* Posts by Fihart

1150 publicly visible posts • joined 3 Jun 2008

HTC hawks fresh WinPho smartphones

Fihart

More corporate nonsense...

From today's Metro daily newspaper:

......speaking at the (HTC Winpho) launch event in New York the company said the handsets "had a remarkably unique profile thanks to their tapered edges, making them feel thin in the user's hand"

Oh, please, have they nothing else to say. It's a thinnish phone with a thinner edge. How is that a product feature of any significance. Of course they could be short of USPs due to the fact that it's a Windows Phone -- so just the same as other Windows phones.

Want a Leica camera from Jony Ive? There CAN BE ONLY ONE

Fihart

Re: Leica, Schmeica

@Ru

My understanding is that the "Leica" lenses on Panasonic Lumix cameras are manufactured using Leica equipment -- which sort of doesn't make them Leica lenses, really.

Fihart

Leica, Schmeica

I love real Leicas (the original shaped ones that Oskar Barnack designed for 35mm film). Even Russian copies are cool.

I'm left cold by more recent Leicas. The last 35mm (M series rangefinders and the ugly SLRs) were over-engineered and became so expensive that you could get a functionally identical and equally durable Canon or Nikon for 25% of the price.

As for Leica digitals, some appear to be restyled Panasonics. At prices that clearly make no sense, given the very short shelf-life of all digital cameras

The brand has become a victim of collectors (or investors) -- I trust that those who bid for this latest trinket get their fingers burnt . Cameras are for photography. For that, a Samsung will do just fine.

'Programming on Windows 8 just like playing bingo' - Microsoft VP

Fihart

crimes against the english language

Like so many corporate drones, Microsofties use language in a way that defies logic. Here they are trying to change history. It makes you wonder how any of them can write code that actually does what it says and isn't full of waffle and bloat.

They had to change the name Metro -- NOT we only had Metro as a working title and now we've settled on the final name.

One more try: Metro apps are now 'Windows Store' apps

Fihart

Modern or Modem.

Something about clonky rebranding process puts me in mind of struggling to log on with one of little beepy boxes we used before broadband.

In a way says it all.

Microsoft, your day is over.

Now clear off and stop hanging about like an ex-boyfriend.

New iPod nano and touch: Lightning strikes again

Fihart

iWot ?

They're still making these things, then ?

Everything Everywhere swept away by its own 4G hype tsunami

Fihart

from t' mobile to ee by gum...

Having admitted that Everything Everywhere was a terrible brand name, they've swapped it for one that calls to mind the EEC, to which many Brits have a kneejerk hostile reaction. And the logo, obviously the MD's 5 year-old kid drew that up.

As for letting the existing T-Mob and Orange brands die, this is as dumb as the name changes at AT&T (Lucent) and Rockwell (Conexant) or Royal Mail (Nondeliver, or some such).

Still it may please Yorkshiremen -- they can switch from t' mobile to ee, by gum.

Microsoft to open 32 pop-up retail stores for the holidays

Fihart

The shop from Hell.

I have so far avoided the Apple stores in London, but I can imagine the perky jerks who they'd staff up with in the "positive" atmosphere of such an establishment.

Now add the oppressive hand of Microsoft to the equation. My God, perky nazis.

Ten digital radios to suit all budgets

Fihart

More of Less

Like Freeview, DAB may prove that more stations = same talent spread more thinly. Anyway, while the cost and power consumption issues remain, I have no intention of buying a DAB radio. Especially as I own about a dozen FM radios that sound better.

Nokia Asha 311 budget smartphone review

Fihart

Not just battery life.....

....but durability of battery. The battery in my LG base model phone died within 18 months (replacement cost more than the phone did).

Switched to an ancient Nokia 2610 and was astounded at the life still in its original battery. Now on secondhand Nokia E71 smartish-phone and its battery good for a few days use.

By contrast friend's new ZTE TMob Vivacity is constantly running flat and I wonder how easy a replacement will be to find -- and at what cost ?.

So, tempting as Android cheapies may seem, unless you must have GPS, the Nokia Asha doesn't look too silly.

Bruce Willis didn't Buy Hard: His girls can't inherit his iTunes

Fihart

Re: Apple Schmapple

Itunes is probably okay if you use it fairly often, and more so if you are a Mac user. Personally, I have a Windows mindset and find the minimalism just too inscrutable. Though I have an iPod I seldom use it, preferring a newer Sony player which can be loaded without any special software on the computer.

