Nokia LD-4W unboxing
I lost the LD-3W that came with my N800 Navigation kit on one of my trips, I just forgot it on the dash of a rental car. So here is the unboxing of the fancy new LD-4W from mobileplanet.com.
The box front
and back
and then the contents of inside
. And here is all the stuff
the karabiner that it comes with is a joke, brittle crappy plastic
the device itself is awesome it is a perfect size and the addition of the hole allows you to actually use it with a suction cup and not have it awkwardly around like the old style. 
. It has soft rubber on the back so it does not slide around and uses the standard 2.5mm charging cable that most Nseries devices now use.
Got a N95-3 today
I wanted to share the list of applications and setting I have done so far for my brand new N95 today.
Installed: WorldMate for weather Nokia Maps Nokia Map Loader downloaded NH, MA and CA to my 2GB card Shozu Conversation Handy Taskman Sport Tracker Google Mail Mobile Google Maps Setup GooSync to get my calendar, the database name is “Calendar” and use the other generic settings. Synced with iSync to the Mac address book
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Mobile Social Networking : MoMoBoston September 17th
Thanks to the host (Orange Labs) and organizers of Mobile Monday Boston for the chance to attend a mobile social networking panel last night. I wanted to just write a few of my notes.
- Mobile Phones are great social networking tools for a variety of reasons such as they are always with you, are key content creators (camera, microphone, keypad), have access to your location and make it easy to get your attention
- Nobody mentioned 3G at all, everyone mentioned facebook ( I just created a momo boston facebook group )
- Paying for your shortcode is expensive
- The four wireless carriers in the US continue to control distribution
Event details here
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Nokia CA-100 USB to Nokia charger
I got a Nokia CA-100 charger from Expansys via MobilePlanet today. It was kind of expensive at 41 US dollars, converted from the 18 GBP.
Look at all the devices it can charge for me from any USB port I can get my hands on. This will be a most welcome addition to my laptop bag.

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Google Earth Store
Who knew there was a Google Earth Store where they sold cool stuff like the Trackstick II. With it you can upload your track like I have been doing with the Nokia Sport Tracker to Google Earth via a kml file. It can also provide you with the GPX file you need to link with your camera photos to your location and automatically save the location in the photo itself. The Google Earth/Keyhole team continues to impress me.
Update: The Trackstick II requires Windows to export your files. That is kind of lame given the outputs are all open formats.
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Location Based Services for Mobile devices
I attended my first MoMo Boston event this week, the topic was location based services and maybe because it was in a classroom I had the natural urge to take notes so here they are.
My takeaway was that location based services on your mobile phone have been stuck in the same place for 3 years. When I had my Nokia 6820 from AT&T there was an awkward wap site where you could put in a friends mobile number and through an opt-in process subscribe to their cell tower based location. You could then pick a friend from your list and search for a restaurant in-between both of your current locations. This application would have been a great demo even today at such an event. We have not progressed very far.
The presenters were all good. uLocate presented their where.com GPS widgets. They were pitching their platform for Location Based Services so shared their pain in dealing with the individual carriers, phone operating system diversity and testing of location based services.
Skyhook shared some numbers about their coverage, they have mapped 18 million wifi access points and have about 70% of the US population mapped. Ryan said they had some N800 code working, I hope that they enable Maemo Mapper for Skyhook with a Loki app.
The event itself was great, the classroom was filled. There were more Mac’s than PC’s so I fit right in with mine. 7 minutes for a presentation was a good amount of time and Jeff Glass did great as the moderator.
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Nokia Media Transfer for a Mac
Nokia Europe released a N-series Mac app to transfer music AND pictures from your phone to iTunes and iPhoto! Previously it was only for the N91 that could play music from iTunes. Your phone connected with bluetooth can show up as a camera in iPhoto to transfer pictures from and you can fill your phone any % you want of random songs from your iTunes library when connected.
This is a Macintosh week, as I am swapping my HP tablet and MacBook Pro on and off every work week so I can play with both operating systems. A new version of Twitterific and the Nokia app today were great Mac additions.
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Nokia Navkit/Maps and Maemo Mapper and Google Maps Mobile
I arrived in San Juan, Puerto Rico and needed to get to the other side of the 100 mile island to the HP Plant in Aguadilla. I was already familiar with the roads near the plant but getting out of San Juan and across the island in a rental car was another matter. The map that Avis provided was in English (a plus) and that was all I had provided to me.
