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	<title>Online shared intelligence &#187; nokia N810</title>
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	<link>http://www.onshi.com</link>
	<description>like tears in the rain...</description>
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		<title>Back thanks to the MiFi?</title>
		<link>http://www.onshi.com/2009/06/back-thanks-to-the-mifi/</link>
		<comments>http://www.onshi.com/2009/06/back-thanks-to-the-mifi/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 06 Jun 2009 03:01:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Carlos Caballero</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[desktop tools]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gadgetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nokia N810]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[convergence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MiFi]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.onshi.com/?p=66</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The MiFi is not a revolutionary concept, or a totally new product. But I tell you, it will revolutionize the way people like me work. Constant connectivity in a computer with true computer ergonomics is now a reality<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2009/06/back-thanks-to-the-mifi/">Back thanks to the MiFi?</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have to admit it&#8230; I have a major problem with discipline. This statement comes just in case you haven&#8217;t yet noticed the huge gaps in time that separate some of my postings in this blog. </p>
<p>The fact is, I need to enable sudden, serendipitous posting, or this blog won&#8217;t get anywhere. Because I have twenty things to write about each day, but I just don&#8217;t stay put too long behind a desk (and when I do, I have a zillion work obligations to wrap-up). In Airports, traveling in the car (my wife drives most of the time), in coffee stores&#8230; that&#8217;s were I need to have access to the blog (Otherwise, I will just write a note in a piece of paper and NEVER write it on the computer).</p>
<p>The phone? Nope, too small, too hard to type. The computer? Yes, sometimes, if I have access and am comfortable (as right now, traveling north along the California coast, my wife driving and Satie&#8217;s music cranking). The Nokia N810 tablet? MOST certainly, all I need is access (the N810 and the wireless portable keyboard fit in a large pocket – and at 265 pounds of weight, believe me, my pockets are already huge). So, all I need is access. Not any more: I got a <a title="Search Verizon for info on the MiFi" href="http://search.verizon.com/?tp=r&amp;rv=r&amp;q=mifi">MiFi</a> today.</p>
<p>In a nutshell:</p>
<ul>
<li>The size of three credit cards glued together back-to-back</li>
<li>A wireless hot spot that goes with you wherever you go (like now, on the 405 in Ventura, many miles away from any place where I have ever connected from, in the car, at 80 mph)</li>
<li>Up to five computers or PDA&#8217;s at a time can connect to it by just sharing a password</li>
<li>Speed? I would say 5 or 6 times faster than an iPod connecting via 3G.</li>
<li>Cost? Verizon service, barebones $40/Month, beefed-up $60/Month, no more than 5 GB a month, 5 cents the extra MB</li>
</ul>
<p>Nuf&#8217; said. This thing is awesome. Without even thinking, I was looking just for ubiquitous connection for my laptop, and in the process I made an iPod killer from my old Nokia N810 (bigger screen, more memory and processor, better –and free– apps). The only thing missing (THE PHONE!) is now in thanks to the MiFi connection and Skype or any other VoIP running on top of it   <img src='http://www.onshi.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' />    Haven&#8217;t tried it yet, so let me go off and try it. See you in my next post!</p>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2009/06/back-thanks-to-the-mifi/">Back thanks to the MiFi?</a></p>
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		<title>The &#8220;GTD thing&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.onshi.com/2008/03/getting-gtd-done/</link>
		<comments>http://www.onshi.com/2008/03/getting-gtd-done/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Mar 2008 18:11:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>CC</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[desktop tools]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nokia N810]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[agenda]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[getting things done]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GTD]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[knowledge management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[monkeyGTD]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[productivity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[to do lists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wiki]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://caballero.cc/?p=16</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[GTD (Short for David Allen&#8217;s book title Getting Things Done), is not only a book, it&#8217;s also a hugely adopted personal productivity methodology, a cult phenomenon, a tag in del.icio.us with 58,000+ entries, a favorite posting subject for bloggers (how original of me), and the subject of multiple software and online solutions, both open source [...]