Fihart

Re: Apple Schmapple

Itunes is a mess because it's designed to stop you sharing music files -- presumably the price Apple paid for getting the record companies on board the iTunes site.

Far simpler to use a player which supports drag and drop and rip your own CDs (between 50p and £3 in flea markets, charity shops).

Asus CEO sounds netbook death knell

Fihart

Even the Elonex WebBook.......

...has its uses.

The one that Orange were "giving away" with 3G dongle and contract.

Mine turned up in a dumpster minus power cube with a passworded Ubuntu installation.

Dug out an old HP PSU, added some memory, swapped hard drive, plugged in a USB CD drive, put a new OS on it. Looks like a toy, but terrific. Wireless and ethernet socket means it's ideal for sorting out friends' internet issues.

When the battery eventually dies, I'd gladly buy another netbook.

Lexmark dumps inkjet arm, sacks 1,700

Fihart

Printing ? It's so last week!

Most of the bright young things who are my neighbours don't seem to own printers. When it comes to printing out their Ryanair/Easyjet boarding passes they come knocking on my door (I'm not complaining).

It seems odd to an older user who automatically bought a dot matrix or daisywheel with the first personal computers because the primary use was word processing.

Inkjet was the first affordable technology to produce decent print quality -- but reliability went out of the window as colour and models with higher resolution (finer nozzles) came in. Luckily, laser printer prices sank dramatically and I can't remember when I last used an inkjet.

iPhone's market share in China sliced in HALF

Fihart

Re: HTC != Huawei Technologies Co Ltd.

HTC stands for High Tech Computer corporation. It's a Taiwan company, not apparently connected with Huawei which is a mainland China enterprise.

I suspect Apple will lose ground in China (and internationally) as ZTE and Huawei products appear offering similar features at a quarter of the price.

Apple TV: Rubbish, you don't like documentaries – I'll just flick to porn

Fihart

Built-in green filter please.

Ideal telly would switch channels immediately a certain percentage of green hue was detected. Thus avoiding most outdoor sports and snooker.

Everything Everywhere to be Nothing Nowhere in rebrand

Fihart

Nothing Everywhere ! Genius.

Anything up to five bloody mobile phone shops per high street replacing former useful stores. What do they offer ? Essentially identical phones and tariffs sufficiently mixed up to make choosing a pain in the ass.

Everywhere and nothing indeed.

Apple, Samsung blast away in patent case closing arguments

Fihart

Re: What I said was.....

Your teachers failed you if you were hoping to become an advertising copywriter -- like me.

Fihart

What I said was.....

"-and drag and drop, so infinitely preferable to iPods."

The dash implies a new thought.

But thanks for your interest in my post.

Fihart

A curse on both their houses. Apple for iTunes and other control freakery in their overpriced hardware . Samsung for their unsavoury corporate history and (I gather) for messing with Android on their phones.

Sony seem to have learned the lesson of their rootkit PR disaster. Their MP3 players are DRM free -- and drag and drop, so infinitely preferable to iPods.

PLT chair: UK Radio Society is 'living in a dream world'

Fihart

Does it even work ?

I'd be willing to bet that PLT only works at all in a minority of homes, due to old or unsuitable mains wiring. It's probably wise before attempting to use this tech to agree with the retailer that he'll refund the full price if your wiring proves unsuitable.

Office 2013 to eat own file-format dog food

Fihart

docx not welcome here

Anyone sends me a .docx attachment I send back a request for a more compatible .doc version.

As per Richard Plinston I see such "innovations" as docx being default as a means to lever users into a fresher version of Word. I can't see any great improvement in Word since Word III and fully intend to continue with Word 2000.

Vodafone and pals can't kick the habit of cheap mobe prices

Fihart

So, they want rid of subsidies too ?

Long term the EU must outlaw locked phones (as per Belgium) and separate the sale of hardware from airtime so that call costs are more transparent.

Phone purchase price "subsidies" just encourage people to dump working phones* after a couple of years, help keep them them in overpriced contracts and contribute to the "confusion marketing" which makes choosing such a chore.

* I'm not unhappy to have received my neighbour's Nokia E71 when she dumped it for (a less usable) Blackberry Torch.

