A step closer to leaving the laptop behind…
So I’ve been playing with a bluetooth keyboard while at work today and discovered that with it, my phone, and a bluetooth headset, I hadn’t used my laptop at all. The keyboard was very usable (the Stowaway Ultra-Slim Bluetooth Keyboard) and has convinced me that I don’t care if my future perfect mobile device has a qwerty keyboard or not, because T9 is fast enough if I’m up and about, and if I need to really write, I can surely find somewhere to sit down, pull the keyboard out of my pocket, and type.
My usage scenario earlier was:
I was typing an IM with a friend (in IM+, I’ve been using PacketBox to use the built-in IM client on my Nokia N80, but it was having some aweful lag issues earlier today) and got a call from my wife. So I hit the button on the bluetooth headset, got the call (while still typing an IM), answered her question, hung up, and because the call was short enough the GPRS connection resumed as if nothing had happened. If I was on a 3g phone the data wouldn’t even have been put on hold. After the call I hopped over to the podcasting app, began downloading the Engadget podcast (Cingular must love my data usage…but that’s what they get for selling me unlimited). Resumed IMing with a friend about stuff. Then I actually took a break from all of this to, you know, get work done, and then 20 minutes later when I went back to the phone, switched to the podcasting app and started playing the Engadget podcast. So of course then a coworker had a question so I got up, went over to his desk (with earpiece in one ear, still listening to the podcast, despite the phone being on my desk cradled on the keyboard. All in all, I was able to achieve about half of what I do on my computer with those 3 small, pocketable devices. And it was all powered by my phone, which means I could have picked up my phone and walked off, without losing an IM or stopping the podcast download.
What’s still lacking:
The ability to do my core job: programming for closed systems that require windows to run SDKs for, and web browsing (technically I could, but the browser eats enough ram that all other apps would shut down, and web browsing on a cell phone while getting better with the new S60 Web Browser, is still less than preferable). I’m wondering if adding 1 more device, something like the Nokia N800 (with rdesktop for access to a remote windows machine for work) would get me to the point where I could do everything comfortably, and then have everything fit in my pockets instead of bringing the laptop bag with me…