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Wed Jan 31, 2007 - 9:07 AM EST - By Jay Gross | |
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This time of year, the ranks of Treo owners traditionally swells, as people get them as gifts, the lucky ones among us, or finally spring the bucks to buy one for themselves. Then the fun begins. Or not.
Simple as they are to operate, particularly Palm OS models, Treos can inspire puzzled looks and frustrated digging to find answers. In this series I hope to address some of your questions and ease your transition to Treo.
This series is for newbies, freshmen if you will (freshpersons?). It�s impossible to predict what you already know, so forgive me if I cover something you�ve already figured out. We�ll move along slowly, so skip ahead if you get bored. It�ll help us both if you have your shiny new Treo handy - or that grubby used one you got off Ebay. If you need help getting it hooked up to a carrier, consult the carrier of your choice. We�ll assume it�s already working.
First, a round of introductions. Newbie, meet Treo. Treo, newbie. The treasure you have is a cell phone, a PDA, an MP3 player, a calculator, a digital camera of debatable usefulness, an email and web client, a picture viewer, and a huge number of other things that you can make it into by adding software or hardware. We�ll talk first about what you get, right out of the pretty box.
For starters, we�ll take up Palm OS, though with a nod here and there to Windows Mobile 5 as appropriate. If your Treo is a 650, a 700p, or a 680, it�s running Palm OS. Currently in version 5, the operating system has slightly different incarnations according to which model Treo you have, as well as minor variations among carriers. For example, 700p versions differ as to whether the little green light blinks when signal is present or only when an alert needs your attention. There are more interesting things to explore � the sizzle on the steak � so we�ll ignore OS versions for now.
First, we need to agree on what we�ll call things and point out where they are. The Treo has three ways of interaction: touch screen, dedicated buttons, and keyboard. All work at all times, and the device doesn�t care which you use. For example, on the "Home" or "Apps" screen, you can select something that isn�t visible by keying the first letter of its name. This means you don�t have to pull out the stylus to operate that tiny scroll bar along the right side of the screen. The accompanying screenshot illustrates this. It�s from my 700p, but don�t fret if your Treo doesn�t have all those programs (�apps�). I�ve added them over time.
You can also scroll the display with the funny shaped button in the middle under the screen. In Treo-speak, that doo-dad, including the button in its center, is known as the "5-way". It acts like cursor keys on a computer � up, down, left, right � with the equivalent of a "return" key in the middle.
Use the 5-way in addition to, or instead of, touching the screen to scroll, and when you find what you want, press the center button to launch. To close an app, press your Treo�s �home� button (located differently on various Treo models) or simply choose another app with the dedicated buttons � like �Phone� or �Messaging.� Press the first character of an app�s name to move to any that start with that letter.
The Treo keyboard�s "return" key works as you�d expect -- launching apps, for example. In addition to all these choices, the keys on the side of the phone can be set up to go to specific apps. We�ll save that nice feature for later discussion.
Palm OS doesn�t need to �close� an app. Just press the Home key to choose another app, or use one of the dedicated buttons to go directly to Phone, Calendar, Messaging, Camera, or whatever.
Treos running Palm OS don�t multitask. However, you can use apps like Calendar and Contacts while on the phone, and listen to music while using the apps - the pTunes app runs �in the background.� Forget talking on the phone and surfing the web at the same time.
If your carrier inflicts call waiting on you, as both of mine do, you can juggle callers with the Treo�s touch screen buttons. Notice the button labeled speaker phone. It can be a great help in a noisy environment, or if yo want people around you to be able to hear when the caller says. Great for those incoming obscene phone calls.
There�s a good chance the first thing you want to do with your new Treo is phone home. Your new baby makes and takes calls, takes a voice message if you don�t answer (might cost extra, depending on your carrier), displays signal strength � those �bars� that have nothing to do with Dewars -- and maintains a database of callers that you can set up for speed dialing. Treo 680�s will also let you reject a call with a friendly (or not) text message. The Phone app in a 680 looks different too.
Before you can call your friends to brag about your new Treo, you need a database of them to call. On Palm OS Treos, that information lives in the powerful Contacts app. Contacts stores many other types of information about people, including street addresses, pictures, email addresses, birthdates, and a collection of phone numbers for each � like home, work, cell, pager, and fax.
You can clean out what�s already there with the menu option "Edit Favorites Pages," from which you can edit, delete, or add buttons that suit you, rather than line your carrier�s pockets.
A Favorites button can dial a phone number when tapped, but if you give it a hot key � choose carefully � you can make the call with a single keystroke. The Favorites setup even allows dialing extra digits.
Next time we�ll explore file moving � in or out � for pictures, MP3 music files, and programs. Class dismissed.
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