<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/03/getting-gtd-done/">The &#8220;GTD thing&#8221;</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>GTD (Short for David Allen&#8217;s book title <a href="http://www.davidco.com/">Getting Things Done</a>), is not only a book, it&#8217;s also a hugely adopted personal productivity methodology, a cult phenomenon, a <a href="http://del.icio.us/search/?fr=del_icio_us&amp;p=GTD&amp;type=all">tag in del.icio.us </a>with 58,000+ entries, a favorite posting subject for bloggers (how original of me), and the subject of multiple software and online solutions, both open source and proprietary.</p>
<p>But GTD is also a naked emperor of sorts: chronicles of failed adoptions are pretty much as common (or more) as discussions of GTD itself. Typical postings about it go as follows:<span id="more-24"></span></p>
<ol>
<li>Excitement about the discovery of either GTD itself, or even more common, a toolkit, software or smart implementation that promises to ease adoption (the &#8220;GTD thing&#8221;);</li>
<li>Review, description and analysis of the &#8220;GTD thing&#8221;, whatever it may be;</li>
<li>The sharing of a decision whereby the poster decides to start using it, with a comment of the type of &#8220;<a href="http://shouryalive.com/blog/monkeygtd-quick-review/">I promise, if I can stick with this for 3 weeks, I will write another post</a>&#8220;</li>
<li>A series of follow-up posts by *readers* of the original post, but no post that fulfills the promise above&#8230; the original poster failed to adopt it;</li>
<li>Sometimes, successful adopters post their follow-up notes, highlighting that they in turn *were* able to stick to it. Somehow, those posts tend to sound somehow religious in tone, not in the spiritual sense but rather in the canonic sense: they all contain a very detailed canon which, if followed, will produce enlightenment.</li>
</ol>
<p>I must confess, in three different occasions I shared the experience. Adopted it (as well as one of its <a href="http://www.getrichslowly.org/blog/2007/11/08/zen-to-done-the-simple-productivity-system/">variants</a>), constructed my version of &#8220;the GTD thing&#8221;, and then dropped it. Each iteration left me wanting more, but also a little frustrated at myself (I have grown up in a culture that enshrines efficiency and condemns failed attempts at organization, blaming it on personal characteristics of laziness,  procrastination or worse).  But I am also stubborn, and I decided to keep trying. Having gotten much closer to success this time (several months using GTD), I would like to share the secret sauce: the experience only applies to me, but I hope it helps you&#8230;</p>
<h2>Background</h2>
<p>The principles of the methodology are quite simple, and I won&#8217;t go through them here; there is already a great place to go for <a href="http://zenhabits.net/2007/05/massive-gtd-resource-list/">GTD resources</a> and , if you <strong>really</strong> want to dig GTD, the place to go is <a href="http://zenhabits.net/">zenhabits</a> (In the process, you will discover one of the best blogs in the web for all things that are <strong>really</strong> productive).</p>
<p>GTD is extraordinary in that it maximizes the user&#8217;s ability to (a) go with the flow &#8211;you don&#8217;t need to change WHAT you do as much as making minor changes to HOW you do it, (b) leverage serendipity &#8211;when things need to be recorded, whether a to-do or a project or a calendar event, it&#8217;s easy to do so and (c) utmost simplicity of process. Either do what  needs to be done, record something that needs to, or review what comes next.</p>
<p>With such positive pedigree, why does GTD adoption typically fail? Armed with my personal experience, but also that of many friends who have tried it with varying levels of enthusiasm, plus an abundant corpus of web testimonials on the issue, I would venture two abstract principles:</p>
<h3><strong>How ubiquitous is your &#8220;GTD thing&#8221;? </strong></h3>
<p>For the zen of GTD to work, it has to replace two common personal habits:</p>
<ul>
<li>Replace the postponement of decision about emerging and existing commitments and tasks (&#8220;What do I do about this?&#8221;) with the process of logging them down, as they appear, and if possible categorizing them right there, at that moment;</li>
<li>Make the retrospective habit of slowing down randomly to evaluate status (i.e., &#8220;Where am I, what next?&#8221;), usually performed under stress, with a regular, somehow meditative, but periodic review.</li>
</ul>
