Nokia Shows Off Phone with Printable Faceplate
jonknee writes "Nokia is prepping a new phone that one-ups all the other attempts at face plates... you can print your own! Just place one of the template pages it comes with (you can buy more) into your ink jet, and make a nifty design that isn't mass marketed at every mall this side of the Mississippi. The template is perforated so you can get a nice fit around the keys. The phone looks pretty nifty as well: camera, flashlight, FM radio and about everything else." It might be fun to rename someone's keys as a practical joke, not that I've ever done it to anyone's computer keyboard.
But can you actually make phone calls with it?
I believe you can't actually rebadge the keys, the template has holes punched out that fit around the keys, much like Nokia's faceplates for the current phones.
SO you actually don't see that much of your design on the front -- it is all keys and screen -- but a lot of it on the back.
... I recall hex editing someone's keyboard mappings (Windows) so that the misplaced keys still generated the correct letters.
Hours of fun, especially for touch typists =)
if you can video conference with it, you'll have to explain to you boss why you're laughing every time he calls you.
Just in case anybody is interested how this thing actually looks:
http://www.nokia.com/nokia/0,,42298,00.html
There's specs and some more PR stuff on the 3200 from the Nokia site.
Sounds like something that'll catch on with the younger crowd; I'm surprised that no one else has done it yet. On the other hand, faceplates are a big business with that same demographic, so maybe no one's tried it because they'd rather make you pay to customize.
The bold print giveth, and the fine print taketh away
Does the ink run? Holding a cell phone in your hand on a hot day is a recipe for running ink... as is drinking a glass of water next to the phone and touching the glass to the phone accidentally. Is there some sort of lamination or waterproofing provided? Otherwise, I don't think the printouts will last too long in "real world" use.
Honey, I shrunk the Cygwin
That mobile phones, one of the most useful applications of technology ever are so ubiqutious they are now practically being treated as fashion accessories rather than technology.
Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
What truth?
There is no dupe
If I had heard about this any place except Slashdot, I would have assumed that the intended market for this product was 12-year-old girls. I had to re-read the article twice to confirm that there really wasn't anything at all interesting about this phone. News for Nerds? What the hell?
I thought to myself: How on earth am I supposed to dial with those keys?
Am I the only one thinking about this ?
Now I can keep my vi cheatsheet with me wherever I go.
Many, many moons ago the place I worked at had a computer tech with a bizzare sense of humor.
Every year in December, he'd replace the boss' keyboard's L with a J key. We'd ask him why, and he'd say "because this way you now have a Christmas keyboard".
"Huh?"
"No L".
*cymbal crash*
Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
News for Nerds? What the hell?
What if the submitter had suggested a custom faceplate showing Natalie Portman, naked and petrified, eating a bowl of hot grits?
What's up with Nokia keypad layouts, anyway?
Go here and look at some phones.
The 3650 are in a circle. I gave up rotary dial decades ago, I don't want to be reminded.
The 3510 is like a spider web or something.
The 8910i doesn't have any keys at all! (Just kidding... I know they're under a cover.)
This 3200 looks like it doesn't have enough keys.
The 2100 looks like a smiley face.
With all these funky keys, how does Nokia expect me to dial a freakin' phone while I'm driving my SUV at 90mph in the right lane eating two cheese burgers and a Coke?
Apple's PowerBook 1400 did it already with the BookCover. There's a removable clear plastic cover (they also included one of grey plastic in case you didn't like the idea) that slides off the top part of the laptop, and underneath you can put any appropriately shaped piece of paper. It even came with templates pre-installed on the hard drive so you could design something to place there. Was kind of a cool idea, but it didn't really take off, as one can easily see.
My English teacher once told me that two positives don't make a negative. Two words for her: Yeah, right.
since phonescoop.com seems to be down, here is another site with more info about the phone.
The Straight Dope took a crack at the question: http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mphonedial.htm l.
To quote the conclusion: "Basically, calculator keypad design evolved from cash registers, while telephone keypad design evolved from the rotary dial. Tradition has kept them that way ever since."
Strangely enough, I've just posted to a diabetes newsgroup on this...
Having a mobile phone with a built-in blood glucose meter would be a real useful thing, especially since the number of people with the disease is growing at an alarming rate.
Imagine what could also be done--you could IR, bluetooth, USB or phone in your results to your computer or an online data store or your docs. If your BG indicated a possible hypo or hyper attack you could press OK to dial one or more numbers for assistance, or the phone could be pre-programmed to automatically dial for help if you did not hit NO/Cancel within, say 10 seconds. With calendaring and alarms, the phone could also remind when it's time to take medication.
As a type 2 diabetic, I have to carry a meter around with me that's about the same size as a mobile phone, so having the two integrated would be great.
AT&ROFLMAO