Archive for October 15th, 2006

Adventures with the Nokia E62 – Where’s the dang WiFi?

I just got a brand new Nokia E62 smartphone from Cingular. It’s been a while since I had a full-featured smartphone – my last one was a Kyocera 6035 back in 2001.

I’ll be writing about my exploration of this new generation device as I go, but first I already have a major complaint for Cingular -

WHERE’S THE DANG WI-FI?

I can swear that when I looked at Nokia’s site for information on the E62 originally a couple of weeks ago it said that the E62 was equipped with WiFi (or WLAN, as Nokia calls it), as is the E61 that is sold in other (non-US) markets. But the phone doesn’t, in fact, have WiFi, and it’s been widely reported that the main difference between the E61 and the E62 is the neutering of the connectivity options.

I can only assume that Cingular and perhaps other carriers asked for removal of the ability to use high-speed connectivity that’s not carrier-provided. This only points out once again how totally broken the US model of leaving control of the wireless market in the hands of the carriers is. The internet service providers don’t dictate what features my computers have – thank goodness! And I don’t buy my cars from the people who build the roads. So why should AT&T and the behemoths that the Baby Bells have become decide what phones I can use on their networks, and drive the (lack of) technological development in those devices?

In this respect the US lags far behind other parts of the world (like Europe, Japan and India) in the technology we use for wireless communication.

Other initial reactions to the E62 – the screen is bright and resolution is good, and the navigation controls seem easy to use. One problem I’ve noticed is that when I hold it up to my ear to talk on the phone, the screen rubs on the side of my face and gets smudged – it came with a wired headset, but I think I’ll get a bluetooth headset for it.

The speakerphone is loud and has good fidelity, which is great.

The E62 is a little big and heavy (though nowhere near the brick that the Kyocera was), so I’m not sure how to carry it if I’m not wearing a jacket with big pockets.

Technorati Tags: , , ,

[Educause06] InCommon Federation Panel

I finished off my time in Dallas with an appearance on a panel titled Leveraging Your Existing Campus Systems to Access Partner Resources: Federated Identity Management and Tales of Campus Participation (whew – now there’s a mouthful). The topic of the panel is how the InCommon federation is making it easier for universities and vendors of web-based services to work together to get to single-sign-on types of authentication and to arrange for the exchange of information in those contexts.

The panel was chaired by the always delightful Tracy Mitrano and panelists included representatives from Penn State, University of Maryland Baltimore County, and me.

I haven’t been involved directly with our work in leveraging Shibboleth authentication software or our participation in InCommon, but I was well coached by Bob Morgan and Nathan Dors, who have been doing a lot of heavy lifting on these efforts.

We’ve used InCommon to ease the deployment of Cdigix’s CTrax music download service (replacing Napster at the UW this year); to authenticate UW users to Washington State’s Combined Fund Drive (a charitable giving program that uses a web service called CreateHope to power its online presence) and to hook the Chemistry Department up with WebAssign, a service they use for managing homework for some courses.

Other universities have used InCommon for other vendors, and one of the lessons here is that when dealing with vendors the work that’s done by an initial institution working with a vendor can make it much easier for other universities to work with that vendor if they’re all working within the federation.

I was surprised to see that all the examples we saw were about universities working with vendors, and that none of them were about universities working with each other on collaborative efforts. Maybe we’ll see more of that in the future.

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,


subscribe

Pages

Latest tweets

interesting links

What I’m listening to

 

October 2006
M T W T F S S
« Sep   Nov »
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.