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My life with a smartphone - 2011 edition

Submitted by jayabharath on 19 December 2011 - 4:12pm
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Smartphones are not new to my life. I have over the last 10 years with my current employer have been intimately involved in the smartphone technology revolution we are witnessing today. As with any technology the way each of us embrace it and adapt to it is our own unique story. I wanted to dedicate a post on how I have been using smartphone in 2011 and how it has affected my life.


My primary smartphone in 2011 has been the Nokia N8. (Thanks to @NokiaDeveloper for giving me a C7 that I immediately sold on Amazon and bought the N8 instead). To give you a little context of when I came from I had used the HTC HD2 (loaded with Android/CM7) for a few months - CM7 was great and the Android appstore offering on par with the best - however, the HD2 was a bit large at 4.3” display (which is excellent for webbrowsing) and had a mere 5MP (w/LED flash) camera, the battery hardly lasted a day of use.


Let’s take a look at my daily usage:


Morning Drill:

On most days I miss the wakeup alarm on my phone (I cant blame the loud N8’s loud speaker). But I first check out the time. (NOTE: I dont like wearing a watch and I simply love the Nokia N8’s always on Screen saver clock - it’s one of the most handy & used features by me.) I typically keep the phone around me for about 30 mins while I get ready - checking new emails (via Mail for exchange & Gmail) and reply to urgent stuff, twitter/ facebook (via Gravity) and review my day’s appointments. I also catchup on the latest news via CNN & Engadget. Ocassionally, I check the weather as well.


At work

My usage at work tends to be mostly answering phone calls (about 30mins) and responding to SMS. I do most of my primary work on a Mac and typically don’t use the N8 for anything else at this time.


Evening Dance

My evening are filled with family, home/outdoors, shopping malls/dinner etc. I typically use the Nokia Drive to navigate us to the destination and it works like a charm (except for search which can be improved). I also use the Music application to play our favourites tunes in the car (especially to keep my daughter entertained while I drive). I tend to take most of the photos with my camera (typically about 5 per day) and upload them to directly to flickr (via PixelPipe). I do occasionally check twitter/facebook and news (especially while my wife is busy shopping). I also typically read about 5-10 webpages on a my phone each evening espeically when away from home. I take picture of stuff I want to track in Evernote and email it to my evernote account. (due to lack of evernote client on N8).


Good Night Kiss

One last email check & final dose of twitter/facebook before I sleep. And then finally before I sleep - I religiously set a couple of alarms for next morning.


Other usage notes:

  • Phone charging: On most days I don’t really bother charging the phone at night as I know that my N8 will make it thought the night without any issues (I cant claim that for other power powerful smartphones I have played). I typically charge my phone using the Nokia’s fast charger each morning for an hour or so. I know that if I need to charge it a microUSB port would be available in my car & at work. And if there is a risk that my battery will die - I have a fast way to switch on the power savings mode that will certainly get me through till I reach a power outlet.



Built-in Apps:

  • Mail : Mail for exchange and Gmail support work fine and meet my needs.

  • Webbrowser: The browsing experience is seriously lacking (In areas of display resolution, browser performance & rendering) . Once you taste the Android browsing experience -- you really can see what I mean.

  • Calendar: Works beautifully. I just hope that the home screen widget uses space more efficiently

  • Camera: The best image quality (unparalleled in any 2011 smartphone). Performance needs improvement (especially startup & shot to shot). The UI is not bad - but, can really be improved.

  • Maps: Best mapping application I have used (and it’s work every penny of the $8B Nokia invested :) - however searching for places can be improved.  I cant see myself using the Android maps as it has no offline support and.

  • Music: Mostly to list to music on-the go in my car and when I work out.


3rd Party Apps

Most of the big ecosystems (iOS, Android & soon WindowsPhone) have been making a big noise on with their app store metrics. But, I am a strong believer that ‘quality not quantity’ is important to a end user. I also firmly believe that most users use about 10-15 apps on a regular basis (though they may try a lot more in a device’s lifetime).


