Scribble scribble.
June 26th, 2008

Depending on who you ask, Amazon.com’s Kindle is a either a hit or a waste of electronics. The free web and book browsing, where you can find it, is a good thing. The outrageously-priced electronic books, however, are not good. And some think the Kindle won’t actually make people read more books, but simply attract those already-book-readers that have been dying to clear some shelf space. At most, the Kindle is a handy “information device.”
For those who aren’t willing to shell out $399 for a eBook reader, you can rely on your Newton to do the same darned thing – for free.
You see, before there was e-ink or Wikipedia, there was the Newton eBook. Every Newton released has the ability to read an eBook: a Unicode-based, read-only electronic document that supports tables of contents, some images, and internal links.
Downloading Newton eBooks is as easy as downloading a “.pkg” file from a site that provides eBooks, like Newton’s Library or StillNewt.org. Matt Howe recently offered the Newtontalk list a free copy of Robert’s Rules of Order for anyone who asked. Even the venerable UNNA.org has a list of available books.
Applications like Newton Press allow you to make eBooks and package them as “.pkg” files for download (here’s a handy tip site).
Now you don’t even need a Newton MessagePad to read your eBooks. Newton’s Library has provided a Firefox extension that allows you to read them on your browser. The effect is pretty cool:

The Firefox extension lets you read Newton eBooks in a little window, and converts the “.pkg” files to readable text.
The Kindle has the ability to seek and find free eBooks as well, as Merlin Mann over at 43folders.com points out (after he did so on the terrific podcast, MacBreak Weekly). Plus Project Gutenberg is a worthy project that is putting its library of 100,000 eBooks (HTML or plain text) into the hands of readers. All they ask is for a donation.
So if you’re looking to dive into the world of eBooks, you have options. Yes, you can opt for the Kindle – a modern, capable book reader that has a steep up-front cost but freebie options available. But this is Newton Poetry, and for more of a “project” or unique feel to your eBook reading experience that’s sure to turn heads, opt for the MessagePad version.
Posted by davelawrence8 at 6:44 am on June 26th, 2008. Categories: ebook. Tags: amazon, e-ink, ebook, free, HTML, kindle, messagepad, newton, newton's library, newtontalk, stillnewt, text. Subscribe via RSS.
June 25th, 2008

If you’re looking to…gulp…replace your Newton, Nokia’s N800 may just be the portable PC you’re looking for.
This according to a review/comparison over here that gets pretty in-depth into the features of the N800, a modern internet tablet that runs about $200.
The modern Linux interface of the N800, however, is not without its drawbacks:
I like the N800. That’s why I bought it. But as great as the N800 is, and as much of an advance it represents technologically over my 10-year-old MessagePad, I am surprised at how much more sophisticated the MessagePad is than the N800 in terms of user experience.
The handwriting recognition, printing and faxing, and battery life (themes we’ve all heard before) are superior on the MessagePad 2100, according to the author.
Check out the full review for another great fight between a modern tablet and our good friend, the Newton.
Posted by davelawrence8 at 7:56 am on June 25th, 2008. Categories: messagepad, newton. Tags: internet, linux, messagepad, n800, newton, nokia, portable, tablet. Subscribe via RSS.
June 24th, 2008

The madness continues, but us AAPL investors have to be feeling better than we were just a few months ago.
Conventional wisdom says buy on the rumor, and sure enough – after the iPhone 3G announcement, AAPL stock took a bit of a dive. It’s been bouncing back and forth (with the markets, apparently, in red and orange above), now resting at $173 as of today’s closing.
Apple is in good condition, and with the iPhone price drop, I can only imagine things will get better. And others agree (including a blogger I read regularly over at The Simple Dollar). The final pricing point doesn’t matter. What’ll be interesting is to see how the stock performs come July 11, when lines outside Apple stores will surely beat last year’s. I hope to be at our own Ann Arbor store that morning. If it’s anything like the store’s opening, it should be a fun day, indeed.
For all the speculation and gambling and non-news that gets thrown around in regards to Apple, what matters most is the ability of the company to churn out high-quality computers and phones and music players that people want. And they are doing that.
If, as king-hell capitalists believe, a company’s stock price is the true measure of its worth, than Apple is in good condition. Says one analyst (thanks to Reuters):
Analyst David Bailey also raised his target on the stock to $220 from $185, and said Apple should be able to increase its available iPhone subscriber base by more than 80 percent this year due to aggressive expansion into international markets.
Will all that optimism change should that Jobs guy leave the company?
Who can tell? The experiment marches on, anyway.
Posted by davelawrence8 at 4:59 pm on June 24th, 2008. Categories: apple, ipod/iphone. Tags: AAPL, apple store, iphone, iphone 3g, ipod, ipod touch, july 11, mac, macintosh, market, speculate, steve jobs, stock, stock price. Subscribe via RSS.
June 23rd, 2008

