Monday·02·November·2009
Can’t resist this meme //at 18:24 //by abe
Just stumbled over this meme at Adrian (the meme seems to be started by madduck involuntarily), and since I’m fascinated by how people choose hostnames since my early years at university, I can’t resist to add my two cents to this meme.
To be exact, I have two schemes, one for servers out there somewhere (Hetzner, xencon, etc.) and they’re all wordplays on their domain name noone.org, e.g. symlink.to.noone.org (short name “sym” :-), gateway.to.noone.org (usually an alias for one of the machines below), virtually.noone.org (always a virtual machine, initially UML, soon a Xen DomU), etc. So nothing for a quiz here.
My other scheme is for all my machines at home and my mobile machines. I’ll start this list with the not so obvious hostnames, so the earlier you guess the scheme, the better you are (or the better you know me ;-). One more hint in advance: “(*)” means this attribute or fact made me choose the name for the machine and therefore can be used as hint for the scheme. :-)
- azam
- My first PC at all, a 386 with 25 MHz and MS-DOS. (Got named retroactively(*). Hadn’t hostnames at that time.)
- ak (pronounced as letters)
- Got it from my brother after he didn’t need it anymore. It initially was identical to azam, but once was upgraded to a 486. Still have the 386 board, though.
- azka
- My first self-bought computer, a pure SCSI system with a AMD K5-PR133 and 32 MB RAM. Initially had SuSE 4.4 and Windows 95 on. Still my last machine which had a Windows installed! :-)
- m35
- Same case and same speed as azka. Used it for experimenting(*) with Sid years ago.
- azu
- Initially also an AMD K5-PR133, later replaced by a Pentium 90 and used as DSL router.
- azl
- An HP Vectra 386/25N book size mini desktop I saved from the scrapyard at Y_Plentyn before his (first) move to Munich. The cutest(*) 386 I ever saw.
- ayce
- A 386 with 387 co-processor(*) and solded 8 MB of RAM.
- ayca
- A 1992 Toshiba T6400C 486 laptop bought at VCFe 5.0.
- bijou
- My 1996 ThinkPad 760ED, which is still working and running Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 Lenny (I started with Debian 3.0 Woody on it and always dist-upgraded it! :-)
- gsa (pronounced as letters)
- My long-time desktop after azka. A Pentium II with 400 MHz and 578 MB of RAM at the end. Bought used at LinuxTag 2003, it worked until end of last year when it started to suddenly switch off more and more often and now refuses to boot at all. Hasn’t been replaced yet though. I mostly use my laptops at home since then.
- gsx (pronounced as letters)
- An AMD K6 with 500 MHz I got from maol and which was used as Symlink test server more than once. (It was the machine initially named symlink.to.noone.org because of that.)
- hy
- My 32 bit Sparc, a Hamilton Hamstation.
- hz (pronounced as letters)
- My 64 bit Sparc, an UltraSparc 5.
- tub
- An HP Apollo 9000 Series 400, model 400t from 1990.
- tpv (pronounced as letters, too ;-)
- My Zaurus SL-5500G.
- tryane
- A Unisys Acquanta CP mini desktop with a passively cooled(*) 200 MHz Pemtium MMX. Used as DSL router for while, but the power supply fan was too noisy.
- lna (pronounced as letters)
- A 233 MHz Alpha
- loadrunner
- An IBM ThinkPad A31 running Sid. I use it as beside terminal.
- pony
- A Compaq LTE5100 laptop with a Pentium 90 running Sid.
- dagonet
- A Sony Vaio laptop which ran Debian GNU/kFreeBSD until it broke.
Those who know me quite good should already have guessed the scheme, even if they can’t assign all the names. For all others, here’s one name which doesn’t exactly fit into the scheme, but still is related in someway, but you need to knowledge of the theme’s subject to know the relation:
- colani
- A big tower from the early 90s designed by Colani.
Ok, and now the more obvious hostnames:
- rosalie
- A very compact Toshiba T1000LE 8086 laptop running ELKS and FreeDOS.
- amisuper
- Also an old Symlink test server from maol. He named it “dual”. 2x(*) Pentium I with 166 MHz. Unfortunately doesn’t boot anymore.
- visa
- An IBM NetVista workstation running Debian GNU/kFreeBSD. My current IRC host.
- nemo
- My ASUS EeePC running Debian 5.0 Lenny.
- pluriel
- My current WLAN router running FreeWRT.
- c1
- My MicroClient JrSX, an embedded 486SX compatible machine with 300 Mhz for VESA mountings.
- c2
- My MicroClient Jr, an embedded Pentium MMX compatible machine with 200 Mhz for VESA mountings.
- c-crosser
- My Lenovo ThinkPad T61 running Debian 5.0 Lenny.
- c-cactus and c-metisse
- The KVM based virtual(*) machines on c-crosser running Sid and Debian GNU/kFreeBSD.
- jumper
- My NAS(*) at home, currently a TheCus N4100. Soon to be replaced by some Mini-ITX box.
Any one who hasn’t guessed the scheme yet? For those understanding German it’s explained at the end of my old hardware page. For all others I suggest either to look at the domain name in my e-mail address (no, it’s usually not noone.org).
Still not clear? Well, feel free to ask me for all the gory details or mark the following white box to see the scheme as well as the explanations for nearly all hostnames hidden in there:
All the machines are named after Citroëns. Old machines after old Citroëns, current hardware after current Citroën models or prototypes.