T-Mobile puts 'Full Monty' tariff on diet

Fihart

T Mob's User Forum

Mysteriously, not currently available.

Microsoft tightens grip on OEM Windows 8 licensing

Fihart

Re: I see their plan.

The key difference between Apple control freakery and Microsoft's anti-piracy annoyances (which as you say may be growing into hardware control) is that Apple OS and hardware is well integrated whereas, with Windows, the range of hardware available makes that much harder to work effectively in ways that could benefit the user.

So MS will be left with left with annoyed geniune users, annoyed existing manufacturers, a reduced choice of hardware for users. And, doubtless, a powerful incentive for previously legal users to seek jailbroken copies of Windows.

Fihart

Even more will migrate to Mac

Windows was a more attractive option than control-freak Apple when Win95 discs found in any skip could be used to install -- in my view a deliberate policy by Microsoft to gain its near-monopoly but handy if you owned multiple PCs.

Now, what does MS really offer the average user against Apple's simpler, more elegant looking interface.

Opera updated following unexplained Outlook.com lockout

Fihart

More confusion for idiot users.

Microsoft are just too brilliant for the rest of us.

They already have products called Outlook which are offline mail readers, so why not give a webmail service exactly the same name ?

As it is, I know idiot users who refer to Word as Windows and vice versa making offering them help an exercise in frustration.

Airline leaves customer on hold for 15 hours

Fihart

EDF Suck

Electrocity de France which (inexplicably) serves London. Latest estimated bill suggests I call and give them my own reading.

At least 15 mins on hold with "We are experiencing particularly heavy call traffic" (at 8.00 PM ! -- and, if so, why haven't you planned for that ?). Ring back later and the call centre has closed for the night.

Go online, only to struggle to register because (unnoticed by me) they've managed to subtly misspell my surname on the bill and on their system. Registration also demands D.O.B. (why ?) and another "memorable date" -- and that password is spelled with a capital letter.

Jeez, I'm just trying to give them a meter reading that they've been too hopeless to to take themselves -- clearly no-one is going to be at home in singles flats in London on a weekday afternoon.

Most annoyingly EDF have recently ceased showing what their estimated readings are. No meter figure, just the money. In the past I could check my meter and, if the figure was close enough, just pay up without all this crap.

Humax YouView DTR-T1000 IPTV Freeview PVR review

Fihart

Powerline Adapters ?

Less Hassle ? Not in our home.

Hobbyist builds working assault rifle using 3D printer

Fihart

Given that inkjet printers are about the most unreliable element in a computer system, no great surprise that it's only a short step from Paper Jam to Gun Jammed.

Apple blacklisted by Chinese consumer watchdog

Fihart

Re: No money in after-sales service

I've realised that the trader you use often is far more interested in keeping customers happy. Buy a £200 telly at a supermarket and, while the pre-sales service/advice is non-existent, they seldom quibble if you have to return the product with a genuine fault.

Buy the same telly at an electrical retailer and the outcome may be less happy.

The business reason is pretty simple -- Sainsbury or Waitrose rely on you shopping weekly. Comet/Currys can only sell you a telly every five years or so -- and who knows if you'd return to them, even if you were happy with their service.

Fihart

Apple Support Selective

My bro bought an Apple laptop a coupla years back and when the hard drive failed the local official Apple dealer in Belgium claimed it was caused by a memory sim failure (wot?) and the warranty had been breached because non-Apple memory had been installed.

This was astonishing to me: a) every laptop has the facility for users to add memory of the correct type, of any brand b) the memory had been installed at the time of purchase by an official Apple dealer c) my bro had paid extra for Apple Care.

After some shouting, they replaced the hard drive, incidentally, leaving the third party memory in place.

A friend returned his iPod to Apple's shop in London just outside the 12 month warranty and rather than repair or replace they merely offered 10% off a new one. Somebody at Apple hadn't looked at UK or European consumer law which (roughly speaking) holds that the retailer's responsibility for consumer durables well exceeds any notional manufacturer warranty.

Arguably, a warranty is simply an undertaking for a fixed period after sale by the manufacturer to underwrite the retailer's responsibility to repair. It's a contract between the maker and the seller. In the US this may be the consumer's only protection, but not in most of Europe -- and we tend to pay more for the same items, partly for that reason. Warranty wording always states that the terms do not affect consumers' normal rights.

