Home Page About Me My Blog Radio Work Photographs Links Link to Facebook Twitter Flickr Last.FM RSS Feeds



Monday, December 21st, 2009

Santa came for a visit to Original 106 today, to speak to kids across the North East on the wireless.

It was a perfect opportunity to do something interesting with the website. Tracking Santa was an idea that came up in the office during last week. Something similar to the NORAD Santa website that is run every Christmas Eve.

As he started his journey from Lapland this morning, we tracked him as he made his way to Aberdeen.

Track Santa

A few people asked me during the day on Twitter what was the technology behind it?  Simple answer, Google Maps and a tracking device on Santas sleigh. Simple eh?


Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

mobilephone
You know those telly ads you’re seeing a lot of at the moment, the ads that say you can send in your old phones for recycling and get them turned into cash? You probably thought, like me at the time, surely that’s a bit of a con, surely that won’t work?

Well think again.

With an impending tax bill due on January 31st, and my saving not going as well as I’d have hoped, I decided to see if I could indeed convert my old mobiles to cash.

I had two phones for exchange. A Nokia N95 8GB. In its day it was the king of mobile phones. But 2 years later this workhorse of a mobile is battered, scratched and ever so slightly unresponsive after a beer spilling incident back in June. The recycling company Mobile Phone XChange gave me the best quote for this phone. Up to £114 they said. I knew I probably wouldn’t get anywhere near that, but thought it would be worth a go none the less.

I also added a Sony Ericsson K800i in the envelope I sent back. Older, not as high spec, but certainly not as battered as the Nokia N95. Mobile Phone XChange said I’d get up to £25 for it.

3 days after sending a received an email from Mobile Phone XChange. £25 for the Sony Ericsson, and £60 for the Nokia. The reason they wouldn’t give me any more for the Nokia because, and I quote, “there was a PIN lock on it, so they couldn’t check how well it worked.” I was rather chuffed, £60 for the Nokia is more than I would have charged for it if I had been selling it on Ebay. Infact I probably wouldn’t have sold it on Ebay because it was nearly at the end of its working life. But I thought, “hmm, I wonder what would happened if I emailed them the PIN number?”

A day after emailing the PIN number they said “in that case you can have the full £114″. 3 days later the money was in my bank account.

So in total I got £139 for two phones that I still think to this day are worthless.

I can’t entirely work out how these companies are able to afford paying for all these phones, or even what they do with them. I believe that in some cases they recycle the phones and in some cases they send them to Africa.

There is one downside to all this. I’m now having sleepless nights thinking that some poor sole in Africa is using my beer soaked phone and cursing at it in the same way I did when it wouldn’t respond.


Monday, December 14th, 2009

A short break away. Very short infact, 2 nights. A visit to Fort William and the west coast of Scotland. A chance to dust off the camera and take some photos of the usual subjects: scenery, harbours, boats, mountains and animals in sea life centres!


Urquahrt Castle on Loch Ness in the mist


The Commando Memorial


A swan in Oban Harbour


The Isle of Mull ferry


Islay and Lewis, 2 otters at Oban Sea Life centre


Sunday, December 6th, 2009

We’re just back from a rather relaxing weekend in Fort William. And once again Google tried its best to help wherever it could.

I remember reading, what only seems like a couple of years ago, an article professing that one day location aware devices such as your mobile phone would be all the rage. At the time it seemed like a great idea on paper, and something that would be many years away (much like that self drying jacket in Back To The Future II).

However in those last two years, location aware devices have subliminally made their way into my life.  The self drying jacket still has yet to show.

Equipped with only my mobile phone (an HTC Hero running Google Android – something I keep meaning to blog about), here’s how Google affected my weekend.

Google Mail – http://mail.google.com

Not entirely new, but I felt it was worth a mention. My only email provider for 5 years now.

Whether you send an email to my gmail address, my ‘professional’ address (david [at] davidrlewis.com) or my work address, they all come into my Google Mail account, and are then sorted through various filters.  My whole life, and its past five years, are stored under my Google Mail account.

All the information for the apartment we were staying at in Fort William were saved on an email. Directions, times, cost, phone number and even the door code were there.  No need for any bits of paper.

With Google Mail being so well integrated into Android, it’s handy for emailing photos to people (or Twitter), and mailing your dad with your current co-ordinates (he likes keeping track of where I am).

There is one downside to email being so easily available, it’s difficult to ignore your boss when he emails you on your day off.


Google Maps - http://maps.google.com

Google Maps is hardly anything new either. I’ve used this on my phone for a good two years now.

It was the saving grace on a college trip to Orkney last year, and it still impresses me every time I need to rely on it.

It’s still not quite suitable for replacing your Sat Nav yet (although turn by turn direction for Google Maps is now available on the new version of Android), it is useful if you have a passenger in the car who can reel off directions or if you vaguely know the area.


Google Sky Mapshttp://www.google.com/sky/skymap.html

Lack of light pollution is one of the nice things about getting out of the city.  I could sit and watch the stars all night if it weren’t too cold.

Google Skymaps is a very handy application for your phone.  It takes your location by GPS, and what direction your phone is facing via its built in compass, and presents a map of the night sky, customised especially for you. As you turn your phone to a different part of the sky, the map moves with it too. Showing you the names of the stars, constellations and planets in your eye line.

If you don’t tell the person you’re with at the time what you’re using, you can sound as knowledgeable as Patrick Moore.

What it can not do for you however, is get rid of cloud cover.  Of which there was quite a bit this weekend. I expect Google are working on this as we speak.


Google Placeshttp://googlemobile.blogspot.com/2009/06/places-directory-app-for-android.html

This is something new to me.  You tell it what you want to find (restaurants, bars, museums, that sort of thing) and by using your phones location (either by cell tower or GPS) it will tell you all those nearby. In fact it will give you exactly how far you need to go and in what direction. It will even show you turn by turn on Google Maps if you feel the need.

It will also give you user ratings and comments for the place you’re about to visit. Very handy if you can’t decide where  you want to have your Sunday Roast. Google recommended me the Snow Goose Vintage Inn in Inverness, and I can vouch for it’s recommendation.

Google Latitude - http://www.google.com/latitude

This runs within Google Maps, and it’s quite a good idea, in theory.

So long as you and your contacts use Google Latitude, you can see where they are at any time on Google Maps. In turn they can see where you are.  Your phone will then beep at you if one of your friends is nearby, so you can have a coffee, or most likely what I’d do, try and avoid them at all costs.  You can switch it off for privacy, or even lie about where you are (I was in New York City last week).

Where the idea falls a bit flat is that so far I know very few folk who use it. It’s a bit of a catch 22. It’s only good if people use it. But no one will use it because they don’t know anyone on it.

I so far know two people on it. One who lives in Greater London, and one who hasn’t updated their location since May. Not very useful.

What I do use Latitude for is the “I’m currently in” section on the front page of this website.  It’s set to vague mode so you don’t know exactly where I am (like my flat). It’s there because I was experimenting with coding something I plan to use in the future. I can imagine it’s also useful for potential burglars (although my brother in law lives right next door so don’t even think about it).

Google Latitude also provides a nice map of my location history, which only I can view. Great for fans of nostalgia and map geeks, two categories which I fall in to.

googlelatitude

Conclusion

So there you have it, my weekend away with Google. Some of what they provide is very handy, some a bit more pointless. But it’s amazing to think what we could be using location aware devices for in only a few years.  All that, from the palm of my hand.

There is one problem with all this though.  When the mobile signal goes or the battery dies, so does your ability to do  anything. And the more and more we rely on Google, the more and more scuppered we’re going to be when it all goes horribly wrong.