Microsoft Partner Program

Well, sorry for not posting in a while but this sort of thing really gets my back up I’m afraid.
You see, I was just contemplating signing up for the Microsoft Action Pack, for 200 quids this gets you a years subscription to lots of microsoft software, including Windows Server 2008, Exchange 2007, Vista Premium etc etc, good value. There are some restrictions however. As I was contemplating upgrading my Windows Server 2003 and Exhange 2003 server this seemed like a ideal time to ‘enroll’.

Anyways, from my iMac I decided to start the enrollment process, first step is to sign in with a silly microsoft windows Live ID, Sounds really cool huh?! but it’s not, it was Microsofts attempt to get everybody to have a single sign in account for everything, kinda pants really. They are still hanging on to it for now and as there seems to be no way round it I had to begin the process.

I already have a ‘Live ID’ which I use for MSN Messenger (or whatever fancy new name it has these days, no doubt having ‘Live’ in the title) so I proceeded to sign in with that, all good so far until I clicked ’sign-in’

BOOM! “Browser Support Warning”

Problem Encountered
You are using an unsupported Internet browser. Please use the most recent non-beta version of Internet Explorer to access this page. If you continue you will likely experience performance issues. Please download this supported version or proceed to the PMC page you requested.

How damn annoying, I tried with both Safari and Firefox, no go. So I either go find a Windows PC and try again or just forget it??

Upgrading the OS on my Blackberry to version 4.5

As I write this RIM (the company who owns Blackberry) have not officially released OS (operating system) version 4.5 yet. However there have been some beta/test versions floating around the interwebs for several weeks now.
My Blackberry Curve 8320 came with OS version 4.2, looks like there was never a 4.3 released for it and 4.4 has been skipped for some reason? So I decided to go searching for the latest OS for my 8320 which turns out to be 4.5.0.42 beta version. I grabbed the file, backed up my Blackberry and upgraded it!

I’m impressed. The new OS has some really nice touches, some of which are:-

  • Much improved layout of email messages.
  • Ability to connect to more than one calendar.
  • I can now use the camera for recording video too.
  • Much nicer web browser.
  • Nice improvements to the calendar interface.
  • Media player is able to stream video (not got this one working yet via wi-fi)
  • Many other small enhancements.

I’m sure there has been a lot of changes behind the scenes too. Once such change which I’ve not been able to test yet is the ability to view html emails. This requires either BIS 4.5 or BES 4.5, both of which are just around the corner I hear.

The only problem I noticed with this beta version so far is that it made my phone go low on memory on one occasion. I removed the battery and all was well again. Perhaps I’ll notice this one again in a few days.

Top 5 reason why I love my Blackberry Curve.

My last two phones have both been Blackberry’s. I’ve tried Treo & Windows Mobile devices in the past butMy Blackberry Curve 8320 neither have given me that warm feeling inside that you get from Blackberry.
So, here are the top 5 reasons why I love my Blackberry.

  1. It does not crash or lock up. Other phones I have tried and read about have a habit of crashing, locking up, becoming very slow to use etc. The Blackberry very, very, very, very rarely does any of these things!
  2. One handed operation. There are countless times when I need to quickly access my information with one hand. When I tried Windows Mobile devices with a stylus in the past I really did not think it would be an issue but for me its a deal breaker! Being able to check your email, browse a web page etc with one hand is very important. It allows you to do other tasks with your free hand! It also makes you appear to be not actually checking your email or reading a RSS feed etc whilst waiting for a service pack to install etc. Using the phone with both hands looks like you are totally engrossed in it to your customer.
  3. The Blackberry belt clip. Being able to take my phone from my case with one hand and have it automatically on, unlocked and ready for action is sweet! Putting it back in the case with one hand and having it lock is equally sweet. Taking it out, opening a web page and then putting it back whilst it loads the page and carrying on with other tasks around you is double sweet. This is all down to the clever magnet in the Blackberry case, simple but very effective.
  4. The Blackberry trackball. When I moved from the Blackberry 8700g with a side wheel to the Blackberry Curve 8320 with its cute little pearl ball, I was not sure I would like it but I can tell you now, I do. Having the ball in the middle of the phone allows you to use the phone with either hand. With the 8700g I was more or less forced to use my right hand, as the scroll wheel was beneath my thumb. Now my right hand is free to put the kettle on, type on a keyboard or use a mouse, whilst my left hand goes about its work on the Blackberry. The clever ball allows you to scroll in any direction too, with the wheel you had to hold down another key to scroll sideways.
  5. It’s secure. Blackberry has to be, the government use them, the FBI use them, even Madonna uses one. With its secure triple des end to end encryption, remote wipe when connected to a BES server its the phone I’d be most happy and gutted to loose at the same time!