Here are apps I use on a regular basis:

  • Gravity - For Twitter & facebook

  • Nokia Pulse - Still in Beta. But, I use this to send short updates to my family

  • PixelPipe - Use it to send picture from my N8 directly to flickr.

  • Upcode - QR codes are not dying. So, this is quite handy.

  • AAS - I keep track of whats going on in the Symbian world (afterall Nokia N8 is a Symbian ^3 device)

  • Enagdget (RSS widget - I made my own via appwizard)


Ocassional Usage:

  • Joikuspot: Somehow this has been pulled from Nokia store in US. But you can get it directly from the publisher.

  • Google Maps: I mainly use it as the Nokia Maps seach mostly never finds what I am looking for. I typically seach on google maps and then load up the info into nokia maps to give me turn by turn routing.

  • HDR Pro Camera: Just a nice app to capture and experiment with HDR photos.

  • Sports Tracker : I use it to record my occasional jog

  • Talking Hamster : It’s a neat little app that I use to amuze my daughter

  • Skype

  • Angry Birds : A casual game I play when I have a few dull minutes I want to pass


So now with all of this said - smartphone (N8 in 2011) has now woven into my daily living. Here is summary of what I learned about my my smartphone usage & preferences.


The essentials (what I can’t part:

  • Core phone: Yep - it need to be solid, stable & should work!

  • Robust Email: It should just work with a range of email accounts

  • Great camera: Though I have moved to using a DSLR at home for photos - smartphone camera will continue the camera at my arms reach for years to come. So, I just need the best camera in the phone I carry.

  • Usable & intuitive browser: Currently very lacking in a N8 - I do think a good browser is a must for me (something on part with Android browser on my HD2)

  • Best Text input: should be intutive and fast (this is currently a limiting factor in N8 soft keyboard which feels contrained).

  • 3.5-3.9” Display - I cant really go back to the E72/Blackberry style phones after I had the taste of bliss (larger touch screen devices like the N8)

  • Functional button & key add to usability: Manufacturers are on a path to removing all button from a phone - but I have found that I like thoughtfully designed and implemented button (e.g., the Lock/Unlock key on the N8 - missing in most modren smartphones).


What’s missing:

  • Nokia N8 currently does not have apps for Evernote & Audible that I use often.

  • Breadth of apps is important: My needs and workflow is dynamic - I would like to have an app ready on my smartphone so that it fits into my workflow.

  • Fast camera performance is a must.

  • Fitness Accessories: I would like my phone to keep track of my weight, calories burned, sleep times etc - an accessory that works out of the box will keep me healthy

     

 

Blog Entry 

technology, smartphone, life, n8, Nokia, apps

2011 Holiday Shopping Guide - with OMAP in it!

Submitted by jayabharath on 24 November 2011 - 12:50am
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It’s holiday season and lot of us are looking to buy or gift a mobile device. It has been a tremendous year for OMAP™ fans everywhere and a lot of awesome hardware is available today to include in your must have holiday shopping list. I thought I will take a stab at listing out my favorite cool new OMAP powered products for your shopping list or just wish Santa will bring you one of them!


Smartphones:

Yep the smartphones from last year have been outsmarted yet again. Here are my OMAP powered picks:

 

Samsung Galaxy Nexus (OMAP4460): If you are looking to get a fix of latest Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) in time for the holidays this is the only way to go. Simply awesome Samsung hardware & the latest unadulterated Google Android software are tough to beat combination. Though I have not played with the device nor tested it’s camera - the choice of 5MPx camera sensor is a bit of a let down for any flag ship device in 2011. If you are not in it for the camera - then the Galaxy Nexus is hands down the best smartphone you can own this year.

 

Motorola Droid RAZR (OMAP4430): This is my personal favorite. Simply awesome crafted hardware - it’s true to it’s name RAZR. As well as handles 1080p video recording and 8Mpx stills that you tend to expect from a flagship smartphone in 2011. The device is blazing fast for all you can throw at it and has LTE support on Verizon USA. In addition Motorola has promised a upgrade to Android 4.0 in 2012.

