The Blackberry Curve 8900

The Blackberry Curve 8900

I was never a big fan of Blackberry devices in the past. They seemed a little too serious, a little too business-like for my taste. And to be fair, they were originally designed to keep busy people tethered to their email no matter where they were.

However, RIM’s latest offerings have certainly shaken off the “dull” tag that used to dog the Blackberry. From the Pearl to the Storm, and now the Curve, Blackberry is finding its niche in the consumer market.

It’s taken some time, but it’s safe to say I’m hooked.
Continue reading ‘Review: Blackberry Curve 8900’


SpiralFrog, RIP

22Mar09

We had high hopes for SpiralFrog. When it was announced a couple of years ago it seemed like it may be an alternative to paying for music from iTunes.

Alas, it is no more. Insert your own pun about the service croaking it *here*.
Continue reading ‘SpiralFrog, RIP’


Mistakes happen. Every now and again we all get our email addresses wrong. But a polite request to the person who keeps giving out my gmail address as theirs: please stop.

In the past few months I have had family emails, friends updating me about hen parties I’m not actually going to and, once, some blood test results from a Dublin clinic. That one I replied to. The rest I’ve started blacklisting as spam.

Here’s the thing. If I wanted to sign up to newsletters from Aldi and Lidl, I would. And I don’t want notifications from online clinics, or be registered with HP for a printer I never bought. It might also explain the massive jump in spam in my account in the past few months.

So please. STOP. Thanks.


It must be tough being Google. I mean, you try to throw out some new services, out of the goodness of your own heart, and there are people standing by waiting to stomp all over your efforts with talk of “privacy”.
Continue reading ‘Google gets slammed for Street View’


Vote for George!

Maybe he’ll invite us all over one he gets the job as caretaker of the Islands of the Great Barrier Reef. At 17,000+ people voting for him, I doubt it, but we can dream.


Call me a cynic, but when I see another company boasting of its “eco friendly” products, I can’t help but smile.
Environmentally friendly technology is a growing business these days. With consumers seeking to cut bills and politicians pushing the carbon emissions agenda, everyone wants in.
Continue reading ‘More green tech for the eco-bandwagon’


Another week, another survey on how the internet is wasting time for Irish employers. This one, by Peninsula Ireland, says Irish employees are wasting two hours and 20 minutes a day on personal internet use [Irish Times].

Now, does anyone else suspect some fudging of the truth was going on here?
Continue reading ‘Internet in time-wasting shocker’


Microsoft is getting a bit of breathing space, it seems, with the news that the European Commission is backing off on its surveillance of the tech giant.
Continue reading ‘Europe relaxes monitoring on MS’


So Blackout Ireland has started, and there’s a few blacked out avatars on Facebook and Twitter. I’ve yet to see how many people wrote to their ISPs and TDs to lodge their objections.

Danny O’Brien writes about it in todays Irish Times.


After his no-show last week for the US v Ireland at the National Stadium, the only clues to Kenny Egan’s whereabouts were on Twitter. @kennyegan was leaving us cryptic clues about his whereabouts through pictures and posts that seemed to suggest he was in New York.

But @kennyegan is no more.
Continue reading ‘Twitter loses a follower’