Monday, May 03, 2010

Three's MiFi - magic in your pocket!

I am a 3 mobile broadband customer having availed of a generous offer on the ZTE MF627 USB dongle in 2009. I came across Three's MiFi device - Huawei E5830 a few months ago and it was almost like a revelation of the "wish I had thought of that" kind. Because it brings the best of consumer internet experience together - WiFi and 3G mobile broadband. And that is a powerful combination.

My interest in the MiFi is three-fold:
  • A backup home and mobile internet connection, which I can switch to if my primary 3G or home connection fails or is unbearably slow. Without having to fiddle with SIM cards on my phone or plugging in a mobile dongle into a PC. A backup reliable 3G+WiFi connection.
  • A 3G+WiFi device that I can use to take my WiFi only devices out to play. The iPod Touch immediately comes to mind and that is what seems to be 3's target market, for now. But if you don't fancy a mobile dongle sticking out the side of your netbook/laptop, the MiFi is perfect.
  • iPad. We already pay a hefty premium for an Apple product, on top of which we pay a premium for being an early adopter if we get one now. Tech blogs tell us that as early adopters, our best bet is to get the base model and upgrade in a year or two's time when the product has matured to the level we would have wanted to begin with. Which means we go for the WiFi only model. But then no taking your iPad to browse the web on the train/tube and no A-GPS, no geolocation, no geotagging, no fun. Again the 3 MiFi perfectly serves the purpose in more ways than one as I found out.
So I asked 3 if they would send me a unit to test and they kindly did. (3MobileBuzz if you are interested) There have been in depth reviews done of the device already, its technical specifications, what it offers, 3's price plans for the device and usage etc. So am not going to waste time repeating stuff - but the basics are its mini USB with a microSD card slot, uses a Huawei HB4F1 3.7V 1500mAh Li-Polymer battery (same as in the Huawei U8220 mobile phone aka T-Mobile Pulse), SIM goes in the back beneath the battery. Comes with a wall charger, USB to mini USB connector and useful help cards to get you started and answer initial questions. IMEI, MAC and serial numbers are beneath the battery near the SIM bay along with the SSID and WiFi key. SSID and WiFi key are also on one of the help cards included.

My impressions:
  • Setting up - There might have been an issue with the unit I received, in that the previous tester might have changed the settings and converted it from a secured WiFi connection to an open one. Three include the connection settings in the box, so you should be able to pop in the SIM, start charging and be ready to connect straight away. However, I found my unit to be unsecured and that meant securing it first. You can do so by installing the 3 WiFi Manager software stored on the device itself. Connect the device to your PC with the supplied mini USB cable, drivers get installed (might have to reboot - I had to on Win7 64-bit Professional Edition) to get the drivers install properly. Up pops the 3 WiFi Manager installation dialog box. Here's the catch : its Windows only. There is no Mac OS X version, which means if having to secure your MiFi before using it is standard (doubt it, but do check before buying) then you need access to a PC. Also there is no WEP security, if that's an issue (seems Nintendo DS uses WEP only and hence won't play nice with the E5830). Once secured, its the usual procedure to connect devices - its a WiFi spot as far as everything is concerned and you find it, type in the password and connect. I was able to simultaneously connect 2 iPod Touch 1Gs, a Macbook pro (running Windows or Mac OS X), iPhone 3GS and an Android handset (Huwaei U8220) and the Three MiFi seemed happy with all the attention.
  • Indoors - am on an O2 contract with my iPhone. Which means I have no usable 3G connection to speak of. Inside the flat or out in the open. So the first thing to do was run speed tests in as close to scientific conditions as possible on 3's MiFi:
    • Windows 7 - Google Chrome Browser - http://www.speedtest.net - 2.25 Mbps down, 1.07 Mbps up.
    • iPhone 3GS - OS 3 - SpeedTest Native App - 1.42 Mbps down, 1.49Mbps up.
    • iPod Touch 1st Gen - OS 3 - SpeedTest Native App - 0.47Mbps down and 0.79Mbps (am sure the 1st Gen hardware must have had a say in this, because the iPhone 3GS was giving me 1.29 down and 0.40 up at this point)
    • Android T-Mobile Pulse/Huawei U8220 - Android 1.5 - 1.08Mbps down and 0.75Mbps up.
    In comparison, I got 0.22 Mbps down and 0.19 Mbps up on O2 3G on the iPhone, with 2-3 bars of signal from the same physical location. For the sake of completeness, I decided to switch the SIM in the iPhone to the 3 one in the MiFi to test. I realize this is not a like to like comparison because the MiFi SIM is probably a HSPA mobile broadband SIM, though the SIM pack in the box said it was a PAYG 3G SIM (which I am assuming is the same as a phone SIM). Anyway, I got the full 5 bars (astonishing actually) and an immediate 3G connection with the 3 SIM in the iPhone (I think I had previously entered the 3 APN settings in my iPhone at some point). Running the SpeedTest app gave me 2.03 Mbps down and 0.30 Mbps up. So there.
  • Outdoors - Tried the MiFi on the overground parts of the tube in (outer) London and out and about in the Strand area. Whereas O2 has at least 4 extended blackspots on my 20 min above ground journey, 3 had one minor blip. Sure O2's network is over utilized and 3's maybe not so much, but that doesn't make a difference to my monthly mobile bill, so more annoyed with O2's excuses. Some photographic evidence Non existent O2 connection, happily browsing with the MiFi.
Now, the really really fun stuff