<p>The rest is gravy, pretty much: if the two habits are replaced most of the benefit automatically accrues. The &#8220;GTD thing&#8221; of choice just needs to support the two routines, and minor behavior modifications create the rest.</p>
<p>That could be the reason that non-computer-bound people have high success rates when they use a &#8220;GTD thing&#8221; based on traditional index cards and a portable card wallet: they are always with you, and a pencil is very little extra equipment to carry.</p>
<p>There is, however, a serious drawback: index cards start to impose their own overhead as they multiply with the zillion events of a busy agenda, and they interface very poorly to daily computer-based routines. Typical case? Find something on the web, want to turn it into an actionable item. Have a contact in your contact manager of pain (I <strong>was</strong> going to say choice, really), and want to record a call to that person, with a reference to a note contained in the contact&#8217;s record, and perhaps having to make the call when you are away from the computer.</p>
<p>In my case, cards were already part of my arsenal of choice, but I had a hard time keeping them linked to the zillion computer-based and internet-based pieces of content in my life.</p>
<p>Computer-bound people need to bring GTD into their computer routine; and that means, of course, some sort of  <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_GTD_software#Software_tools_for_GTD">GTD software</a>. Many of them are quite good. OmniGroup&#8217;s <a href="http://www.omnigroup.com/applications/omnifocus/">OmniFocus</a> is, IMHO, a sure winner, having the big plus for me that it runs on the Mac (and the big minus of not doing Windows). Further, the ability to send yourself emails to register tasks and integration with other Mac apps and the OS comes close to making this particular &#8220;GTD thing&#8221; almost ubiquitous. The problem is&#8230; one day, traffic is bad, you decide to stop at Home Depot (sorry, I dislike Walmart&#8217;s Lowe&#8217;s even more), where is your GTD list for Home Depot? You are watching TV, and there is this short mention of a movie you want to add to your NetFlix, where is your GTD? You register it in a  piece of paper? Mmmm&#8230; The moment that you start using paper i<strong>as well as</strong> software (ias input as well as output), your chances to fail at GTD start growing geometrically with time, because you create conditions for loss of synchronization. Things start to fall through that crack between the paper pad and the screen&#8230; The &#8220;GTD thing&#8221; of choice needs to be more ubiquitous than either of the solutions above.</p>
<h3><strong>How multi-modal is your &#8220;GTD thing&#8221;?</strong></h3>
<p>Remember the &#8220;retrospective review&#8221; I talked about above? That is an example of just one <strong>modality</strong> for using your &#8220;GTD thing&#8221;. There are more: inspection, planning, etc.<br />
I have found that I am not alone at using the task management routine in multiple modalities. In some cases, it is &#8220;register and move on ASAP&#8221;. In others, it&#8217;s &#8220;let&#8217;s see many things, so that context makes itself evident&#8221;. Others, it&#8217;s close to meditative: look at this project while my mind wanders and ideas emerge. There is also a browse mode, and many others. That is the reason index cards excel: manipulating them is like manipulating ideas and events, stacking them, grouping them, etc. No computer version approaches that level of dexterity (except, <strong>may be</strong>, using <a href="http://www.eastgate.com/Tinderbox/">Tinderbox</a> &#8212; then again, Tinderbox has huge power as an XML-based mesh manager, but also its own set of drawbacks, amongst them a distractive abundance of possible operations, each one of them obscure)&#8230;</p>
<p>Those modalities take place in different settings, and have different requirements. Of course, nothing better than a large screen space with high resolution for context-related tasks (nothing kills context like having to choose which of many views is on top, hiding the others &#8212; that&#8217;s one of the reasons I am addicted to my Mac&#8217;s double 30&#8243; displays). In-store list review is better done in a succinct, unobtrusive piece of paper (or screen), unless you want everybody else in the store looking over your shoulder. Your &#8220;GTD thing&#8221; has to support all of them optimally.</p>
<h2>My secret sauce</h2>
<p>In <strong>my</strong> case (remember, the fact that it works for me has no say on whether it will for you), the secret sauce has two main ingredients:</p>
<p>* <a href="http://monkeygtd.tiddlyspot.com/"><strong>monkeyGTD</strong></a> &#8211; An open source, one-file, self-enclosed, single page (but multiple-view) GTD program and data file that runs on practically every browser and every computer (yes, descriptions can be correct and yet do little justice to what they describe);</p>
