Tag: eris

Smartphone for a Soccer Mom

 First, a disclaimer: I am not a soccer mom. I am, however, a track mom, a cross-country mom, a Daisy mom, etc. None of my three kids play soccer, but I am that mom that shows up on field trips and attends numerous after-school and weekend events that go along with having school-age kids.

That being said, I finally decided to jump into the world of smart phones earlier this year. I am the type who, after lengthy research, chooses a phone that I keep for years. (I  had two cell phones in the last 5 years.) When my two year contract is up, I am inundated with offers to upgrade and sent phenomenal deals on a new phone. What usually convinces me to upgrade is the need for a new battery! After almost three years with the same phone, the battery is the weak point and needs to be charged every evening. But when I price a decent battery (NOT a cheap aftermarket one that gets hot and doesn’t last) the battery alone is more than the offer of a brand new phone with cutting-edge technology.

But what exactly IS this cutting edge technology, why do I need it, and why should I consider paying an extra $30 per month to use these new Smart Phone services?

In 2009, my sister in Denver bought the iPhone. It was sleek and pretty and did a lot, but she basically used it for making calls and getting on the internet once in a while. Where I live, an AT&T contract is unavailable and if you go out of the area to purchase one, the service is spotty. When I saw advertisements for the new Android operating system that was released late last year, I was excited. I drooled for the Motorola Droid because having an actual keyboard, rather than a touch screen one, was important to me. I loved my Samsung SCH-U740 and its unique design that flipped open like a normal phone and also horizontally to reveal a full QWERTY keyboard.

But my excitement over the Motorola Droid was short-lived when I got to play with a friend’s and I realized it was just too big and bulky for my little purse. It was heavy – a ‘man phone’ I call it, but it had a lot of great features that I knew were practical for me. For instance: Google Sky. I am an amateur astronomer and enjoy learning about the constellations, how they move in the sky, where the planets are, and being able to identify what it is I’m looking at. I live in the mountains and the skies are dark, really dark, and there are a lot of stars to look at. With the Google Sky app, you can hold the phone up to a portion of the sky that you are looking at and the device uses your GPS coordinates and knows which direction you are holding the phone, revealing a detailed and accurate depiction of the night sky right in front of your eyes. Now that I have had it for a while, I use it to test myself. Is that Cassiopeia? Is that bright star really a planet? Is it Mars?

Another app that I was shown at the Verizon store was a barcode scanner. The rep said he doesn’t show it much to the customers in the retail electronics part of the store because it is a powerful shopper’s tool. Basically, you use the phone’s camera and the barcode app to scan a product barcode. Immediately, you are connected to the internet with a list of product reviews and prices so you become a savvy shopper. Pretty cool, but I haven’t used it yet.

I had an advantage when picking out my smartphone because I tutor clients with their electronic devices. I like electronics and technology and am good at figuring things out. I was able to help clients set up iPhones, Blackberries of different models, LG’s, Samsungs and other phones that had touch screens. Some were frustrating, some were intuitive, but none was perfect.

A rep at another Verizon store told me about the Droid Eris, made by a company called HTC. I hadn’t heard of the phone, but was interested because it had the Android operating system on it. The first thing that appealed to me was the size and weight. It is more of a ‘girl phone’ than the Motorola Droid. The touch screen is the best I have tried, and having seven screens (the Motorola Droid has just 3) that I can customize with my apps to make them accessible is one of the best parts of the phone.

There is a Market where I can download from thousands of free apps, and the better ones that are very useful are free. There are GPS programs that act like a pedometer when I go on walks and hikes and record my speed and distance, I can listen to Pandora internet radio in my car via a tape player adapter and customize my stations, which saves me from subscribing to XM satellite radio, and I can use Google Maps to get exact directions to my location via text or map directions. When I was visiting San Diego last month, I needed (yes, NEEDED) to find an In-N-Out location. I loaded the browser on my Eris, went to the In-N-Out page and pulled up their map of locations, found an address to type into Google Maps, and instantly I had directions to where I wanted to go. After a grilled cheese, fresh cut fries and delicious chocolate shake, the kids were as happy as I was!

One of my most used features is the Visual Voice mail that Verizon offers.  (See my Voice Mail Made Easier post.) Having the ability to see my voice mail organized by caller and being able to play them in any order I want, while pausing and skipping to any part of the message, is a huge timesaver and avoids the dread I used to feel when having to check a dozen messages after a busy afternoon.

And one final thought: when I was still on the fence about spending the extra money each month to have the smartphone, a main reason was because I work online all day and didn’t want to get a device to keep me on the internet more. But one of my colleagues told me that her Blackberry saved her computer time because she could accomplish many tasks like checking and replying to emails or looking something up without gettting lost in all the other distractions that occur when you get on your computer.

She was right, and now I keep my laptop closed much more because I can simply check my Eris to see if my client okayed a design and know I can get back to them during business hours. Sweet.

This mom is very happy with her smartphone purchase. And the best part is – it was free! (Free after rebate, certain restrictions apply. Void where prohibited…)


Voice Mail Made Easier

There are some days that I get so many voice mail messages that my head spins. By 10 a.m., I will have eight messages. In between clients, I check the messages and return phone calls, and during that time I will have five more messages. By the end of the day, I’ll have another half dozen notifications and just turn off my phone and pretend they’re not there.

My business involves meeting with clients and setting up computer systems, troubleshooting software issues, tutoring a client on how to use a new program, or consulting with a business owner on their website and social media. Fielding phone calls is a part of my job, but I take no pleasure is trying to keep up with the messages on busy days.

I tried using the Visual Voice Mail that came installed on my Droid Eris smart phone through Verizon, and I loved the features. When a message was received, I could pull up a list of calls along with their caller ID’s. I could play an individual message in any order I received, which comes in handy when I want to hear a message from an important client with a current project and not have to listen through the other chit chat messages.

The $2.99 per month that Verizon charges for the service is well worth it. It integrates nicely into my phone and the layout and ease of use gets top marks. The negative, though, was that the volume of the voice messages was excessively quiet. No matter how high I turned up every volume setting I could find, the volume of the message was almost too hard to hear. On speakerphone, it was even worse.

I poked around message boards and found a few other recent posts from users who were having the same issue, but there didn’t seem to be any solutions. Several posts, however, mentioned a similar service that was offered free through YouMail. I was hesitant to use a free service, but there were many mentions of the site from users who had good results and I decided to give it a try.

The service works in much the same way as Verizon’s Visual Voice Mail, but instead of working with the system voicemail, unanswered calls are forwarded to a number that allows YouMail to field the calls. If I’m at my computer, I can go to my YouMail page, see who has called, and play my messages online.  And just as on Verizon’s service, users can also set up custom greetings for each caller.

The YouMail interface on my Eris isn’t as sleek as the Verizon program, and one of the things that bugs me is that I have to press Menu and then delete to remove a message. With Visual Voice Mail, there was a trash can icon that I could click to do this. Not a big deal, and maybe it will be added in a future version.

All in all, I’m happpy with the free YouMail program. I will use it for a few more weeks before I cancel my Visual Voice Mail subscription with Verizon. The biggest benefit of having my messages presented to me as a list is that I no longer have to sit through messages to get to the ones I want. I control my messages and can even archive or email any voice mail for future use. It has saved me a lot of headaches and I no longer dread it when I have a dozen voice mails to check.


Site copyright 2010 Red Humpy Design.