An exciting thing about the MiFi is that in a way its mobile networking for your WiFi devices because they will be all on the same subnet. Not sure whether the WiFi feature necessarily works if the MiFi is not able to find a mobile signal/3G connection, but it should. What this means is that you can use cool apps like the DSLR camera remote, which allows you to remote control your camera while its tethered to your laptop (running the server software) from your iPod Touch, iPhone or iPad. So, networking.

Remember what I said about the assisted GPS stuff on the iPad, which will be missing in the WiFi only version? Now in the brief time I got to test the MiFi with an iPod Touch, there was another revelation. Geolocation and maps will work on a non-GPS enabled device with the MiFi to the same extent as triangulation using mobile towers does. Sure, it might not be able to pinpoint like a true GPS device, but for most city dwelling and use purposes that is good enough, right? We don't get a GPS fix in the midst of all those buildings anyway, its usually triangulation using the mobile towers. While in a taxi on the A4 to Heathrow, I was able to near pinpoint (accurately) my location on the iPod Touch, WiFi-ed into the MiFi. Geek gadget heaven! So, maps.

What else does WiFi give you? Skype calls! Over 3G. On your iPhone or iPod Touch (you'll need a handsfree kit), which the native Skype app still doesn't allow. Tried it, it worked. And with reports that some apps are not playing fair with the iPad 3G, the MiFi is a cure for many ills. Also it means that you will not be at the mercy of iPad 3G data pricing (and micro SIM prices, though you can fashion your own microSIMs from standard SIMs) from other networks. Though its unlikely that, with 3's MiFi around, networks will be able to get away with exorbitant charges. So, calls and texts (either through Skype or the 3 WiFi Manager App for Windows, which allows you to send and receive text messages in tethered mode from the MiFi).

Finally, if present and near future proofing your iPad or any new WiFi enabled mobile gizmo purchase is important to you, then a MiFi is pretty much your only bet. LTE/4G are not that far away and I have no idea what kind of hardware changes those technologies will demand. So if having to upgrade your essentially perfectly fine kit just to use the latest connectivity is likely to annoy you, the MiFi is your friend.

Of course, you will find more uses for the device as the possibilities click in your mind. Like leaving the MiFi on the window sill for the best signal, while you roam around inside. You and your partner can both engage in "must look that thing up that I must look up now" activity while on the tube/bus/train and maintain radio silence. Bliss...

So, what are the downsides?
It is churlish to try and pick faults with this star, but there are a couple of things, one of which should and can definitely be sorted out.