Look what I found at my recycling group’s most recent e-waste drive: a beautiful-condition PowerMac G4 and Apple Studio Display.
The guy who dropped it off said it “worked perfectly.” His family was simply upgrading to a newer Mac. All the volunteers at the e-waste drive immediately brought it to me and asked me if I wanted it. The answer to that one is obvious.
An older guy dropped off a Macintosh IIci and an Apple Extended Keyboard II, as well, but those are going to my friend Curtis, who helps me out with classic Macs.
Now, what to do with the G4?
More… »
Posted by davelawrence8 at 7:59 am on June 23rd, 2008. Categories: DIY, lowend, macs, OS X. Tags: apple, apple studio display, G3, g4, OS X 10.3, panther, PCI, power mac, powermac, quicksilver, USB 2.0, yikes. Subscribe via RSS.
June 18th, 2008
* This morning (October 12, 1996) I started up my Newton MP130, instead of the normal lightbulb screen appearing, a lunar eclipse the screen very slowly, casting a shadow on my name. This is a known egg that occurs whenever there is a partial or total eclipse.
* Write “EGG FRECKLES” highlight it and tap on assist.
* Write “neat bong” highlight it and tap on assist.
* Write “about Newton” highlight it and tap assist.
* Go to the time map. Select AREA 51 or Groom Lake or what ever strange name you find near Las Vegas. Then check your dates again.
* Reset the newton, then turn it on and tap on “undo”. Then tap on the overview button, now select the first error, there tap on the little info symbol. Now its just the question what happened on that date and why it is supposed to be an error?
* In the Notepad, using the printed (Rosetta) recognizer, write… Rosetta! Rosetta! Rosetta!
On the MP 110 and earlier there should be some other eggs:
* Tap on the little clock symbol and hold the pen down. first you will see the time and the battery power, after a while it will also display the temperature in the battery compartment.
* Write “find elvis” then tap on assist.
* Change your country to “Graceland”. (personal info) (then there will be a problem when autodialing)
[Grabbed from Newton Newbie Info.]
Posted by davelawrence8 at 8:09 am on June 18th, 2008. Categories: humor, newton history. Tags: apple, doonsbury, easter egg, egg freckles, elvis, hidden, messagepad, mystery, newton, rosetta. Subscribe via RSS.
June 16th, 2008

I always wonder about the Mac Mini.
Every time I see one I want to touch it, and I’m always on the look-out for a cheap enough model to buy. But I wonder how the Mac Mini’s sales are doing.
When it was launched, people predicted the Mini – then a G4 – would sell pretty well. Then, last summer, sites predicted the death of the Mini. Since Leopard was release, the Mini just hangs in limbo.
It’s a shame, too, because people love the pint-sized Mac enough to mod the heck out of it. Media centers, car computers – you name it, someone has put a Mini inside it. But how well does it sell overall?
The original idea was to offer up a below-$1,000 Mac so that Window users, who already own a capable monitor and keyboard/mouse set, could jump ship easily and cheaply. The Mini could run OS X and MS Office software and anything else you could throw at it, and users could expect a machine to help them “learn” the Mac OS without whipping through 40 Photoshop filters at top speed. You knew it was a modest system. You didn’t expect a whole lot.
As it stands today, though, people are switching to Apple – but mostly through the notebook route. What’s the Mac Mini’s role in all this? A new MobileMe-only device? A music server?
Plus, OS X 10.5 requires more powerful hardware, and the Mini’s modest specs seem to not up to the new iMac’s standards, I guess I’m just worried the tiny Mac will get lost in the (non-iPod) shuffle. If sales are sluggish, would Apple just drop it? Would the monitor-less experiment be over? And what about the dreaded xMac?
If anyone knows, I’d love to hear about it.
Posted by davelawrence8 at 9:35 am on June 16th, 2008. Categories: apple, macs, OS X. Tags: apple, hack, imac, leopard, mac mini, macbook, mobileme, mod, OS X, xmac. Subscribe via RSS.
June 12th, 2008