Those names starting with “A” are 2CV derivatives since the 2CV was Citroëns “A” model. “AZ” was the 2CV, AZU and AK were 2CV vans and everything starting with AY (e.g. AYA, AYA2, AYB – but those don’t sound that nice ;-) is Dyane based, but I currently only use Méhara names (AYCA is the normal Méhari, AYCE the 4x4 version). Interestingly not everything starting with AYC is a Méhari: AYCD was the Acadiane, the Dyane van.
HY and HZ are variants of Citroëns “H van” (HX, HW and H1600 as well, but they don’t sound that nice), TUB was the pre-WWII “H van” prototype and later the nickname of the “H van” in France.
TPV was the name of the pre-WWII 2CV prototype and an abbreviation for Toute Petite Voiture (French for “Very Small Car”), hence the Zaurus, my smallest Linux box, got that name. Rosalie was the nickname of a rear-wheel drive pre-WWII Citroën.
M35 was a Wankel engine prototype of the Ami 8 and the Ami Super was the 4 cylinder version of the Ami 8. Bijou was a 2CV based coupé build by Citroën UK in the late 50s and early 60s.
Visa and LNA were 2CV predecessors which were available with 2CV engines, but were stopped before the 2CV. GSA and GSX are GS late derivatives.
C1, C2, (C3) Pluriel, C-Crosser, Jumper and Nemo are current Citroën models and C-Cactus and C-Métisse are recent Citroën prototypes and show cars.
The 2CV Dagonet was an aerodynamically optimised 2CVs by Jean Dagonet in the 50s. The Tryane is an aerodynamic and fuel efficient, three wheeled car by Friend Wood based on the 2CV and with a body of wood. And Colani once dressed a 2CV so that it broke several efficiency world records.
The Namco Pony was a 2CV based light utility truck (similar to the Méhari, but with steel body) built in Greece under license in many variants.
And Loadrunner is the name of some CX six-wheeler conversions.
Some links about the naming items:
- Tryane II
- An original Loadrunner and a just recently built Loadrunner. I even saw the base of exactly that one in RL shortly before it was converted into a Loadrunner.
- Luigi Colani
- Dagonet
- Namco Pony
- C1, C2, C-Crosser, C-Cactus, C-Métisse, Pluriel, Nemo, Visa, LNA, GSA, Ami Super, Rosalie
- AZAM, AZL, AZKA, AZU, AK, AYCD, Bijou, TPV
- HY, HZ, TUB.
Hope you had fun. I had. ;-)
Now playing: Willi Astor — Gwand Anham Ära
Tagged as: 2CV, Citroën, cmot, CX, Debian, fun, Hardware, hostnames, loadrunner, madduck, maol, meme, now playing, Other Blogs, Planet Debian, quiz, scheme, UML, vintage, Xen
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Wednesday·11·February·2009
Favourite Linux Desktop Applications //at 15:01 //by abe
foosel tagged me, whatever that means. Perhaps it’s the English word for “Stöckchen” (German for “small stick”) of which I always wondered how the English blogging part of the blogosphere is calling that kind of coercing blog posts… ;-)
So these are the rules:
- blog a list with your favorite desktop Linux software (as many or few you want)
- add links to the software project’s websites
- post these rules
- tag three other Linux using bloggers
Interestingly splitbrain, who started the thing just calls it “Meme”, but to me memes are the same thing just without duress. ;-)
So you want to know about what Linux desktop software I like and use, hmm? Desktop means GUI, doesn’t it? There are only a few GUI application I really use often since, as you probably know, X is primarily a terminal multiplexer and screen resolutions are compared by how many 80×25 xterms with fixed font you can get on one screen without overlapping. ;-)
But to be honest: Although I’m more the command line guy hacking cryptic lines into windows with small fonts, there are a few thing where I don’t want to miss X and the GUI applications: For all things web – that means web browser, feed reader, etc. But then there is also a bunch of GUI software I use occasionally or as alternative tool to some text mode or command line software.
Web
Liferea – My favuorite feed reader although it takes ages to start and since a few days also starts crashing, probably since I have configured it to cache up to 1000 items per feed and have subscribed to several hundred feeds.
I do not read them all though, but I use them togther with Liferea’s “search all feeds” feature as a Google News replacement. ;-) I though read a lot of feeds in it, since I use it for news, blogs, webcomics and to read missed tweets on Twitter. It organizes the feeds in a tree structure so I can easily group different types of content together.
Opera – I’m back using Opera as my primary web browser since they offer alpha versions for 64-bit Linux.
Initally I started using Opera with version 3.60 on Windows 95 somewhere about 10 years ago and I’ve always come back to it when no current free browser fits my needs.
Although it hasn’t an AddOn possibility as Firefox has, I still prefer it over the bloaty and leaky and quite unstable Firefox 2, since it offers nearly every functionality I need (mainly mouse gestures and a flexible tab management), is fast, needs less RAM and is quite stable for an alpha version. And Firefox only offers those features I need via Addons which are often the cause for leaking or crashing. Haven’t tested Firefox 3 yet, but it’s said to be be less bloaty…
Kazehakase – Formerly I used kazehakase as my primary web browser since I really like its user interface, but the version in Etch is quite slow and seems to have memory leaks. It’s currently the second browser I have always open. But since my browsers always have uptimes in terms of months I don’t need web browsers that are leaking, so I’m thinking about replacing it with something more stable.
