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Google Voice Web App for Windows Mobile

January 31st, 2010 Rob 1 comment
This entry is part 9 of 10 in the series Google Voice

The other day it was announced all over the web that Google Voice was finally available again for the iPhone, only as a web app instead of a true app. Google created a web page at http://m.google.com/voice rather than trying to get another app approved n the App Store. I checked it out on my iPhone (yes, I have one too — for work) and it is a great app. Although it doesn’t integrate fully with the iPhone contacts and dialer, it does present a decent dialer of its own and works very quickly and cleanly, initiating calls via the web and calling the handset back to complete the call.

Google says on the mobile web page that the m.google.com/voice page works for the iphone and for BlackBerries; the page identifies the phone type when you get to the page and directs you appropriately. So I wondered what would happen if I went there with a Windows Mobile browser like Opera.

Google Voice Mobile Screen

The result is a useful if ugly web page. The interface is limited to simple links, but all the necessary functionality is available. You can initiate a call by simply adding the number or selecting something from your Google contacts (it doesn’t integrate with your phone contacts). You can also see and manage any voicemail messages that you have.

By assigning Opera to a speed dial key on the phone and then assigning the Google page to a numbered bookmark, the page is only three clicks from any page on the phone. It isn’t quite iPhone convenient, but it works.

The downside to this implementation is that it’s dependent on a data connection, so you can’t use it where you have phone only service. This probably isn’t an issue for Verizon customers, but us T-Mobile and AT&T folks need to worry about these things.

Google Voice Mobile Connect Screen

Initiating a quick call is pretty simple and it does integrate with your contacts. It uses the callback method, so once you input a number or select a contact to call, you are presented with a list of your registered phones and the option to select the one to connect with the call. The iPhone app recognizes that it’s your iPhone, and once set up will always ring back to that number.

Please note that I have captured these screens from my Dash 3G with its tiny QVGA screen. I’m willing to bet that this app will look and work better on a larger touchscreen device. But at least those of us with non-touchscreen Windows Mobile smartphones finally have a workable Google Voice method besides GVoice Dialer. At the very least, it will give me another option to overcome the problems I’ve been having with GVoice Dialer connecting, particularly in noisy environments.

Identity Crisis

January 23rd, 2010 Rob 2 comments

It finally happened to me. My Twitter identity caught up with me and my professional life.

As part of my day job, I was asked to write a post for my company’s website. And, within the community of professionals in my field, the post got some traction and rapidly appeared on Twitter. Of course it wasn’t long before someone figured out my Twitter username, since it was my real name and started following me. Within hours, everyone from my boss’ boss’ boss to influential industry figures were following me, and presumably weren’t interested in my great posts about spare ribs and pulled pork.

So I faced the dilemma … do I keep a single Twitter account for personal and work use, or should I create a second online persona and divide my personal from my professional life? I follow people who have done it both ways. In some ways, it’s kind of nice to get a glimpse into the private life of someone you follow for professional reasons. But there’s a difference between someone following me for work getting a glimpse into my affinity for music, and someone expecting an occasional opinion on industry events but getting 8 tweets a month about bar-b-que and me hacking my cellphone.

So I ultimately ended up creating a new Twitter user name for my own personal use, and I will be transitioning my original name to my professional persona. The change has already been made on this site — my new “Mass_BBQ” name is linked to the Twitter display in the sidebar.

The good news is that many people are in this same situation. So most Twitter clients, including TweetDeck and PocketTweet which I use, can display and post to multiple accounts at once. So keep an eye for my posts on a new account.

Categories: Technology Tags: , ,

A Yankee’s Guide to Bar-B-Que Part 3 – So You Wanna’ Buy a Grill?

January 18th, 2010 Rob 1 comment
This entry is part 3 of 3 in the series Yankee's Guide to BBQ

Springtime is just around the corner, and just as I am often asked about what equipment someone should buy for their grilling friend/spouse/neighbor, I am also asked by people about what kind of grill someone should get. Gas grill, charcoal grill, wood smoker, electric smoker, or some hybrid device? Believe it or not, this can be a complex question. Hopefully, I can help sort it out for you.

