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I've now had the Storm for a bit over one month. My prior BlackBerry was a Curve. Overall, I give the new Storm a 'B' grade...and I think it will be an 'A' after another OS upgrade or two.
There's a definite learning curve, but it only took me about an hour to be accustomed to a touch screen. Helping Shirley configure the Curve (she opted to replace her Pearl with my now-discarded Curve), I found myself already trying to select items on the screen using my finger. The real learning was in getting used to the typing on the faux keyboard. There are postings on a few web sites suggesting Option settings to tune the typing. For me, these settings work best:
Select Options > Screen/Keyboard, scroll down to the Touchscreen section, and set Tap Interval = 600, Hover Period = 700, Swipe Sensitivity = (High) 6. Experimentation is the key here. The other thing that improved the feel of the keyboard tremendously, was to pop off the battery cover, trim 2 business cards to the size of the battery, and place the trimmed card stock on top of the battery (between the battery and the cover). This suggestion is posted on CrackBerry. As with the Option settings, one should definitely experiment.
OK, so here's what I like:
- It's a BlackBerry. My Notes mail and calendar from work synch effortlessly and wirelessly as long as I have a BlackBerry
- Beautiful large display. This is far and away the reason why I prefer this device
- The touch screen is easy to use for navigation
- Tight integration with other apps like Facebook, Flickr, YouTube
- Great phone coverage from Verizon
- Notes mail on the Storm displays with colors, renders tables, etc.
- I can open (or God forbid, edit) Excel, Word, and Powerpoint files
- The camera is 3.2 megapixel, so it takes some decent pics
- Did I mention the incredible display?
And a few things I don't like:
- From time to time it will just reboot..sort of like a BSOD, but at least it restarts itself. Happens a couple of times a week.
- Had to buy a new BlueTooth headset (Motorola H710 works nicely)
- The camera. What the heck?!?! A glacier will pass by and melt in the time it takes to snap a single pic. It literally takes several seconds for a picture to snap.
There's a software upgrade coming in a few weeks (RIM releases it, then Verizon tests it for a bit before releasing) that should improve some issues. So overall, I really like this device. Those few little irritants that I listed are what keep me from giving it an 'A', but I will be keeping this BlackBerry.
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Best part of Lotusphere: sharing intense learning with fellow curious colleaguesposted Sunday 25th, January 2009
It struck me this evening that the best part of Lotusphere is the combination of taking in SO much information - learning such an incredible amount - and sharing that experience with so many other curious people.
We're geeks in order to earn a living, yes, but also in large part because there is so much joy to be found in exploring and learning. It is the nature of the human existence to constantly seek for more and more. Whether that 'more' is knowledge or money or love or anything else, we are not happy if nothing ever changes. We crave growth (as much as we may sometimes fear change). Lotusphere offers an intense opportunity to learn from the research of many brilliant colleagues - and to share this wonderful week with others who also yearn to constantly expand their knowledge.
I was thinking earlier about going back to the office tomorrow. At our regular jobs, few of us have the opportunity to be researching and diving deep into new realms every single day. We may not be mired in a world of TPS reports, a la Office Space, but we do all nonetheless have a certain degree of routine to our normal work days. That routine is pleasantly disrupted by the frenzy that is Lotusphere, and joyously shared with a few thousand close friends. And I am already missing it and looking forward to Lotusphere 2010.
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My Dinner with Arne: Best side effect of Lotusphere is new friendsposted Saturday 24th, January 2009
Last night it was my very great pleasure to be able to spend the evening dining and chatting with Arne Nielsen (note: Arne's blog is written in Norwegian. I use the Unofficial Google Translate Firefox extension to translate to English). The manner by which this evening came to pass is a serendipitous chain of events that started some years ago...
I began blogging 6 years ago (early 2003). Fairly quickly I met (virtually) a number of other bloggers from the Notes community and from elsewhere (I have this technical blog, and several public and private non-technical blogs). Among the early bloggers was Trond-Are Utle from Symfoni Software in Norway. Several years ago, Trond began inviting several other bloggers and me to the annual Symfoni Collaboration Dinner at Lotusphere. At last year's dinner, I met Arne, whose blog I'd been following (as best I could with the translation software) for some time. At this year's dinner, Arne and I (and John Vaughan and several wonderful folks from Norway) were seated at the same table chatting for a couple of hours.
When I returned from Lotusphere Thursday evening, I wanted to continue the networking that Lotusphere fosters, and scanned my email address book, sending invitations to connect on LinkedIn to a number of folks. Arne accepted the invite, and I noticed in his note that he was in the Tampa Bay area for a day before heading back to Norway today (Saturday). So I emailed Arne asking if by chance he was free for dinner and would care to join Shirley and I at The Hurricane - one of our favorite local destinations. Arne emailed back, we chatted a bit on Skype, and the plans were set.