Conkeror – A Gecko 1.9 (i.e. Firefox 3) based web browser completely controllable with the keyboard. And the key bindings are those from Emacs and partially also from the classic text-mode browser Lynx. Will be available in Debian Experimental soon.
Netsurf looks very promising as it’s a simple and fast browser with it’s own rendering engine and originating on RISC OS. But since I’m a heavy tab user (60 tabs in one window are not really seldom), a browser (yet) without tabs isn’t really that useful for me. But I hope it will get tabs soon.
Midori – The other upcoming new browser in the Linux world is using Apple’s WebKit (which itself is based on KDE’s KHTML) underneath. Only in Experimental yet (form a Debian point of view :-). Use it on my Debian Sid machine to play around with it.
Twitux – A simple GTK Twitter client which doesn’t clutter the screen with unnecessary icons or buttons. Just a small menu bar, status bar and the tweets.
Azureus – In the seldom case where I need to download files via Bittorrent I either use Opera’s builtin client or Azureus. The nice thing about Azureus is that you can get nice graphical as well as textual statistics about all aspects of your downloads.
X / Desktop Environment
FVWM – My favourite window manager for normal, big or multiple screens. I use it since more than 10 years (twm and tvtwm were its predecessors) and its configuration has evolved since then quite a bit to tinted transparent window frames and title bars, etc.
I tried other window managers in between (e.g. Sawfish and GNOME’s own Metacity, each for a month or so and both together GNOME, also played around with KDE on one machine) and I always came back to FVWM. No other window manager is so fast and configurable in regards of keybindings. Handles multiple screen very well and out of the box, too.
ratpoison – My favourite window manager for small screens (less than about 1024×768, e.g. on my EeePC, on the 8” touchscreen connected to my MicroClient Jr. or on my 1996 ThinkPad 760ED with 133 MHz Pentium 1) since it doesn’t waste screen space for window borders or title bars. It just maximizes all windows by default to screen resolution. You then can manage (split, resize, switch, close, kill) windows as you are used to manage shells and text-mode applications with screen(1). Doesn’t work that well with multiple xrandr managed screens though if they don’t have the same size.
FLWM – The Fast and Light Window Manager. My favourite low-end but still DAU compatible window manager. Use that on demo and guest accounts, especially on low end machines.
Synergy – connects displays of other computers (not only X but also even Mac or Windows) with your mouse and keyboard similar to a KVM switch. I use it at work to add my laptop as fourth monitor. ;-)
trayer – A desktop environmen independend system tray developed by the FVWM Crystal Project. Since I changed from manually editing /etc/network/interface on my laptop each time I came into a new wireless LAN to using GNOME’s Network Manager, I needed a system tray for the nm-applet. Trayer is quite easy to configure using command line options and can handle tinted transparency as I use with FVWM and ATerms. So it fits in perfectly.
- ratmenu and dmenu – For showing generated menus together with ratpoison, I use ratmenu (e.g. as replacement for ratpoison’s non-interactive window list) and dmenu (e.g. as application menu using my own wrapper which generates the menu from some config file). Probably will publish that code once it proved itself stable.
xtrlock – the simplest tool to lock you desktop: The mouse turns into a lock and it only goes away if you enter the right password. No screen saver included though and everyone can see what’s on your desk. I like it though. Use it on low-end machines.
xosview – my favourite system monitor since more than a decade.
XScreenSaver and Really Slick Screensavers (GLX Port) – Configurable and command controllable screen saver daemon. Favourite modes: GLMatrix and Substrate from XScreenSaver and Lattice Sky Rocket and Hufo’s Smoke from RSS GLX.
Terminals
xterm – there is no better X terminal emulator than the original xterm. I found no other terminal which is so fast, has no problems with text-mode applications (aterms break aptitude’s display), no problems with character set encodings, which can be embedded into other applications and which has a fully working classic Unix cut & paste.
aterm – When I need a fancy transparent terminal for showing a fancy desktop, I use the AfterStep Terminal Emulator aterm. In that case, the system tray, the window borders, the window’s title bar and the terminal on my desktop have the same fancy tinted transparency.
yeahconsole – A wrapper around xterm which works like the pulldown console in quake. Good for the short shell usage inbetween. ;-)
The other similar pull down consoles I know (KDEish yakuake and GNOMEish tilda) had some issues with focus and keybindings while yeahconsole works just out of the box and showed no problems until now.
Audio and Video
XMMS and Audacious – If I want to play a single list of files of the same file format or single stream, I usually use the command line tools mpg123 and ogg123. But if I need anything more fancy or more flexible, I prefer the WinAMP clones. Formerly XMMS, nowadays Audacious. Both with some old skin which I use since more than a decade and which I initially used with WinAMP 2 on Windows 95.
mplayer – no fancy GUI, easily controllable with the keyboard, plays most video file formats I can remember. ;-)
Editing and Developing
GNU Emacs – I’ve been raised with GNU Emacs and Lisp at university, so I’m quite sticked to that. I usually only start one Emacs instance and connect to it using emacsclient. I also like TRAMP for editing remote files. but I don’t need it that often.
