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"You Two! We're at the end of the universe, eh. Right at the edge of knowledge itself. And you're busy... blogging!"
— The Doctor, Utopia


Tuesday, August 08, 2006

New TabletPC on the way

Gateway CX210X My TabletPC is starting to show it's age so I just ordered a new one from Gateway. (Yes, overall, I'm still happy with the company.) It's scheduled to arive late next week. The specs are:

  • System Name: Gateway CX210X
  • Operating System: Genuine Microsoft® Windows® XP Tablet PC Edition
  • Operating System Software Backup Media: Genuine Microsoft® Windows® XP Tablet (SP2) Backup CD
  • Application Software: Microsoft® Office Small Business Edition 2003 (Basic + PowerPoint & Publisher) w/ Microsoft® Home Collection
  • Processor: Intel® Core™ Duo Processor T2500 (2.00 GHz, 667MHz FSB, 2MB L2 Cache)
  • Memory: 2048MB 667MHz DDR2 SDRAM (2-1024MB modules)
  • Video: ATI Mobility™ Radeon® X1400 64MB Graphics featuring Avivo™ display technology
  • Hard Drive: 100GB 5400rpm Serial ATA hard drive
  • Optical Drive: Modular 8x Multi-Format Double Layer DVD Writer (DVD±R/±RW/CD-RW)
  • Extended Service Plan Including Limited Warranty: Notebook Value Plus Service Plan -- 3 year parts/labor/on-site/3 year technical support
  • Battery: Primary 8-cell lithium-ion battery with AC pack and 1 yr. limited battery warranty
  • Digitizer Pens: Gateway executive stylus pen w/ Continuous Sensing Technology™
  • Integrated Wireless Networking Adapter: Integrated Intel® 802.11a/b/g wireless networking card
  • Bluetooth: Bluetooth® Wireless Networking Module
  • Floppy Drive: 7-in-1 media card reader (Memory Stick®, Memory Stick Pro®, MultiMediaCard™, Secure Digital™, xD Picture Card, Mini Secure Digital™, RS-MultiMediaCard™)
  • Expansion Slots: (1) Type II PC card slot
  • External Ports: (3) USB 2.0, IEEE 1394 (FireWire), VGA
  • Screen: 14.0" WXGA TFT Active Matrix (1280 x 768 max. resolution) with rotating hinge for tablet functionality
  • Keyboard and Mouse: Full-size keyboard and EZ Pad® pointing device
  • Multimedia Package: Integrated sound and stereo speakers, headphone/speaker jack, and mic jacks
  • Modem: Integrated V.92 56K modem
  • Network Adapter: Integrated Intel® 10/100/1000 Ethernet Adapter
  • Additional Software: Adobe® Acrobat Reader® 7.0 and Google Toolbar
  • Personal Productivity: Microsoft® One Note, Microsoft® Experience Pack and Microsoft® Education Pack

The most interesting part of the ordering process was this bit of fine print: "You received free shipping! $20 Handlind Charge Applies." Go figure. Also, Gateway has a trade-in program for old equipment. I ran a quick estimate on the old TabletPC and according to them the "Estimated Trade-in Value (includes a Prepaid shipping label) : $176.12

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Monday, July 03, 2006

Windows Vista for TabletPC

Microsoft has put up a page titled "Improve Your Tablet PC Experience with Windows Vista" covering how an upgrade to Vista will effect TabletPC features. "Flicking" seems to be the coolest feature.

"Flicks are gestures that help you to use your pen more effectively. A quick flick of the pen can scroll a window up or down or navigate forward and backward on the web. Flicks can also perform common actions such as copy, paste, delete and undo."

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Friday, May 19, 2006

Gateway gets it right this time

Back at Computers in Libraries, the latch on my Gateway Tablet decided to start disconnecting from the case. The latch still held the tablet closed so I wasn't in a rush to get it fixed. This past Sunday, the latch decided to detach itself completely. Off to the Gateway customer support chat site I went.

The last time I sent in my tablet for a crack in the case (here's the post from the end of the 36 day marathon), they reformatted my hard drive. This time I wanted to be sure this didn't happen. I made it completely clear that they were authorized to fix the latch but to not reformat my hard drive for any reason. I was assured that there was no need to even turn the computer on so that should not be necessary.