I did however pack my new N800 Navigation kit, as I sat in my cool blue Chevy Malibu I attached the horn looking mount to the windshield and fired up the n800. Oh crap there are not maps of Puerto Rico included! I could have checked before I left but other things were on my mind. Ah well I used the Avis map to navigate out of the city and onto Route 22 a road with many tolls that went directly across the north coast of the island to my destination.
As I drove across the island I thought to try the Nokia Maps application on my N80. One of the cool things about the N800 nav kit is that the GPS is a bluetooth model that works with other devices. It connected right away and started to download maps via GPRS! I had roads in Puerto Rico abit on a small screen. I was in business and was confident in my location and where I was going. I was a little bored so I thought why not try out the turn by turn navigation option but I knew already that you had to pay to enable it. I asked for a route and it connected over the network, when you click start navigation a prompt to purchase shows up. It actually offers you a few subscription options such as 1 day, 7 days and 1 year and 3 years. I chose the 7 day option for 11$ USD! Voice guides were downloaded and I was in turn by turn navigation mode, nice.
Now the screen on the N80 is small. This led me to attempt to get some sort of maps on the N800 and load up Maemo Mapper. Now this grey market program can connect to the same Bluetooth GPS and downloads maps from a URI to Google, Microsoft or any other map provider. This is not entirely okay with the copyright restrictions on the maps but was downloading maps through another bluetooth connection to my N80 and on the windscreen. Score update.
Now I already know the few roads around Aguadilla and the North East corner of the island so cruising around with the N800 works great for a few days.
On Friday evening I made the trek back to San Juan. And started right off with Nokia Maps, at first it told me that it was back in an unlicensed state! I attempted to buy another license and it correctly told me that it was already licensed and started to work again. It was an easy ride back across the island. No points awarded since Maps crashed the phone when I attempted to redial a call from my bluetooth headset. I am still impressed that it tried, this little device was connected to a bluetooth GPS, downloading maps and route information from a GPRS connection as well as making phone calls back to the US, all of this in the Caribbean ocean and 1,600 miles from home.
Back in San Juan and near the aeropuerto. I needed to find the Courtyard Marriot where I was staying. Hmm Nokia Maps has no POI database in San Juan, I did a search for Marriott and it returned a few hotels in Florida (only 900 miles away) and even a few in Boston! How useless is that. Okay we have even more technology here. I called the hotel first and got some directions that I could follow. I also fired up Google Maps mobile on the N80 to find the hotel address. It worked as perfect as a Java app on an S60 device can first by prompting me to allow it to access the network and then by letting me triple tap the hotel name in. This is where it got really wacky. The addresses in Puerto Rico are in a mix of Spanish and English, so the Hotel shows its address like 7031 Boca… but Nokia maps could not find it. Never mind that in this area of San Juan near the big casinos there are a bunch of one way and confusing streets. I eventually wound up at the Hotel from the directions on the phone as none of the devices were any strong help except Google Maps!
I can’t believe how much stuff actually worked (like Nokia Maps and Google Maps) and how much at the same time I had traditional methods like paper maps and phone calls to actually get myself around. It was nice to have lots of options.
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Traveling with my Nokia N800 and N80
I took my N800 to Puerto Rico this week. It worked out great, I was able to jump on open wifi and use GPRS all over the island. Once online I could check gmail, facebook, twitter, and forums all without lugging and opening up a laptop. It also was great for maps and navigation but that is a story in itself.
The highlights was making my first Gizmo call home when I had no mobile coverage. I did have wifi that worked best in the bathroom of all places in the room.
On the plane home I checked out the pictures I took with the N80 on the screen by popping the miniSD card into the n800. When I did not grab the N800 I used google mail, widsets and shozu on the N80, I continue to be impressed with the N80. If only the networks I use had 3G coverage and used the same frequency as Europe. . .
The only camera I carried was my N80 which made it a truly mobile communication device providing calls, pictures, navigation, information and even sent a video up to youtube while standing there outside Castillo de San Felipe del Morro.
The only gripe is that the battery life could be better! This has always been the case but it really hurts when you are relying on it for so many things. It continues to be nice to only need one power adapter for most of my mobile devices the list of: N80, N800, BH-800 headset and LD-3W GPS all use the new 2.5mm Nokia jack so one car adapter for them all. I can’t wait for the CA-100 to ship so I can even suck power from any USB port ;)
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