Your basic choices are:

Grills

  • Charcoal
  • Gas
    - Traditional
    - Infrared

Smokers

  • Vertical/water
  • Horizontal / dedicated pit
  • Electric

Hybrid

  • Ceramic
  • Grill/smoker Combinations

As always, there are myriad factors effecting this decision. Each of the devices listed above is better at one aspect of cooking than another. Rarely can a single device prove competent at the wide range of tasks from cold-smoking salmon and sausage to hot-smoking ribs and pulled pork to grilling vegetables and fish at low heat to searing a steak. So the first question to be answered is this:

What kinds of food will you cook and how often?

The main division is between grilling and smoking, because these techniques are done at such divergent temperatures – grilling typically above 350°F (and searing meat above 700°F) while smoking is done at or just below 250°F. With few exceptions, a grill with the burner capacity to heat to 700°F will not easily maintain a low temperature of 225°F. And of course, having multiple specialized devices is best, but other considerations will affect this.

Next, you need to answer the one question that affects everything:

How much money are you willing to spend?

The simplest small charcoal grill can cost as little as $20 and make a decent steak once and a while. Yet you can also drop $20,000 or more on a large custom BBQ Pit. The amount you spend is limited only by how much you have.

Finally, there are some logistics that come into play:

How much room do you have?

Most people are limited by the space available to store their toys. Either the size of their deck or patio or the space in the garage is going to limit the number of pieces of equipment you’re going to buy.

The Pros & Cons

Device Primary Use Typical Cost Range Typical Sizes (Cooking Surface) Notes Example
Charcoal Grills Grilling – meat, fish, vegetables. $20 to $250 From 150 in2 to 850 in2 Charcoal is an excellent heat source and provides traditional flavor to grilled food. With careful technique, many charcoal grills can also hot smoke, though they aren’t very efficient. Charcoal is prone to flare-ups. Can take time to pre-heat, and temperature control is a matter of technique (building multi-level fire). Weber Kettle (One Touch)
Gas – Traditional Grilling – meat, fish, & vegetables $99 to $2000 From 300 in2 to 1000 in2 Traditional gas grills have some device to prevent flare-ups (rocks, ceramic briquettes, or “flame-tamer” burner shields. Cheaper models have flimsy grates and weak burners that sear meat poorly. High-end models can add rotisserie burners and searing burners and cook at a wide range of temperatures. Weber Genesis
Gas – Infrared Grilling – meat, fish, & vegetables. Also hot smoking $350 to $5000 From 300 in2 to more than 1000 in2 Infrared grills isolate the cooking surface from direct flame, and use a substance (ceramic or steel for example) to absorb heat from a burner and re-emit the energy as infrared light to cook food. Infrared grills are usually able to sear at higher temperatures than traditional gas grills, and so excel at cooking steaks. Yet many can also maintain lower temperatures when necessary and can therefore be used for hot smoking. Because the flame is isolated from the cooking area, many infrared grills allow you to add woodchips to the cooking area to simulate real smoke flavor. Char-Broil RED [I own a 4-burner version of this grill]
Vertical Water Smoker (charcoal) Hot smoking $69 – $299 ~250 in2 Good way to get true hot smoked meat and charcoal flavor in a compact package. Called a water smoker because a pan of liquid sits between the coals and the meat. Most can be converted from a smoker into a small grill. Downside is that these smokers require a lot of fire tending. Brinkmann “Cook-n-cajun,” Brinkmann Gourmet Charcoal, Brinkmann “Smoke-n-grill,” Weber Smokey Mountain [I own an old Brinkmann Smoke-n-pit vertical smoker]
Vertical Water Smoker (electric) Hot smoking $119 – $199 ~250 in2 Easier to maintain temperature than with a charcoal version. But all electric smokers suffer from an inability to create a traditional “smoke ring” in smoked meat, because without combustion, no NOx gasses are produced by the heat source. Brinkmann Smoke-n-grill electric, Brinkmann Gourmet electric
Dedicated Horizontal Smoker Hot smoking $99 – $800 all the way to $20,000 + From 500 in2 to 1500 in2 Known on the Internet as “Cheap Offset Smokers” or COS, the low-end of this range is most people’s first leap into serious bar-b-que. Most can serve double-duty as a grill, but the main feature is a wood and/or charcoal burning firebox which is offset from the main cooking chamber and a series of dampers to control the heat and smoke. Char-Broil Silver Smoker, Brinkmann Pitmaster, Char-Broil Longhorn Smoker, — at the high end, custom smokers like ones by Klose. [I own an old New Braunfels Black Diamond horizontal smoker which is now the Char-Broil Silver Smoker]
Electric Smoker Hot or cold smoking meat, fish, vegetables, sausages, cheese, etc. From $170 – $700 500 in2 to 1000 in2 Electric smokers offer convenience because they can hold a set temperature without constant tending. Many higher-end models offer digital controls for better precision. Some (notable Bradley smokers) can cold-smoke food below 150° F. Various analog and digital smokers from Masterbuilt and Bradley. [I own a 4-rack Bradley Digital Smoker]
Ceramic Grill/Smoker Grilling and hot smoking $400 to $1000 150 in2 to 500 in2 A unique charcoal cooking experience, the ceramic grills are known for their ability to hold temperatures and to get very hot with charcoal for searing steaks. They can also be used as ovens. Big Green Egg
Hybrid Grill/Smoker Grilling and hot smoking $250 to $500 500 in2 to 1000 in2 A recent phenomenon, some companies have begun putting traditional gas burners under a cooking surface with an offset smoker box so you get a traditional gas grill and an offset smoker in one. Char Griller Duo
http://www.brinkmann.net/Shop/Series.aspx?category=Outdoor+Cooking&subcategory=Charcoal+Smokers+%26+Grills&series=OUT-1001-6&seriesname=Gourmet%20Electric&id=0