On Tuesday I received the box from Gateway and promptly shipped the tablet back that afternoon. On Wednesday I received confirmation that Gateway had the tablet. Thursday I got an e-mail saying it had been fixed and shipped back. 20 minutes ago (Friday) I got my tablet back, latch fixed, hard drive untouched.

Thank you Gatway. This is how it's supposed to work.

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Friday, March 24, 2006

CIL2006: Supporting the Digital World with Gadgets

Hope Tillman, Director of Libraries, Babson College
10:30-11:15am

  • Definition of Gadgets
    • small electronic or mechanical device which a practical used often thought of as a novelty
    • Consumer electronics
  • Gadgets are all arounds us
    • productivty vs. distraction
    • useful or time-consuming toys
      • time shifting
      • blurring of work and personal time
    • overload vs. the more the better
      • makes time to do more
      • makes more to do
  • Today's students
    • Class of 2009
      • voice mail always available
      • may have slept w. game boys in their crib
      • always digital cameras
      • may not distinguished between news entertainment
      • libraries have always been comp access centers
  • Why single out gadgets
    • what consumers are willing to buy
    • refelect customization and personalization trends
    • continue to change, show evolution and shift
  • qustions to consider
    • what features lend themselves to info magt knowlege sharing
    • how to identify gadgets to adopt/support
    • what do patrons use now
    • who are you listening to?
    • what makes your life easier
    • what are other libraries doing
    • what's the tipping point
    • how do you look at the issue of interoperability and upgrades
  • Tends
    • convergence
    • personalization and customixation
    • miniaturization / portability
  • ZDNet top 10 gadget must haves list
    • changes every 2-3 weeks
    • Creative Zen
    • Sony PSP
    • XBox 360
    • Mobile DVR
    • Slingbox
    • Treo 700w
    • Soundmatters MainstageHD
  • A few of the gadgets
    • PDAs
    • tablets
    • cell phones
    • MP3 players
    • video players
    • digital cameras
    • pocket scanners
  • Morphing the name of the PDA
    • Personal Digital Assistant
    • Palm or PocketPC
    • Handheld
    • Portable Media Player
    • Movile Media Companion
    • PocketPC phone
    • Ruggedized handhled
    • Ultra personal computer
  • PDA/Handhelds/Tablets
    • Convergence
    • thickness weight vs. functionality
    • PDAs still part of the mix
  • Smart watches
    • Embedded GPS for kids
    • wireless or synched
    • limited by recption area
    • content
    • IM cell phone features
  • Smart phones
    • single device for all data and voice nees
    • e-mail access
    • SMS
    • browser
    • organizer
    • phone
  • MP3 players
    • iPods
    • Nomad Jukebox
    • Walkman Bean
    • iRiver
    • Rio Carbon
    • Creative Zen
    • Flash/HD/FM
  • Digital voice recordres
    • smartphone/pds
    • iPod addon
    • olympus DM-20 w/ USB interface
  • Video Players/recorders
    • Creative Zen vision
    • iPod w/ video
    • Archos Gmini 402
    • Smasung YEPP YH-999 PMC
  • Digital still video cameras
    • Standalones
    • Embedded/addons to other devices
    • one-time use
    • webcams
  • Pocket scanners (reader pen)
    • scan, store send
    • reads notes aloud
    • beams data
    • get immediate translations definitions
    • reading aids
    • Wizcom technologies
    • Docupen RC800
  • Digital Pen (drawing pen)
    • Logitech io2 Digital Writing System
    • TabletPC w/o the tablet
  • Security everywhere
    • fingerprint
      • Keyboards
      • jump drives
    • biometrics
    • RFID
      • Pros cons
      • inventory vs. privacy
  • Special purpose chips
    • USB drive
    • flash memory
    • fitkeys
    • dexit
    • sanDisk flashCP Cruzer
    • DRM dongle
    • IBM Soulpad
  • Wireless devices
    • mice
    • keyboards
    • presentation remotes
  • Remote control
    • Logitech Harmony
    • MyNevo
  • Game machines
    • Sony PSP was the gadget of 2005
    • "Video Games and the Future of Learning"
    • "Everything Bad is Good for You"
  • Games and Libraries
    • Gaming in Libraries blog
    • Game Primer
    • Parallel Worlds: Online Games and Digital Information Services
  • GPS
    • Stand alones
    • smart phone
    • pc-based
    • geocaching
  • What toys do your toys have?
    • memory chips
    • keyboards
    • speakers
    • skins
    • caps
    • cases
    • solar backpacks
    • ringtones
    • subscription content
  • library applications
    • marketing
      • Geocaching
      • podacsts
      • blogging
      • MySpace
    • operations
      • Inventory control / RFID
      • remote control
      • circulation of devices
      • bibliographic file management
    • communication/collaborations
      • IM
      • blogs
      • videoconferencing
      • wikis
    • learning/entertainment
      • delivery of files data
      • role of games in learning
      • search engines
      • ebooks/ejournals
      • current awareness
      • iPod use
      • catalog pages
      • pubmed for handhelds
  • What's next?
    • e-ink
    • e-paper
    • flexible displays
    • soft-hardware
      • ElekTex keyboard
    • wearable computing
      • itunes jacket
      • movie glasses
      • MP3 sunglasses
      • Head-word display
    • more games w/in libraries
      • additional tool to help librarians provide realistic simulations
      • reference librarian avatars
      • "Active Worlds" site
  • Convergence of information and connectivity
    • "Ambient Findability" by Peter Morville
  • Trends
    • convergence
    • personalization
    • customization
    • portability
    • "Save the time of the reader"
    • any time, any where, and way
  • Where to go
    • Engadget
    • Gizmodo
    • ZDNet must have list