Where are you Mike?

Today I received my Bluetooth GPS ‘keyring’, a Freedom Bluetooth Mini Keychain 2000 GPS which I purchased online from Maplin UK- I ordered it on Saturday and it arrived this morning, Tuesday - free delivery as well, none to shabby I’ll tell you.

My Blackberry Curve does not have GPS built-in, at the time I purchased the phone I had to choose between built-in Wi-Fi, 8320 or GPS, 8310 I chose the Wi-Fi model and have been extremely pleased with the phone since.

I read about the Freedom GPS unit and thought I’d order one and put it to use. There are times when I am out and about with my work, don’t have my TomTom with me and need to get directions to some place, customers etc. Or I’d like to take a photograph on my phone and have it geotagged with embedded location details.

The GPS is really small and picks a signal up on my key ring in the car ignition which is great.

I had an application on my TyTn II Smartphone (which I have just listed on Ebay!) that plotted your location in real time on to google maps, using the inbuilt GPS and sending your location back via GPRS. I was very pleased to find there are similar applications for the Blackberry. One of which is InstaMapper, I downloaded the small java program and installed it this evening. It seems very simple to use and does exactly what I want and best of all it’s free. See the map below for my location.

GPS tracking powered by InstaMapper.com


Wardrive May 2008 results are in…

They have been independantly counted and verified, and I am pleased to announce…..

blah blah,

Yes that’s right, six months have passed since myself and Morgan went on our twice yearly outing driving round the streets of Lancaster, Morecambe and Heysham seeing how many wireless network devices we can find and then displaying the results here for your geeky viewing pleasure.
We take the same route each time we do the wardrive wireless survey and I’m always surprised at the vast amount of devices we detect on or 40 minute outing.

This time we detected a total of 1957 devices with only 236 having no form of encryption enabled.
On our last outing in November we picked up 413 networks using BTHomeHub, this has only risen to 427 six months later but the big mover is Sky Brodband which has had a large increase from 189 last November to 335 .

 

October 2005 Encrypted 52% Total detected 357
May 2006 Encrypted 61% Total detected 752
November 2006 Encrypted 70% Total detected 1041
November 2007 Encrypted 85% Total detected 1690
May 2008 Encrypted 88% Total detected 1957 

Most popular channel: 1, followed by 11 then 6. (no change since Nov 07)

Most popular SSID: BTHomeHub with 427 detected
Second most popular SSID: Sky with 335 detected (56% increase since Nov 07)

Most unusual SSID’s: ‘bollockchops3′ & ‘Petiatoskovakazakina1503′

 

So there we go until next time, see you in November!

Blog moved.

Well I finally got my finger out and moved my blog to another server/host. I’ve a few other blogs that I need to do this for and this was kind of a test. As such I need to move some other files over in order to complete the change. Hold in there folks, it might be a rocky ride!

MythTV upgraded.

I’ve not written much about my home mythtv system recently, it’s been running pretty well for a while now. It’s not taken over from the trusty Tivo yet but that’s partly my problem I guess. I’ve not configured the remote control to work in an intuitive way with Myth just yet, so to get the best out of it you still need to use the keyboard, obviously this is not practical from several feet away, yes I could get a wireless one I hear you cry but ever time I think about doing this I realise I should get to it and fix the remote config.