So, factoring in all the information above, what’s the recommendation? That’s still a tough decision. I’ll start with what I own and why, and then make some recommendations.

My Stable of Grilling and Smoking Devices

  1. A Char-Broil RED 4-burner infrared gas grill. I bought this grill three years ago when the 2008 models first came out and I have been absolutely thrilled with the results. This is the first grill I have ever personally used that can get to 800° F and sear a steak, and also hold a steady 250° F temperature and turn out competent bar-b-que. I have written extensively about this grill in the Char-Broil forum on my favorite message board, the BBQ Source. Since this is such a versatile grill, it’s a good foundation to build from.One word of caution: after the initial debut of this grill in 2008, several quality problems have been reported, particularly with the similar but smaller 3-burner model of this grill. The issues are well documented in the Char-Broil forum mentioned above, but please check into the issues before buying!
  2. Modified NBBD Smoker

    New Braunfels Black Diamond smoker. I bought this in 2002 when I moved into my current house. It has taken some modification, but it’s now a competent bar-b-que pit. Every year I break it out in the summer to smoke for my Carnivore’s Carnival. The first five years I did four racks of pork ribs at a time. Last year I added pulled pork to the menu and did two shoulders and four racks of ribs. The smoker performed flawlessly for two days straight (14 hours for the shoulder and 6 hours for the ribs). This smoker is now sold as the Char-Broil Silver Smoker mentioned above.

  3. Brinkmann Smoke-n-Pit vertical water smoker. I’ve had this for about 10 years now. The Smoke-n-Pit was the first real wood smoker I ever had the gave me the first confidence that I could produce real bar-b-que ribs by myself. Unfortunately, I haven’t used it since I bought my Black Diamond. But this was the device that got me and my friends hooked on bar-b-que, so I make sure it stays sheltered in my garage. At one point in my life, this was also the grill that let me eat good food when I had, literally, no money to my name. My first one was a gift from a friend and was well used. But an hour with an electric drill and wire brush and one can of high-temp paint and it was back in working order. When the food budget was low, I cooked hamburger and cheap pork cuts over a fire built from branches from the trees in my yard. I had several apple trees and the apple-smoked pork loin was amazing.
  4. Bradley Digital Smoker. This is my newest purchase, and it’s only a month old. But I already love it. The Bradley is, IMHO, better than the Mastrbuilt because the smoke generator is a separate unit and this facilitates cold smoking better. It makes a decent hot smoker, but is really the only choice (other than a custom built device) for cold smoking. In fact, I have a nice salmon fillet that cured in salt and sugar for 12 hours waiting to go into my Bradley as I write this.

Great, So What do I buy?

OK – here are my recommendations.

