andrewducker: (overwhelming firepower)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2012-03-18 12:24 pm

I got my technology working!

Whilst tidying the flat today* we found the bluetooth keyboard that I bought so that I could write when at writing group, before I had a laptop. It worked perfectly with my Nokia N95 (and possibly also with my N80, I'm not sure when I bought the keyboard), and was very handy if I wanted to write more than a paragraph of text. My previous phone had an earlier version of Android that didn't support bluetooth keyboards (I think support came in with the tablets in version 3), and that was frustrating. I spent many hours trying to get it working, with no success. With my Galaxy Nexus it worked instantly. Nowadays I use Swype on the phone, and while it's the best touch-screen keyboard I've used it's still nowhere near as good as an actual keyboard, even if said keyboard is a teeny-tiny folding one.

So now I have a keyboard I can carry with me when I don't want to carry a whole laptop around. I don't think I actively need one at the moment, but it's nice to know it's there.

*My mother is visiting the day that we get back from holiday. Between now and then we have precisely two evenings in the country, and on one of those we're meeting the Hotel Wedding people. Tidying is thus the order of the day.

[identity profile] anton-p-nym.livejournal.com 2012-03-18 03:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I've been using a Stowaway folding keyboard with my 7" slate for the past 5 years and I love it; small enough to fit in a shirt pocket but big and sturdy enough when opened to use at something approaching normal typing speeds. (>70wpm is easily attainable if you aren't using a lot of numbers)

-- Steve thinks it's a pity that they don't make the Stowaway anymore.

[identity profile] steer.livejournal.com 2012-03-18 04:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh yes -- I had a folding keyboard for my palm pilot years ago. This was after I spent the whole of a 30 minute train journey doing meeting minutes on my palm and discovered when I loaded it onto my computer that it was, in fact, only about 6 lines of text. Folding keyboards are absolutely brilliant as an idea. There's also something super-satisfying about the unfolding of them.