So I succumbed to the allure of normality

That is, an inter­est­ing way of say­ing “I have a new phone that doesn’t require a con­certed weights train­ing regime for sev­eral months before you can begin car­ry­ing it around with you”.

Sony Ericsson V630i next to an iPaq

Noth­ing amaz­ing, it’s a fairly aver­age look­ing Sony Eric­s­son V630i. My ratio­nale in buy­ing it was that it’s not as though it’s part of the same busi­ness units as the DRM morons, any­way, and actively sub­verts their cause by offer­ing MP3 & WMA sup­port, instead of retarded ATRAC spe­cial­ness. It does use an M2 card instead of microSD, though, which is a bit of a shame.

Sony Ericsson V630i

Its PC Sync­ing is ade­quate, though obvi­ously not up to the Win­dows Mobile per­fec­tion to which I am accus­tomed :P

Mostly I just wanted PC sync­ing to make con­tact trans­fer pain­less. The “PDA” func­tion­al­ity (if one even dare call it that) is very much a sec­ondary thing: I’m vaguely con­sid­er­ing buy­ing a Palm, but not until I’ve got my head around this com­pletely. It’s rather on the usable side, but the inter­face is obvi­ously more lim­ited than a touch screen would ever be.

Sony Ericsson V630i

It cost me… noth­ing, on a Voda­fone con­tract. I didn’t mind that because I’m not locked into the hand­set for the con­tract length — I can unlock it from the Voda­fone net­work today if I want, with­out any charge, and stick my (3G, but, alas, I’ve only got par­tial 3G cov­er­age at my house — with both 3 and Vodafone/Optus, haven’t tested Tel­stra — so there’s not a great deal of UTMS going down here at the minute — reg­u­lar triband GSM wins out) SIM into any other phone.

Yes, that’s right, petty 3 users. I can change phones with­out hav­ing to go grov­el­ling to my net­work provider. Howdya­likethathuh? *gloats* :)

Any­way. It’s still good fun. It also has an MP3 player, but the probably-prohibitive cost of M2 media for this thing, com­bined with the supremely uncom­fort­able bun­dled head­phones (they’re designed for like, ele­phants or some­thing) and lack of reg­u­lar 3.5mm jack (*tear*) mean it’s not likely to get used much. ‘cept to say it sup­ports WMA & MP3 ring­tones, which is about as much fun as I had with the iPaq, only Win­dows Media Player actu­ally sup­ports this as a media device.

Yes, friends, that too is irony.


From the “If you buy DRM’d music it’s your own stupid fault” department

“Microsoft’s iPod-killing Zune player won’t play music that’s locked up with Microsoft’s own anti-copying software.”

Via a ZDNet blog via Slash­dot

See also my angry post from last week about copy­right and dig­i­tal media in Aus­tralia.

Even if you’re not a geek this STILL AFFECTS YOU. Own an iPod or any other MP3 player? Have iTunes on your computer?

SoundConvert 2.0

I posted sev­eral months ago on con­vert­ing ACT files recorded on an MP3 player to some­thing read­able on a com­puter. It’s prob­a­bly with­out com­pe­ti­tion the most-read and commented-on post on this site: there are many peo­ple out there who are look­ing for a tool to do this. And it seems that the ACT files gen­er­ated by newer MP3 player devices aren’t com­pat­i­ble with the older convertors.

So, one of the read­ers, Phil “Mum­bles”, dis­cov­ered a tool that works for this stuff. He’s sent me the file after hav­ing cut it down from 8MB for a few apps to under 300KB for the just new sound con­ver­tor tool.

You can down­load it here — please post if it works or doesn’t work with your MP3 player/recorder so that other peo­ple look­ing for infor­ma­tion on their device can find it.

One clos­ing note from Phil:

and BTW,

It appears to hang if you don’t let it run its course (gives a not respond­ing msg). the “hang” grows accord­ingly with the .act file size.

Cheers

Phil

# by Josh on September 30th, 2005 Tags: , , ,
| 133 Comments »

MP3 player and ACT files

Speak­ing more regard­ing my MP3 player/voice recorder/toy in gen­eral. Read the rest of this entry »

# by Josh on November 8th, 2004 Tags: , , , , ,
| 93 Comments »

Making memory manufacturers rich

Josh has splurged. It wasn’t entirely an impulse buy, but some­thing close. Read the rest of this entry »