobile devices, sometimes bigger is better. The Sidekick LX is like a messaging limousine, with a big, luxurious keyboard and huge, bright screen that makes e-mails and IMs fun to write and easy to read. But if you're not looking for something large, this Sidekick is behind the curve (and the Curve).

NOTE: Picked this up for my 14-year-old daughter, Alexandra, on the day it went on sale. Simply put, it's a BIG hit! Sleek design, beautiful monitor with sharp screen resolution. She hasn't put it down, yet (not sure if that's good or bad)! - - Ryan Yee, Host of NerdBoyTV

The LX is the new top model in T-Mobile's lineup of Sidekick messaging phones. Sidekicks aren't quite smartphones, but they have the same e-mail, IM, calendar, and Web-browsing power you'd get from a basic smartphone. In the past, they've been coveted for their fun and easy-to-use interface, too.

This Sidekick is a tall drink of water, that's for sure. It's the biggest device I've handled in a while, the same width and length as the previous model 3 at 5.1 by 2.4 inches but 0.2 inches slimmer at 0.7 inches thick. It is also considerably lighter than the 3 at 5.7 ounces. It has the traditional Sidekick design, with a flip-up display, but this display is far, far better than those of previous iterations. It's bright and glossy, with 400-by-240 resolution and rich colors; its only flaw is that it is somewhat reflective in sunlight.

The traditional Sidekick interface has gotten a shot of color and better graphics, but not many more features. You still navigate a rotating wheel of icons with a trackball that pulses with multicolored light when you get a new message, a cursor pad on the left and four action buttons that perform various functions.

The best feature on the device is the keyboard. The well-spaced, raised buttons make it easier to type on the LX than on almost any other handheld device I've tested. The keyboard ties into the always excellent IM client, backed up with both SMS and MMS support. There's full access to Yahoo!, AIM, and MSN buddy lists, and you can even see your buddy icons. You can flip through conversations quickly, and it's very easy to type speedily on the large, widely spaced keys.

The Sidekick also pushes POP3/IMAP e-mail to you, and it's extremely simple to set up. The device supports its own T-Mobile mail account plus three more. Image attachments appear inline in messages, while other attachments are usually boiled down to text. But unlike every other smartphone platform out there the Sidekick still lacks support for Microsoft Exchange e-mail, Yahoo! Mail, or a native Gmail client.

As a phone, the LX is mediocre. It didn't do very well in our weak-signal test. Maximum call volume wasn't very loud; when it was pumped up by a very loud source on the other end, I heard distortion problems. The speakerphone is fine. The LX supports Bluetooth headsets, but only in mono mode—no stereo music headsets.

The device has very little onboard memory. It doesn't seem to be measured in megabytes, but I managed to max it out with three days' worth of e-mail messages. You'll want to drop a microSD card into the slot under the back cover. My 4GB Kingston card worked fine. The LX's 1.3-megapixel camera takes decent pictures, though I saw compression artifacts on them and outdoor pictures tend to overexpose bright areas.

The built-in MP3 player sounds good over standard headphones plugged into the 3.5mm jack on the side, and the device handles MP3, unprotected AAC, and unprotected WMA files of any bit rate—including non-DRM'd files bought from iTunes Plus or Amazon. You drag and drop music onto your memory card by plugging the Sidekick into your PC with a USB cable. The device doesn't support any video, either recording or playback.

You can download a limited set of games, applications, and ringtones, but nowhere near the hundreds of apps available for other smartphone operating systems. The one included title, a Mario-style game called Bob's Journey To The Center Of The Earth, played very smoothly.

The LX browses the Web, but not very well. Speed-wise, it's stuck with T-Mobile's EDGE network, without the boost of Wi-Fi that other EDGE devices like Apple's iPhone and the Blackberry Curve have. I achieved varied speeds between 50 kilobits per second and 150 Kbps at speed test sites, a wide range that's typical of EDGE. I experienced a very high latency, often having to wait several seconds before Web pages would start to load. The browser is basic, without support for frames or Flash (most notably, Facebook looks lousy); then again, it's no worse than the BlackBerry browser.

To make up for the browser's struggles, the LX includes a dedicated MySpace app. The tabbed client does give you quick access to MySpace profiles, blogs, and mail, but I can't help but think T-Mobile is behind the curve here—aren't people moving over to Facebook?

The LX's main problem is that it's simply outmatched by T-Mobile's BlackBerry Curve. The Curve is better in every way. It's a better phone. The e-mail client is more flexible. The camera is better. The media player is far better, with video and stereo Bluetooth support. The Curve makes free phone calls over Wi-Fi hot spots. It's also easy to use, and stable. It fits much more easily in your pocket. And it costs $50 less.