Anyway, the reason for this post was to let you know I have upgraded the Myth box from Ubuntu 6.10 to Ubuntu 7.10 which has taken MythTV from 0.20.2 version to 0.21. That does not look like a significant jump but it does bring loads of fixes and some big new features, the main one is ‘multirec’. This allows you to record several digital channels with one tuner card, as long as these channels are on the same multiplex you are good to go. Of course your Myth box has to have enough horse power to handle this to. So, at the moment I’ve configured mine to record 4 channels at once and will see how it goes. Watch this space :)

Here we go with another mobile phone rant/rave post!

Or a review & comparison of the Blackberry 8700g, TyTN II (Windows Mobile) and Blackberry Curve 8320

Yes, you’ve asked for it and now you’ve finally got it, one of those techie type posts about a mobile phone or to be more precise three mobile phones, (or cellphones if you are reading this from the other side of the Atlantic).

Blackberry 8700gRegular readers will have noticed that I like my Blackberry, it has served me well for the last 18 months of my contract with T-Mobile. It’s used daily for checking my calendar, reading emails and the occasional bit of web browsing. Its a Blackberry 8700g and by todays standards looks a bit on the retro side, however drop it and it would probably bounce right back up in to your hand with barely a scratch on its tough casing. It’s been super reliable for me and I think it’s locked up once in all that time when I had to remove the battery to get it working again.

However it lacks one thing, no make that two things, a camera and Wi-Fi. So at the end of my contract period with T-Mobile I was offered a free upgrade. T-Mobile do not do a Blackberry with Wi-Fi and a camera, also known as the Curve 8320 but they did do a rather snazzy Windows Mobile device called an MDA Vario III, this is also known as a HTC TyTN II (yet another snappy name!)

TyTN IIThis phone seemed to have everything, even 3G (read fast Internet, video calling) and a built in GPS. I read some reviews on it and it came out well, very well indeed. So I called the good folks at T-Mobile and they said if I stayed with them for another 18 months they would send me this phone for free, well actually “£5.49 postage Sir”! How could I refuse. A couple of days later and this little beauty arrived at the door!

It weighs about 3 times as much as my Blackberry 8700g and packs so much in to a small device, even a fairly large keyboard which slides out and tilts! I was in geek heaven :)

It didn’t last long though, as soon as the initial WOW factor had worn off I realised the battery would only last just over 1 day with fairly conservative usage. The next annoyance is the power on button, its almost like the designers went out of their way to make a button so unobtrusive, so hard to press accidentally that they in fact made it near impossible to turn the phone on. I guess I’d just got used to taking my Blackberry out of its case and it automatically switching on as it brushed past the magnet in the case.

Ok but putting that aside it’s got a camera, so that ought to be good? In theory yes but this camera is like nothing else you have used. Firstly the delay from pressing the button to the shutter taking the photo is probably between 2 and 3 seconds, I kid you not. Next the actual image you see on the screen is so blurred by motion the subject you are photographing has to be absolutely stationary, stationary as in a building or tree with no wind. I’m not exaggerating here, the camera is next to useless, sorry but it is.

On to 3G, well here is something that seems to work, I don’t have 3G coverage at home (something I was disappointed to find out when I got the phone - c’mon T-Mobile, lets have some better coverage 0.5 miles south of Lancaster city centre, please) but I did try it out from several locations, web browsing seemed fairly snappy, apart from Pocket IE, which is a story in itself, 3G video calling worked fine.
I’m sorry but the annoyances go on, the next big one is the actual interface itself, in this case its called Windows Mobile 6 Professional. I’m sure you’ve seen the nice screenshots in the advertisements whilst reading the Telegraph or staring at the opposite wall of one of London’s underground tube stations (just think instead of reading that book on the tube you could be putting the finishing touches to an important proposal or tidying up a spreadsheet for this mornings meeting!?), indeed it does look pretty and very much like Windows itself of course but thats where the appeal for me ended.

It’s just so damn ‘clunky’ and cumbersome in everyday use. Simple things like looking up a contact in the address book and dialing it are no longer a one handed experience as they are on the Blackberry. You either have to get the stylus out and start prodding around on the screen, risk doing it with your finger nail and easily mis pressing something or try to navigate around the interface with the scroll wheel and keys. You could pop out the hidden keyboard but this is certainly a two handed operation.

