It’s also a phone
Jarod | January 20, 2007So, it took me nearly two weeks to patch my xda Orbit the way I want it. While you would usually leave your normal mobile phone the way it was designed to be, maybe change the colors a bit or the background image, you can seriously alter the appearance of a Windows Mobile device. Furthermore, since it’s a small computer you can install programs and tweak the registry almost any way you want. The perfect geek tool.
I would love to show you what my little digital friend looks like but I don’t have a camera on my hands
I’ll post some photos later. Anyway, facts first. The xda Orbit comes with a 200 Mhz ARM processor, Windows Mobile 5, a 2 mega-pixel camera, Bluetooth, wi-fi, headset and GPS (Tomtom 6 Navigation software). I don’t really need the Tomtom, but I don’t mind it anyways. The Orbit doesn’t have a keyboard, so you have to use the 320×240 touchscreen, the scroll wheel, trackball and soft buttons. Well, the trackball is was too small and sensitive to be useful, but the touchscreen works like a charm. It’s a little slow out-of-the-box, but as said, you can tweak the registry and I can run multiple programs simultaneously with no problems. Size-wise, it’s hardly bigger than other modern phones with bigger screens, I was positively surprised. It weights about the same as my old Nokia. Can’t say anything about the battery lifetime yet.
It comes with a 512MB microSD card. I replaced that one with a 2GB card, the Tomtom maps (Germany and Benelux) take up about 400 MB already. Windows Mobile 5 lacks a few features that improve usability, like a task manager or an application launcher. With this kind of device you can really combine a few others in one – with the right software installed. There are some suites you can buy, but since WM5 has been around for quite a while now, you can find a lot of freeware sites, too.
Here’s a list of apps that I find very useful. They are all free, I won’t link since the websites change often anyways. Just google, you’ll find plenty.
- cLaunch – great tabbed app launcher for the today screen
- UI Tweaker – lets you adjust system colors etc. on the fly
- ThemeGenCE - theme generator for WM5, can also create landscape backgrounds
- vBar – very small, very light task manager for the task bar
- Task Manager – Mobile version of the Windows standard task manager
- XnView pocket – mobile version of the popular image viewer with many features
- Virtual Earth Mobile – satellite imaging, maps (requires internet connection)
- TCPMP – versatile media player
- Skype – well, the name says it all
- Minimo – mobile version of the Mozilla browser, with tabs
- KeePassPPC – password safe
- Friday Shopping – lets you manage your shopping lists
- Hitchhiker - automatically scans, configures and joins open wireless LANs
- WiFiFoFum - another WLAN scanner
- AlarmClock - well, an alarm clock
- deltaTimer - countdown clock
- Total Commander – THE file manager
- Pocket UFO – the classic UFO game for your mobile, with all features
- Crimson Fields – Battle Isle clone
- Doppler Mobile / Hubdog – subscribe and download RSS feeds and podcasts directly
The last point should be noted. I can download podcasts directly from the internet using any wi-fi connection. No need for iTunes!
In short, the device can play and sync music, browse the web, download and sync my mails, contacts, tasks and calender, run games and … it’s also a phone. Ten more years and these devices can replace laptops.






Jarod,
How are you able to download podcasts directly from the internet using any wi-fi connection. No need for iTunes! How do you manage to do that ?
Frat. tks.
Hi patFrat,
you have to use a program which can handle podcasts (search for Hubdog, FeederReader or just google for “windows mobile +rss +podcast”).
A podcast is nothing more than an ordinary RSS news feed which points at audio files (mp3). The program checks the feed for new items and downloads them; you can then play the audio files with any media player you have on your mobile device.
To find the URL of the RSS feeds, the best idea would be to go to the podcast’s site and look for the link there. Usually they offer different links for iTunes, Yahoo, standard RSS and others.
So in short
1. Get a program that can handle RSS with podcasts
2. Get the URL of the podcasts (the RSS feed). Example: http://barely.fatalshadows.de/feed/
3. Enter the URL in the program (only need to do that once)
4. Have it fetch the feed items and download the podcast directly
This also works for video podcasts and any embedded images, even automatically. It sounds more complicated than it really is