<p>* <a href="http://www.nseries.com/index.html#l=products,n810"><strong>The Nokia N810 Internet Tablet</strong></a> &#8211; A convergent hand-held portable computer that pushes the computer concept as close as possible to a phone as it possible (without loosing its character as full-blown computer), and pushes Linux (actually, Maemo) as close as possible to the ideal usability point.</p>
<p>Each one of these components is in itself a brilliant piece of engineering and usability:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong><a href="http://monkeygtd.tiddlyspot.com/"><strong>monkeyGTD</strong></a> </strong>brilliantly addresses  one of the key problems of paper-based lists, namely that they are absolutely dumb. You put all the intelligence, all the alertness about time, all the manipulation required for review and any other modality. <strong><a href="http://monkeygtd.tiddlyspot.com/"><strong>monkeyGTD</strong></a></strong> does so by consisting of a single-file web page that has the GTD intelligence built in <span style="text-decoration: underline;">as part of the page</span> (I was never a fan of JavaScript, but monkeyGTD made me much more tolerant of it): all modalities are well supported, and most common operations common in GTD and its variants are supported as well. If you have access to the file containing your GTD lists and contexts, you have access to the program, because it is inside the same file. This concept is much more brilliant than it looks at first sight, but it rarely given full credit until you try it yourself.</li>
<li>It may sound like &#8220;killing mosquitoes with a cannon&#8221;, but the<strong> </strong><a href="http://www.nseries.com/index.html#l=products,n810"><strong>Nokia N810 Internet Tablet</strong></a> only adds two capabilities that are critical to your &#8220;GTD thing&#8221;: you can now carry and use your GTD &#8220;brain&#8221; (both data and intelligence) anywhere with you, 24-hours a day (showers not recommended). <span style="text-decoration: underline;">More important yet</span>, because the<a href="http://www.nseries.com/index.html#l=products,n810"><strong> Nokia N810 Internet Tablet</strong></a> is also an unobtrusive USB and Blue-tooth and wireless device, when you sit at the computer, you have access to that same brain, all its data, and all its intelligence, from any computer you may use.</li>
</ul>
<p>Together with all the other computers I may use, both mine and somebody else&#8217;s, My<a href="http://www.nseries.com/index.html#l=products,n810"><strong> Nokia N810 Internet Tablet</strong></a> and my <strong><a href="http://monkeygtd.tiddlyspot.com/"><strong>monkeyGTD</strong></a> </strong>file create a wonderful &#8220;GTD thing&#8221;, one that has managed to stick to my routine (and viceversa). All the convergent features of the tablet come to good use as my GTD thing, and I have come to firmly believe that the almost $500 I have spent on the device would be justified by just using it with Monkey GTD:</p>
<ul>
<li>The tablet is always connected to anything I am using, from phone to Mac to Windows to Linux. Right now it&#8217;s sitting on the desk, but its monkeyGTD file is open on my Mac&#8217;s screen, next to the window I am typing this on;</li>
<li>It is with me whether I am looking at a movie, having lunch, in the bathroom, bus, train, car, etc. Totally ubiquitous;</li>
<li> If I am in a situation where I can&#8217;t type, I have my recorder always open: touch screen and talk is all that is needed, the &#8220;Check recordings&#8221; task is already there for when I do my review;</li>
<li>I save the file to my web server at least once a day, just in case I lose the tablet or run out of battery (a very rare event);</li>
<li>Whatever list, for whatever context, as well as whatever alerts I record, whatever emails I receive, whatever browser bookmarks I refer to, are always with me, and I can not only access them and act on them: I can also type short notes <strong>much </strong>less obtrusively than in my phone;</li>
<li>The screen is large enough to comfortably show me my &#8220;dashboard&#8221; at any moment, as well as to look at a whole project in context, or at a whole context.</li>
</ul>
<p>Looking at the notes above, it looks like the magic is in the tablet, not the monkeyGTD. But not really: of course, the tablet makes a great list manager, so you could do Zen to Done without the need for monkeyGTD, as all other benefits would still accrue. But why would you? monkeyGTD is quite intelligent, and the GTD routine is built into its navigation. Opening a monkeyGTD ona browser is <strong>much more context-rich </strong>than opening lists on a text editor.</p>
