Showing posts with label maemo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label maemo. Show all posts

Sunday, January 03, 2010

N900 Tethering Via iPhone 3G

I had to take a quick trip to Virginia today. It's about a 3 hour drive and once I got there I was going to have about an hour of downtime. Always preparing for the worst, I brought my iPhone (with SIM) and N900 (w/o SIM) to tinker around with while I waited.

I first scanned for wifi connections and there were plenty available. Many of them were open as well which would make things easy, but the easy road isn't always challenging. I wanted to try something different.

My iPhone is jailbroken with PdaNet installed. For those who don't know, PdaNet is a shareware application that allows you to tether your iPhone's Internet connection. There are two modes available: WiFi Router Mode and USB Mode. USB Mode wouldn't work for me since that requires PdaNet desktop installed on a PC. WiFi Router Mode requires the connecting device, in this case the N900, to create an ad hoc wifi network. This happens to be very simple to setup on the N900 much to my delight.

On the N900 go to Settings > Internet Connections. Click on the Connections button and click New. A prompt will come up asking you to tap Next to continue. After doing so, we finally get to the Connection Setup. For the Connection Name I entered N900, but you can enter anything you like. Click Next and the N900 will ask you to scan for WiFi networks, click No. The next series of questions go into more detail:

Connection Setup: Wi-Fi
Network name (SSID): pdanet
Network is hidden: Unchecked
Network mode: Ad hoc
Security method: None

Save your settings and return to desktop. Click the Battery, Clock, Time in the top bar and click Internet Connections. Your new connection will appear as N900 (if you named the new wifi connection that). Be sure to click on it and return to the iPhone.

On the iPhone, open PdaNet and check WiFi Router Mode and click Done. PdaNet will scan for a connection in which your N900 will appear as it's SSID, pdanet (if you followed my example). Press the name once it appears and PdaNet will connect. Now you can return to your N900 device and do whatever tinkering you need to do using your iPhone's 3G connection. Fulfilling and satisfying, isn't it?

PdaNet is one of many tethering apps for the iPhone. I chose it because it was the only one that worked when I was looking to tether my phone. But feel free to use similar settings with the other (free) tethering apps out there. Finally, be sure to turn off PdaNet WiFi Router Mode when you are done surfing on your N900 to conserve battery on your iPhone.

Thursday, December 31, 2009

N900 Bluetooth DUN on AT&T

I'm very happy to see apps like Philip Langdale's Bluetooth Dial-Up Networking V1.0-2 available at maemo.org. Simply put, this app allows you to share your cell phone's connection to the Internet with your PC or Mac over Bluetooth.

Setup is easy. On the N900, download and setup the app via Application Manager. Done.

Pair your phone with your Mac which makes available Bluetooth PAN and Bluetooth DUN network adapters. Using the Bluetooth DUN adapter enter the settings shown in the screenshot below. The Password is CINGULAR1.



In Advanced Settings I have the following options under the Modem tab:



Press Okay after making your changes and press Connect. Voila! You're connected and surfing through your N900.

Nokia N900 Review

It's been a week now since I got my Nokia N900 and I want to record my initial thoughts on the device.

Speed

Unfortunately, when I bought my N900 I just expected it would work on AT&T's 3G network in the US. I was wrong and should have checked the N900's specs. Nokia really missed the ball on this one if they intended selling these in the US. I'm hoping they have something up their sleeve. While 2.5 isn't terrible I find my iPhone's 3G loads browser pages slightly faster, which is to be expected. The only option for US users is T-Mobile if they want the 3G experience. YMMV when it comes to T-Mobile's coverage.

Wireless setup and speeds are similar to any other device. I set mine up in a few seconds after finding the Internet Connection option under Settings.

The N900 scores an A if you're on T-Mobile, B for AT&T.

Touchscreen

As we know there are two types of touchscreen most common in handheld devices, capacitive and restrictive. A capacitive touchscreen recognizes touches using the electric impulse from your finger, i.e. iPhone or iPod Touch screen. A restrictive screen uses the pressure of your finger or stylus (yuk!). In my opinion, restrictive screens are passe. It's unfortunate that the N900 has one. I find it unresponsive compared to what I am used to with the iPhone. However, I have found a happy medium in that I can use my finger nail to achieve rather accurate touches. I refuse to use the stylus since it's not 1999. Do Treo's still exist?

All-in-all, I'd give the screen a B-.

Keyboard

You have two options here. One is the onscreen keyboard. While it's effective using the fingernail technique, it doesn't always popup when you enter a text field. Annoying! Which leads me to the slide out keyboard. The full query keyboard is nicely laid out and the custom keys are very intuitive. I find typing on it somewhat difficult when attempting to strike keys on the first row. I have large, not mutant large, but large hands and struggle to strike those keys with any consistency. I would have preferred another 1/8 inch or a slide out similar to the n97.

I think this the slide out is another just-miss for the N900 and give it a B-.

Camera

The N900 hit gold with the cameras. Not only do they work well they are highly configurable. 5MP in high resolution and 3MP in widescreen with integrated flash plus all the modes you would expect from a pre-SLR digital camera appear to be there.

The video camera in the N900 is excellent as well. I found the videos to be quite smooth and crisp. The good news is theres also a camera in front of the camera. While Nokia does not support that camera yet, one of the upcoming firmwares are sure to. Does this mean video conferencing is coming to an N900 near you? I hope so.

This score is simple, A+!

Apps

The app count just hit 100 as of New Year's Eve, but this device is still very new. The open Linux-based Maemo OS has lots of promise but let's hope we get some robust applications and not hundreds of small console-based niche apps I see in most Linux repositories. The best thing to do is to turn on the dev-extras repository under Application Manager. With this repo you can browse dozens of apps still under development.

I can't put a score on this one so I'll have to check back and see where we are with apps after Q1 2010.

Happy New Year!