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	<title>Smatters &#187; IBM 360</title>
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	<description>Matters of the Smith-Atwood Family</description>
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		<title>From Treo to Storm II</title>
		<link>http://www.smat.us/archives/466</link>
		<comments>http://www.smat.us/archives/466#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Mar 2010 20:38:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Rick</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Family]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blackberry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Droid]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ebooks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[eWallet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IBM 360]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ilium Software]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Palm]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[passwords]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PDP-1]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pre Plus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[smart phone]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Storm 2]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wallpaper]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.smat.us/?p=466</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Last fall, Alex warned me that Apple was dropping their support for the Palm Treo. I couldn&#8217;t upgrade to Spotted Lynx, or whatever the latest OS-X is called, until I switched phones. While I had been hoping to hold out for a Verizon iPhone, my patience ended a couple of weeks ago. After a weekend [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Last fall, Alex warned me that Apple was dropping their support for the Palm Treo. I couldn&#8217;t upgrade to Spotted Lynx, or whatever the latest OS-X is called, until I switched phones. While I had been hoping to hold out for a <a title="Yet another Verizon iPhone rumor" href="http://brainstormtech.blogs.fortune.cnn.com/2010/01/20/verizon-iphone-unveiling-next-week/">Verizon iPhone</a>, my patience ended a couple of weeks ago. After a weekend with a Droid, and a brief flirtation with the Palm Pre Plus, I settled on the <a title="Crackberry: Storm II Review" href="http://crackberry.com/blackberry-storm2-review">Blackberry Storm II</a>.</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-481" title="phones" src="http://www.smat.us/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/phones.jpg" alt="" width="200" height="180" /></p>
<p>Aside from the built-in contact list and calendar (oh yes, and the phone) I rely on a smart phone for two other things: <a title="Reading ebooks on the Storm II" href="../archives/469">an ebook reader</a> and a password manager. And I also want to feel some comfort for the phone&#8217;s security model. And, oh yes, I need easy access to contacts and calendar on my desktop, presumably through a sync feature.</p>
<p>I didn&#8217;t warm to the Droid because it&#8217;s too much like having a laptop on your pocket. And since the Pre Plus was a complete rework, I figured it wouldn&#8217;t be that similar to the Treo in practice. There was a period of suspense after acquiring the Storm, since I wasn&#8217;t sure it would in fact do all I wanted, but things eventually worked out.</p>
<h3><span id="more-466"></span>The Droid</h3>
<p>I had three problems with <a title="Android OS for the Droid phones" href="http://www.android.com/">the Droid</a>: its excessive computer-ness, its weak security model (a related problem), and synchronization troubles. The computer-ness means that it&#8217;s not so much a phone as a computing platform. You yourself have to arrange your &#8216;desktop&#8217; with the appropriate things, and the learning curve was too steep for someone who didn&#8217;t want to spend a whole weekend moving to a new phone.</p>
<p>The Droid security model <a title="Droid security model and malware" href="http://www.cryptosmith.com/archives/970">doesn&#8217;t do enough to protect the phone</a> from malware, like viruses, worms, or Trojan horses. Basically, I&#8217;d have had to teach myself (and possible configure the Droid) to keep the risk of malware low. I didn&#8217;t want to invest that sort of extra time just now.</p>
