Best Technology For Long-Distance Travel? 257
An anonymous reader writes "Over the past year I have traveled across the globe for work but I can't seem to find the right balance of technology to take with me. After reading a CNET article about tech for traveling, I'm still slightly undecided about what hardware suits me best. On the work side of things I need a laptop, nothing fancy but it can't be too heavy or slow. I also need a smart phone that can receive emails across the world and if possible a satellite navigation device, as I need to get to less-traveled locations on a regular basis. From a personal perspective I need my music but I don't care about video, so I'm looking for something with high-quality audio and great battery life. A compact camera wouldn't go amiss but dSLRs are too heavy for my needs and carrying strength, so something I can tuck in a pocket would be perfect. Any suggestions greatly appreciated."
Hmm... I think (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hmm... I think (Score:4, Funny)
SCRAMJETS (Score:2)
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Re:Hmm... I think (Score:5, Informative)
best camera (Score:5, Informative)
Thus you want a camera with digital image stabilization, as good wideangle as possible and at least 5 megapixels. Last time I did the round up (a few months ago) there were surprisingly few cameras that met these conditions - mostly because most of what is on the shelves in "Best Buy" (not best for at least several years) does not have any wideangle whatsoever.
My purchase was Panasonic Lumix LX-2 [dpreview.com] which, at the time, was not available in any store in Boston so I had to order it from Vahns. I was not disappointed and even found the movie mode to be useful - it has a higher resolution than my camcorder (which is NTSC like) and, best of all, the movie files are mpeg4 encoded and play readily on my Kubuntu systems.
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Come Again? (Score:2)
I use 12Mp Nikon D2x and on sort focal lengths, all my lenses are of the non Images Stabilised type and I get perfectly sharp images with
Re:Come Again? (Score:4, Interesting)
It is really quite simple - when you tilt camera by a certain angle the image would shift by 1 pixel. For two cameras covering the same scene the one with more pixels will have the smaller angle. Thus for the extra pixels to actually make a difference you need the camera to move less than that angle during the exposure.
To test this put a thin black hair on a letter or A4 size piece of paper and take an image. Ideally it should be 1 pixel wide, but 3 antialiased pixels is probably to be expected with todays cameras. If you see more than 5 pixels the camera was shaking too much relative to the object and the same quality could be achieved with a sensor of 1/2 resolution (and thus 1/4 of megapixels).
As for your shots, yes I can easily believe that with large wideangle (corresponding to 0.5 zoom) you can make use of 10 MP without stabilization. However, none of pocket sized cameras have lenses that can do that - and I find the ability to have the camera always with me quite useful.
Re:best camera (Score:5, Insightful)
Something that takes normal AA or AAA batteries.
Spare yourself from taking a million adapters that may or may not work, plus it's less devices to plug in once in the hotel.
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This is mostly a result of the small sensor size and restrictions on the optic size which forces compromise on image quality that is possible for a compact camera.
Also be wary of maxing out on the megapixels and on the zoom range of the lens - as the negative effects of a small poor quality lens will be far more apparent the more megapixels you place behind it.
Small
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Anything with more than 5 megapixels needs digital image stabilization - otherwise your extra resolution will be smeared out by natural shaking of your hands (or even your tripod - but this takes effect later).
Although image stabilisation is great and desirable it has nothing to do with the number of pixels.
Similarly large "tele" zoom is useless - if you zoomed in 10x closer to your subject you have 10 times the effect of shaking (and thus need a good tripod or very short exposure time).
A large telezoom is very desirable and indeed is increasing the chances of 'shake'.
But just because it's available on your camera doesn't mean you have to use it even in adverse light, after all it's a zoom...
Good wideangle on the other hand is great - not only you can get more of the scene in a small room but it also reduces the effect of shaking.
A valuable advice.
The majority of cameras have a 35 mm (equivalent) wide angel setting but 28 mm. would be much better for indoor and landscape photography.
One of the compact cameras with a good len
Re:best camera - waterproof? (Score:2)
olympus makes the stylus 770 sw...
not perfect but:
SHOCKPROOF (5FT).
WATERPROOF (33FT).
FREEZEPROOF (-10C/14F).
CRUSHPROOF (220LBF).
2.5" HYPERCRYSTAL LCD.
DIGITAL IMAGE STABILIZATION.