If You Want to Cook and Hot Smoke

If your budget is unlimited, you can have the best of everything. Of course I recommend the equipment I have – a good quality gas grill, a dedicated smoker, and a nice electric smoker for convenience.

But if you have a medium budget — like $400 to $600, I recommend starting with a good gas grill with at least an infrared searing burner. Many people have luck with Chinese produced grills from the big-box stores like Lowe’s and Home Depot. Just read the imported grill message board at the BBQ Source forums and you’ll get an idea about what’s working in any given year.

If you are really limited in budget, I recommend a good charcoal grill, like a Weber kettle. A One Touch Silver starts at $89.99 retail, and as long as you are willing to put in the work, you can learn good fire control techniques and sear steaks and make passable bar-b-que all on the same grill.

The Only Thing I Smoke are Marlboros … What Grill Should I Buy?

If you want to improve your grilling technique the single best thing you can do is invest in something that allows you to really control the heat. Most cheap gas grills don’t allow this: even turning their knobs through a full range only changes the burners from really hot to very hot. So, if you have the budget, I’d recommend a good quality gas grill. And note that good quality doesn’t mean stainless steel. Stainless is a convenience feature — it does nothing to aid cooking. Weber gas grills have a great following. Jenn-Air used to have a loyal following, but I’ve read that their grills have declined in quality over the last couple of years. A company called Nexgrill makes a few models under different brands (sold at Costco and Sam’s Club for instance) and while a lot of their stuff seems like junk, a number of the people on the BBQ Source seem happy with them. Realize though, that a decent grill these days starts at ~ $600 and goes to $2000. If your budget is more modest, I recommend looking for a used deal on Craigslist and putting a little elbow grease into cleaning it up.

I Have the Grill … I Want to Smoke.

If you just want the end product and have the budget, an electric smoker can allow you to experiment with everything from sausage to ribs to shoulder to fish. For versatility and convenience, an electric smoker can’t be beat.

But, electric smokers aren’t the best for real, large cuts of bar-b-que like ribs and shoulder. For this you need something that burns wood (or charcoal). A cheap offset horizontal smoker is usually the way to start, but you can buy a pit that stretches any budget. Running a wood pit requires a commitment … smoking shoulder can mean 14 to 18 hours of tending a fire every 30 minutes to keep a constant temperature. But the reward is worth it. Nothing makes the great tasting bark on a shoulder like a long slow smoke over real hardwood.

GVoiceDialer Trick

January 16th, 2010 Rob 1 comment
This entry is part 8 of 10 in the series Google Voice

I’ve written about GVoiceDialer before, and in spite of some problems, I’ve continued to use it, since it’s really the only Google Voice client available for non-touchscreen Windows Mobile phones.

However, I was growing increasingly frustrated with it because it would frequently fail to complete my calls. Usually the Google computerized voice would indicate that invalid keys had been pressed or some other error would occur. It was very unreliable. Well it finally occurred to me the other day what was happening. Most of the time when I had trouble, I was either outside in Boston, or on a train. When it worked, I was either at home or in my office. So I attributed the issue to signal strength. Maybe I wasn’t getting more than 1 bar when outside and the keys weren’t registering correctly.

In reality — it is the background noise! My house and office are quiet. Other locations where I typically use it aren’t . And I discovered that the background noise often prevents the Google system from recognizing the DTMF tones correctly. So the trick is to mute your phone as soon as GVoiceDialer starts the call and unmute once you hear the “this is a free call” announcement from Google. Since I’ve started this trick, GVoiceDialer has proven very reliable, regardless of where I use it.

This should be a feature built into the next version (assuming there is a next version). Muting of the phone’s mic when dialing.

But for now, it works much better if I remember to mute the phone.

Categories: Technology Tags: ,

A Train Late and a Car Short

January 15th, 2010 Rob 1 comment

Getting to know your fellow commuters ...

What the hell is happening on the Worcester-Framingham commuter line these days? Since the holidays ended, I’d swear they’re running some rush hour trains at least a car shorter than before the holiday. I routinely take the P529, 6:15 Worcester train home (and have for over 15 months now) and for the last two weeks at least the damn train is packed to overflowing nearly every night. It was not like this before the holiday season. I have no empirical evidence — I didn’t routinely count the cars in the train every night, but I swear something has changed. Perhaps lot’s of people have made a New Year’s resolution to take the train more. Or perhaps it’s a symptom of the broken-down MBCR/MBTA and the result of too many cars in the shop.