<p>My son has most of his life posted on the Google web site (contacts, e-mail, and calendar, at least), and all this flowed smoothly onto his own Droid phone. I spent a few hours struggling to get all my stuff replicated onto Google from Apple&#8217;s Address Book and an older copy of iCal. No dice. Then I tried a 3rd party product, &#8220;<a title="Missing Sync for Android" href="http://www.markspace.com/products/android/missing-sync-android.html">Missing Sync for Android</a>,&#8221; which briefly looked like a solution. No dice again. Calendar sync turned out to be a &#8220;future&#8221; feature.</p>
<p>It took about 24 hours to wring all this out. Then I went back to <a title="Wireless Zone, Hastings MN" href="http://www.wirelesszone.com/franchise-homepage.php?id=286">the local phone store</a> and had my old Treo turned back on.</p>
<h3>The Palm Pre Plus</h3>
<p>The guys at the phone store thoughtfully ordered me a <a title="Palm: Pre Plus" href="http://www.palm.com/us/products/phones/preplus/index.html">Palm Pre Plus</a> after I expressed my displeasure with the Droid. I like Pre&#8217;s the slip-out keyboard, and its self-portrait mirror is worth a chuckle.</p>
<p>But as I looked closer at the Pre, I found only one clear reason to choose it: I would remain faithful to the brand I&#8217;d used for over a decade. I picked up a Palm III back when they first came out in the late &#8217;90s, and I never regularly carried a cell phone till after I bought my first Treo (which only ran on T-Mobile).</p>
<p>Brand loyalty isn&#8217;t a very practical reason to choose a phone, but it&#8217;s all this really was. There was no benefit from my existing Palm software base. As I noted before, the sync software would be completely different, and they had completely rewritten the phone&#8217;s operating system. So nothing I had would work, except in an alleged &#8220;compatibility mode.&#8221; I hate comparability modes.</p>
<p>Such loyalty to Palm would certainly outshine its loyalty to me as a customer. I&#8217;ve been putting up with the Treo&#8217;s awful Bluetooth software for years. Every time I started my car, I worried about whether it synced correctly with the hands-free gizmo. Sometimes it <em>pretended</em> to sync up when in fact it did not. The Treo even had trouble staying synced with an earbud. Pitiful. And it had been <em>years</em> since the last Treo software update.</p>
<p>Moreover, my wife is stuck using Blackberries. Her clinic signed on with Blackberry and exports her Microsoft Outlook stuff to it (calendar, e-mail, contacts, etc.). She had been looking at the Storm 2, and I have to admit there&#8217;s a benefit to both of us having the same phone. I was generally lost when I had to pick up her old &#8216;berry and try to answer a call.</p>
<h3>The Blackberry Storm II</h3>
<p>The Storm 2 is a nice, solid device. The screen surface seems sturdier than anything I&#8217;ve used before, including all my Palms. It&#8217;s roughly half the thickness of the Treo, and with a much larger screen.</p>
<p>The biggest downside is the &#8216;soft&#8217; keyboard. It takes up half the screen when it appears, and my fingers only work with it when it&#8217;s in landscape mode. There&#8217;s some weird &#8220;multi-tap&#8221; techniques that use fewer, larger keys in portrait mode, but I don&#8217;t want to have to train myself on them just now.</p>
<p>On the other hand, the touch screen is solid and reliable. The &#8220;landscape mode&#8221; soft keyboard hasn&#8217;t given me much trouble, though there&#8217;s definitely a learning curve. But I&#8217;d have had to learn the &#8216;touch&#8217; of a new physical keyboard in any case.</p>
<p>At first I was really disappointed by the Blackberry calendar, but I&#8217;m resigned to it for now. It doesn&#8217;t seem to use the available graphics as effectively as the old Treo calendar did. In fact, the graphics are roughly the same as the Treo&#8217;s. That&#8217;s a real minus for the Storm 2, since it has far more pixels to work with. The Storm 2 calendar doesn&#8217;t show quite as much info in Month mode and it&#8217;s hard to see the whole schedule in Day or Week mode. Worse, there&#8217;s no &#8220;Display the Year&#8221; mode.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m holding out hope that there is an improved add-on calendar app somewhere.</p>
<p>I think some Storm problems are caused by its lack of a physical keyboard. Traditional Blackberry apps assume there is a keyboard. The graphics don&#8217;t exploit the larger screen because <em>there is no larger screen</em> on a traditional &#8216;berry. Most apps target the least common denominator, which used to be a smaller screen and a physical keyboard.</p>
<p>As I noted elsewhere, <a title="Ebooks on the Storm II" href="../archives/469">ebook reading would have been a deal breaker</a> with the Storm 2, had I not found an acceptable solution. As it is, I found Amazon&#8217;s Kindle for the Blackberry to be perfectly servicable.</p>