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Thursday, March 23, 2006

CIL2006: Thursday Keynote

Planning for a Handheld Mobile Future
Megan Fox, Web Electronic Resources Librarian, Simmons College
9:00-9:45am


Note: This is the second time in a week that I've heard/read someone that "mobile" is the future. Sorry, but it's already here.
  • Planning for is no longer an option, it's a necessity
  • 1.4 billion in the world have mobile phones
  • 62% of users use SMS
  • 350 billion SMS messages per month world wide
  • Devices
    • PDAs
    • Tablets
    • iPods
    • eBook readers
    • Smart Watches
    • Blackberry
    • Smartphones
    • Gaming Devices
  • "PIN numbers" ARGH!
  • eBook readers
    • digital ink
    • less than 9oz
    • 80 books on internal memory
  • Ultra Personal Computer
    • OQO
    • Vulcan Flipstart
    • Looking to vertical markets instead of consumers
  • Ultra Mobile PC
    • Microsoft Oragami
      • WinXP Tablet
      • 7" or smaller display
      • 400x800
      • 60gb hard drive
      • WiFi Bluetooth
      • Touchpad program
        • Appropriate for fingers
        • customizable
        • onscreen thumb-based keyboard
      • New font: Cambria (Times New Roman replacement?)
  • Mobile Optomized Web
    • Web sites intended for large screens, busy, multimedia content
    • Reduce content
    • Remove graphics
    • Word wrap
    • Narrow
    • Examples
      • TV Guide
      • Google, Personalized Google
      • National Weather Service
    • Conversion
      • iyhi
      • sqeezer
      • google
      • Might loose wanted content when using 3rd party conversion
      • Can't translate flash
      • Mobile Blue
        • Flickr
      • Mobiledelicious
    • Native mobile content
      • Splash Blog
        • Moblog
      • mob5
        • hosted mobile web space
      • Blogger on the go
    • Top mobile content
      • Weather
      • Yahoo mail
      • hotmail
      • google
      • ESPN
      • Mapwuest
      • CNN
      • dining
  • Traditional Library content
    • opac (I do this with the Aurora Public Library)
      • III: AirPac
    • ebooks
    • subscription content
      • dictionaries
      • encyclopedias
      • Oxford American Dictionary
        • PDAs
        • Smartphones
    • Look on Tucows for mobile content
    • Handango
      • 240+ reference titles for smartphones
    • Handmark
      • Tools toys for a mobile generation
      • Cell phone downloads
    • Mobile Genealogy (blog)
    • Popular books
      • Overdrive
      • NetLibary
      • ebrary
    • Audible Air (Audible)
      • download recordings
    • Medical Health database vendors leading in mobile access to databases
  • Point of need answers
    • Yahoo! Go
    • AOL Mobile
    • Google Mobile
    • Types
      • Definitions
      • phone numbers
      • geographical information
    • 4info
      • SMS to 44636
      • Searching shortcuts
    • Medio
      • "answers instead of lists of links"
      • preferences, location, device to personalize results
    • Answers.com mobile interface
      • Have a librarians section
      • "pre-research market"
      • Don't want to step on librarian's toes
    • gada.be
      • mobile metasearch
      • builds search into URL
    • Search software packages being built into phones
    • SMS-based search
      • Google SMS (46645)
        • send "shortcuts" to get list of commands
      • Synfonic
      • AskMeNow
      • Yahoo! Go
        • Voice messages
      • Text alerts
        • scheduled once or ongoing
  • Reference IM
    • Typically computer to computer
    • Reference via SMS
    • Altarama
      • Converts SMS to e-mail
      • Overdue notices
    • Teleflip
      • Free txt messages
      • Cell#@teleflip.com
    • RSS
      • Talis, patron account data alerts
      • LibraryElf
    • Wake Forest, MobileU
      • voice activated commands
      • checking laundry in the dorm
    • Montclair State U, Dawgtel
    • Stephen King's Cell (I did this)
  • Other services
    • Feedalot
    • Mobdex
    • feedbeep
    • litefeeds
    • UpSnap
      • search
      • live mobile audio content
      • sports
      • faith
      • magic 8 ball
    • iPods
      • circulating shuffles
      • podcasts
      • local tours
      • ebooks
      • subway maps
      • spark notes for iPod
      • Test prep
      • iPods @ GCSU
      • All audio reserves on every iPod
      • storyhour
      • instruction sessions
    • Mobile video
      • mostly due to video iPod
      • "mobisodes" mobile episodes
      • mobitv
      • LocationFree TV
    • Guide by cell
      • Self guided tours via mobile phone
  • For library staff
    • Sirsi PocketCirc
      • Check out from anywhere
    • III's Wireless workstation
      • 10 libraries currently using
  • Glimpse of the future
    • Shopping price comparrison
    • Yahoo! Shopping (testing)
    • Froogle (testing)
    • Fandango
      • movie times, reviews, buy online
      • tickets sent to device w/ barcode
      • barcode read off of phone
    • e-version of Bonita Daily News
      • Small version
      • SMS alerts
      • video highlights
    • New business models
      • free ebook reader w/ content membership
      • ESPN phone
    • mobot
      • take pic, send in, get song
      • mobile visual search
    • Resources
  • web.simmons.edu/~fox/pda