MANOMETER.
Resolution: 7.10 Megapixels
ISO: 80-1600
Shutter: 4-1/1000
Max Aperture: 3.5
Lens: 3.00x zoom (38-114mm eff)
The thing I like the best is the waterproof.
http://openphoto.net/gallery/index.html?user_id=178 [openphoto.net]
And not just for underwater. It makes for a nice experience walking around shooting pics on a d
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unfortunately, the company screwed it up by removing raw from the last model in that line and they also haven't released a new model for a long time.
canon, i'm talking about you. give us back the s series we knew and loved
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Yes, I'm taking the luddite stance, but take it from experience, the more you slow down and digest your experiences, the better you will present them later. I get more from my paper notebooks than I do from my Flickr, Twitter and blog postings.
You'll also spend f
Addendum (Score:5, Interesting)
First, I wiped it clean. Next I set up two accounts, on that I would use, the other set to be the default, no password login, in case customs wanted to see what I was up to. Browsing was done through an SSH tunnel to my home proxy server (mainly because my own blog was on China's great firewall) and any files I wanted to keep were SCP'd back home.
Web mail is better than a POP app, as long as you avoid Nigerian net cafés and use your own laptop. Skype seems fine everywhere.
Take a pocket digital too. The one you have from a few years ago. Use that for all of the crap photos you will inevitably take and save your film for the good stuff. Upload all of the digital junk to Flickr or whatever from your hotel every day, so you won't worry about losing it.
For the real pictures, use film and take your time to enjoy it. Slow down and write down your impressions of the place and give it some real thought.
Enjoy your trip.
...or Garmin's GPS phone... (Score:2)
Here's a Review [cnet.com]
Garmin's Site [garmin.com]
I'd like to get one a these, although I don't travel as much.
Ideal Solution (Score:3, Funny)
The ideal solution is to simply find a job that allows you to stay in your basement. I hear that people that have mastered this art seem to have congregated at some website that combines the '/' and '.' characters.
*ducks*
Re:Ideal Solution (Score:5, Funny)
I thought this was settled... (Score:2)
Come on, everyone knows the answer to that ... (Score:5, Funny)
A towel and a copy of your HHGTTG,
And maybe a hammer to whack Marvin with. If he's going to be so depressed all the time, might as well give him a reason to be.
Asus eee pc (Score:5, Interesting)
The wheel (Score:2)
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love my epc as well light powerful its all good
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Second this. I got one of these after getting sick of carting my full size laptop around in a backpack for emergency work. Its tiny, light, comes with a nice distro of Xandros which just works (tm), and I plug it straight into my 3G phone for internet anywhere. Great battery life. Goes up to 1024 x 768 so great for web-based demos through client projectors. Starts up in 20 seconds. Open Office for document work (though personally I use google docs).
Best of all its cheap, and I don't keep any data on it (s
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And it truly is a "lap"top, "knee"top even, as I'm typing this on my eee in m
Re:Asus eee pc (Score:4, Informative)
I've only had it a few days, but the keyboard already feels completely usable, and the ridiculous boot times and portability (and cost) can't be beat IMHO.
The touchpad is as usable as the touchpad on my thinkpad (though I am a fan of the IBM nipple pointing device when you have to make do without a mouse), but it does work well (I guess if touchpads fundamentally sucked Macintosh laptops wouldn't ship with them).
I'm not sure about installing XP personally, unless there's a compelling reason to do so, when you can get Ubuntu with that 3D visual bling that seems to run great on this little machine based on youtube videos floating around. I'm holding out to the base software mostly because boot times would suffer with anything else, and it comes with just about anything you would actually need to get work done with a portable computer. Firefox, flash, MS Office Docs, and multimedia all just work with less (zero) tweaking than with a windows computer
I was impressed with the OQO (had a chance to play with one extensively) for portable computing, but the price difference makes it a no-brainer for me. In fact, work would have paid for either of the two, but I'm a Linux (GNU OS really?) fan, so a workable command line meant that my job will refund me 400 bucks instead of a couple of grand
If your work is mostly Photoshop (or Gimp) then a tablet might make more sense
YMMV, of course, but I'm happy as a clam with the eee pc
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Seems difficult to find on craigslist...
Where else do you look?
eBay doesn't return any sub $300 listings.