On machines, where I don’t want a full blown Emacs installation or under root I prefer GNU Emacs’ little brother GNU Zile (Zile Is a Lossy Emacs), but that’s text-mode and no GUI software.
OpenOffice.org – I think it’s a really great software, but I use it quite seldom, usually only when I have to open some file in a Microsoft file format. For writing letters, articles, presentations and so I have LaTeX.
Gnumeric – My preferred spreadsheet application. Although for some purposes I use the OpenOffice.org spreadsheet, usually when Gnumeric has not all necessary features.
Graphics
xv – Yet another tool I use since more than a decade: No other image viewer is so fast and yet so easy to use with both keyboard and mouse. Open source, but unfortunately not (yet?) free software.
keyjnote – fancy PDF presenter with a lot of interactive features.
pdfcube – PDF presenter turning pages as a cube as compiz or Macs do with the desktop.
Chat
Pidgin – I usually use irssi inside a screen for IRC as well as Jabber and ICQ (via Bitlbee), but I also often have a local Jabber client running which then is Pidgin (formerly known as GAIM).
Other Tools
Unison – I use it to synchonise the cache and state of my feed reader between laptop and workstation. And I do indeed prefer the GUI version over the text-mode version. I use the text-mode only if I use it from some remote location.
XKeyCaps – The ideal tool to wreck you keyboard layout. ;-)
XGnokii – Used it to backup my former Nokia mobile phones, the 6130, the 6210i and the 6310i. Doesn’t work anymore with my new E51, though.
Sunbird / Iceowl – Not really using it yet, but I plan to use it as my primary calendar tool.
QEMU / KVM / KQEMU – My favourite desktop hardware emulator. (For servers, I prefer Xen for virtualization.)
Games
- ScummVM
- Planet Penguin Racer / Extreme Tux Racer (all forks of Tux Racer)
- Frozen Bubble
- Battle for Wesnoth
- cuyo, xpuyopuyo, flobopuyo
- Sauerbraten
- PrBoom / Freedoom
- Neverball / Neverputt
- Briquolo
- xfrisk
- Icebreaker
- XBomb
Non-Desktop Applications
In case someone wonders about my mail client, Jabber client, IRC client, ICQ client, file manager, notes taking application, shell and versioning system – they’re all command line or text-mode applications:
- E-Mail: mutt
- Chat, Instant Messaging: irssi + Bitlbee + GNU Screen
- File management: coreutils (and sometimes busybox ;-)
- Notes: hnb
- Shell: zsh
- Version control: Subversion (svn), Mercurial (hg)
Who’s next?
That’s difficult:
- maol would be interesting, but since a while he just blogs in Jeopardy style, so he would need pack all those programs into the subject of his blog post… No, not a good idea.
- Venty! No, has no active blog anymore.
- Dieter! No, no Linux user.
Hmmm, I think I have to look in a different corner of my circle of friends. Hmm. Ah, now I know:
- dyfa – not really a Linux user, but I guess FreeBSD is ok, too. :-)
- nion – this will be really interesting. He even uses more strange software than I do. ;-)
- alphascorpii – no idea what she prefers (except that it will be available as Debian package ;-)
And no, I don’t expect posts as comprehensive as mine. :-)
Tagged as: alphascorpii, aterm, Audacious, Azureus, Bitlbee, Conkeror, Debian Experimental, desktop, dmenu, dyfa, Emacs, fancyness, Firefox, FLWM, foosel, FVWM, GAIM, gnokii, GNOME, GNOME Network Manager, Gnumeric, GUI, Iceowl, ICQ, IRC, irssi, Jabber, Jeopardy, Kazehakase, keyjnote, KQEMU, KVM, Liferea, Linux, maol, Meme, Metacity, Midori, more than a decade, mpg123, mplayer, Netsurf, nion, ogg123, Open Source, OpenOffice.org, Opera, Other Blogs, pdfcube, Pidgin, Planet Debian, Planet Dokuwiki, QEMU, ratmenu, ratpoison, RSS GLX, Sawfish, splitbrain, Stöckchen, Sunbird, synergy, tilda, trayer, tvtwm, Twitter, Twitux, twm, unison, Venty, web browser, WinAMP, window manager, Windows 95, X, XKeyCaps, XMMS, xosview, XScreenSaver, xterm, xtrlock, xv, yakuake, yeahconsole, zile
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Wednesday·21·May·2008
A good day //at 17:43 //by abe
Today was a good day — at least if I average all the things happened today. And since Twitter.com is currently down and there’s no way all those things fit in 140 characters, I decided to pack them in a “short” blog post:
- This afternoon one backplane of our newest backup server caught
fire.
:-(
No collateral damages though.:-)
The machine is currently at the manufacturer and should be back on Monday. - My EeePC (more about it in an upcoming blog post) recently
overheated and switched off. It looked as if it since then didn’t turn
off correctly anymore, but power and the fan stayed on although the
operating system was shut down. Today I found out with help of the
debian-eeepc-devel mailing list that my EeePC wasn’t damaged but the
snd_hda_intel driver caused the machine to not shut down correctly.
One rmmod line into /etc/default/halt and it shuts down perfectly and
fast again.