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Friday, December 09, 2005

Gatweway Woes: Day 29

Well, I checked with Gateway again this morning regarding when I'm getting my tablet back. I contacted Teach Support via chat for the third time (the first was on 11/29 and the second was on 12/05) and they told me that they couldn't help me and I needed to send an e-mail to the general e-mail address. Talk about outrageous. When I told them that they were able to help me the last two times the tech "talked to [his] supervisor" and confirmed that Tech Support couldn't help me. I've sent the e-mail and I'm waiting for a response.

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Tuesday, November 29, 2005

Tablet woes day 20

I chatted wit Gateway tech support this morning and they said:

According to our database, your system is currently under full system diagnosis ( final ) to make sure that the issue was fixed when you recieved the system.

They suggested I call their "service team" for an ETA on getting my laptop back. A phone call later, I was told that once it's finished ("today or tomorrow") I should receive it in "3 to 5 business days." Friday would be nice but I'm thinking next week at this point.

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Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Tablet woes day 14

I finally called Gateway back to see what's up with my laptop. I was told that they received it on the 16th (it was shipped to them via DHL on the 10th) and that they started "diagnosing the problem" on the 21st. (Considering the case is cracked, I'm not sure what they need to "diagnose".)

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Thursday, November 10, 2005

Tablet woes day 3

The box for shipping my tablet back home to Gateway arived yesterday and DHL picked it up this morning. Luckily I have an office laptop I can take to the CAL conference starting this afternoon.

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Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Tablet woes day 1

Well, I'm in for another "service repair" experience. This time it's with Gateway. My TabletPC has been slowly developing a crack around the swivel hinge connecting the CPU and the monitor. I called Gateway late last night for a repair estimate and it seems that I did purchase the three year warranty on the computer so the repair will be completely covered. I did have to pay $44 for a shipping box but that's o.k. since it'll be sure to get to Gateway no worse off than it is now. They did make me give them permission to format my hard drive but I did make it clear that if they reformat my hard drive to fix a crack in the monitor casing I'd be one upset customer. (The box is scheduled to arrive at my office by the 13th.