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Dupe! (Score:2, Insightful)
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Imagine this Ask Slashdot:
"So, I got this new job in the sewers of New York. I need a laptop that is waterproof and can emit ultrasonic noise to scare the rats away while I do my surveying..."
Oh, wait, that might actually be interesting (the laptop selection, not the job).
+1 Mobility, but -1 Strength (Score:5, Funny)
DSLR vs. compact (Score:4, Informative)
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The perfect is the enemy of the good. (Score:4, Insightful)
Someday, we'll all be wearing digital clothes and contacts like in Rainbows End and it will meet all your needs. Until then, you're going to have to choose between carrying a few different gadgets and giving up capabilities.
P.S.
Does the "the government can revoke your certificate and kick you off the net" idea freak anyone else out? It sounds like Vernor Vinge understands trusted computing.
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Pick up a relatively cheap unlocked phone somewhere. Cost of replacement is negligable, you can put a
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iPhone fanboy defense coming.
For the device it is, the battery life is not bad. I do about 2 hours of web surfing on EDGE a day, an hour on the telephone, and read about 30 emails on mine, and I can usually get through a day and a half on the battery. One can also get battery-based rechargers for iPods that I'm sure would also work on an iPhone, which is in fact less expensive than a spare cell battery, so the "non-user-replaceable-battery" is a nonissue for travel (face it, if you're carrying a cell phone
HTC TYTNII (Score:4, Funny)
Quad band GSM, 3.5G data, bluetooth, wifi, 3.0 MP camera w/autofocus (no flash)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTC_Kaiser [wikipedia.org]
As for music, I have a 2 gig micro sd card (You need more than 2 gig b/c typ nav prog and maps run 1-1.5 gig) and have it loaded up with phil hendrie (I love ted's of beverly hills steak house) and some music. Helped me get through many 70 hour weeks in the office. Use BTaudio to toggle audio redirection to the bluetooth headset if you don't have something that does a2dp.
Built in GPS great. You don't plan on getting lost, you just do. Having a GPS always in your pocket has saved me many times.
I must warn you though, many users are royally 3.14ssed about the video performance due to "missing drivers". see http://htcclassaction.org/ [htcclassaction.org] and http://slashdot.org/firehose.pl?op=view&id=469774&from=badge [slashdot.org] for more info.
Grump
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-Brother Justin, Carnivàle
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Used HP Laptop (Score:3, Informative)
I got myself a used HP nc4010 [hp.com] for cheap. I maxed out its RAM, put a big HDD in it, installed the 802.11g wireless board, and got the optional travel battery. To cap it off I got a mini bluetooth mouse, and its been great. I can dual boot it to windows or gentoo and it runs just dandy. It can even play WoW at about 7fps. Total investment was about $500. Its small and light even with the extra battery.
You could probably do as well with something similar, I've read that the IBM ultra-portables are pretty nice also.
Hong Kong Lineup (Score:3, Interesting)
For post-flight I'm not much help, I'm happy to concede cell-phone and mobile email when overseas.
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Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Just do your own research. (Score:4, Informative)
From what he said I think I know what he needs. A Nokia e90. My wife has the e61 and it does 90% of the computing tasks I need. Wi-Fi, 3G, phone, office documents, acrobat, web browsing with Opera, Blackberry support, exchange, & Skype. The e90 is big enough to do any office task on and small enough to take with you. It has 2 cameras (one 3m with flash) and is a great MP3 player. If you don't believe me read Maddox's review of the iPhone vs. e70 titled "The iPhone is a piece of shit, and so is your face." [thebestpag...iverse.net]. Granted the e90 is a little different than the e70 but who is going to notice that the e90's balls are made out of tungsten instead of steel with kicking them? Plus it runs on Sybian, a great OS with lots of support and not a bitch of M$ or a BSD rip off with flashing colored baubles.
You know it is a great product because the US cell phone companies will only sell a crippled piece of shit version (e62) in the US.
Re:Just do your own research. (Score:5, Informative)
I think you meant Symbian [wikipedia.org] not Sybian [wikipedia.org].
Clarification (Score:2)
I read all my emails on my phone by logging in to gmail via http. But I don't download my email to my phone.
Portals (Score:2, Redundant)
On a clear day, you can get to Asia like this. Then it's just a matter of endurance to get anywhere else.