Whatever the reason, it sure makes for a crappy commute.

Categories: commuting Tags: , ,

Four in ten seniors go online | Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project

January 13th, 2010 Rob No comments

Because this is very pertinent to my day job, I wanted to record and distribute this information. It’s a revealing look at the lack of internet use by age. Especially revealing is this line:

And while the Pew Internet Project has found that mobile access is closing the gap between African Americans and whites, and mobile users are more likely to participate in social media, just 16% of U.S. adults age 65 and older go online wirelessly, via a laptop or handheld device. By contrast, 55% of all adults connect to the internet wirelessly.

Posted via web from robhavasy’s posterous

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One Time Old School Windows Mobile Beats the iPhone

January 11th, 2010 Rob 1 comment
It occurred to me this morning that there was one use case where old-school Windows Mobile touchscreen phones (like my T-Mobile Wing) kick the iPhone and Android’s ass: winter!

Windows Mobile touchscreen devices are widely ridiculed (when people pay attention to them at all) for still including a stylus and a tappable software keyboard. But this morning, while standing on a train platform hovering somewhere between 5 and 6 degrees F (-14 to -15 C), never mind the wind chill, I really wanted my stylus back when trying to check my phone. At 5 degrees, taking off a glove for more than a minute or two is a painful experience.

So, while capacitive touchscreens may be a marvel of Californian and Asian design, I’ll bet there’s a whole swath of the globe, from Alaska, through Canada and Scandanavia, to Sibreria, that would appreciate a stylus which can be used with a glove on.

Is there an app for THAT?

Posted via email from robhavasy’s posterous

Categories: Rants Tags:

The T-Mobile Dash 3G Summary Post

January 7th, 2010 Rob No comments
This entry is part 10 of 11 in the series Dash 3G

Over the last nine or ten months I have tweaked, upgraded, and generally overhauled my T-Mobile Dash 3G smartphone. I’ve learned quite a bit along the way. And after my most recent upgrades I think I finally have a really solid phone that I love. So if you’ve recently picked up a Dash, or are thinking about it, here’s all the information I have in one place.

The Basics

To turn your new phone into a lean, mean, communications machine, I recommend ditching the Windows Mobile 6.1 that comes on the phone and upgrade to Windows Mobile 6.5. Since neither T-Mobile or HTC has released an official 6.5 upgrade yet, you’re best bet is a custom “cooked” ROM. I use the latest version of ookba’s “3Volution” ROM. In the interest of full disclosure, modifying your phone with custom software will invalidate any warranty on the device, and most probably violates several copyrights. However, in defense of this practice, it has been well established that Microsoft is aware of, and its employees contributors to, the XDA-Developers community among others. And with all the resources at its disposal, Microsoft has not attempted to shut down the practice. So if you choose to do this, do so with an understanding of what you’re doing. (See sidebar for more info.)

How Can I Do This

As I mentioned, upgrading the software on this phone likely violates several copyrights. So how can I do it with a clear conscience?

By my reckoning, there are three parties to be concerned about: the manufacturer (HTC), the distributor (T-Mobile), and the OS Provider (Microsoft).

My feeling is that the manufacturer, HTC, doesn’t care about software upgrades. Like any computer provider (Dell, HP) they provide an initial OS, but have no vested interest in what I eventually run on their hardware. Just as I can install Linux on my Dell, I figure I can install a different OS without HTC being concerned.

As for T-Mobile, they too provide a modified OS, which incorporates their proprietary features. But, again, as long as I don’t run anything on their network that violates their terms of service, I don’t think they care whether I run WinMo 6.1 or 6.5.

That leaves Microsoft. And there is an issue here. Just because I have a valid WinMo 6.1 license, doesn’t mean I should also have a 6.5 license. So, ordinarily, upgrading with a cooked ROM would be something I’d avoid. However, in this case, Microsoft has indicated on their website that they will be offering a 6.1 to 6.5 upgrade for the Dash 3G (see http://www.microsoft.com/windowsmobile/en-us/meet/wm65-upgrade.mspx#phoneList). So I feel somewhat justified in turning my 6.1 license into a 6.5 license. Since they say that their partners (HTC and the various carriers) will be releasing the upgrade, I figure that as far as they are concerned, getting it from ookba is just as good as Verizon, Sprint, or T-Mobile.