:-)
See also the hint in the Debian Wiki. - Even more: I’m sure that it not even has been turned by being hit
by something through its neopren bag inside my backpack as I initially
expected. It turned out that I must have not noticed that it wasn’t
properly shut down and put it in the neopren case in that condition
:-(
since the power button simply doesn’t work when the lid is close. The good news: It doesn’t seem to have carried away any damage.:-)
- I had the same problem as Beat had: I couldn’t import certificates into my
Nokia E51 mobile phone. I already tried to import the PEM and the DER
versions of the CAcert root certificates but it just didn’t work.
After Beat found out (Kudos to maol who pointed me to Beat’s blog posting), which certificate
format is necessary, I found out that while the CAcert PEM
certificates have the correct Content-Type header
(
application/x-x509-ca-cert
) the DER certificates have not — they are served astext/plain
. Downloading them to my server, adding the right content type to the config and downloading them from there again with the mobile phone worked fine and I now don’t need to acknowledge anymore the certificate of my IMAP server each time I want to read my e-mails on the mobile phone.:-)
- One more EeePC thing. During a discussion on the
debian-eeepc-devel mailing list, I noted that the maximum summed up
resolution of the internal and external display seems to be
800×800, but it turned out that you can configure that in your
xorg.conf.
:-)
The screen section of my xorg.conf now looks like this:Section "Screen" Identifier "Default Screen" Monitor "Configured Monitor" SubSection "Display" Virtual 2048 2048 EndSubSection EndSection
See also the xorg.conf in the Debian Wiki.
So if I sum up the smileys in this blog posting, I get 5 happy ones and only 2 sad ones. I think being happy outrun being unhappy today. ;-)
Now I want to dive into my bath tub to get this smell of burning
servers off me and my cloths. ;-)
Tagged as: Admin, bath tub, CAcert, certificate, Debian, Debian Wiki, DER, EeePC, ETH Zürich, fire, Flupp, maol, Nokia E51, Other Blogs, overheating, PEM, server, shutdown, Smiley, X, xorg.conf
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Monday·14·April·2008
New mobile phone and what the Nokia 6310i did better than the E51 //at 00:31 //by abe
Habits control our choice sometimes more than we would like to admit…
New mobile phone
Since about two weeks ago I’ve a new mobile phone. The Nokia E51 will replace my slowly dying Nokia 6130i.
I knew I needed a new mobile phone when my 6310i started to turn off itself shortly after I turned it on. I needed up to about ten times switching it on to make it stay on. Sometimes it already switched itself off before I could enter the PIN. Looks like a loose contact, but I never figured out where it is.
Although I know about Nokia’s behaviour in Germany, I still had to buy a Nokia, because after using a 6130 (the GSM 1800 only clone of 6110 and 6150), a 6210i and the already mentioned 6130i over the last decade, I got so used to how Nokia mobile phones are navigated and how you type with Nokia phones (blank on 0, point and comma on 1, case changing on #), everything else (especially those with blank on 0 and case changing on *) would be worse than the half-dead mobile phone, I’m currently using.
Spoilt for choice
So which Nokia? For a long time I refused to buy a mobile phone with a camera or radio in it. But since the E70 was no more available (and is said to have quite buggy software) and the E61 has been replaced with the E61i, there are no more smartphones without a camera, at least not from Nokia. But I also found some useful uses of camera phones. After a while I could track down the number of choices to four: Communicator E90, E61i, E65 or E51:
The picture above shows that the main differences of those models is size: Although having a QWERTY keyboard on the phone would be nice (for ssh, Jabber, the web, etc.) and the E90 being only slightly bigger than the 6310i on the paper, the size difference to the 6130i is more than only noticeable since the 6310i tapers off at the top. Besides, for the price of an E90, I get an E51 and an EeePC together… (Thanks to maol in whose blog I read about Sizeasy.)
The E61i also has a (very small) QWERTY keyboard and is primarily only much wider than any of the other phones. It even has no bigger screen resolution than the E51 or E65. (Only the no more available E60 – a normal monoblock smart phone like the E51 – had a better resolution: 352x416 pixel instead of 240x320 pixels.) And since I usually carry my mobile phone in my trouser pockets, width matters most.
So I had the choice to either get a phone which is too big for my trouser pockets or one without a QWERTY keyboard. The I remembered those foldable external keyboards for PDAs. There are at least three different makers of foldable bluetooth keyboards said to be working with Nokia Symbian S60 3rd Edition phones, so a QWERTY keyboard on the phone itself was no more important. (Only passwords will need to be entered over the number keypad since I don’t want to broadcast them… ;-)
The choice between E65 and E51 was made easier by their reviews (E65, E51) at Xonio: The E65 seems to have not that good standby and phoning times while the E51 seems to be quite good regarding endurance.
I looked through the usual shops around Z¨rich HB: Swisscom Shop, MobileZone, Phonehouse: All had the same prices (about CHF 250 for a two years contract at CHF 25 per month), except that Phonehouse had no E51 available in the shop. Interestingly digitec had a much lower price (CHF 100 for the same contract) and the choice of color (the shops always only offered one color), so I ordered a black one there.
Converting a prepaid card to a postpaid contract isn’t that easy
I wanted to change from a prepaid card to a postpaid contract, both at Swisscom, so I already own a SIM card. But digitec only offers new contracts including a SIM card or contract renewals, but no switching to a contract with keeping the number. And a new SIM card costs CHF 40 extra in their online shop. So I called their hotline and asked. The answer was: I need a new SIM card since prepaid SIM cards can’t be converted to postpaid SIM cards (but can be used with different providers).