<p>But there is another reason why, IMHO, monkeyGTD is an absolutely critical component of getting GTD done. I can only explain it succinctly assuming you have come to depend on wikis as much as I do; if you don&#8217;t, you may find this explanation quite foreign. Wikis are an extraordinary productivity tool, as are blogs, because they favor the unobtrusive representation of those traces of our intelligence that we call knowledge, which in turn sits on lots of <strong>content</strong> (book paragraphs you may be writing, thought explorations, records of conversations, podcasts, pictures, videos, and more). When you <strong>search</strong> in a wiki, the results of the search frequently have that odd deja-vu-kind-of-feeling, as if you knew that your brain, would have come to the same answer if only you had time to spare. The problem is, they also require their own set of gestures and processes, and they usually sit only in a server somewhere in the sky. Did I mention that monkeyGTD is <strong>also a wiki</strong>? You can write as much as you want into gtdMonkey (no, you can&#8217;t store Wikipedia in a single page, but would you?). You can create a few files using monkey or the original tiddlyWiki, and then cross-link them, and still have an organic GTD thing that encompasses all of them. There is such a synergy between the two ingredients of my secret sauce, that I can guarantee you that, f you try the sauce, you will believe it&#8217;s a single, organically produced, indivisible single ingredient.</p>
<h2>So, is this the GTD Nirvana?</h2>
<p>I don&#8217;t know, never been there. It&#8217;s certainly not perfect, because integration between the tablet and my externally-imposed desktop productivity client at work (MS Office) is very poor, almost non-existent. Also, monkeyGTD is not supported by a large community of developers, but pretty much is the work of love of a single brilliant developer on top of another brilliant piece of software (and love), <a href="http://www.tiddlywiki.com/">tiddlyWiki</a>. It moves slowly forward in terms of features (then again, if it had too many more it would not be as cool).</p>
<p>But I would have to be unfair to find fault in the combination. This thing works and <strong>exceeds expectations</strong>: you will not only get GTD done, you will find that you have opened doors that were not available before, such as an infinitely expandable context of webs, an integration beyond belief between online and off-line info-spaces. Give it a try, let me know how it goes&#8230;</p>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/03/getting-gtd-done/">The &#8220;GTD thing&#8221;</a></p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>How do I use my Nokia N810</title>
		<link>http://www.onshi.com/2008/01/how-do-i-use-my-nokia-n810/</link>
		<comments>http://www.onshi.com/2008/01/how-do-i-use-my-nokia-n810/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Jan 2008 16:37:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>CC</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[gadgetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nokia N810]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[connectivity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GTD]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[screen size]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[use patterns]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://caballero.cc/?p=11</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Patterns on use of Nokia N810: how the N810's particular convergence of memory size, connectivity, processing speed, storage and UI bandwidth gets very close to ideal for me<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/01/how-do-i-use-my-nokia-n810/">How do I use my Nokia N810</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My usage follows my habits, and thus I need to start by describing those, because a critical parameter for judging the Internet Tablet is precisely&#8230; that the Internet be available, that is, wireless connectivity:<span id="more-19"></span></p>
<ul>
<li>Work &#8212; Split half/half between working from home or at the office. In both cases covered by wireless. In the case of the office, wireless is somehow hampered by a very strict corporate firewall (I will address that later). Also, I move around the corporate campus quite a lot (meetings, chats, the occasional nicotine fix, cafeteria), very rarely dragging my laptop with me (at least, since I use the N810);</li>
<li>Week-day leisure &#8212; Mostly at home, errands, occasional eat-outs, mostly in an urban and stationary basis (I spent no more than 45 minutes a day in the car);</li>
<li>Weekends split between travels (mostly to Santa Barbara to see Ona and the kids) and home pleasures: playing in the garage or the office, fixing things, helping clean, walking the dogs, cooking, music, movies and TV).</li>
<li>Travel: Whether for pleasure or work, the laptop rarely makes it into the bag (even when the X61 Lenovo is very small and light).</li>
</ul>
<p>So, fairly sedentary life, definitely not the road warrior I used to be. Interestingly enough, modern sedentary life shares much more with the road warrior life than it used to, because of this increasing addiction to things Internet&#8230; but that is a whole different posting.</p>
<h2>So, how do I use it?</h2>
