Nokia E71

I’ve finally relented to self-induced peer pressure and bought myself a smartphone. I researched long and hard for the best phone and the best deal. I couldn’t afford an iPhone so I chose the Nokia E71 instead.

A note for the Phones4u salesmen/women/robot, don’t offer me a completely different phone when negotiating a deal. Although top marks for listening to the convoluted explanation of my requirements.

I’m trying to write the blog post from the phone itself on a fast, tilting train without the safety of the Firefox spell checker.

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Some thoughts:

  • The phone has a pleasing form factor. The keyboard is easy to use. The side buttons are useless.
  • Mobile Facebook is as addictive as it sounds.
  • The organisational satisfaction of synchronising contacts and calendar to the cloud.
  • I’m now a social networking demon. Although it feels like I’ve sold out to someone.
  • I don’t have to carry around a bible anymore.
  • Could this be the end of my Moleskin diary?
  • It’s like an iPhone, but less cool and more geeky. Perfect.

My Ideal Desktop Setup

Ideal Desktop 

I spend close to 8 hours a day in front of a computer. 4 of those hours are in front of Excel spreadsheets. This is what my world looks like. This is my ideal desktop setup.

  1. Black desktop – Utilitarian, plain, simple and no distractions. The main reason for this is that Windows loads up 2 seconds faster. This saves 32.4 minutes over an average lifetime. Staring at such a boring and demoralising desktop takes 32.4 hours off your life expectancy.
  2. No crap on the desktop – Utilitarian, plain, simple. Desktop crap is distracting and unproductive. I keep a "current" folder off the desktop for that purpose.
  3. Lots of quicklaunch icons – One-click access to the 16 most-used programs/folders. That includes one-click shutdown. The seconds seem trivial, but it is also easier and less frustrating.
  4. The sidebar – The most striking feature of my desktop setup. When I’m working, I usually have 20+ windows open. I need to see them all at once. With a sidebar, I can see all the windows and select them easily. Also, there is plenty of horizontal space on today’s widescreen monitors, vertical space is at a premium*.

*Thanks to Andy Liu for this insight

I’m off to find a new hobby so I can write about something else.

Ridiculous work-induced website spike

Website traffic graph 

Believe it or not, I don’t write this blog because I’m a typical-narcissistic-Generation-Y-auditor. I’m actually in it for the money. To this end, website traffic is monitored using Google Analytics. The big spike was caused by a colleague emailing my site to select friends at the firm.

Thanks (I think).