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    Mobile Computing

  • PC World editors offers tools, tips, and product recommendations to help you make the most of computing on the go.
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Mobile Computing Patrick Miller, PC World |

Toshiba Dynadock Wireless U: The Perfect Docking Station?

We may be living in the age of Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, but much of the laptop experience is still heavily wired. Me? I'm tired of being chained to a desk by my speakers, external display, and assorted USB devices. Luckily, Toshiba's Dynadock Wireless U ($300 from Toshiba, $250 from Amazon.com; check out PC World Pricing) wireless docking station showed up at the office. I took a couple days to play with it, and here are my initial impressions.

Wireless Docking in the Real World

The Dynadock Wireless U packs a DVI connector (with VGA adapter), six USB ports, a digital audio port, and an Ethernet port, as well as line-in, headphone, and microphone jacks. Anything you plug in will be usable by your laptop, which it connects to via an included USB stick. You could leave your cameras, phones, speakers, and so on connected to the dock while you roam around the room on the laptop with full access to your devices, or you could work from the hub by connecting a full keyboard and mouse to the USB ports and hooking up an external display while your laptop sits elsewhere.

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Mobile Computing Darren Gladstone, PC World |

Pret-a-Portable: Dell Adamo, HP Envy, and Sony Vaio X

Sleek little laptops are nothing new--I recall drooling over a Toshiba Libretto back in the day--but something's in the water at the design houses lately. We're seeing all sorts of new notebooks pushing the envelope in different directions.

Probably the most obvious place to start is with the new Dell Adamo (check out the funky design) that I got a sneak peek at...and that Dell has started letting slip to different Web sites.

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Mobile Computing Darren Gladstone, PC World |

The Dell Latitude Z600 and a Tale of Two Bloggers

Before I get into it, I want to first thank everyone who chimed in over e-mail and in the forums, sharing their shovelware horror stories after last week's crank-fest. I wish I had time to respond to everyone, but someone, somewhere pointed out a program that everyone needs to know about: PC Decrapifier. Install this on your brand-new machine and it'll strip out just about all the unwanted junk. You're welcome. Okay, onto this week's rant!

Enter Wireless Charging

[A public Mea Culpa to Jared. I didn't think I was making a personal attack, merely providing a counterpoint. I cut out a couple bits that might've been misconstrued, but the thought is still there: I was in the room and used it and don't fully agree with master Newman's assertions.]

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Mobile Computing Darren Gladstone, PC World |

Die, Shovelware, Die!

Hi, I'm Darren Gladstone. You might remember me from Casual Friday and my many laptop reviews. Now, in my copious free time--sleep is for the weak!--I'm also contributing to the Mobile Computing blog.

Occasionally, I'll tell you what cheeses me off about the state of mobility, and answer some of your questions in the process. And--fair warning--I may occasionally go off-script. So, let's start off with an easy target: shovelware that comes for "free" on your laptop.

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Mobile Computing James A. Martin, PC World |

Top 5 Tips for Mobile Professionals

Seven years ago, this blog you're reading now was an online column offering advice on such things as traveling with a PDA in lieu of a laptop. On that particular topic, I wrote that accessing the Internet on a PDA was like "driving cross-country in a Pinto with a cracked windshield--painfully slow and monumentally irritating." One of the main options for checking e-mail on a handheld, I explained, was to connect the PDA to "a dial-up modem and a landline connection."

We've come a long way since then, don't you think? And I've thoroughly enjoyed the journey, reporting every week on the collective digital path we've been on. But after nearly eight years of writing Mobile Computing, this blog post is my last. It's time for me to move along my own path. I'll still contribute to PC World on mobile technology, social media, and other topics.

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Mobile Computing James A. Martin, PC World |

Do We Love Our Smartphones Too Much?

If it hadn't been so crazy expensive to use Google Maps on my Apple iPhone 3GS while I was in the UK, I might never have met Elizabeth. I probably wouldn't have made it to that charming inn/pub high up on the hill, either. And my trip would have been a bit less rewarding as a result.

Funny thing about the iPhone, RIM BlackBerry, Palm Pre, Google Android device, and other smartphones. Once we submit to the two-year contract and get used to paying the monthly ransom, we tend to grow dependent upon our phones. We read e-mail at stoplights. We book a dinner reservation on OpenTable while in a checkout line. Getting the latest news or sports scores or texting a buddy become almost unconscious activities.

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Mobile Computing James A. Martin, PC World |

The Best Digital Camera, GPS, and Bags for Travelers

For Star Trek fans, space is the final frontier. For travelers, it's a never-ending challenge. What do you decide to pack in your oh-so-limited carry-on and checked baggage space? It's a vexing question, especially given that most airlines charge you to check a bag. Last week, I guided you to the laptop, netbooks, and smartphones well worth giving space to. This week, a look at the best digital camera and GPS device, plus where to find the best gear bags.

Digital Camera: Canon Powershot SX200 IS

Based on Tim Moynihan's glowing review, the Canon Powershot SX200 IS seemed like the ideal camera to take on my summer vacation. Here's what caught my eye:

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Mobile Computing James A. Martin, PC World |

The Best Laptops, Netbooks, and Smartphones for Travel

Thanksgiving is over two months away. But I thought we'd celebrate early by giving thanks for the most rockin' laptops, best netbooks, and smartest smartphones on the market.

Read on for my picks for the best laptop, netbooks, and smart phones for travelers. Next week I'll look at the top GPS, digital camera, and gear bags for people on the go.

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Mobile Computing James A. Martin, PC World |

High-Speed Internet on a Plane: Where to Find It

After years of fits and starts, Wi-Fi on airplanes is finally taking off. I've had the pleasure of staying connected to the Internet from San Francisco to New York, and I highly recommend the experience.

At the moment, however, in-flight wireless Internet access is far from ubiquitous. And it can be difficult to determine in advance if a flight you're considering has the service. For example, American Airlines currently offers Wi-Fi on some of its MD-80 aircraft, but not all. When you're booking your flight at American's Web site, there's no way to tell if a particular flight offers wireless access.

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Mobile Computing James A. Martin, PC World |

Using a Mobile Phone Overseas

Using a mobile phone while traveling internationally can be like grocery shopping at 7-11. Sure, you can do it--but you'll end up paying a lot for a less-than-optimal experience.

Here are some money-saving tips for staying in touch when traveling overseas.

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Mobile Computing James A. Martin, PC World |

Recharging Laptops, Netbooks, Gadgets Abroad

Traveling within the U.S. can be stressful and expensive. When it's time to dig out your passport, there's no telling what will happen (other than you'll wish you hadn't had your passport photo taken at Walgreens). Packing a laptop and other gear doesn't make international travel any simpler, either.

So, to make your upcoming globetrot a bit easier, this week I'll focus on what you need to know about recharging electronics abroad. Next week: using your mobile phone overseas.

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Mobile Computing James A. Martin, PC World |

Google Voice for iPhone: Missing in Action

Big Brother is a little late in arriving, having been expected by 1984 at the latest. But he has shown his face twice recently in the world of mobile technology: First, in the mass removal from Amazon Kindles of George Orwell's 1984 (oh, sweet irony) and Animal Farm e-books. Second, when Apple banished all Google Voice-related apps from its App Store--including one excellent app, GV Mobile, which Apple had approved and which had been available in the iTunes store since early May.

Amazon's move was by far the more outrageous of the two. If you'd purchased Orwell's e-books from Amazon's Kindle store, you'd have awakened one fine July morning to find that an entity more powerful than you had spirited those e-books away in the dead of night, like dissenters in a totalitarian regime.

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