 

Motorola Droid 3 (OMAP4430): If you need to have a traditional QWERTY - then the Droid 3 has one of the best keyboards on a smartphone.

 

Motorola Droid Bionic (OMAP4430) : In addition to being all you expect 2011 smartphone  - the droid Bionic takes the smartphone experience to the next level with Motorola’s Webtop application & lapdock accessories.

 

LG Thrill (OMAP4430) : The world is 3 dimensions - so why should our smartphones capture and render anything less that that. The LG thrill is one of the first 3D smartphones with 3D video capture & glasses free 3D playback. It does come with some limitations - the device's 3D display suffers from low viewing angles i.e., you need to hold it a specific way to enjoy the 3D effects.

 

Nokia N9 (OMAP3630) : The device does not earn the credit of having the leading edge OMAP technology - but, its a beauty in it's own right. The Nokia N9 is simply stunning piece of industrial design, runs MeeGo/Linux Operating system. The UI and the device are simply put "beautiful". The only let down is that Nokia has pulled the plug on MeeGo platform and any future updates to Nokia N9. However, Nokia N9 is the smartphone I would recommend to open source enthusiasts and linux hackers.


 

Tablets:

Kindle Fire (OMAP4430): For $199 it's a bargain for what it does. The key selling point of the device is how beautifully it ties to Amazon services, Amazon's android app store, Amazon prime with thousands of videos, mp3 & last but not least ebooks. This is the tablet I would recommend to all for this season.

 

Nook Tablet (OMAP4430): I have been a fan of the Nook Color (see below) but the Nook tablet take it to the next level. With Dual core OMAP4 SoC, better battery life, lesser weight, integrated new tablet centric apps like Hulu, Netflix are built in. However,  there is no official support for any market place. And I personally find the Kindle a better device for most people as it gives access to broad range of amazon services.

 

Blackberry Playbook (OMAP4430): The Playbook is a decent device especially for enterprise, blackberry owners. If you are happy with the built in applications, lack of native mail/calendar client, & the rather small blackberry app store choices then it might be a good buy. Most retailers seem to be offering deep discounts on the Playbook this holiday season to making it a sweeter deal.

 

Archos G9 (OMAP4) : Finely spec'ed device with great media codec support. The G9 is pretty awesome bang for the buck. I am looking forward to the Turbo versions with 1.5Ghz Dual core and 250GB disk space.

 

Ebook Readers:

 

Nook Simple Touch (OMAP3): eInk displays provide a book-like reading experience and Nook Simple Touch gets you started at a very low price with great usability & performance. It also supports a open ePUB format that most libraries and ebooks are available in.

 

B&N Nook Color (OMAP3621) : The Nook color is still my favorite color ebook reader - or should I say tablet. It's easy to convert to a fully functional Android tablet (See: Cyanogenmod). Well you don't need to give up on your ebook's as you can install Amazon's Kindle app as well as B&N Nook app and get best everything Amazon, B&N and Android has to offer.

 

Hackable Development Boards

Yeah this is a special category for hardware hackers & enthusiasts.

PandaBoard: Low-cost way to get access to cutting edge OMAP technology in a open-source package. With over 70 community projects, 1100 community members & 9 linux distro you can scratch your geek itch this holidays.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Happy Holidays!

 

Full Disclosure: I work for Texas Instruments in the OMAP team. The post has been composed with public information & expresses my personal views.

 

 

Relationships a key to being Happy @ Work

Submitted by jayabharath on 9 November 2011 - 4:19pm
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I have been pondering & studying a lot lately on what makes us happy at work. One of the key elements that I have come to strongly believe is that "relationships" with our co-workers is a key ingredient to being happy at work.

It is a known fact that man is a social animal and research has shown that depth and extent of relationships is a key factor in long-term happiness.