<h3>Password Management</h3>
<p>The last piece of the puzzle is the password manager. I&#8217;ve used <a title="Ilium's EWallet" href="http://www.iliumsoft.com/site/ew/ewallet.php">Ilium&#8217;s EWallet</a> for several years now, and upgraded it across various Treos. EWallet stores its database in encrypted form using a textual password to protect it. It has a matching desktop version that lets you look at your password list as long as you know the encrypting password for the file.</p>
<p>Ilium offers a Blackberry version which I&#8217;m eager to try out. The only problem is that they haven&#8217;t yet released their OS-X native version of their desktop software. So I have to run it on a different desktop to start with.</p>
<h5>Merging and Migrating the Old List</h5>
<p>Meanwhile, however, I have to contend with old Palm Treo troubles. The Palm sync software has always been buggy, and they never properly adapted it to work with multi-user operating systems (like, <em>everything</em> on a desktop since the era of Windows 2000). I haven&#8217;t been able to sync my EWallet since crashing my Windows XP virtual machine last summer. After that I moved things to Vista and then to Win 7, neither of which were fully tolerated by the Palm desktop sync. I suspect there was a privilege problem &#8211; the old software always worked best when running as an Administrator.</p>
<p>But this left me with one set of passwords on my Treo and a different one on my Windows laptop. Since then I&#8217;ve brought up another XP virtual machine, and I&#8217;ll install all the Palm stuff there, along with a vintage copy of EWallet. Hopefully that will sync up and I&#8217;ll get all my passwords into a single list.</p>
<p>I just have to hope that the latest version of EWallet (7.1) will willingly start up with a database from an older version. We&#8217;ll see &#8211; Ilium seems to be pretty good about such things.</p>
<h5>UPDATE: March 18</h5>
<p>I managed to coax a copy of EWallet onto my Windows 7 laptop and onto the &#8216;Berry itself.  After a couple of false starts, I got the old Palm and EWallet sync software running on a Windows XP virtual machine I had lying around, and I merged my Palm and desktop wallets &#8211; I hadn&#8217;t been able to do that since attempting it once or twice on Vista.</p>
<p>Then I moved the wallet file to my Win 7 laptop and laboriously got the sync software working there. The biggest hassle here was that the &#8216;Berry software limits its sync support to &#8220;Yahoo&#8221; and Outlook/Exchange. I use neither and don&#8217;t want to use them. But if you want <em>any</em> sync at all, you have to sync your calendar, contacts, or &#8220;Notes&#8221; with either Outlook/Exchange or with Yahoo. I convinced the thing to sync my &#8220;Notes&#8221; with Yahoo.</p>
<p>At first, EWallet didn&#8217;t really work on the Storm. I could open the wallet and scan the card titles, but I couldn&#8217;t actually examine any cards. I turned out the &#8220;permissions&#8221; weren&#8217;t correctly set: the three application permissions all require the &#8220;allow&#8221; setting. I found that out through e-mail with Ilium&#8217;s customer service.</p>
<p>Ilium is promising a genuine, sync-capable version of their Mac OS desktop application someday. At present they provide a beta version that allows me to look at my passwords, but not to edit them.</p>
<p>So, for now, I have to sync my passwords with my laptop. Oof.</p>
<h3>Storm 2 Wallpaper</h3>
<p>In case anyone noticed, I&#8217;ve adapted a view of a PDP-1&#8242;s control panel as wallpaper on my Storm 2. I created two background images: a close-up of blinkenlights from an IBM 360/90, and the PDP-1 image. These images are 360 x 480 pixels, and should work anywhere that needs a low res 3&#215;4 wallpaper, more or less. Here are thumbnails with links to the full sized JPEGs, in case anyone else wants them:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.smat.us/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/chm03bb1.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-482" title="IBM 360/90 for BB Storm" src="http://www.smat.us/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/chm03bb1.jpg" alt="" width="216" height="288" /></a> <a href="http://www.smat.us/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/pdp1bb.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-483" title="PDP-1 lights for BB Storm" src="http://www.smat.us/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/pdp1bb.jpg" alt="" width="216" height="288" /></a></p>
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