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This Laptop is…..

Friday, November 27th, 2009

Generally speaking, one of my most depended-on pieces of technology is my Dell XPS M1330 laptop. I’ve had it since January 2008, and while it’s been reasonably good – where “reasonably” is subject to whether I’m talking about the computer itself (not bad), Windows Vista (awful), or the motherboard which was replaced under warranty last year (nice one, Dell).

While my laptop itself doesn’t do any heavy duty computing tasks – not since I dumped Outlook earlier this year, anyway – it does travel everywhere with me, spending time on around a dozen WiFi networks regularly, and a smattering of 3G broadband connections in Australia, Europe and Asia.

But I was talking to a fellow XPS owner earlier this week about the problems he’s had with his M1330, and how the motherboard has had to be replaced several times because of overheating; clearly, I was lining myself up for a fall because 5 minutes after (fortunately) a big presentation on Wednesday afternoon my video screen turned, quite literally, to vertically-lined mush.

I spent much of Wednesday evening trying to get it to a state where it could do a clean reboot, after which it would work perfectly for around 5 minutes or longer before it would randomly scramble the video display and then freeze.

So flying back to Australia this morning, I decided to drag my jet-lagged body into the office to say Hi to the team and pick up snail-mail, when I tried to boot the laptop again on the office network – just long enough to make a quick backup before the same symptoms appeared again. So I called Dell, who, on asking me to quote my service tag politely informed me that my XPS was out of warranty – then proceeded to ask me to run a diagnostic test: holding down the “D” key while powering the laptop on. This displayed a sequence of coloured screens and, on hearing the diagnostic results, the support person informed that this was a video problem and therefore had an “extended” warranty for an extra year – happy news.  So I was given a case ID and informed a Dell technician would contact me on Monday to arrange a swap-out.

In the meantime, I’m trying to work on an old G4 iBook that I had at home – I used to love this Mac, now it’s barely fast enough to run Firefox.

I’d like to congratulate Dell at this point on their customer care, however I suspect that their “extension” of the warranty is really only a result of endemic failures of their XPS laptops. Which is a shame because, on balance, they aren’t a bad business computer.

Kicking the Hornets Nest

Sunday, October 25th, 2009

I’ll admit I was late to the party, but I’ve really enjoyed reading Steig Larsson’s Millenium trilogy over the past few weeks.

I really struggle to find fiction that engages me these days. I’m partial to a good geopolitical spy or thriller, unfortunately they seem to be few and far between. Daniel Silva’s Gabriel Allon series of books have been long-time favourites – I have grown immune to the all-American, flawed-but-still-brilliant ex-military tough guy heroes that seem to be the publishing industry’s stock-in-trade for this genre. Like Silva, Larsson’s books are European in setting, characters, and believability. And having visited Stockholm occasionally on business, I found the settings if not familiar, then certainly reminiscent of places I’ve noted while there.

This weekend’s Sydney Morning Herald noted that the final installment in the trilogy – The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest – is now Australia’s best-selling book, outpacing the Twilight series, so I’m clearly not alone in my appreciation of the Swedish author.

Sadly, Larsson passed away after delivering his novels to the publisher, so we are denied further adventures of his heroine Lisbeth Salander. And I’m back to the bookshop to try and discover another author I’ll enjoy. Any suggestions?

On being a temporary Normob

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

Hong Kong has long been one of my favourite cities in the world, and it’s been terrific to be up here for the past week working with the Catalist Group and meeting prospective investors and customers. On the mobile front, however, I’m temporarily experiencing life as a “Normob”: or to clarify, as a normal mobile user.

I first became aware of Normobs via Chris Kettle and some other friends who attended a mobile event in the UK where the term was bandied about. But this week I’ve experienced life first hand as one, and I’m reeling from confusion.

Unlike some countries – Australia and Singapore, for example, Hong Kong doesn’t have major identity requirements in order to provision prepaid mobile access; it’s primarily walk into a store, pay HK$100 (around A$15) and walk out with an activated SIM card. Text and voice work fine, and the rates aren’t bad either – HK$0.10 per minute for local calls (around 1.5c) which has enabled me to call into our VoIP service just fine. But mobile data? Forget it.

(This is despite the HKCSL prepaid packaging advertising mobile broadband as one of the benefits of the prepaid service – an anomaly which was confirmed to me by one of the retail assistants, who just shrugged when I pointed to the packaging with a “but it says here that…..”).

So here I am, with…..voice. And text.  Only. Like it’s, I don’t know, 2002 or something.

I can’t hit the Google search portal, or mobile Facebook. Or use Google Maps, or Gmail. Most of the Symbian apps on my E51 are utterly useless sans data access and I’ve found myself with spare time on the MTR wishing my handset would do something. Anything. But it’s now just a mobile phone.

And I’m, temporarily at least, a “Normob”.

My Evil Inbox

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

I was bemused this morning to find that my Gmail inbox had turned evil:

My Evil Inbox

My Evil Inbox

Not that I’m particularly superstitious, mind. Regardless, it was disconcerting!

I’m in London, still*

Friday, July 17th, 2009

I’m in the UK this week on a business trip, before heading to my favourite island republic for a few days on Sunday.

Specifically, I’ve been representing the company at a two-day GSMA OneAPI project meeting in London; it has been great to be in the room for a change, as normally we participate in these meetings via a teleconference bridge. The OneAPI is an initiative to create a standard access API for mobile network enablers – messaging (SMS/MMS), location and charging.  Our own OneAPI reference implementation has just been deployed for testing, and we are leading an effort to run a commercial pilot in the Asia-Pacific region by November.

So far we’ve had an enthusiastic response from operators in Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Singapore and several other countries in South Asia. (If you are interested, either contact us or follow the Locatrix blog for more details and announcements of participating operators and developers).

Anyway, while in the UK I’ve also been doing the rounds of the local operators to learn more about their initiatives in the areas we focus on: enablers, location-based services, social networking and mobile marketing. I’ve been pleased with the reception to our solutions and hosted services focus, and am becoming optimistic about our expansion in this part of the world over the next 12 months.

While I’ve been here I’ve also taken the opportunity to sample, as a pre-paid consumer, several local mobile offerings – mobile broadband, on-portal mobile VAS, as well as regular voice/text services. It would be remiss (not to mention commercially dangerous) of me to go into specifics, but I’ve been struck by the percentage of dodgy SIM cards I’ve been supplied – I’m on my third from the recommended mobile broadband network, and my second from one of the other operators for general use. As in SIM cards just not registering in devices, and having to be replaced. Quite frustrating, not to metion time-consuming. In all the pre-paid SIM’s we’ve registered in Australia, I’ve never had this happen.

I’ve also got to note how I now take decent quality mobile broadband in Australia for granted – I’ve been really surprised at the low 3G performance here in London (using a standard Huawei USB modem).  I’m now posting this from a bar in Camden, as England finishes day one at six down for 300-odd runs. Better value than hotel WiFi for sure, but I miss my NextG from home.

That said, I love visiting London – I’ve taken the opportunity to catch up with some old friends (both Brits and Australians) who live here, but frustratingly haven’t been able to get tickets to the Ashes! I’ll likely be spending more time here as we ramp our export efforts, so it is fortunate that I’m starting to be able to navigate my way ’round the capital and surrounding area more effectively.

So I’m in London, still, and despite some 3G hiccups, am having a productive trip.

*Sincere apologies to The Waifs for my blatant plagiarism of the title from one of their excellent songs!

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