What can we learn from this?
  • For individuals (i.e., you & me):
    • Find ways to connect more & better with your co-workers. Yeah I am not talking about connecting via a online social network (that's a start) but in-person. Don't just say hi in the hallway - start a conversation.
    • If you are in a very large team - make it a point to get to know 1 new person each week.
    • Strengthen your relationships with the people who you naturally get connected to. Make an attempt connect with them outside of work.
  • For leaders & business owners:
    • Remember that team building is not just a one time event that gets scheduled a few times a year. It's about how connected the team is, how well they know each other that translates into a good team.
    • Strive hard to create a culture and environment to nourish these relationships. It will pay off in the long run - both in employee satisfaction & productivity.

Do your good relationships at work make your happier? What are you thoughts?

 

Blog Entry 

happiness, work, relationships

Hidden messages

Submitted by jayabharath on 3 August 2011 - 10:23pm
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Bad economic conditions & outlook are forcing business to cutback on expenses. Leaders roll out austerity measures to cutback on spending. However, they fail to realize the hidden messages that they constantly communicate with the team. They set bad examples!
 
Take the case of a leader who implements travel restriction in a group on one hand while he/she travels or appears to travel most of the time unnecessarily. The group will soon feel that the leader is being hypocritical and could start to get disengaged. 
 
It is a known fact that you continue to communicate hidden messages in all your actions - You Can't Not Communicate. Actions speak louder than words!
 
As a leader not only should be speak & communicate your ideas & direction, but you must act in accordance with it. You must make the extra care to communicate the right hidden messages in your actions. The is no other way.
 
What hidden messages are you communicating?

Blog Entry 

Leadership, communication

Project Options

Submitted by jayabharath on 1 August 2011 - 5:14pm
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Humans tend to make decisions that affect short term performance at the risk of long term growth. This has been proven repeatedly with the fall of Enron, the financial crisis lead by the failure of the major banks and you can look back in history to find countless examples.  

Human resources experts have found that 'stock options' are a effective tools for 1) Employee retention 2) Enable ownership & build accountability into employees work.  

Though stock options are have been proven effective in employee retention - it is really tough for rank & file employees as well as  middle management to translate their day to day decision making into share holder value. The result is short term thinking and bad decision on projects, lack of accountability, long term thinking & holistic view on projects that they are working on.   

How do we device mechanisms to encourage employees & middle managers to make better decision, to bring more employee engagement on projects. One idea I am calling is 'Project options' (due to lack of better term). Here is how project options could work:  

  • Each project is run as a profit/loss operation (Think: a mini business)
  • Each participant in the project get a certain number of project options at the start of the project. And they may get more as a performance reward as well during their tenure with the project.
  • Project options translate into real dollar value and vest after while (a say 4 yrs -25% vested/year upto the 4th). The value of the option can be calculated via some mathematical formula based on project profitability.
  • People get to keep the project options even after they move away from a project (unlike stock options). 

Project options can become the key to long term success of projects,  bring about long term holistic thinking in decision making. In addition, Project options may not solve the problem of ethical decision making in business. But, it could certainly help alleviate it as long term success of any business is build upon strong ethics.

Blog Entry 

Business, efficiency, ethics, ideas

Smartphone device innovation - An opportunity up for grabs

Submitted by jayabharath on 15 July 2011 - 12:26pm
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Smartphones have been the cutting edge of mobile device innovation over the last 10 years with a few notable innovation periods:

  • 2004 & earlier: PDAs integrated phones, RIM blackberry for corporate email
  • 2005-2007 Multimedia computers: Nokia lead this effort with it's multimedia computers capable of excellent imaging capabilities, carl zeiss optics, xeon flash with devices like N82N95.
  • 2007 Touchscreen devices : The last major innovation boost was with the original iPhone in 2007 which brought in the era of finger friendly simple interfaces, app store and a few other concepts.
  • 2008 Open Devices: Open platform innovation with Google's Android with prior attempts from Nokia's Maemo platform.
  • 2009-present: Most of the focus seems to have shifted to building a ecosystem of developers, integrated services. However, devices innovation is mainly around incorporating faster application processors like OMAP, Snapdragon & Tegra.

