<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
      Today my new mobile phone, a cute little Sony Ericsson K700i, arrived.
      This is a marvel of technology which <cite>Just Works</cite> and
      <cite>Does The Right Thing</cite> from beginning to end.
    </p>
    <p>
      First I had to move my address book from old phone (a T68i). This isn't as
      easy as just it used to be, when one could save it on the SIM, as both my
      old and new phones use a more powerful data format and you lose data when
      exported to the SIM.  I knew that both phones supported IrMC, a
      synchronisation protocol, so I installed Multisync. Despite having a
      rather overly-complex interface, it pretty much does what it says.  I
      created a new synchronisation pair, one end of which was a Bluetooth phone
      and the other end was the Backup source, which simply stores what it is
      sent.  Doing the synchronisation was trivial: point the Bluetooth source
      at my old phone and ask it to sync, and seconds later I had all of my
      contacts on my laptop in vCards.  Change the Bluetooth source to my new
      phone, tell the Backup source to Restore All, and ask it to sync again.
      Another 5 seconds later and my address book is on the new phone, complete
      with Home/Work/Mobile annotations.
    </p>
    <p>
      Next, to do something about the look of the interface.  The default theme
      is not too bad, but I do feel like a walking Vodafone advert.  I quickly
      searched around the Internet and downloaded a number of <tt>.thm</tt>
      files, which are themes.  I expected these to be some proprietary format,
      but Nautilus did a MIME sniff and swore they were tarballs.  I doubted
      this, double-clicked, and the theme opened in File Roller...  Themes for
      this phone are a tarball of images (PNG, JPEG and GIF for the themes I
      had) and an XML file to define the theme.  Getting the themes onto the
      phone was no trouble at all thanks to Edd's excellent
      <tt>gnome-bluetooth</tt> tools, right-click on the file, press <cite>Send
      via Bluetooth</cite> and select the right phone.
    </p>
    <p>
      But the surprises didn't end there...  I had a look through the supplied
      images, most of which were photos but there were a few short (and
      mediocre) movies. One of them caught my eye as it had very sharp lines and
      flat colours, and found out that it is actually an animated SVG file.
      Invalid is may be (the <tt>xlink</tt> namespace isn't declared) but
      Inkscape could still open it, despite not understanding animated SVGs.
    </p>
    <p>
      So what is next?  The phone has a calendar/task list so I'll probably try
      (again) to use the Evolution calendar for more than birthdays, and export
      it to the phone (and my iPod, so I've no excuse for missing an
      appointment).  All in all, a very satisfying play with a new phone.  I'm
      don't expect the media player to support Ogg Vorbis or Ogg Theora, but
      XML, SVG and PNG is a very good step in the right direction.  Kudos to
      Sony Ericsson!
    </p>
    <p>
      <small>NP: <cite>Music For The Mature B-Boy</cite>, DJ Format</small>
    </p>
]]></content:encoded><category domain="http://www.burtonini.com">/computers</category><dc:date>2004-09-23T17:21:41Z</dc:date></item></channel></rss>