Watching Olympics at work? How to avoid a £1k telly-tax fine

Fihart

Re: Or maybe

Why people watch sport is beyond me

LG Optimus 4X HD quad-core Android phone review

Fihart

Re: Fab phone. Dinosaur price.

The game is up for BMW as far as my family are concerned -- now have Tata (actually a Jaguar, company now owned by Tata).

Anyway, a car matters -- a phone, not so much.

Fihart

Fab phone. Dinosaur price.

When ZTE and Huawei can offer an Android for £50 or £100 the day game is up for expensive, glossy, trinkets without the cache of brand leadership.

PayPal is bleeding market share and it's all eBay's fault

Fihart

Tried eBay once, never again.

Looking for a hard drive caddy for Dell laptop, outbid at the last nano-second by someone using some smartass software.

An AUCTION is where you can see the other bids !

Few weeks later found a whole Dell Latitude (with broken screen) at a car boot sale for less than the winning eBay bid for a single part.

Paypal is just adding complicated insult to injury.

'Unfair' tariff tweaks yield networks £90m

Fihart

Re: Don't sign a contract

It's probably time that we followed the Belgian example and stopped the mobile companies locking up phones. This would have the side effect of discouraging them from offering "free" phones with contracts to distract customers from the high cost of calls (did you know that texts cost so little to the operators that they can't actually calculate how little). Would also end the free upgrades every couple of years that encourage customers to ditch perfectly functional phones.

Hopefully we will eventually see the mobile companies forced to separate the selling of contracts from the selling of phones so that they'd have to compete more transparently. Would give other retailers a chance to offer phones in and perhaps lead to more competitive prices for phones and air time.

Fihart

Re: Customers have no recourse

Hope you get the go ahead to drag Three into the County Court. Interesting to see if they even defend the action -- more likely they will try to settle on the steps of the court because they will not want to risk a decision against them in case it provokes an avalanche of other small claims.

Build a bonkers hi-fi

Fihart

Re: Landfill in the long run. Technics v Thorens.

Thorens 166, and especially 125, would make an impractical disco turntable. Heavy components loosely sprung, need to be partially disassembled and replaced in original packaging before transit. The pity about the SL1200 is that the feedback isolation is not that good and the arm -- despite high price of SL -- is like those on budget Japanese turntables (bearings need to be checked and tightened or the sound is affected). Speed stability is good, though apparently can be improved with mods.

Fihart

Re: Landfill in the long run. Technics.

Technics SL instant start is convenient for ripping vinyl to CD otherwise you are dead right. Did a side by side with the Thorens (with Mission 774 arm) and identical cartridges. Technics sounded dire.

Fihart

Landfill in the long run.

Only a few people I know still have full sized hifi systems. Others know nothing better than laptop or ipod based audio.

Much of my system has been rescued from dumpsters, including big B&W DM2 speakers and a 55 watt NAD receiver. Technics SL1200 and Thorens 125 turntables, various CD players with classic Philips swing-arm lasers were flea market finds.

Older stuff has a more enjoyable sound than the latest multi-£k models where screechiness seems to be equated with optimum information retrieval. As for networked audio -- hardly hifi and seems like a lot of unnecessary complication.

Lookout mulls flagging privacy-invading phone apps as adware

Fihart

Their hand in your pocket.

I guess what makes mobile malware so sinister is that it could so easily be used to run up costs on your phone account. This is a different order of threat than annoyances on your PC.

Google makes Opera bloggers an offer they can't refuse: Use Chrome

Fihart

Opera, boringly efficient

How can one have a life so barren that internet browsers are a topic for debate. I've heard people being rude about Opera (fair enough, but really ! ). To go to the trouble to accuse users of Opera of being boring is just a get-a -life scenario.

It's a browser, it seems to work quite well for me and it seems to run faster than others I have tried.

I don't appreciate being bullied by the likes of Google or Yahoo -- the latter's recentish email version actually doesn't work very well with Opera so I've stuck with the old Yahoo.

Automatic Wi-Fi roam, signup and billing via SIM card to be tested

Fihart

The end of free wifi ?

see heading

Microsoft set to 'do a Nexus' with its Surface tablet

Fihart

not only Xbox

......"despite hyping up its 30-year history of manufacturing hardware, its only real success to date has been the Xbox."

Microsoft have sold a fair number of mice -- in fact in my experience they have usually made the best ones available.