Just remember to bring your own cake.
Portable music: Cowon iAudio 7 (Score:2)
Noise Cancelling mp3 player with LONG battery life (Score:2)
I bought it off woot.com for $50 which was a great value.
http://reviews.cnet.com/mp3-players/sony-nw-s705f-noise/4505-6490_7-32111531.html [cnet.com]
Cheers!
--
Vig
MacBook Air (Score:3, Interesting)
As long as you aren't burning CDs or anything, the Air is a very good solution. If you really need to burn CDs, there is an external drive available.
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Damn.... (Score:2)
You've already said what you need... (Score:2, Informative)
- PHONE: Get a Nokia e61i/SonyE P1, they have a real keyboard and gsm, grps, edge, 3g, wifi, should get your mail mostly everywhere. I also have a crackberry subscription with intl roaming works on both phone with some added software and I use the gmail phone app when I need to search through my old emails. (it also work with exchange push mail, depending on what your company is using.)
- GPS: Get a real GPS. I suggest the Garmin 60Csx. It has a lot of memory, a s
Travel Electronics (Score:2)
My thoughts: (Score:2)
cell phone: Don't ask me. Find someone who really cares about the different models. You'd probably be best with a combined phone/GPS rather than having two separate units.
Camera: If you tend
Is this trip really necessary? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Do you really need to go?
I gave up plane travel years ago.
Get everything in one device! (Score:2)
GSM quad band phone - communications and 3G connectivity. WiFi for non-cell 'net access. VGA screen so browsing is actually usable. MicroSD cards so you can have several 4 GB cards to store pretty much anything. Built-in camera. Windows Mobile Pro so you can read/edit Word docs, use PDF readers, etc. GPS so you don't get lost. And the keyboard for when you need to type for more than a few minutes.
You'll get all the media player capabi
The best is low tech... (Score:2, Insightful)
Well (Score:3, Informative)
You just need the right hardware/software along with your DS, of course. Which isn't that hard to come by.
Check The mod goDS at http://www.themodgods.com/ [themodgods.com] for more information and (best of all) links to more information sources beyond themselves. The basic "kits" will run about $100. Personally I just use my DS for playing a few games I own so I never bothered buying all the extras, but after seeing all my friend's things, I kinda regret buying an MP3 player...
No Laptop (Score:5, Interesting)
Sure you might want to work on the airplane while you fly over the ocean. Print it out, bring a pen.
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So some sort of portable compute
Ridiculous shill (Score:4, Funny)
Travel Arsenal (Score:2)
After you manage that feat, see if you can find a laptop that just needs 24V or 12V external power source that you can find a
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super-durable small camera: Olympus Stylus (Score:2, Informative)
I own the model from a couple years back (stylus 800, 8 megapixels). Not yet waterproof, but has survided a fall into the pool. Not yet crushproof, but has survived a 6ft fall onto concrete.
Only minuses: takes proprietary Olympus (xD) memory cards, but adapters for miniSD are available. Also, picture delay is b
By far the best tech for long distance travel is.. (Score:5, Funny)
everyone have her/his pick, here mine (Score:2)
For the music, you have plenty of choose
Same for GSM phone with gps, I got the HTC, nice package
For the camera, today, only one can have all the SLR function/benefice without the weight it's the canon G9. Hope this will help you.
A Couple Thoughts... (Score:5, Insightful)
First, you don't need your music. You simply want it.
Second, anything you return to the USA with may be taken at the border and searched, including computers and storage devices. Be aware of the information you're traveling with, and where it's backed up otherwise.
Thirdly, don't take anything you can't afford to lose. The USA are not the only border guards you'll face, along with all the other predators out looking to take advantage of the richly equipped foreign traveler.
Re:A Couple Thoughts... (Score:5, Interesting)
Everything you have when you travel can and will be lost (one day or another). I have had laptops, external hard-drives (including ipod), flash drives, cds seized without cause by customs official in some countries. Probably because they wanted to have it for themselves and there is NOTHING you can do about it unless you want to risk spending a couple of weeks in jail for a $100 HD. They might just be able to find some marijuana or cocaine on you if you won't let go and try to make a fuss.
I have a synchronization software that run on my laptop and send every updated file back "Home" (over ssl) as soon as it detects an internet connection. So if my laptop gets "borrowed" I'll only lose the value of the hardware and not the actual work.
