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Mon Jan 14, 2008 - 12:31 PM EST - By Jay Gross | |
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In this on-going series, we�ve talked about ways of operating your Centro, including simply pressing the first letter of what you want in the Apps screen to navigate quickly. We�ll take this up in more detail, �cause the first thing you need in your Centro is a bunch of people to call or text. And gloat.
Let�s start at the beginning. The Contacts app keeps track of phone numbers, addresses, and other information about the people you call � including reminding you of their birthdays if you like. You can bring it up in either of two ways:
Either way, you�ll see a list of phone numbers you can call. If the list goes past one screen, you can jump to the w�s, say, by pressing the w key. Simple! Press another letter, and the Centro finds contacts whose first name starts with w and last name with whatever your second keypress was. This is how I find contacts. I almost never use the scroll bar (far right side of the screen, tiny!). Within the list that appears, use the up and down buttons on the 5-way control to move the highlight to the phone number or person you want. For simplicity, highlight the name to edit an entry. Highlight the number to make a call. To place the call, you can press the center button or the green button with the icon that looks like an antiquated telephone handset. I shot the picture of the keyboard to show off all these features.
So, how do you enter information into Contacts in the first place? Another good question. Short answer: type! Again, there are two main possibilities:
There are other ways to get contacts into the Centro. One is nearly automatic. When you receive a call, the smartphone smartly looks up the incoming number in its Contacts database. If it finds the number, it reports who�s calling, and it can display a picture, if you set that up (more on this shortly). It can also play a ringtone that applies to the caller. When a friend dials in, you�ll get a different ringtone from a call from your dentist. If it doesn�t find any matches, it offers the opportunity to make a new Contacts entry. Think quick! The offer doesn�t stay on screen for long.
Another choice, particularly for exchanging caller information among phones, even non-Centro models, is beaming. This system works on the same thing that drives TV channel surf devices: infrared. It�s most reliable to and from Palm phones, but it�ll work from other devices, too. With gotchas.
To beam stuff, put the two devices with their IR windows facing each other, and within a foot or so. Before you can beam to it, Centro�s built in infrared facility must be turned on.
The external source must initiate the �beam,� after which your Centro�s screen will ask whether you want to accept the record(s) into the Contacts database.
From other Palm OS devices, you can beam entire categories of contacts, even �all of the above.� With non-Palm sources, you�re on your own, as their mileage will differ. My Windows Mobile PDA, for example, will beam only one contact at a time (still better than retyping!).
Centro honors other types of beamed information; we�ll visit those in context later in this series. We�ll also visit Bluetooth networking, a big topic, worthy of thorough exploration.
For each contact, put in as much or as little information as you like. It�s possible to store only a phone number, but too many of those will get confusing. I store street addresses and zipcodes for my contacts so I can look them up whether or not I�m at my desk.
Street addresses are way useful for Google Maps, which is built into the Centro. Another topic for later in this series.
Over the years I�ve switched around from index cards to Rolodex to pocketable looseleaf notebooks. Nothing works as nicely as a computer, and that�s one of my favorite Centro advantages.
Tutorial time. Here�s the step-by-step for entering a record:
To assign a picture, click the portrait-looking icon on the first screen in Contacts. A small menu appears.
If you select Photo, the Centro displays thumbnails of all the pictures it has in its clutches. Choose one that suits your contact. When you tap it, the picture appears on your Contacts page. To change your mind, tap it again and choose Camera, Photo, or Remove.
As you enter the data, you can use the little plus-sign menu on the bottom row to jump to sections by name. The Custom entries are special fields that you can use for other information about a contact � spouse�s name, wine preference, L.L. Bean account number.
While you�re in the entry screens, Centro figures out what type of information you�re entering, for the most part, and switches on its numeric entry where appropriate � such as for phone numbers. To enter alphabets instead, press the numbers-on key (bottom row, two leftward of the spacebar). When finished, tap Done.
To call an entry, highlight a phone number on the Contacts screen and press either the Center button or the Big Green Button, or tap the number with the stylus and choose an option (Dial, Message, Cancel) from the dialog box that appears. To edit an entry, tap (or center-button) the caller�s name, rather than a phone number, and choose Done, Edit or Map. That�s Map, as in Google Maps, a topic for another time. Promise.
The sort order for Contacts defaults to last/first names. You can change this (for example, for business uses) to company and last name using Contacts > Options > Preferences.
Only two more items to explore this edition. If you crave an on-screen keyboard to tap, instead of thumbing your way through data entry, Centro offers one in Contacts. Look in the menus (menu button on bottom row) in the Contacts app for Edit > Keyboard. Hint: fingertips work as well as the stylus. To have the Centro hide some of your database entries from prying eyes, look into the �Private� options, a big topic (security!) for another time.
We�ve explored the Contacts app this time, and delved into adding pictures and special ringtones to callers� entries, discussed some cute tricks for navigating within the data, and explored options for quick and easy data entry. Next time, next topic. Don�t touch that dial!
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