Then there are the occasional freezes and frequent slow downs of the device. It comes with all the quirks of a windows PC but with a phone bolted on too. Suffice to say it didn’t take me long to start looking on Ebay to see how much I might be able to get for it and to find something to replace it!

I’d decided I needed something with a full qwerty keyboard that is not hidden or needs sliding out. It must have a camera, Wi-Fi and be able to syncronise over the air with my Exchange 2003 server.

Blackberry Curve 8320Enter the Blackberry Curve 8320, this was a similar form factor to my 8700g but included Wi-Fi and a camera, no 3G but that’s no great loss. Unfortunately T-Mobile in the UK do not sell this model, the only provider that does is Orange. I wasn’t about to switch to them as I’d just signed for another 18 months with T-Mobile.

I contacted RIM to see if they sell unlocked devices, “NO” was the answer. Back to Ebay then and I found somebody in the UK selling the Blackberry 8320 locked to Orange. A little investigation and I found I could get this unlocked, so I placed my order and received the phone.

I’ve been using it now for about 2 weeks since I got it unlocked and it’s superb! The built in camera seems to take good pictures and its so much more responsive than the TyTN. The Blackberry interface is very responsive and in my opinion is laid out in a much more logical fashion. I’ve not had any lockups or slowdowns on it either. The only criticism I have is that the radio receiver for the cellular network does not seem as sensitive as the one in the 8700g.

It works fine with my Exchange 2003 server and Blackberry Enterprise Server (free express edition), I’m able to book appointments on my calendar when at a customers and have everything synced without messing with any cables or bluetooth. It has voice dialing - no extra program required as with the Windows Mobile device and so far has been rock solid reliable.

All 3Its a slightly smaller device than the Blackberry 8700g, fits nicer in the palm and the styling is much more recent!
If you have got a Blackberry and are in the UK and need it unlocking, use the contact form, I may be able to help.

Wardrive - November 2007.

Firstly appologies for the late post! I intended to post this the day after we did this wardrive but time slipped by and I never got round to it.
The last wardrive I did (or wireless network survey if you want the ‘posh’ name) was back in November 2006, I aim to do one every 6 months but missed out on the May 2007 one and decided to just do it 1 year later. So here are the juicy stats and pictures.

October 2005 Encrypted 52% Total detected 357
May 2006 Encrypted 61% Total detected 752
November 2006 Encrypted 70% Total detected 1041
November 2007 Encrypted 85% Total detected 1690

Most popular channel: 1, followed by 11 then 6.

Most popular SSID: BTHomeHub with 413 detected
Second most popular SSID: Sky with 189 detected

Most unusual SSID’s: ‘Cheeky_your_Stealing_My_Internet’ & ‘gogetbrianpotter’

Overview Here is the plot of the entire route. It’s the same route I do every time, probably about 7 miles round trip, through the centre of Lancaster, on to Morecambe not forgetting to take in a small part of picturesque Heysham and back home via Torrisholme Road.

As you can see the entire route is covered in access points.

LancasterHere is a close up of the Lancaster section. The loop you see at the centre of the image is the A6, it’s actually a one way road through Lancaster in a clockwise direction.

 

Morecambe Here is the Morecambe and small part of Heysham section of the route. Not much to report here apart from the almost constant coverage of wireless devices.

A couple of  things which do stand out is the increase each year of the number of secure networks.

Also BT are contributing a large amount to the number of networks, with them now ‘owning’ almost 25% of the detected networks, this has risen from last years figure of 16% (combined from BTHomeHub and BTVOYAGER ssid’s Nov 2006).

MythTV says I have TV guide data until 2038? cool!

Of course its not true though, apparently it’s a bug in the EIT guide data which is sent with the digital TV signal. Some how it  sends bogus data which confuses MythTV and makes it think it has far more guide data than it should have. Normally EIT data in the UK has the coming 8 days guide information.

There is an easy fix, connect to your backend mysql and ‘connect mythconverg;’ this should display something like:-

mysql> connect mythconverg;
Reading table information for completion of table and column names
You can turn off this feature to get a quicker startup with -A

Connection id:    679
Current database: mythconverg
Next issue the command:-

delete from program where starttime > date_add(curdate(),interval 14 day);

And it’s done. Make the interval greater than the amount of TV guide data you know you *should* have, I could have probably got away with 9 days here. Anyway, all looks good now.