Encrypted drive can be fun but might also get you into more trouble than they are worth. Last time a custom official asked for my windows account password I was in a locked room, he had stored my passport in his drawer and was carrying a gun. Again, not worth it. Just make sure that there is as little sensitive information on your laptop as possible.
I travel in some rough countries, some of them under embargo by the US (I am not a US citizen), some of them on the "axis of evil", some of them just plainly plagued by corruption. (And some of them quite nice and relaxing but they aren't funny to talk about)
If you do the same, keep some spare change for bribes (at least fifty $1 bill), convert part of your cash to traveler's check, keep you credit card separate from your wallet. Do not trust safe in hotel, even if you can "choose" the code, management has the master key anyway.
Oh and don't go to the local brothel even if the taxi driver tells you his nice brother run the place.
About taxi driver when you find a "good" one, always give him a large tip and keep his number that will create an strong incentive for him to come pick you up very quickly and to "protect" you during your stay (otherwise he'll lose his good tipper). But we're not talking about technology here so I guess I'm out of scope.
AA batteries (Score:2)
The best tech to take with you is a homebuilt mod (it's not that difficult to make) to let you run your PDA, phone, camera, or whatever using standard AA batteries that can be bought at any kiosk or supermarket. Trust me, when you travel, even if you carry 4-5 or more batteries for each device with you, at some point you will find yourself with no power for your device and no power socket to recharge it.
empiricism.... (digs through the bag) (Score:2)
charger! (Score:3, Informative)
For the curious, the reason I had two iPods is that I took my 40 gigabyte hard-drive based model that has my complete library, for listening to music in the hotel, and my Nano for listening to audio books and podcasts in the hotel and on the go. The flash-based players are better for the latter, because they are more response if you miss something and need to skip back a few seconds.
If I were doing that trip again now, I'd probably buy a Kindle. That would be perfect for a train trip.
Why don't you... (Score:2)
It's a short list (Score:2)
Nokia E90 phone (smartphone, email, quadband GSM, GPS, you can fit maps of the world on an SD card)
iPod Classic 160GB (highest battery life of any MP3 player)
Canon PowerShot SD950 (metal case)
Here ist the list as you asked: (Score:2)
Refurbished Thinkpad T40/T41/T42/T43 (still IBM made, good price, light, workable)
dont want to spend too much money, cause all the gear can be stolen
Camera:
Canon Powershot A540, A530, A560, A570
If you can't get new ones anymore get a used one.
6 MPixels are more than you will ever need, above the picture actually gets worse,
Canon Powershots are the best. Better to get the A540 than the A560.
Those work with standard AA batteries. So you can get cheap rechargables that last long and can replace them any
Here is my list... (Score:5, Informative)
Solio charger for remote places (Score:2)
If you are going to remote places, you should check out a Solio Charger [solio.com], which will charge your gadgets (at least, the phone, camera and other small stuff) using the sun.
My mother-in-law got me one for Xmas, and it is quite cool.
Try this (Score:2)
It does most of what you want. Camera, quad band GSM, FM receiver, GPS, music player, bluetooth, wifi, etc.
It's only deficiency is that it runs windows mobile, which means you need to reboot it from time to time or else it gets flaky. Oh, it can charge through the USB port on your laptop so you do not even need the charger.
With that and a 15" Macbook Pro (dual boot with XP just in case), I have traveled around the world happily.
strike
Best Technology For Long-Distance Travel? (Score:2)
Jet aircraft are very popular.
And you need a good bag! (Score:3, Interesting)
One thing that needs to be addressed, what to carry all your gear? I've always used a backpack to carry my stuff (14 in. laptop, mp3 player, digital camera, disk case, PSP, assorted cables and chargers, and a couple magazines and/or paperbacks) as the messenger bags tend to get too bulky. I'm currently carrying The Crumpler Sinking Barge backpack [photo.net] as I've been traveling with my Canon DSLR and two or three small lenses and this bag was designed to carry the camera stuff and a laptop. The Crumpler brand is well known in the photog arena for their capacities, durability, and funny names.
Some of what you want can't be done... (Score:4, Insightful)
The rest - well, it depends on whether you are going to a hospitable or hostile environment. If you're going to a hostile place, make sure you take something to keep yourself amused. A portable game device and LOTS of reading or tv shows and books are essential.