And thus it came to pass that my wife and I were delighted to be able to dine and visit with Arne, spending an absolutely wonderful evening getting to know each other. Thank you Arne. And be forewarned: we are making plans to come and visit!
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Got up at what felt way too early...which is odd since I usually get up around 5:15-5:30am, so 6:30 or so should have felt like sleeping in. Oh well. Grabbed some coffee and arrive fashionably late to Scott Good's JMP201 (AJAX & JSON). Main note to self from this session is that I *need* to play with JQuery - looks to be a HUGE time-saver when coding ajax calls and then use of JSON will save a bunch of time for parsing data. Much simpler than parsing XML!
Next up was JMP203 - Getting to Know XPages and Designer. Maureen Leland and Maire Kehoe went through creating XPages apps...covered pretty much everything you need to know to get started. I recognized Maire's voice as the voice I'd heard on some of the instructional videos on the Domino Designer Wiki. I need to download the session slides, 'cause there was a couple of tips re properties or techniques I'd not encountered to date whilst playing with XPages.
Grabbed some lunch - ran into Duffbert in the chow hall - snagged fresh coffee, and next up was SHOW105 - Dojo Widgets. Lance Spellman presented this session focused on the Dojomino toolkit that his company has provided. This is yet more web 2.0 goodness provided to the Domino community. It was a great session, but I have to admit that even with the coffee I had to keep shifting position and chewing gum to stay focused...I swear they ground up sleeping pills in the lunch salad dressing. This is another session for which I took some notes and mainly made a note to get the session slides and to download the toolkit ...and to hit the session later in the week when Lance and Jack Ratcliff square off with Dojomino vs ext.nd.
I'd planned to hit another Show-n-Tell session at 4pm, but decided it was WAY too early in the week to start being fatigued. So I popped back up to the room (gotta love staying on property) and snagged a nap. Then on down for TURT101 presented by, of course, The Turtle - how many folks get their own track! - at 6:15pm. This was a nice entertaining break from some of the earlier heavy-duty sessions. And then on to the opening reception 'Beach Party'. Tried to locate a colleague, but we missed each other's texts and calls. DID have some great conversation with Duffbert, Curt Stone, Julian Robichaux (and his very forgiving wife, Candace), Dan Sickles, and Nathan Freeman. Best quote of the night - from Nathan - "I am better at you than this". I don't think he intended the words to come out in that order, but it was far more entertaining this way. Saw Lars Olufsen wearing a tie! He said his mom tells him that he cleans up nice :)
Curt and I popped over to the big screen TV that was set up outside for the Steelers-Ravens game, and ran into Rocky Oliver (now with Teamstudio), and I was able to chat a bit with Trond-Are Utle from Symfoni.
The sessions are a wealth of information, but I must say, it's at least as valuable to be able to again visit with so many colleagues from the global Domino community. And with that ...time to rest up for another busy day!
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If you're a Notes admin looking for a gig in PA, this was just emailed to me (I'm not looking for work!)
Lotus Notes Admin
Pittsburgh, PA
11-12 months+ contract
The job holder supports the Corporate Lotus/Notes Domino server environment running UNIX/AIX. Supports all product upgrades and patches to all servers and supports the Corporate Email and application infrastructure including Internet mail. Also upgrades servers, software, and maintains backup and recovery procedures, monitors servers for hardware break-fix and coordinates problems with centralized help desk, optimizes server and application performance, and capacity planning analysis on hardware and storage system. Involved in all phases of implementation and performs software installations and documents system software.
Minimum 3 to 5 years experience supporting Lotus Notes/Domino server environments required along with experience in advanced trouble shooting of Notes/Domino server environments. Job holder must have thorough knowledge of the companys technology practices, standards and procedures and implementing heterogeneous, open systems. Must have prior experience with producing detail-level functional requirement documentation and selecting the optimal testing environment for specific applications. Must also have a solid understanding and support of large DNS and DHCP networks. Job holder must be familiar with designing and executing major software installations.
Must be experienced at addressing a variety of technical (hardware, software or application) problems. Must also be customer-service oriented, able to build cooperative relationships with people and have effective oral and written communication skills. Job holder must be an experienced problem solver who thinks creatively about solutions and adapts easily to changing priorities. B.S. or B.A. or equivalent work experience required; advanced degree or certification beneficial. Knowledge of collaboration tools (instant messaging) preferred.
Dirk Carney
Lead Technical Recruiter
Software Specialists, Inc.
724 933 6100 x 1102
724 933 6106 (F)
dcarney@softwarespecialists.
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Yesterday I needed to add a shared action to each of about 10 views in a Notes application. Unsure of whether Ytria actionBarEZ could help with this, I opened the tool and was pleased to discover that all I had to do was select the target views, and then drag the needed shared action to each of the views. What a time-saver!
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