Inevitably, battery life is a major downer. And having another wall charger and another cable will lead to some utterance of profanities at some point. And it does misbehave at times. Especially, when it drops its connection and tries to reconnect etc.

But the main and only real issue I have with the device is the lack of a proper admin console (the 3 Wifi Manager isn't enough) to tell you what devices are connected to your MiFi, how much data you've used etc. There are hacks available on the web to do all this, but that is besides the point.

Conclusion
Get it - its a no brainer really. The E5830 is fantastic and though there is Novatel's much more expensive MiFi 2352 (and possibly other MiFis that I am unaware of) and the alternative of using software/app based MiFi functionality, the pricing and the coverage of Three's offering are just right.

Hagia Sophia Mihrab/Altar


Hagia Sophia Mihrab/Altar, originally uploaded by Shivaranjan.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hagia_Sophia

Monday, April 26, 2010

The Blue Mosque - An Essay


The Blue Mosque - An Essay, originally uploaded by Shivaranjan.

The Sultanahmet Cami (pronounced Jaami, which I understood to mean a humongous mosque as compared to a Mesjid - Masjid in India - an ordinary sized mosque) and the Hagia Sophia (also known as the Ayia Sophia or Sancta Sophia) are two imposing, almost menacing, structures sitting opposite each other in close quarters, ready to slug it out. The bulging domes ripple like muscles and you are dwarfed standing between the two in the small square and can't help being in awe of the fact that these buildings are so old. The Hagia Sophia was dedicated in 360 A.D. according to Wikipedia and the Blue Mosque in 1616. Incidentally, the Blue Mosque is so called because of the blue tiles inside the building, there is not much blue on the outside. Kind of a clever way of piquing your curiosity and tempting you to have a look see inside :)

I will be posting interior snaps of the Hagia Sophia in the next few days.

See the two behemoths square up to each other here

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

A shaky melodic memory


A shaky melodic memory, originally uploaded by Shivaranjan.

Taken near Galatasaray Square on Istiklal Cadessi in Istanbul over Easter 2010

I don't know what musical instrument the old man was playing, but he had the most melodious voice that will forever haunt me. I will forever seek that voice and I will never find it. The singer was blind, completely lost in (what I think was a folk or Sufi) song while his grandson held the mike, interested and disinterested at the same time. The blind singer's wife sat behind waiting for him to finish. I stood mesmerised, trying my best to capture something to remind me of how I felt. The municipal cleaners tried their best to disrupt him mid song, but he was in another world. And when he finished, he calmly stood up, placed the instrument in its carrying case and shouldered it, took the stools in one hand and his grandson's hand in the other and went his way with his wife following them. And the voice was gone and I will forever search for it.

It really makes me sad that someone with such a mellifluous voice has to sing on streets, fighting with passing trams and cleaning trucks to be heard. But I don't think he cared.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Buying a printer

We need a printer - to print boarding passes because we are checking in online a lot more, to print application forms, letters, invoices.... Let's just say that our printing needs have sky rocketed and we need a printer - its no longer ethical to use the printers at work because its no longer a page or two a month maybe.

The only issue was that having never owned a printer, I didn't have much brand awareness. Sure - there's only Epson, Lexmark, HP, Canon, Brother etc. to choose from. Still, I had 2 criteria which could potentially narrow the field down - WiFi and AIO (All In One for the not so geeky).

But here's the interesting bit - I first went to John Lewis' site to see what they stocked, found a couple of printers which fit the bill, checked the cheapest online prices which turned out to be Amazon's. Why John Lewis? For the same reason that Dixons chose them as one of their three targets in their remarkable ad campaign (see below) encouraging customers to get their info somewhere else and place the order with Dixons.



If you are interested - the story's
here.