The cultural appeal of the Sidekick has something to do with the flashing disco lights, loud swooshing alert sounds, and even its large, obvious size. I just find it bulky and a bit obnoxious. And the smarter crowd among the Sidekick's youth market seems to be starting to agree. Paris Hilton still has a Sidekick. Hilary Duff, on the other hand, has a BlackBerry. Who would you rather be with?

That said, there is one big reason to get the Sidekick: It's big. The big, comfortable keyboard and large screen are easy on the fingers and the eyes, a refreshing change in a world where devices are getting more and more tiny and cramped. If you're looking for a messaging device and the superior Curve just seems a little too small, the LX will be for you.

Benchmark Test Results
Continuous talk time: 10 hours 49 minutes

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Apple expands educational content on iTunes

The Associated Press

Free material includes public radio broadcasts

SAN JOSE, California - Apple Inc. is expanding the free educational content available on its online iTunes Store beyond lectures and videos from universities.

Materials ranging from recordings of U.S. Supreme Court arguments and public radio broadcasts on the civil rights movement to video interviews with sculptor Richard Serra are among the offerings under a new category called "Beyond Campus."

The section can be found within iTunes U, a free service which Apple has offered to universities since 2006 to distribute their course lectures or other digital content through the iTunes Web site. The schools decide whether they want to open the free materials to the public or limit access to students and alumni.

"But we found that there's a lot of educational content from other parties, and we thought it'd be a great opportunity to leverage iTunes U," Eddy Cue, Apple's vice president of iTunes, said Thursday.

A larger learning catalog for anyone — in college or not — helps to broaden the appeal of Apple's iTunes and iPod franchises, Cue said.

The iTunes U material is accessible on Windows-based or Macintosh computers and transferable to portable devices, including Apple's iPods.

Apple began "Beyond Campus" this week, starting with six partners, including public radio producer American Public Media, Smithsonian Global Sound, The Museum of Modern Art in New York, and KQED public radio and television in San Francisco, Cue said.

UC Berkeley posting lectures on YouTube

By Michelle Locke
The Associated Press


Watching the videos is free — but you won't get course credit

BERKELEY, Calif. - Move over "Leave Britney Alone Guy." And all those cute kitten videos, too. The University of California, Berkeley, is posting course lectures and other campus happenings on YouTube.

"To a teacher who has a passion for teaching, this is enormously exciting," said physics professor Richard A. Muller, whose "Physics for Future Presidents," is among courses available online.

"My students are everywhere and I don't have to give them exams."

Berkeley and other universities have been broadcasting a variety of courses on the Web for some time, including an arrangement Berkeley started in 2006 with YouTube's parent company Google Inc. The agreement with YouTube was formally announced Wednesday.

Watching the videos is free and for the joy of information only. You won't get course credit.

"It's not meant as a substitute for going to class. You can't interact; you can't be part of that dialogue," said Ben Hubbard, co-manager of webcast.berkeley, a local site delivering course and event content as podcasts and streaming video.

But Muller gets e-mail from all over the world — "Even Timbuktu!" — and Hubbard said course videos previously distributed online through Google scored more than a million hits and about 700,000 downloads.

UC Berkeley launched an audio podcast program with more than 25 courses in 2006. In 2007, the campus is to deliver audio or video for 86 full courses and more than 100 other events — 3,500 hours of content.

More than 300 hours of videotaped courses and events already are available at http://www.youtube.com/ucberkeley.

Berkeley's offerings join an eclectic mix of content on YouTube, including the breakout rant from the young man known as "Leave Britney Alone Guy" for his tearful defense of singer Britney Spears's performance on the MTV Video Music Awards.

Muller, known for presenting physics with innovation and relative simplicity, has found his audience is as diverse as it is far-flung.

"I get e-mails from high school students, I get e-mail from college students, people who graduated and never learned this stuff. People listen to this because they enjoy learning," said Muller, who is at work on a book under the same title as his course that he plans to have ready before Election Day.

Best Buy ends sales of analog TVs

The Associated Press

Electronics retailer pulls sets from shelves, sells only digital products

MINNEAPOLIS - Best Buy Co. said Wednesday it has stopped selling analog televisions and pulled all remaining stock from its shelves, signalling the end of an era as consumers increasingly move toward digital products with flat-panel and high-definition screens.

Best Buy, one of the nation's top electronics retailers, heralded the reign of digital TVs, saying it made the move "as the end of the analog broadcast era draws near." Best Buy instructed stores to stop selling the products on Oct. 1.

Beginning Feb. 18, 2009, broadcasters will stop transmitting analog signals.

Non-digital television sets that are not attached to a cable or satellite service and not equipped with special converter boxes will no longer work.

Best Buy is the first consumer-electronics retailer to report an exit from the analog-TV business. More than 60 million U.S. households currently rely on an antennas or analog cable, and cable operators are required to guarantee their customers will receive broadcast channels until February 2012.

