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Archive for February, 2009

Keeping track of how much time you have left to talk in a presentation or a meeting presents special difficulties. As evidence that no good solution exists for the problem, I point to the universal practice of appointing a single individual to keep track of the time who is delegated to conveys the impending end of the allotted time to the speaker. Any time a simple task is done by a human, you know it’s not all that simple. But we all know that watch displays are too small, the laptop is occupied presenting slides, a one-minute alert is fine but the speaker has no way to know how close am I to the one-minute mark?

I ran across a big countdown timer at online-stopwatch.com, written in Flash. Running on a Nokia Internet Tablet, the numbers are large enough to read from ten feet away or further. It’s a perfect use of the NIT’s 4.3-inch screen.

Countdown clock in Flash

Different versions of the program display a stop-watch (counting up), splits, or a circle clockface with a single hand sweeping once around the face whatever time you have entered.

You can run this useful app from the website if you want. Me, I simply downloaded the .swf file, put it into a /tools folder, opened it in tablet’s browser and bookmarked that local copy. Easy to grab. And of course the graphics resize nicely as I switch between standard and full-screen display. Hey, thanks, online-stopwatch person!

Last summer my N810 was stolen during a library visit. Since I praised Nokia when it first released the Internet Tablet for ruthlessly paring away the inessentials — the 770’s absence of a phone, hard drive and keyboard stunned most mobile-device observers — I didn’t replace it, but instead relied solely on my N800’s* for my tablet needs.

Besides I already had a Bluetooth keyboard and GPS. I didn’t have to have the newer Internet Tablet if I wanted those features.

Then last Thursday, I ordered an N810 from Buy.com, paying $227.86** for the little treasure that arrived this morning. (It’s sitting next to me on the computer desk, charging now.)

Why?

I’ve been pondering that. Maybe subconsciously I think I’ll use the built-in GPS (even though I rarely use the external GPS I own). I don’t really type faster with the N810’s slide-out keyboard, though I know having it simplifies using some programs. Does losing display real estate to an on-screen keyboard interfere with my thinking processes more than I’ve been aware? Could be. I know that my tap-drags to get an upper-case letter succeeds only about 60-80 percent of the time, so entering some characters is way slower than is good***.

And, trivial as they may seem, I know I’ve missed the screen-lock button and the cover-that-doesn’t-fall-off.

These are little things, and I’m struggling to find any bigger reasons for using an N810 instead of an N800. OK, “little things mean a lot,” but two hundred-plus dollars’ worth?

Still, I’m content with my purchase. Something in me knows this is a good deal, even if I can’t consciously say why. Even though logic says to preserve my cash for some forthcoming, more dazzling new tablet. Not sure why, but definitely sure it’s a good thing.

Like I said, I’m content. And that’s a good measure.

__________
* Um, yes, I’ve acquired three used N800’s, intending to gift them to family in California, Texas and Georgia, but I’m like Scrooge McDuck in his private vault when I’m cooing over my tablets and I can’t seem to let them go . . .

** Including taxes, shipping and handling

*** Years ago, IBM released a study showing that any interruption in typing that was longer than a tenth of a second drastically reduced your efficiency.



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