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Thursday, April 14, 2005

Dual-boot

The trainers at BCR are getting laptops. Since I already have my Tablet and use it to train I figured I'd play with the new company one. I'm planning on making it dual-boot WindowsXP and Fedora. (It'll be my office computer so I'm not yet ready to ditch Windows completely.) If anyone out there has any warnings/suggestions for me I'd be happy to hear them. I'll be doing this the first two weeks of May so I've got prep time.

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Saturday, August 14, 2004

Service pack 2

Since this is my first full, two-day weekend in six weeks I managed to do everything I needed to do today. That leaves me with tomorrow and nothing on my to-do list. So, what do I come up with, installing WindowsXP Service Pack 2 on both my laptop and desktop. Since the laptop is a tablet and sp2 gives me way cool new features, that's the first to go under the knife.

For those wondering how I'm pulling this off without waiting for the "automatic update" feature of Windows to do this for me, you can download the 272.391MB version on the Windows XP Service Pack 2 Network Installation Package for IT Professionals and Developers page. The only difference between this one and the auto version is that the auto version only downloads the files you need for your system. This download includes everything, but only installs the files you need. So, if you're on dial-up, this is not the version you want.

I'll report on the success or failure of the installs later.

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Sunday, August 08, 2004

Tablet tales

On Friday my nine DU students turned in their case studies in Word format. I had intended to use Word's insert comments feature to make my notes on their papers and return the graded papers without ever needing to print them out. Yesterday it hit me that my TabletPC was made jsut for this. This morning on the flights from Denver to SF to Portland I took out my laptop and proceeded to grade the papers with red pen, completely electronically. Now when I send the graded papers back to my students they'll receive their papers complete with my handwritten comments, completely digitally, no dead trees required. Way cool!

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Thursday, March 11, 2004

Score!

Two full days into the conference and I'm finally told that there's free wireless in the lounge. Guess where I am now...

It was a great afternoon and a better evening. The sessions went well and we quite interesting. (o.k. I think most anything blog-related at this point is interesting.) I also had a short meeting with the Editor-in-Chief of Information Today about my next book idea. He likes it and he's passed around the proposal along to five big wigs in the library world for their input. (Sorry, can't remember any names but I recoginzed four out of the five he mentioned.) He promised to send me their responses back in the next week or two.

Dinner was an absolute blast. 14 library bloggers including The Shifted Librarian, and Chris of L.A.C.K. were there. Jenny decided to show off her Treo 600 and I think she's convinced me to get on this weekend when I inally get rid of my finally. I asked her if 'that picture' she had taken of me was going to appear on her blog. She said of course. I meant the one she took of me and my tablet. She meant the one she had taken of me just minutes earlier on her Treo. (Hey, when I'm at sea level I'm allowed on drink.)

Durring the conversation one person mentioned that during a presentation I didn't attend today someone asked if anyone was blogging this conference. The presenter did a quick search and they found this blog, specifically the entry relating to The West Wing comment from D. Scott Brandt posted last night. Man I'm gettng more press by just being here than I did four years ago when I presented. I'm starting to get a little freaked out.

A bunch of us ended up getting ice cream (yes, in DC in March) from a little shop down the street. Turns out we were being served by the 'scoop freaked.' (His term not ours.) It started out by one of our group asking "hey, is that more ice cream" pointing at another selection around the corner. His response, "no, that just looks like ice cream." The conversation, though funny, went down hill from there.

Well, some others just arrived and want me to join them. Later...

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Wednesday, March 10, 2004

Notes from the road

This entry is a long one. Since this date and time is the first I've been online since leaving for the conference I just decided to put up all the posts I've written so far all up at once. So, everything that follows for today includes posts for yesterday and today in chronological order. They are dated and time stamped individually for your convienence.