Hmmm (Score:2)
For your laptop just grab whatever you actually need as long as it has Bluetooth to plug into the phone.
Although you've not mentioned it, the bit that you really need is a GSM SIM with reasonable roaming data charges. Your options are to work out where you're going to be going and to pick up a SIM that offers the best roaming over all regions, or to pick up a PAYG SIM in each a
Business Trips Overseas (Score:5, Interesting)
Last time I went on an international business trip, I took one carry-on with my clothes packed in vacuum-sealed bags. As far as electronic items, I took my 60Gb iPod and my HTC TyTN... oh, and a set of noise-canceling headphones. Not to mention an eye-mask and ear plugs (so I could sleep). That's it... nothing else.
I had packaged up my laptop and other business-related paraphernalia in a secured box and shipped using an insured carrier the day before I departed. Yes, that meant I was "sans laptop" for a day... but really... with my TyTN able to get my email and web browsing I didn't miss it. The laptop and stuff arrived the day after I did and was quite secure... I didn't have to run the rigmarole of dealing with the TSA or their foreign counterparts with my laptop, and I had the security of knowing all my luggage was in the overhead during the entire flight and wasn't getting lost somewhere in the depths of Newark's baggage handling facility (those who've gone through Newark know this pain).
Sure, the shipping wasn't cheap but I was able to write it off as a business expense since all I was shipping were business items. I treat either carry-on or checked bags as an insecure location to store critical information. Yes, there's a risk that a loss may occur with a carrier like Fedex or UPS as well, but if it's insured then you can claim it back. Oh, and make sure the data on the drive is encrypted if you're really feeling paranoid.
So what if I'd wanted to work the day I arrived? Yes, that would be a catch. However, the first day after you arrive internationally, you're almost never going to be functional. You're going to want to sleep. However, just on the off-chance I had a bug up my butt to actually do some work that day, I put critical information (critical to the project at hand plus a few other minor items) onto the hard drive of the iPod, and a copy on a 2Gb USB stick... both encrypted of course. That way, I'm pretty much covered.
Did the same on the way home and couldn't have been happier. There's little reason to take a laptop onto a trans-oceanic flight these days... most of the airlines do in-flight movies. Even if not you can put movies on your iPod or iPhone or (insert media player of choice here). I have considered in the past getting one of the nice portable media centers to carry on international flights, but to-date I have never needed them. Plus, I make a point of getting red-eyes (overnight flights) so that I'm almost forced into a position where I get a few hours of sleep. That makes the travel much more bearable.
Think about your priorities and make a decision from there what you need to bring... but bear in mind a laptop is LOW priority if you're sensible about your other technologies. Laptops are also a risk, and when I travel the only places I like to carry my laptop are between the hotel and the office... and then ship it to my next port of call. I find travel a LOT less stressful since I started this because it means you have a minimum of stuff to keep a track of, and so long as you make sensible use of encryption your data is as secure as reasonable.
Laptops (Score:3, Insightful)
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You're thinking "threat of law."
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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A Bluetooth keyboard (foldable, even) and bringing back the USB connector (just cameras and flash drives would be fine given the limited resources of the Touch) would make that little machine the belle of the ball.
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I assume you want to travel and use a real, arguably 100% secure OS so your stuff you are writing doesn't end up in the hands of criminals.
Wow, I didn't realise that MacOS encrypted all its drives by default and had absolutely no bugs or security holes? I'm sorry but you don't sound like you really know what you're talking about. I've always loved MacOS since I used it as a kid almost 20 years ago, and am in fact typing this from OSX on a Macbook Pro, so I'm not just trying to troll Macs.
I doubt the Air would really stand up to heavy travelling either, it's more a gimmick/'lifestyle' type device than a serious workhorse. If he's going to get a Mac for travelling to remote locations, may as well get the cheapest Macbook (or a Macbook Pro if money is no object here).
macbook air (Score:4, Insightful)
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My boss travels around the world a lot and he has one tip he uses all the time - get a Pay as you talk SIM in each country that you visit, and keep them in your wallet. It's *much* cheaper than
paying roaming charges. Pretty much any (unlocked) GSM phone will do.. but don't spend too much - they can break, get lost, etc. and you have a laptop anyway.. no need for snazzy features.
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