So that’s why my conscience is clear.

To install it, follow these steps:

  1. Install a \”hard SPL\” security fix, which allows non-official ROMs to be installed.
  2. Install the latest version of ookba\’s ROM.

I’ve written a little about the upgraded ROM here and here.

Upgrade the Radio

Although I’m not sure upgrading the radio made a really dramatic improvement, it does seem to have helped a little. It certainly hasn’t hurt.

Install Some Useful Applications

I’ve made a couple of lists of useful software that I’ve installed. The main list is here and the second list is here.

Learn

There are many resources on the web for Dash 3G owners. Here are some good ones:

Another Dash 3G Update – Upgrading the Radio

January 7th, 2010 Rob 1 comment
This entry is part 9 of 11 in the series Dash 3G

The other day I flashed my phone to the latest version of the 3Volution ROM which Ookba had released on XDA-Developers. It’s been three days now and I’m very happy with it. It’s stable and fast and, so far, everything woks as expected. Even the Skyfire ALT key bug has been fixed.

There was really only one last thing to tackle on this device: the cellular radio itself. In a cellphone, there are really two sets of code that make things work, The Phone’s Operating System (OS) and the radio software. The OS controls all of the functions that you can see, while the radio software controls the way the phone communicates with the network. The OS and the radio can be installed separately.

Users on various message boards have reported that their phones seem to drop their 3G data connection back to EDGE speeds whenever they end a phone call. And a few people have complained that their ability to capture a 3G signal in the first place is suspect. Some people hope that an upgraded radio software package from the manufacturer will address some of these issues. In fact, it probably won’t, since connection speed decisions are made by the network and not the phone, but at any rate I figure that if HTC released a newer version of the radio software, there must be some improvement in it….

My Dash 3G originally shipped with radio version 3.44.25.30 (check yours by going to START/SETTINGS/ABOUT). The manufacturer (HTC) released a Windows Mobile 6.5 upgrade separately from the T-Mobile upgrade, and the HTC version had some updated radio code in it. Ookba managed to extract this package and build it into a stand-alone update, with version 3.47.25.29 in it. And that’s what I installed.

The Verdict

Well … the flash worked perfectly and everything installed in about a minute of work. Did it change the way my phone behaves? Not that much that I can see. It certainly doesn’t seem to have hurt anything, but there is no dramatic improvement either. I think that I am able to get better signal on my normal commute, but this could also very well be the result of T-Mobile’s ongoing network upgrades too. I don’t get any faster speeds when my laptop is tethered. I’m not sure yet whether actual phone performance is enhanced (I haven’t made enough calls).

So my recommendation is this: if you are comfortable flashing your phone, go for it. You might see some marginal improvements. But if flashing makes you nervous, then there’s no reason to suffer through this – the improvements aren’t dramatic.

T-Mobile bumps their entire 3G network up to 7.2Mbps, 21Mbps coming soon

January 5th, 2010 Rob 1 comment

T-Mobile might have been a bit late off the plate in rolling out their 3G network compared to the competition, but that gave them one small advantage: foresight. By the time T-Mobile started setting up towers, the world was already well aware that the same technology that powered their 3.1 Megabit per second 3G network could be bumped all the way up to 21 Mbps without drastic overhauls.

They’ve taken one step toward that today, kicking the speed dial up to 7.2Mbps across their entire network. They’re the first carrier to be able to claim a 100% rollout of the doubled speed — even if it is largely because their 3G network is a wee bit smaller than all of their competitors. Good news for all you speed demons: they’re looking to drive it from 7.2Mbps to 21Mbps by mid-2010, with tests already underway in Philadelphia.

[Via Phonescoop]

I found this on MobileCrunch this morning … looks like good news for us T-Mobile subscribers. And this comes on the same day that Google announced the Nexus One, which will use T-Mobile’s network, at least initially. Big day for the underdog carrier. And, according to press coverage on the Nexus One launch, Google promised that tethering will be coming to Android. Nice …

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