As coincidence would have it, while I was doing all this research, BBC2 informed me that the next scheduled programme was "Inside John Lewis" - the synopsis for which was "In a television first, the BBC goes behind the scenes of John Lewis - one of Britain's biggest and best known department stores - as it tackles changing tastes, tougher competition and the worst recession for 80 years. Programme three looks to the future. John Lewis is expanding its fashion offering online and we learn what their customers are expecting from a brave new world of 21st-century shopping. The big question facing John Lewis is whether they can embrace this online world without compromising on what it considers to be the business's Holy Grail - personal and specialist service."

Personal and specialist service. Not so personal on their website sure, but still specialist and specialist enough. The point is that these retailers expend the effort in reducing the available choices out there (edit it, in their own words) to a manageable few that we mere humans with mortal coils and limited time, resources, knowledge and patience can make an informed choice from. That's pretty special, but not special enough - thank you JL for the free advice but 30 quid extra is a lot to pay for a machine selling at 115 quid on Amazon!

But I rationalise my obnoxious behaviour thus - JL was only part 1 of the search phase viz. to create a list of 2 maybe 3 printers to research further and more importantly obtain reviews and feedback for. Reading a pc magazine's reviews on the choices, customer reviews on amazon and apple (coz I need the printer to work with mac and windows) narrowed the list down to one - Canon PIXMA MP560 (despite the problems some people have reported setting these up with routers of different makes and security settings and snow leopard).

Then, and I can't for my life remember how and why, I decided to check how old this model was and recent developments in the Canon PIXMA world, when I came across the news that Canon announced 3 new wifi AIO printers with added faxing ability in Feb (available end of March 2010) - the MX870, MX350 and the MX340, the 340 being an "entry" level at 99 quid RRP (89.84 on Amazon pre-order).
Story here. So for those that need a fax machine, here you go.

I was almost back where I started - confused and having to choose. Which is where Canon's
product comparator came in handy. Pretty much told me that for my non-facsimilated needs, the MP560 was the dog's proverbials.

And that's what is winging its way to me.

Update: 25 Mar 2010
BTW - Don't let the spiel on the new Canon printers with regards to iPhone printing fool you. You can print from your iPhone/iPod Touch direct to the MP560 too. Yep - there's an app for that!

Saturday, October 03, 2009

festa2016_pedrokirilos-1-45


festa2016_pedrokirilos-1-45, originally uploaded by PedroKirilos.

A fantastic capture from a contact on flickr, who i think was up in a helicopter above Rio on the 2nd, waiting for the Olympics bid results!

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

I'll be there for you, cause you're there for me too

A man after my own heart :) Its actually nice to know that I am not a weirdo in thinking that Friends was and will remain the best tv show ever!

Monday, August 17, 2009

Resource List - Digital Photography



Examples


Guides and Tutorials


Books


Textures


TBO
http://www.lightroomkillertips.com
http://www.apertureprofessional.com/forumdisplay.php?f=27
http://digitalmedia.oreilly.com/aperture/
http://tacksharp.tv/
http://strobist.blogspot.com/2006/02/welcome-to-strobist.html
http://www.planetneil.com/tangents/flash-photography-techniques/
http://photography-on-the.net/forum/showthread.php?t=75678
http://www.dpreview.com/
www.kenrockwell.com
photo.net
luminous-landscape.com
bobatkins.com/photography
photozone.de
the-digital-picture.com
flashflavor.com
http://www.robgalbraith.com/bins/index.asp
http://www.dtowntv.com/
http://blog.chasejarvis.com/blog/
http://blog.livebooks.com/
http://duncandavidson.com/
http://www.butkus.org/chinon/
http://www.thetrainedeye.co.uk/
http://www.lovegroveconsulting.com/
http://www.chrisweston.uk.com/workshops/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/netwolfuk/
http://www.whf.org.uk/aboutwhf.cfm
http://www.magnumphotos.com/Archive/StartPage.aspx
http://yervant.wedshooter.com/category/Post-Production/
http://www.scottkelby.com/blog/2009/archives/4108
http://www.good-tutorials.com/
http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/04/17/40-amazing-online-photography-magazines/
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/