<p>In the routine described above, the N810 has almost totally displaced my laptop AND my smart phones in every occasion when I am not on my desk: the laptop because it is impractical (large, heavy, slow to boot, absorbing, etc.) and the PDA/Smart phones because of screen size, speed and usability advantages.</p>
<p>The displacement of the laptop is not surprising, but that of the phone is. Both in my Sony Ericsson P900, 910 and 990, and on my Nokia N93, I have 90% of the functionality I get from the N810, and then some (synchronized PDA suite). I used to extensively leverage ALL features and applications in my phone, even when small screen and keyboard sizes, T9 typing in the N93, anemic memory and slow performance unavoidably frustrated me. But the biggest contention was <strong>screen size </strong>(both physical and logical). I find browsing on anything below 800&#215;480 totally worthless. Even in the Sony Ercisson P990, at 320&#215;240, browsing less than a paragraph at a time is just ridiculous. Particularly because, regardless of the paragraph you are reading, the browser <strong>still</strong> has to load the whole page to show it to you. Which, by the way, is the major lie behind the iPod commercial where the user brings up a web page, a full paragraph in view, and immediately moves on: what was it, a web page of only one paragraph? Can I please have the URL?  <img src='http://www.onshi.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>And here comes one of the major killer features for the N810: <strong>the gorgeous screen</strong>. Reviews unavoidably compare bitmap (pixel) dimensions, and the comparisons become hubris very fast. The screen in the Nokia N810 is the exact minimum size and quality to be very different from others:</p>
<p>* Browse more than a single paragraph at a time, and let your eyers jump around the page (isn&#8217;t that a basic requirement of &#8220;browsing&#8221;?); this capability enables what, for me, is one of the most addictive features of the N810: <strong>Getting-Things-Done organization via browser and local file</strong>. What do I mean? I use <a title="Monkey GTD" href="http://simonbaird.com/monkeygtd/">monkey GTD</a>, one of the smartest implementations of tiddlywiki by SImon Baird, to keep my to-do&#8217;s, with fantastic advantages:</p>
<blockquote><p>* The file is available 100% of the time to me, either by accessing it from my laptop (when at work or at home, my N810 is 100% of the time USB-connectedto either my Windows laptop or my Mac) or on my N810 if I am out;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>* The keyboard in the N810 is too small for typing long docs, but ideal for short notes;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>* If a sketch is required, the N810 mostly obviates the need for paper that creates loopholes in the GTD system;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>* If I land, say, in Costco, I always have my Costco context available for things I needed to get, even if I thought about them two months ago.</p>
<p>If you have tried GTD and failed, it&#8217;s almost certain that the reason you failed is because of too many recording devices, or the constant paper-vs-computer tension. Now just imagine that the file is (a) device independent, just a browser required, and (b) always available to you in your device, in a form factor that makes it usable&#8230;</p></blockquote>
<p>* Read a 8.5&#215;11&#8243;-paginated book or document on PDF, with the usual margins, with zooming set to &#8220;text width&#8221;, all of it <strong>without using a loupe</strong>. I didn&#8217;t realize what that meant until I had it available; with smaller screens, you go &#8220;hunting&#8221; small windows around the text, or you zoom it down to eliminate the lateral hunting and then it becomes unreadable. It <strong>doesn&#8217;t matter</strong> if you have a fantastic interface to move that reading window around the page, you will end up with a headache if you persist.;</p>
<p>* Play a game of medium-to-high visual complexity: this one is easy to defend as another advantage. Brain needs visual clues of any complex environment: reduce resolution and the clues need to be sacrificed, end up with boring, lame mind frames.</p>
<p>* Watch a video without squinting, and see the details. Same as with games: complexity requires detail, and eliminating visual complexity makes the watched piece boring. You just have to add compression artifacts and you realize that in smaller screens you end up listening to your videos more than watching them.</p>
<p>All of this ends up meaning that I use the Nokia N810 for <strong>visual pleasure and light work that doesn&#8217;t require multiple windows</strong>. Multiple windows are still the domain of the computer, as is very precise mousing and ultra-high-complexity visuals&#8230; but I will get to that in my next posting.</p>
<p>Post from: <a href="http://www.onshi.com">Online shared intelligence</a>; copyright &copy; 2008 Carlos Caballero. All rights reserved.<br/><br/><a href="http://www.onshi.com/2008/01/how-do-i-use-my-nokia-n810/">How do I use my Nokia N810</a></p>
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