Web 2.0, what is it all about?!

Quick one this I promise. Just what is it with Web 2.0? I mean where did Web 1.0 or 1.9.9 end and Web 2.0 begin?
At least to me it does not make sense. How can you put a version number on this? Have a read of this interview with Mr WWW, Tim Berners-Lee, about 2/3rds down. If anybody should know…..

The Leopard is Free!

ROAAAR, GROOOWWWL, meow? Well whatever noise Leopards make, Apple have now released their long awaited update to Tiger, OSX. The current version is 10.5, apparently it was delayed in order to give Apple and the right honourable Mr Jobs time to get the iPhone well and truly out of the Cupertino door. Anyway the point of this post was to tell you I have upgraded my iMac from 10.4.9 to the all new and shiny
10.5, Leopard!

The upgrade pretty much went without a hitch, performance seems very similar to Tiger for me, I’m running a 1.83GHz (yes the 0.03 makes a difference!) Intel Core Duo iMac, with 2GB under the hood. One oddity which kind of inspired me to post this update to my blog was the behaviour of Finder, OSX’s version of ‘My Computer’, for those on the ‘other side’.
I’ll try and explain. Assuming you already have a Finder window open somewhere, lets say it is buried beneath other windows on your desktop, with Tiger - OSX 10.4, all you had to do was one click on the Finder icon in the dock and it would magically appear on top of all your other windows. Well with Leopard, one click on the Finder icon and all that seems to happen is the Finder toolbar, across the top of the screen becomes in focus. A further click is needed to bring the most recent Finder window to the surface?
I’m assuming this is intentional, or perhaps it is some odd bug with my system? I have not rebooted since the install, I’ll sign off and do just that now, expect an update if anything changes!

AOL and Belkin woes!

I just had to put fingers to keyboard to bring this to you. If you are with AOL and thinking of going to a wireless setup, please do yourself a favour and avoid a Belkin wireless router like the plague!
Today I had the misfortune of wasting more than an hour trying to convince a Belkin F5D 7632-4 wireless router to connect itself to an existing AOL broadband connection.
Although the ADSL sync light came on, the CHAP/PPP login light remained red, looking in the router logs revealed a “CHAP Authentication failure”.
Of course my first thought was that the existing AOL login and password was incorrect, however connecting the BT USB modem back to the PC I was able to login fine with the details which refused to work with the router.
I should point out at this stage I normally create a new login/username, or ‘Screen name’ in AOL speak for the router to establish its connection to AOL. However due to some very strange problems with the PC and AOL software I could not get to the AOL page to create the new screen name, so I decided to use an existing but un-usued screen name.
No amount of trying, checking and double checking would allow me to get past the CHAP failure.
In despair I decided to call the Belkin support line. Syed of Belkin advised me to call AOL and get the password changed and all would work. Despite me telling him I could login fine with the screen name and password as it was now with the AOL software. He remained adamant that this would fix it.
So thats what I did, and do you know what - he was right! Amazing but true.

Mobile data access?

Hey, long time no see huh!? Well as usual I have been busy with ’stuff’ and just not got round to updating this. I am amazed at some blogs I see which are updated *at least* once a day, how do the owners get time?
Anyway for a change I am typing this entry using my Blackberry, on a slow train back to Lancaster from London. The subject that got me to post this was about mobile access to the internet, websites, email and all that - OR - rather the lack of it!
Of all the places we need access to our ‘online lives’ the train is surely one of the biggest. We are forbidden to use our mobile phones on aircraft so that’s an easy one, it’s obviously not safe to type an email whilst driving, but on the train that’s where it is so easy and a great place to catch up on emails, check some websites etc. Yet it’s not easy to keep a gprs data connection for any length of time on a train, at least not for me!
I’m sure it’s being worked on (I’m not talking about wi-fi here, I realise some train companies offer that now) its just a matter of time before we have our very own mobile pico cells on the old fashioned choo choo train. So lonf for now…..