Those millions of households offer a lucrative market opportunity for electronics retailers and television manufacturers alike.

"We are committed to helping people understand the digital television transition, and exiting the analog video business is one way we can help avoid confusion," Mike Vitelli, senior vice president of electronics, said in a statement.

After the first of the year, the government will be making available to each household two coupons worth $40 each that can be used to buy two converter boxes. Best Buy will sell coupon-eligible converter boxes starting in early 2008.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

iRegret: Apple's smartphone isn't so smart

By Joe Hutsko
MSNBC contributor


My feeling toward my iPhone has gone from reasonably hopeful to hopeless regret.

When I purchased the iPhone the day they came out, I told myself that the long list of gripes was tolerable because Apple would very likely add so many of the missing features commonly found on every other smartphone. Simple things, like the ability to look up a contact by tapping in a few letters, or a way to copy and paste information from an e-mail or Web page into a contact or note card.

Sure, I felt stung by the so-soon-after-launch $200 price drop, and only mildly mollified by the $100 Apple Store credit the company offered in apology for so blatantly screwing early adopters like me. But I was willing to accept that, providing the most important iPhone must-have of all — the ability to run standalone third-party applications — was possible. And it was, thanks to a add-on called Installer.app that opened up the iPhone to a growing library of cool programs.

That is until Apple updated the iPhone’s firmware and, at best, merely disabled add-ons like Installer.app, or, at worst, “bricked” iPhones that had been hacked to work with networks other than AT&T to the point of uselessness. What’s more (or actually, less), those simple hoped-for wish-list items such as contact search or copy and paste were absent from the update.

So here we are, three months later, and this remarkably inventive device that’s so lacking as an actual phone but so promising as the be-all/end-all gadget is no better than at launch, and even less hopeful because of Apple’s action against iPhone customizations that enable it to do more than just what Apple says it can and should do.

When the iPhone was launched it was hyped for its desktop-strength operating system. It’s less a phone and more an all-in-one communicator that happens to make and receive phone calls. Thanks to Installer.app it could do more than the few things it could do at launch. The same way other smartphones running Palm or Microsoft or Nokia operating systems can do.

Coincidentally enough, I happened to install Installer.app the morning before Apple released the 1.1.1 firmware update. So for the hour or two before the update my feelings toward the iPhone had changed, and I was a believer again. I shut off the Treo 680 and Blackberry Curve phones I’d been switching between because I missed so many of the functions that the iPhone lacks.

Things such as being able to set a size limit on e-mail attachments, reading an ebook while riding the subway or keeping a dozen or so sticky notes in sync between the handheld and my MacBook.

Then I received an alert in iTunes, informing me that the firmware update was available. I downloaded and installed it, and when it was done, Installer.app and all the cool applications I’d downloaded earlier that day were gone. History. Attempts to reinstall Installer.app were met with a crashed iPhone that insisted I restore it in iTunes. A little searching turned up the aforementioned revelation, that 1.1.1 locks out modifications or bricks the device.

I’m done with the iPhone for now. I’ll stick with the Palm Treo 680 and probably switch to Palm’s new Centro once Palm supports AT&T (currently the Centro works only with Sprint). Or I may give the BlackBerry Curve a longer trial to see if it’s a better solution.

Either phone does things I need to do, like sync with those sticky notes, and work with Word documents. Yes, the iPhone can open Word documents to view, but it doesn't allow the creation of a new document, or the ability to edit an existing one. A program called Documents to Go allows this ability on the Palm, and for the BlackBerry there's eOffice.

On another note, both phones also let me remove and replace their rechargeable batteries. What's more, a company named Seidio even makes longer-lasting ones than the standard battery that comes with the Treo, the BlackBerry and many other cell phones. No such luck on the iPhone's battery, which is sealed inside the device and must be sent to Apple for service when the battery needs repair or replacement.

And while my msnbc.com review of the iPhone ended with the revelation that I’d typed the entire first draft of the story as a long e-mail using the iPhone’s virtual keyboard, the reality is I prefer the real mini-keyboards found on the BlackBerry and Treo smartphones to Apple’s unreal-feeling on-screen keyboard.

Apple has stated the iPhone will eventually support third-party applications. To be fair, there’s no doubt that a great many iPhone users couldn't care less whether the iPhone syncs sticky notes or supports ebooks or can do things beyond the limited things it currently does. For those people, the iPhone is a snazzy iPod that also happens to be a so-so phone with an excellent Web browsers and light-duty e-mailer.

For the rest of us who believe the first half of the word smartphone is why we want to use one, the iPhone is just too dumb to be taken seriously. Smarten up, Apple, and open up the iPhone. Seriously.