Nov. 30th, 2003

I set up tcp/ip access over GSM. The girls were attacking an outlet mall in a (apparently traditional?) post-thanksgiving shopping spree, and Kenny and I were left lounging in the van for an hour or two. In that time I managed to connect my Ericsson T616 to my laptop and get GPRS (General Packet Radio Service, aka packet-switched data over GSM) working. (As they say — how stereotypical.) For some reason, I couldn't get the Ericsson software to talk to the phone over the IrDA link, but with the serial cable (thanks to [livejournal.com profile] baseballump) it works fine. Service is available nearly everywhere in the cities and along interstates. It's a bit slow, though, (reportedly 9600 bps), and expensive (cents per kilobyte)? I'm interested in other solutions to the mobile internet problem. Can I, for example, just dial up a regular ISP using the phone as a modem? I tried calling a BBS [Digital Decay, +1(714)871-2057] but it wouldn't connect ("NO CARRIER" without ever connecting). I'm eager to play with 802.11b some more, but I'll need a better card first (and an external antenna).

I'd also like to get some mapping software for my computer too, so I can have something like mapquest-on-the-fly. Delorme Street Atlas gets surprisingly horrible reviews, and Microsoft Streets and Trips apparently has atrocious GPS support. Not sure what to get, then.

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