A piece of crap

03.09 10:13am
Last weekend I finally broke down and purchased a rolling computer case. (Maybe I've already mentioned that here but it's key to this story.) Yesterday I took it for a test run to the office and back and decided that I really liked it. Not exactly the right pockets in some places but I was able to quickly adjust. So today I took it with me on my trip to DC. I'm sitting at my gate and I'm now carrying my rolling computer case. I got through security, put all my stuff back into my pockets, put the laptop back into the case, set it on the floor, pulled out the telescoping handle, and one of the two bars, came apart. It looks like I have all the pieces but they do not snap back together. $135 for this damn thing (Eddie Bauer, so it's supposed to be a good bag,) and I've now got to carry it for the next four days. (Unless there just happens to be a store I can exchange it at near my hotel in downtown DC. Yeah, that'll happen.) Luckily I have the shoulder strap but I loaded this thing for bear since I didn't have to carry it. I hope that the rest of this trip goes better than how it's started.

And so it begins...

03.10 7:36am

Well, the high-speed connection in the room Is $9.95/day so but the time I settled in my room last night at 8pm I decided it wasn't worth the cost. I would have been happy to dial in to the BCR AOL account but it seems that I left my phone cord in the old laptop bag. Scratch that idea. So, no connection at the moment I figures I can write all the entries and then upload them this evening.

Flying into DC for the first time since 9.11 was a little bit interesting. It seems that no one is allowed to get up out of their seats for the last 30 minutes of the flight. Now I understand why this rule exists but why treat the capital any different from anywhere else. Yes, I understand that DC is "special" but why just not institute that rule for all flights?

I landed on time at 5pm and had a dinner scheduled for 5:30. These "dine-arounds" were put together by different hosts around a multitude of topics each night at different local restaurants. Since I got into town so late I was considering not going to this one but I figured I had to eat anyway so I got into the hotel, dumped my stuff in my room and hoofed it the mile to the restaurant, getting there at 6.30, only an our late. Turns out that only one other person showed up and after an our waiting for anyone else to show up had finally ordered. The two of us had a great Indian dinner and wonderful conversation. The big surprise was that this dinner's host, who also happened to be the organizer of the conference, never showed. I'm hoping to corner him at some point during the conference to ask what happened.

Anyway, I'm registered and waiting for the morning keynote at 9. I've left the power cord for the laptop in my room so let's see how long this battery actually lasts. (Of course, I don't want to just leave the machine on so the biggest drain on the battery will be turning it on and off whenever I need it.)

Hmmm... Maybe I should take this opportunity to work on the CSS & forms chapter. (Especially since I think my editor is manning the Neal-Schuman booth and will defninitely ask me how the book is coming along.)

Web design book update

03.10 11:22am
I just found out that my editor from Neal-Schuman is not at the conference. Oh well, I Still got 10 new pages written this morning before the keynote. Now I'm only One day behind.

"Didn't you have a tablet?"

03.10 1:40pm
I decided to try out the Windows Journal program on the tables and took notes by pen throughtout the first session. (I'll defnitely be doing that for the rest of the conference. It's really convienent and no tapping of the keyboard or worrying about mistypes. Oh, and I found a outlet that I could sit next too so the battery worries, at least for today, aren't an issue.) When the session was over I switched back to the regular laptop/keyboard to I could get some more done on the book. (I'm so glad I for the version with a full keyboard.) THe next thing I know I've got someone sitting next to me asking "Didn't you have a tablet." One spin of the screen and the tablet was back. At that point I'd drawn a crowd and spent the whole 15 minute break talking about my laptop. And after the next session. And just a miniute ago before this upcoming session. At this point I might as well be a conference presenter. (Hmmm, an idea for next year's conference?)

Advertising vs. entertainment

03.10 1:45pm
In this morning's neynot speech, Clifford Lynch mentioned something about how much entertainment was "sponsored." This immediately reminded me of a blog entry that I wanted to write Sunday night but had forgotten about. In Sunday's episode of Alias, about 10 minutes into the show Sidney and Vaughn are chasing after someone in a parking garage and she yells "The F-150" pointing to a truch they quickly commendeer to chase after the bad guys. Not five minutes later, the car chase through the parking garage over, the opening credits run and then the first commercial appears. That commercial, and one commercial in every other set for the duration of the show, is for "the new Ford F-150." Come on folks. I've heard of product placement but this steps over some sort of line in my opinion. Have them drive an F-150, fine, that's placement. Have them announce they're driving an F-150, that's the sponsor deciding the content of the show. I can't believe that the show's writers put those words into Sidney's mouth without anyinput from the folks at Ford.