When I came to the shop, the employee needed three tries to fill out the Swisscom form for the number migration and still did it wrong somehow. No postpaid contract acknowledgement from Swisscom after two workdays. So I called their hotline. They told me, the wrong SIM card number has been entered and I need to make digitec to enter the correct one.
A few days later back at the shop they were overextended. After a while an internal e-mail was on the employee’s screen which clearly stated that in case of prepaid to postpaid conversions (and a few other cases) no new SIM card must be given out and if this happens too often for the same employee he will be charged the CHF 30 a new SIM card costs digitec… (So they have a 25% margin of every sold SIM card…)
About one hour after they closed their doors (I was there about ten minutes before shop closing time) Swisscom had accepted the contract changes and I had a credit note of CHF 40 for the erroneously sold SIM card. And the mobile phone became even cheaper than in all the other shops. :-)
New gadget, new features
So after a week, I can say that in general I’m quite happy with the new phone. It has a nice web browser, an IMAP over SSL capable mail reader and a feed reader, it can connect to the internet via WLAN and the 240x320 resolution isn’t as bad as I expected. I already have a Symbian port of PuTTY on it and sshing into my workstation works fine, even if I currently only have the phone keyboard and T9 as input device and helper.
I also have Opera and Opera Mini installed, but to my own surprise the included web browser from Nokia (said to be based on Apple’s HTML rendering engine WebKit which itself is based on KDE’s HTML rendering engine KHTML) is way better, especially in navigation, even although Opera Mini 4.1 caught up a little bit in comparison to Opera Mini 4.0. (Hey, and you hear that from a web browser fetishist and Opera fan!)
The only thing which currently really bugs me on the builtin web browser is that even an enforced updating of my feeds sometimes just results in nothing. Maybe a firmware upgrade can help…
As barcode reader, I have installed the i-nigma Reader. (The Quickmark QR Code Reader download just showed the content of something which seems to be a Windows DLL instead of downloading it. *plonk*) It’s amazing how fast the i-nigma Reader recognizes a 2D barcode from Semapedia on my laptop screen.
Of course I also have ScummVM on my new Symbian phone.
I will also play around with Amora which turns your Symbian S60 mobile phone into a remote control for your presentations on Linux (or any other unixoid operating system) running laptop as soon as I managed to get an amd64 Debian package of it. (Currently there seems only i386 packages and no source packages available, but this may be due to the “Show all downloads” link gives a server error…) Oh, and many thanks to foosel since I found Amora in her blog.
BTW: Any recommendations for a free (preferably free as in DFSG) Jabber and/or IRC client for Symbian S60 3rd Edition? I already downloaded and installed Gizmo5, but somehow it refuses to work each time I try to create an Gizmo account.
Accessories
Since the E51 has no QWERTY keyboard, I ordered a Nokia SU-8W Foldable Bluetooth Keyboard at Brack. It was a little bit bigger and thicker than expected, but OTOH the metal case seems to be very stable and robust.
Since this keyboard is designed to fit on Nokia mobile phones it also has the two Nokia typical soft keys and the middle select key. So nearly all phone functions can be used with the external keyboard, even turning off the phone’s key lock. Only locking the phone’s keys again doesn’t work via the external keyboard.
Additionally I equipped my E51 with a 2GB microSD card. Probably a bluetooth headset for driving will come once, too.
What the Nokia 6310i did better than the E51
There are a few things which are annoying regarding Nokia’s UI consistency over the years. That the backspace key is no more the right soft-key is ok. It took me only five tries to get my e-mail account setup without hitting the abort key (no “Do you really want to abort?” questions ;-) instead of backspace key.
But what’s really annoying is that the menu navigation via number keys only works for the first level and no more for all levels. So no more “menu 4 4 4” to switch to manual network selection.
It’s also annoying that you (or at least I ;-) can’t enter phone numbers as the recipient of SMS directly anymore, at least those SMS never reach their receipient neither do I get an error message.
Same counts for the missing acoustic acknowledgment of locking the keypad. You only hear pressing the first key but not even the second key anymore.
And if you press the volume keys on the side of the phone, you also have neither acoustic nor visual feedback if you pressed them hard enough so that the volume changed. The 6310i had visual and acoustic feedback.
The alarm clock in the E51 seems to be artifically castrated: After having pressed the snooze button two or three times there is no more snooze button on the right the soft key anymore. With the 6310i you could press snooze as often as you want. Only disadvantage with the 6310i in regards of the alarm clock: the snooze time was much too long (10 minutes)…
Oh, and what’s also annoying is that I can’t move over the whole addressbook of my 6310i in one piece but have to send each contact via bluetooth or infrared and then the E51 even get’s the contact names mixed up: ‘Beckert, Axel’ becomes ‘Firstname: “Beckert,” Lastname: “Axel”’… Great! I have to edit nearly all contacts manually… The cut and paste feature helps here, but it takes about one to two dozens of key clicks to copy the whole content of a filed into the clipboard…
The E51 can run several applications at the same time and that you can switch between them any time. While that’s generally a nice feature I started using quite soon, it’s sometimes annoying that you have to wait up to a second or so after you’ve chosen some menu entry until you can do anything further. Also the screen often flickers while loading applications, showing them, then showing only the background, showing them again, etc.