Well, kind of. It helps if you know who he is.
“Splorp”” is actually Grant Hutchinson, a big Newton MessagePad fan and keeper of the Newtontalk list (which seems to be down as of this posting – here’s the Twitter feed), the Newted Community, and his own personal site (and, above, his Twitter feed).
Anyway, one of the 2008 Apple Design Award winner for “Best iPhone Social Networking Application” was Twitterrific for the iPhone, and his picture is right there on Apple’s web site. Kind of cool.

He might not even know it yet, but I’ll let him know right now. Because, you know, us Newton users need all the help we can get, right?
When I first got my iBook, back in November 2005, I saw a Celldweller CD sitting on one of the desktops on Apple’s “Get to know your Mac” tutorial sites. Being a fan, I let him know, and he seemed to appreciate it. “I know we have some fans over at Apple,” Clayton told me.
Posted by davelawrence8 at 4:04 pm on June 12th, 2008. Categories: community, ipod/iphone. Tags: 3G, apple design awards, community, iphone, newted, newtontalk, sdk, splorp, twitter, WWDC. Subscribe via RSS.
June 11th, 2008

by J.R.R. Tolkien
Roads 90 ever ever an,
Over rock and under free,
By caves there neve sun has shone,
By streams thut newr fu the seas.
Roads go ewer ever on,
Uncle cloud and uncle stir,
Yet cut trut wundering have gone
Turn at last to home afar.
[Read the original – at the bottom of the page. I can’t believe I haven’t done Tolkien yet. I’ve been thinking about picking up the “Lord of the Rings” series again. This one fits my upcoming trip, too. Find out why this poem is misspelled.]
Posted by davelawrence8 at 7:06 am on June 11th, 2008. Categories: poem, tolkien. Tags: bilbo, english, frodo, hobbit, lord of the rings, lotr, messagepad, newton, poetry, road, tolkien, travel. Subscribe via RSS.
June 11th, 2008

I’m a public relations professional by day, and I’ve got to tell you: I admire the way Apple gets all the headlines for their events.
I noticed this Monday when my iGoogle pops up and the WWDC 2008 buzz was everywhere to be found (above). Apple’s PR juggernaut can’t be stopped, even when Steve Jobs is looking under the weather.
One goal of public relations is to get your message out and to communicate with your “publics” (shareholders, employees, customers, etc.). Another is to get “inches” out of the new press, which amounts to free advertising. Apple does this without batting an eye. Oh, to be a PR pro in the Cupertino halls.
Posted by davelawrence8 at 1:45 am on June 11th, 2008. Categories: apple. Tags: ads, advertising, apple, iphone 3g, pr, press, public relations, sick, spin, steve jobs, WWDC. Subscribe via RSS.
June 10th, 2008

Gizmodo is hosting a wallpaper image to use as your iPhone backdrop, a roundabout way to relive Newton glory days.
Gizmodo is pretty harsh on us Newton users:
However, the fact is that the iPhone, while simpler than Newton, it’s an extremely powerful device. Much more than the Newton ever was. Its software is more accessible to normal users than the Newton’s; it runs an extremely fast operating system and, most importantly, it has a phone and built-in Wi-Fi, which is reason enough to make it a better communicator than the Newton. A product for the masses, rather than a niche wonder.
Whatever, Gizmodo. But we do appreciate the iPhone wallpaper. Click the above image to get your own copy.
Posted by davelawrence8 at 8:34 am on June 10th, 2008. Categories: blogs, ipod/iphone. Tags: apple, backdrop, gizmodo, image, iphone, messagepad, newton, wallpaper. Subscribe via RSS.