Wireless found, but not useable

03.10 3:04pm
Sitting her working on the book, waiting for the next session I suddenly get the message many have been waiting for: "wireless connection found." Woo hoo! Well, I was able to connect to "Chris Home Network" but it's peer-to-peer. No outgoing conenctions. Oh well, it was a few minutes of excitement anyway.

Conferences are dangerous

03.10 3:11pm
I've already got three more ideas on what I could present on next year. Better start planning soon. I'm already booked through December of this year. I'm sure someone will be booking me for March 2005 any day now.

Web design book update

03.10 4:10pm
Five more pages done. That puts me caught up through yesterday. One more session the off to dinner then one more session (the annual fun fest on "dead technologies.") Those three events will put me down for the count so I'm done with this project for the day. However, if I can pull off 15 pages on breaks today one hopes that I can repeat the performance tomorrow. (Hey, that would even put me a day ahead of schedule.)

Conference fun

03.10 9:31pm
I'm back in my room and it's been an interesting evening. Here's the scoop.

Earlier today I figured out that I didn't pack the power plug to recharge my PDA. Walking to dinner I turned it on to check on the battery level to find the startup screen. The damn thing had done a hard reboot and everything, including my calendar for this conference and directions to the dinners was gone. Not a big deal overall but remember, this is the NEW PDA. The one that I just excahnged the old one for two-something weeks ago. I'm starting to think that when I exchange this one (yes, this one goes on Saturday when I get home) I'm going with a different brand or at least a different model. Anyone have any suggestions?

After the last session of the afternoon I doublechecked the location of the dinner I was attending. And, since this particular "topic" dinner didn't have a "host" and since I was the first on the list, the reservation had been made under my name. Luckily I didn't have to do much as everyone seemed to converse well with each other and had no need for me to do anything as the "host". I was the one who talked the waiter into diing the checks for the 13 of us into three and even though that took a bit of schmoosing, it wasn't that much work.

On my way to the last seesion of the night, (I'll get to that in a minute,) I was stopped in the hall by D. Scott Brandt, the "host" who didn't show last night. He apologized profusely. I told him that I was impressed he recognized me without my nametag. He admitted later that he rembered my name but had to look me up on Google for the face.

The last (and only) evening session was titled "Dead and Emerging Technologies." This is an annual pannel discussion that, although on a serious topic, almost anything goes when it comes to what the speakers say. Irreverant is the best way to put it and the laughs hardly stop for the whole hour and a half. At one point, one of the pannelists is declaring that library cards are dead or should be shortly. At that point she brings up her next PowerPoint slide and says "except for this guy." I look up and there's my name along with images from my library card collection. She had no idea I was in the crowd and when she says my name I oblige with "I'm right here." My guess is that when she was looking up "library cards" in Google she found the site. She's promised to send me a copy of her presentation.

After that person's presentation Scott mentioned that I was one of the other people he'd seen with a laptop floating around the conference. (Referring back to something he talked about in his intro. One of the pannelists then spoke up and corrected "Michael has a Tablet." She's the one who asked me about it after the first session.

Last but not least, I'm now sitting in my hotel room waiting for a tech support call. I tried to connect to the high-speed connection in my room to read my e-mail and post all these items but it doesn't want to work. I have a connection but my browser's telling me that it can't find any sites. Sounds like a DNS problem. (Hmmm, that sounds familiar.) I call texh support and after the front line guy had me tru to go to cnn.com he decided that this problem warrented an "escalation" to a real tech support person. Go figure.

Tried a reboot and I'm in...

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Friday, February 27, 2004

PDA update, tech-support hell

Got my replacement PDA today along with a 128MB SD card which can be read in both my laptop and my PDA. (This is a 'solution' to the no floppy issue.) Trouble is, the card works find in the PDA but the laptop keeps telling me it's not formatted nor can it be formatted. I called PNY's tech support and they were "unable to find [my] laptop in their database." When last we left the call the support guy was going to try to find more information and call me back. Here's me with finger's crossed. (Worst comes to worst, I return the card and try another brand.)

A few hours later the guy called back with a non-answer: "There's no reason the card shouldn't be working in your tablet." Oh, and he checked to make sure I was inserting it right-side up. Anyway, he's 'esclated' the problem to their 'falsh experts' and they'll give me a call back on Monday.

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