… but finally
I already got used to the new mobile phone so much that I already have
the feeling that my old 6310i became more thick since I have the E51.
(Won’t think about how thick the about ten years old 6130 feels now
compared to the slim E51… :-)
Tagged as: *plonk*, 2D barcode, Amora, barcode reader, Bluetooth, camera phone, DFSG, digitec, EeePC, feed reader, foldable keyboard, foosel, Habits, i-nigma, IMAP, IrDA, Jabber, maol, Mobile phone, Natel, Nokia, Nokia 6110, Nokia 6130, Nokia 6150, Nokia 6210i, Nokia 6310i, Nokia E51, Nokia E60, Nokia E61, Nokia E61i, Nokia E65, Nokia E90, Nokia SU-8W, Opera, Opera Mini, Other Blogs, PuTTY, QuickMark, S60, ScummVM, Semapedia, Sizeasy, smartphone, ssh, SSL, Swisscom, Symbian, T9, web browser, WLAN, Zürich
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Wednesday·25·April·2007
Das Web 2.0 Stöckchen //at 01:57 //by abe
Kaum bloggt man mal wieder, kommt einem auch gleich wieder ein Stöckchen entgegen geflogen, dazu auch noch zu einem solch brisanten Thema wie Web 2.0.
Also fangen wir an: Ich nutze Apache 2.0, Blosxom 2.0, Emberl 2.0, WML 2.0, CSS 2.0, Firefox 2.0, HTML 2.0, Debian 2.0, äh, moment, nee, so altbacken bin ich nun auch wieder nicht. Ach, das war gar nicht die Frage? Achso. Na dann wollen wir mal die eigentlichen Fragen beantworten…
- Nutzt Du Social Bookmarking/Networking Seiten wie Digg, Yigg, Mister Wong oder Del.Icio.Us? Wenn ja, welche?
- Kaum. Einen Yigg-Account habe ich, wenn auch schon lange nicht mehr benutzt, Digg ist mir aufgrund ihres Abmahnwahns unsympathisch, Mister Wong sagt mir sowas von gar nix und Del.Icio.Us finde ich durchaus interessant, denke aber nicht, daß es mir wirklich etwas bringt, da ich meine Bookmarks — sofern Zeit ist *hüstel* — selbst von Hand zu Fuß als HTML tippe und damit genauso browserunabhängig bin. Flock nutze ich dementsprechend auch nicht.
- Nebenbei: Digg und Yigg sind für mich keine Bookmarking-Seiten sondern Newsportale. Und unter einer Social Networking-Seite verstehe ich Orkut (Ja, habe ich einen Account, aber vernachlässigt), OpenBC (das neuerdings heißt wie ein Filmchenabspieler für Windows, nein habe ich keinen Account und will auch keinen. Ich mache kein “Business”.) oder LinkedIn (wirkt auf mich noch viel mehr auf Business abgestimmt als OpenBC). Und gute Jobs habe ich bisher auch immer ohne solche Seiten bekommen. Das einzig nette daran, ist festzustellen, wie klein die Welt doch ist.
- Schaust Du Dir Videos bei Videoportalen wie YouTube, Sevenload oder DailyMotion an? Wenn ja, was für Videos guckst Du Dir meistens an?
- Manchmal. Meist dann, wenn sie sowieso grade im Büro umgehen und alle Kollegen gemeinsam vor einem Monitor rumlachen. Sprich, meist sind’s irgendwelche witzigen Sachen. Manchmal auch Filmtrailer. Wobei ich eigentlich außer Google Videos und YouTube kein anderes solches Portal wirklich kenne. Zumindest sagen mir die anderen genannten sowas von gar nix.
- Kennst bzw. nutzt Du Flickr?
- Kennen kommt man wohl kaum drumherum. Nutzen? Ja, manchmal, zum Bilder anschauen, die mir irgendjemand zeigen will oder über die ich sonstwo gestolpert bin. Account habe ich jedenfalls keinen. Ich war mit allen Webgalerie-Lösungen bisher unzufrieden und hab mir meine eigene geschnitzt. Web 2.0 brauche ich an der Stelle bisher nicht. Aber wer weiß, vielleicht bekommt das Ding auch mal RSS-Feed-Support.
- Was hälst Du von Diensten wie Twitter oder Frazr?
- Ich kenne sie nicht einmal. *draufklick* Nix.
- Wie viele RSS-Feeds hast Du abonniert?
- Ich meine mich zu erinnern, dass neuere Versionen von Lilina nur bis ca. 50 Feeds skalieren. Ich hab ein paar mehr, vermutlich so ca. 60-70 Blogs und ähnliches. Dazu noch unzählige Newsfeeds (wohl so um die 40-50, Tendenz steigend, vor allem Symlink wegen), die ich aber von den Blogfeeds getrennt halte und auch nicht mit einem Feedreader sondern so einer Art Cheesy Portal lese. Wobei es so aussieht, als ob sich bei Lilina wieder was tut, jedenfalls hat die Seite ein neues Design und eine neue URL. Müßte ich mir mal wieder mal ansehen.
- Liest Du die alle täglich?
