1 – Update to the latest windows mobile device center
2 – Follow these instructions to add and change the registry entries on the PC to COM5.
3 – Pair the devices
3 – On the phone, UNCHECK the [] Activesync capability the PC offers when the devices pair. Hit done, done, done.
4 – On the phone, in Activesync, select “connect via Bluetooth” and follow the prompts (add serial connection to PC).
This voodoo to make it work is insane but it does work and I can now sync outlook to my phone, yippee!
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
activesync via bluetooth
Saturday, October 18, 2008
mio c220 GPS
Our Garmin Nuvi 200 series GPS that we received as a gift is fatally flawed. Last week in Boston while trying to use it we realized that we frequently need a reliable GPS. Garmin has a great user interface and wonderful maps that are easily flash updated. It's routing has been perfect in the USA and in Europe wherever we used it. However, our unit cannot operate while charging and it frequently spends 20 - 30 minutes finding satellites. On ocassion it takes a few hours. So in Boston we decided to buy a new GPS. When we arrived back home, I ordered a Mio 220 from Circuit City for $75 (with free shipping).
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Tuesday, October 14, 2008
wishlist for my mobile phone
1 - I would like to add a USB wifi device. Are there drivers for them available for windows mobile 5 or 6?
2 - I would like to get the camera to work better. Is there better camera software available? The pictures have good resolution but the optics, colors, contrast, and focus are crap. Can one attach external optics?
3 - I would also like to buy a bluetooth GPS device for use with streets and trips or tomtom or garmin or other map software. Any recommendations?
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
more photos of Aachen -- http://mw.spaces.live.com/
Mitch teaches in Aachen, Germany (part 5)
The Aachen office is under construction so Microsoft rented a conference facility 2 Km from the office in a castle called Schloss Rahe. The castle has a moat, a dungeon, and well-appointed, brightly lit conference rooms. We had no projector but someone ran back to the office to get one (a tiny 8" squared unit that worked amazingly well). Microsoft Redmond sent the printed workbooks too late but they arrived literally minutes before the class began. The food and coffee at Castle Rahe is bad (except for the fresh fruit) and there is no Internet available, ouch! However I had almost all of the materials I needed and the courses ran quite well without network access.
Mitch teaches in Aachen, Germany (part 4)
The hotel Aquis Grana is in the center of Aachen next to the big Cathedral complex and cobblestoned squares / pedestrian-only areas. Parking is in an underground garage next door. The rooms are clean, small, and quiet. There are plenty of restaurants and wonderful shopping in the area (great book stores!). There is no health center inside the hotel but it's really interesting to jog around downtown because of all of the tourist attractions (fountains, shops, historical landmarks, University, the Cathedral itself). And push-ups / situps can be done anywhere. I had a great dinner in a local basement-restaurant filled with noisy kids, young couples, and extended familes. German beer is the best. Breakfast buffet at the hotel is also fantastic. I am a big fan of most breakfast foods including Cantonese rice porridge, grains (oatmeal, granola), eggs, fruits, salads, fresh-baked breads. It was fantastic and I ate too much.
Mitch teaches in Aachen, Germany (part 3)

Monday, July 21, 2008
Mitch teaches in Aachen, Germany (part 2)
The Air Berlin flight was late leaving Zurich so I arrived in Aachen at rush hour (around 5pm). When we landed there were two other planes flying right next to ours. All the planes landed within 1 minute of each other (two at once on parallel runways). Our plane rushed off of the runway because another plane landed right behind us. The runway on the other side had a plane taking off right after the one in front of it landed. It was like watching military jet operations. The Aachen airport uses those special buses that scoot around the tarmac, taking people to and from the planes instead of having the planes pull up to a gate. We were very efficiently wisked through the high-traffic tarmac and taken to the terminal. I actually prefer a smaller terminal and those buses to walking and taking trains through the humongous terminals of large airports.
Mitch teaches in Aachen, Germany (Part 1)
My oldest son (Simeon, 17) drove us to the airport, saving Microsoft the $35 shared van ride service fees. I left my laptop at work and texted (sent a text message via cell phone) to Adam, asking him to email me the slide decks for the courses I am teaching in Germany. Adam sent out all the materials and I retrieved them on a borrowed laptop in my hotel the night before the classes started. The class room has no network access so I am very grateful to Adam for sending them.
