On Tuesday night, I was wondering aimlessly through the
streets of Old Montreal, staring in hapless confusion at my
Pocket PC. Prior to the trip, I thought I had passed into
the elite of the technologically advanced road warrior. With
Pocket Maps loaded, my hotel location pinpointed and a
plethora of enticing little dots to explore, I set out on
the cobblestone streets, secure in the knowledge that the
entire streetscape of Montreal was magically captured in my
trusty iPAQ.
Exploring Old World Quebec - New World Style
I’m a pretty savvy traveler. I have a great sense of
direction, usually study a map ahead to get the “lay of the
land” and can keep north and south straight in my head. My
wife’s family often wonders how I do it, as they have no
sense of direction at all. I remember one trip to Vancouver
with my father in law. I was heading for the Second Narrows
bridge to cross over into North Van and was on the street
that would take us right onto the bridge. My father in law
asked where I thought I was going, and when I told him the
bridge, he said I was way too far west; it was at least 2
miles further east. As we stayed on the road and eventually
ended up on the bridge, he harrumphed and said they must
have moved it. Obviously one of those migratory bridges.
So, with this innate ability, enhanced with my newfound
technical navigational advantage, there should be no
stopping me. This was the trial run for a family trip this
summer to France and Italy.
Input and Output: Kaput!
I got one block from the hotel and was totally lost. I had
no idea where north and south were. The tiny 2.5 by 3.5 inch
screen held no clues for me, as I zoomed in and out and
helplessly panned around, looking for a street with which to
get my bearings. Street names sometimes appeared, and
sometimes didn’t. And the huge church in front of me, which
I recognized as Basilique Notre Dame, one of Montreal’s most
famous landmarks, for some reason didn’t show up on my
diminutive map. Instead there was a little blue dot labeled
“Vieux Seminare”, practically obliterated by hundreds of
restaurant and hotel icons. I scratched around helplessly
with my stylus as I slowly walked down the street, trying to
pan to a section of map that looked familiar. If you’ve
never tried using a stylus while walking, be forewarned, you
need the steady hands of a brain surgeon and the dexterity
of a Cirque du Soleil performer. It’s not for the faint of
heart. I would just get to a section of the map that looked
promising when I would have to look up to avoid running into
a lamp post or person and suddenly my stylus would leap
across the screen and transport me to the nether regions of
Montreal, miles from my current location. Once it
accidentally opened a map of Manhattan and I was half way to
Times Square before I realized what happened.
As I reached a square, I saw a map of Old Montreal
conveniently placed for tourists, a real map, 3 feet by 4
feet, with icons that didn’t disappear and street names I
could read. It was at a scale where I could look at more
than a block of the map at a time and still see the points
of interest. I pocketed the iPAQ, got my bearings and
happily explored the rest of the Old City (which is
fabulous, or as they say here, tres merveilleux) as the iPAQ
dozed silently in its holster. Its wandering days are over.
And here we have the biggest problem with mobile. Getting
information into it, and getting information out. We are not
Lilliputians. My fingers can pretty much wipe out an entire
family of Blackberry keys in one swipe. And my thumbs are
even more dangerous. This was not the way a 6 foot, 220
pound guy was meant to communicate. Give me a durable, beefy
keyboard that can take my not so subtle advances.
And the only thing meant to be seen on a 2.5 by 3.5 inch
screen is Dr. Phil, because just when he gets to the peak of
his self righteous “I can’t help you unless you help
yourself” diatribe, you can pretend you’re squishing his
head between your thumb and forefinger. This also works with
Donald Trump on the Apprentice and Simon Cowell on American
Idol, by the way.
I dream of a heads up display embedded in my eye glasses,
and a workable voice interface. You say what you want, and
it instantly springs up in front of your eyes. Now that
would be sweet. Hey, if anybody out there is working on this
stuff, let me know. I’d like to buy stocks.
The Wireless Ransom
My first lesson with mobile data roaming came soon after
getting the iPAQ. We hopped in the motorhome and headed to
California. Of course, we experimented on the way with how
nifty it was to check email, look up websites and, for my
wife, to chat on Messenger for several hours between Lincoln
City and Florence (Oregon, not Italy) with her sister back
home. We reached San Francisco and in trying to locate
Molinari’s delicatessen (a place you just have to get a
sandwich, by the way) we just searched for the website,
found the address and walked right to it. This was what
being wired was being all about!
Then we got home and found out what being hosed was all
about. We got the mobile bill: $800 in data charges for two
weeks! Looking up the restaurant probably cost us more than
the meal itself. I figure each of my wife’s Messenger chats
averaged about 30 dollars. Since then, I’ve learned to not
keep bringing up this point in domestic discussions.
Until we get some broadband upgrades, standardized rates and
roaming agreements that cost less than the GNPs of most
small countries, we’re scared to death of going online on a
mobile device. It’s like going into your lawyer’s office.
You get in, get what you want to say said, and get out. You
don’t comment on décor, mention children or bring up
holidays. At 300 bucks plus an hour it would be cheaper to
call a 900 number and chew the fat about female self
awareness with Jenn and Barbie at Dial-a-Date.com
Convergence Soon Please!
The third leg of the mobile conundrum is the usefulness of
the apps you use. At first glance, they look great, but
anemic features, lack of computing power and restricted
storage space make you realize their limitations all too
quickly. The concept is great; the execution leaves a little
to be desired. Case in point, although you can find points
of interest in Pocket Maps, you can’t link them together
with suggested routes. I realize the data to calculate the
routes is a little much to expect from a Pocket PC, but why
does it have to be that way? Isn’t technology here to solve
our problems? Anyone trying to create an itinerary on the
fly will soon give up.
Also, the points of interest and landmarks found just give
the title and address, but nothing about them. Even if they
did give you a website link, you’d be afraid to click on it
because websites get totally hacked on the small PDA screen,
take forever to load and cost you a small fortune to access.
The Promise of Things Yet to Come
I want a smarter mobile navigational and search experience.
I want to be able to indicate my starting point on my GPS
enabled mobile computer, feed in my interests, get a real
search online function to help me find locations (Pocket
Map’s 2006 is an improvement over 2004, but leaves a lot to
be desired), have the best routes indicated, give me one
click access to information, menus, entertainment, prices
and reservations for restaurants, integrate reviews and best
of lists like CitySearch and TripAdvisor and switch to a
satellite view if I wish. Better yet, I’d like to indicate
times I’d like to take a sight seeing tour, a time I want to
stop for supper, and have my PDA work as a smart assistant
for me to take my likes and dislikes and provide me with a
list of suggestions for my approval. Upon approval, it lays
out the best route and points out landmarks I should look
for on the way. As always, search will be the functional
layer that ties it all together.
Or think of what shopping with a super smart PDA would be
like. You are in a shop and see something you absolutely
love. You scan the label with your PDA and see if there are
any others in a 4 block radius at a lower cost. There is, in
a store 2 blocks east (the map is already drawn) and in
different colors. You send a request to the store to set
them aside. You start delivering mobile functionality like
that and you’ll leave desktop bound PCs in the dust.
I’m sure most of the capabilities I dream about lie here and
there in development, tiny little fragments of a yet to be
integrated solution. When it comes, it will be a wonderful
thing. But for now, when I’m on the road, the iPAQ will
probably spend more time in the holster than out of it. I
haven’t totally given up yet, though. The Bluetooth GPS
receiver I ordered from eBay is on its way, if it didn’t get
lost!