Mailing List Archive
tlug.jp Mailing List tlug archive tlug Mailing List Archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Free softbank keitais
- Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 15:31:41 +0900 (JST)
- From: "Andrew Errington" <a.errington@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Free softbank keitais
- References: <7037.211.8.77.3.1187663314.squirrel@webmail02.lancs.ac.uk> <46CBC9A5.5010002@simon-cozens.org>
- User-agent: SquirrelMail/1.5.1
On Wed, August 22, 2007 14:29, Simon Cozens wrote: > a.errington@example.com wrote: >> access. I arrived two weeks ago, and I now have a keitai (Softbank >> 707SCII, the free one) >> > > Either your gaijin card came through pretty fast or you found a > less-than-scrupulous Softbank outlet. Actually, I guess that covers most of > them. I got the 705SH and seriously regret it. If I had been quick enough, > I would have taken it back during the statutory 1 week contract > cooling-off period and gotten the smartphone. My poor thing doesn't even > support Bluetooth syncing properly. I don't have the plastic gaijin card- I used my temporary paper one. I went to the 24-hour SoftBank store in Harajuku. It seemed pretty legit. I just wanted a phone- you know, dial a number and speak. I am here with my wife, and we chose SoftBank as the calls between us are free. We both signed up on the White Plan, Y980 a month. I am sure I will be dinged for services I am using without realising what I am doing. With regard to the phone, there are 4 free ones. One is a kiddie's phone, which leaves three. Two are folding, and one is a one-piece phone. I didn't want the one-piece one as it was too big, and I thought the screen might get damaged. The 707SCII, which I chose, is a folding one made by Samsung and is very thin. The only drawback I have found thus far is I often miss calls as I cannot hear the ringing or feel the buzzer. I think I can get around this as I learn what ringtones are socially acceptable here, and which pockets I can feel the phone in. > And - although this is verging into keitai-l territory - the locked-down > nature of the Java platform is driving me mad. Anyone know if there's any > possibility of turning an ordinary .jar/.jad pair into a set of .huf files > as the platform requires? I know it's something to do with signing the > app, but at the same time it does seem like there's a load of third-party > apps, so it's got to be something you can do yourself. I have no idea about the Java platform. I haven't really started fiddling. I plugged the phone into my Linux box with the supplied USB cable and it was detected. A modem driver was loaded automatically (cdc-acm module), but I was hoping a mass-storage driver would load too. I don't have Bluetooth on either of my laptops, so I don't know what I can access with Bluetooth. Either way, with USB or Bluetooth I am guessing (hoping) the 'Data Folder' is accessible (where music, photos, and other files are stored), but the phonebook is not in the data folder, so it might be tricky. A CD is supplied with the phone, but I don't know what apps are on it. Anyway, I'd be glad to follow-up any suggestions of experiments to perform on the phone. As I said, all I wanted was a phone. Instead I got a 3G, video capable, multimedia gaming platform with a web browser, appointment calendar and Japanese-Korean dictionary. Fortunately I can make and receive calls and SMS... Best wishes, Andrew
- References:
- [tlug] Hello
- From: a . errington
- [tlug] Free softbank keitais
- From: Simon Cozens
Home | Main Index | Thread Index
- Prev by Date: Re: [tlug] [OT] US Civil War
- Next by Date: Re: [tlug] Hello
- Previous by thread: Re: [tlug] Free softbank keitais
- Next by thread: Re: [tlug] Free softbank keitais
- Index(es):
Home Page Mailing List Linux and Japan TLUG Members Links