My 11-year-old son Yofiel and I flew USAir from Seattle to Philadelphia. A 3.5 hour delay on the ground because of a broken jet engine kept us in the plane in Philadelphia longer than we would have liked. Luckily we had packed lots of food (carrots, apples, veggie-burgers, egg-beater sandwiches) and a large nalgene full of water. USAir does not feed or offer drinks topassengers, even after they keep them prisoner on a plane for 3.5 hours because of their extreme incompetence. When USAir announced the a 15-minute delay because the jet engine needed repairs we immediately burst into a familiar song:
Wanna be late?
Well ain't that great.
It ain't no crime
You're not on time.
(chorus)
Got time to spare?
Fly USAir!
And we don't care.
We're US Air!
Connecting flight?
That can't be right.
Gonna miss it.
Goodbye kiss it.
(chorus)
etc.
Yofiel and I drew battleship grids on blank paper and fired at each other for a while. I finally won a game against him! Then we spent a few hours watching two movies I had in my phone, sharing the bluetooth headset (one earphone per person). Afterwards, Yofi read about 50 pages of _The_Kite_Rider_ (his summer reading) and I read _The Opposable Mind_ that Austina (a co-worker) gave me. I think the topic is interesting but the writing is bad (tedious, pedantic, repetitious, short-sighted, illogical). Eventually the plane took off and caught a tail wind to make up some of the delay. We were only 6.5 hours in the air instead of the scheduled 8 hours.
My wife Gabriella and two of my three daughters (Adinah, 15; Eitana, 4) have been in Zurich for 4 weeks; they came to the Zurich airport to greet us along with my two nephews (Pino, 5; Livio, 3). My family is visiting Gabriella's family. Adinah took Sunday afternoon off from work to visit the airport and greet us. She is working three jobs at a Zoo here in Switzerland and is having the time of her life. My wife announced to us (in Swiss German) that she would speak exclusively Swiss-German with us in order for us to improve our language skills. Adinah is already speaking Swiss much more fluently than I. I answer back in a mixture of German and Swiss, but everyone understands me. We went shopping in the airport and I babysat the three youngest kids while Gabriella took Yofiel's luggage and groceries to the car. I bought a SwissComm SIM card for 20 Swiss Francs and my cell phone is now working here in Europe; it includes 20 Francs (about 250 minutes) of cellular air time and can be used anywhere in the world (unlike my T-mobile service, for which I must buy a special roaming add-on plan plus $1.50 per minute if I want to use it in Europe, tsk tsk). My brand-spanking new cell phone number is: +41.79.863.2758 (to which you can send text messages). I set up Microsoft Office Communicator to forward office calls to the new cell phone number.
The Zurich airport has grown somewhat with another terminal of gates and more, shorter flights inside Europe. I connected from Zurich to Dusseldorf from where I drove to Aachen. Aachen is about an hour's drive from three different airports and the flight to Dusseldorf connected best from Zurich.
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Piping Audio from Phone to Car
I am listening to a great audio book (Beton by Thomas Bernhard) in my phone. I actually have a few queued up in the phone to listen to them when I jog or otherwise have time. But my car has a CD player and radio and no easy way to get at the audio content in my phone. What I currently do is play CDs from the library or burn CDs with audio book content. But then I cannot continue listening to the same book and have a few going at the same time.
So my thought was to have the car stereo bond via bluetooth to my phone as a stereo headset. And I looked around for some way to bluetooth from my phone to the car stereo. My product search came up with some bluetooth to FM transmitters but they were rated poorly because the FM transmitters are too weak. And they were quite expensive. So I looked around for other alternatives. I finally decided to get a "full range" FM transmitter that has an audio-in jack and a 2.5 mm --> 3.5 mm converter to plug in to my phone. My wife had an old mounting bracket that mounts on the vent tines on the car's air conditioning vent and my phone mounts snugly onto it, just above the cigarette lighter. I ordered this device with some trepidation because it costs only $11.50 (including shipping and handling).It arrived this week and it works perfectly! I am now playing audioboks from my phone through the device. And it has a built-in mp3 player that plays from SD cards or USB flash drives. I tested both and they work perfectly as well. The "full range" FM transmitter has no static at all at the lower range (87.5) but had a bit of static at 107.9. I am really thrilled with the device. Now I need some way to pad it when I pack it up for trips where I rent cars.
It's really cool. I love it.