The last couple of years I am seeing a slowing down in smartphone device innovation. Recently manufacturers are exploring other mobile form factors (aka tablets, ebook readers) and are trying to shift their focus away from innovating with smartphones. This situation presents a great opportunity for the next wave of disruptive innovation for the most innovating and daring companies that might just take the industry by surprise (similar to what Apple did in 2007 with the iPhone).  Some technologies to watch out for include:

What do you think will be the next disruptive innovation in smartphones? And where is it likely to come out of? 

Adding Value!

Submitted by jayabharath on 9 March 2011 - 11:35pm

One of the important lessons we often miss or fail to learn is on "Adding value!".

As children we are taught to compete, achieve & win. Often this forms a ingrained habit - that leads us to approach situations with "what's in it for me" attitude. We tend to 'take' rather than 'give'. Eventually, people around you distance themselves & often avoid interacting with you.

Try approaching situations & people with - "How can I help?", "How can I be of value to the team?", "How to I enable others to succeed?", "Will what I do help solve the issue at hand?".. i.e., "Adding value" attitude.

The effect of action arising out of this attitude - makes things happen, makes you more approachable, people want you on the team, people come forward to help you, ... all in all - it's a recipe for success!

Did you try this? What results do you get? If you dint - give it a shot!

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Story of our pay raise

Submitted by jayabharath on 30 January 2011 - 12:54pm
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My boss tells me each year: "You got a big pay raise!"

Me looks at paycheck & wonders : "WTF, it's gotten lower.. where the raise...?"

After a bit of digging, it dawns on me : "Health insurance costs have risen again by 30%...hospitals continue to get inefficient every day... the drug companies raise the price of drugs left & right... doctors enjoy fatter paychecks.. no one cares about fixing the system"

Fast forward 15 years "My take-home becomes 0 (yep you read it right)... the insurance co's, hospitals & doctors steal all the my money... what a plan!"

Now just ignore this note and get back to whatever your doing as your money silently finds its way into healthcare pirates pockets!

Blog Entry 

heathcare

Nokia N8 - Review

Submitted by jayabharath on 22 December 2010 - 10:40am
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I recently updated my primary device to the Nokia N8 (from a HTC HD2) here is my review of the Nokia N8 after 1 week of use.

To give you some background: I used to love Nokia devices about 2.5 years back when I was frustrated with almost all things Nokia (little or no device SW updates, lack of decent app store, basic software on phone is not provided) and decided to move away to the iPhone 2G, Blackberry Bold 9800 and finally to the HTC HD2 (which offered me ability to load custom Android ROMs from xda-developers). After my baby was born - I needed to have a great camera in my pocket all the time and have more media creation needs than ever before and Nokia N8 seems to be 'the' camera phone out in the market today. So, I made the switch back to Nokia again.

Hardware:

  • Form factor: After using larger phones like the HD2 the N8 seems very small. It just reminded me of how big cell phones have gotten with the huge 4.3" displays. I think the size of the device is right on with it's 3.5" screen.
  • Speaker & Camera: It sits on the camera buldge and can easily get obstructed by your fingers or if sitting on a soft surface like a sofa couch. The volume is pretty good and I have no issue. On the camera the only gripe I have about this is there is no physical camera cover. Apart from that it's awesome.
  • Menu Button: Very odd location. And it seems to be meant for right handed operation.
    N8 Menu button
  • Key Lock button: Wow - I almost forgot that these used to exist in a phone. Most modern devices use the end key to double as a keylock. It took me several hours to figure out how to lock the display - then it dawned on me :)
  • SIM/SD Slot: Obvious to locate - but not so easy to open & close.
  • Battery Access: Most users don't need this. But, I have taken for granted that modern smartphone inevitably hang and having access to the battery is a comfort factor me me when I quickly need to reboot the device. Yeah I do know watch dog timers reset the device if it hangs - but, more than often I have seen devices become unresponsive - yet the watchdogs never kick in. You can access the battery on the N8 if you have a Torx screwdriver (i.e, no need to send it to service like an iPhone)
  • Display: Decent size and comparable to other popular display in pixels/sq in. However the 640*360 resolution somewhat feels constrained especially when browsing the web. It is awesome in sunlight (unlike most of my older devices including the iPhone). It uses hardened Gorilla Glass (like the Droid X) and I feel very comfortable throwing it in my pocket with keys & coins!
  • Overall design: The aluminum construction and use of premium materials is awesome. Single handed operation is one of the big things Nokia has been notorious about having in a handset for and I am happy to say that nearly all functions of the device are operable with single hand - unlike most most modern touch screen phones.
  • Connectivity: There are 2 highlight that I really like : It has Bluetooth 3.0 & Penta-Band 3G/WCDMA .. this is really awesome as it gives you access to 3G world wide irrespective which band the carrier uses.

Software:

  • Symbian OS: Nothing really new here. It's a solid OS and I personally feel at home using it. However, Nokia has done little to improve the user experience with the UI. I noticed a few places where you need to use the scrollbars!
  • Web browser: The webkit based browser on older S60 devices used to be cutting edge technology until iPhone cameout. Nokia has failed to improve (some issue include : slow performance, not very intuitive, flash-lite only) on their browser and there is no excuse for it. Maemo5/N900 devices have a better browser and the least I would have expected is for Nokia to port the browser onto Symbian and include it in a Flagship product. Thumbs down on this one. Android devices today offer the best web browsing experience (with build in Flash 10.1 support).
  • Apps (ovi) store: It works. But, it dosen't have quite a few apps I usually need/use.
  • Camera & Music player: They are awesome! Hands down the best. There are a lot of reviews on the internet on this one - I wont cover it here.
  • AV Codec support:  It takes anything you can throw at it. It probably the best in class out there.
  • Corporate Email: The mail for exchange is very buggy. I cant compose, fwd or reply to my corporate EAS inbox.
  • Widgets: Several of the built in live widgets are useless they dont really display usable information at a glance (this is what a live widget it supposed to do!). Nokia also missed out quite a few basic widgets like weather (You can get Accuweather widget from the ovi store).
  • Multimedia service integration: Nokia's share online software is missing! This is a big let down given that most people who view this as a 'connected' multimedia creation device would like to upload to various services directly from the device. There is a 3rd party app called Pixelpipe in the app store that does this job. But it's no excuse for Nokia not to have this functionality built in on a multimedia creation device.
  • UI: It's pretty neat & plain - usually vanilla symbian interface. The underlying graphics hardware is 'not' being leveraged to its fullest for any usable & cool UI effect which is a let down.

Misc:

  • Battery life is surprisingly good with always on 3G.
  • Over the air modular firmware updates work beautifully. I remember the days when you need to flash firmware from the PC. Good to see this has changed.

Overall verdict: If you are a media creator and need the best camera in your phone, need to stay connected, occasional web browsing, great call quality - hands down this is the best device available today! There are some minor issues but nothing that cant be overcome with 3rd party apps, software update. If you really care about webbrowsing experience & large display and need a app for everything - you should look elsewhere aka android & iphone.

 

Nokia N8's Photo by : John Karakatsanis

Blog Entry 

nokia n8 mobile review

PandaBoard.org is live & you can order it today!

Submitted by jayabharath on 18 October 2010 - 10:04pm
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PandaBoard.org site has now live. It's the community portal for PandaBoard. And today we have announced that Digikey will be selling the board and is taking orders TODAY!

BTW, I will be attending ELC-E next week. We will have a some pandaboard with us to showcase -if you are going to be around.. come say hi to Panda!

Blog Entry 

opensource, omap, pandaboard

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