- Nicht mal mehr monatlich oder sonstwie regelmäßig. Seit das letzte Upgrade meines Lilinas eine katastrophale Performance an den Tag legte eigentlich gar nicht mehr. Und zum Flicken hatte ich bisher keine Lust. Genausowenig wie ich bisher Muße dazu hatte, mein “Cheesy Portal” wieder in Sachen Feeds auf den aktuellen Stand zu bringen. Deswegen auch keine Links. Liegt wohl daran, daß mir die Arbeit seit dem Stellenwechsel vor einem Jahr wieder richtig Spaß macht und deswegen keine Zeit mehr für solche weniger wichtigen Dinge ist. ;-)
- In wie vielen Weblogs bloggst Du? (Eigene oder Mitautor)
- Da ich Symlink nach wie vor nicht als Blog ansehe (und auch nicht unbedingt den ISG Newsticker oder den LUG-Camp 2007 Newsticker) nur in zweien: In diesem meinem eigenen Blog wenn mir gerade danach ist (also nicht mit dem Zwang täglich was zu posten, wie manch andere Leute) als auch in der inoffiziellen Blosxom User Group, dort im Normalfall dann, wenn’s was neues (aber nicht notwendigerweise wichtiges) in der Blosxom Community gibt.
- Kommentierst Du in anderen Blogs? Wenn ja was?
- Hin und wieder mal. Meist bei Freunden, manchmal auch bei Leuten, die ich nicht kenne. Was es dann ist, ist recht unterschiedlichen. Von hilfreichen Informationen bis hin zu blöden Kommentaren ist sicher schon alles dabei gewesen. ;-)
- Wer ist Dein persönlicher Blog-König von
Deutschlandder Schweiz? - Was ist ein “persönlicher Blog-König”? Jemand, der Blogs schreibt so wie das Klischee sie erwartet, eben täglich, mit viel persönlichem oder unwichtigem Zeugs? Hmm, in der Schweiz die RUBIs sind recht fleissig und viel persönliches ist da auch dabei, dazu ist’s noch witzig, weil praktisch die ganze Familie bloggt. Und informativ ist es ab und an außerdem noch. In Deutschland kenne ich zu wenige Blogs, aber da fand ich immer das Daily Ivy Blog ganz gut, auch wenn es als Blog keinerlei wirklichen Ersatz für Ivys Bar sein kann. *seufz*
- Gehört Weblogs Deiner Meinung nach die Zukunft oder sind sie nur ein vorübergehender Hype?
- Weder noch. Sie sind eine Nuance eines Mediums mehr, die das letzte Jahrzehnt hervorgebracht hat. Mit eigenem Charakter und nicht eigentlich kaum mehr wegzudenken, aber sicher auch nicht die Krone der Web-2.0-Schöpfung.
- Wird es Dein Blog / Deine Blogs dann auch noch geben?
- Es ist glaube ich gemeinhin bekannt, daß ich selten was wegschmeiße oder gar Webseiten lösche, nur weil ich sie grade nicht brauche, nutze oder pflege.
Und bevor’s zu Ende ist, füge ich hier grade noch zwei Fragen ein, weil ich doch das eine oder andere zum Thema Web 2.0 in diesem Stöckchen vermisse.
- Welchen Feedreader nutzt Du?
- Webbasiert: den bereits erwähnten Lilina für Blogs und einen auf einer PHP-Feedreader-Bibliothek basierender Eigenbau, der nach dem Vorbild von Slashdots Cheesy Portal gebaut ist — nur mehrspaltig, für News. Sonst Opera, allerdings nur mit wenigen Feeds. Ich habe zwar auch schon raggle und snownews ausprobiert und so schlecht sind die beiden sicher auch nicht (snownews ist einen Tick intuitiver zu bedienen), aber wirklich begonnen sie zu nutzen habe ich nicht. Gregarius fürs Web und Newsbeuter für die Textkonsole wollte ich mal noch ausprobieren.
- Was gehört für Dich sonst noch zum Web 2.0?
- Google Maps, maps.search.ch und Konsorten inklusive API. Könnte man auch unter dem Überbegriff AJAX laufen lassen. Dann natürlich Wikis. Und nicht zu vergessen Microformats wie z.B. XFN. Wundert mich eigentlich, das das vorher kaum vorkam in dem Stöckchen.
- Wo gehts weiter mit dem Web 2.0 Stöckchen?
- Also sicher mal bei Venty sei’s in seinem leider schon wieder aufgegebenen Gopher-Blog oder in seinem PodCast, dem ich nicht wirklich folge, weil ich keine PodCasts höre.
- Dann vielleicht noch bei Dieter Schlabonski, weil der es sicher schafft, auch daraus einen stilechten Rant zu machen.
- Und Myon bastelt ja bei Debian gerne mit Web-2.0-Methoden rum, dem werfen wir das grade auch mal zu.
- Sonst fallen mir nur noch Leute ein, die kein Blog haben und daher auch kaum Stöckchen fangen können oder das Stöckchen schon bekommen haben. :-)
Now playing: El-Vez — Mexican Radio
Tagged as: 0x1b, AJAX, Apache, Blogging, Blosxom, Comic, Debian, del.icio.us, Embperl, Flickr, Google, Google Maps, Gopher, HTML, Ivy, Lilina, maol, map.search.ch, Meme, Microformats, Myon, newsbeuter, OpenBC, Opera, Orkut, Other Blogs, Quiz, raggle, Schlabonski, Slashdot, snownews, Social Networking, Stöckchen, Symlink, Ventilator, Web, Web 2.0, WML, XFN, Yigg, YouTube
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