2009 March 21 to 22 Putipot, Zambales

Last week, in what has become an annual pilgrimage, I went to Putipot again. Criso mentioned that she and some of her officemates are planning a trip to Putipot.  She invited Michelle and I. Coincidentally, I’ve promised Michelle to take her there and I figured it would be a good time since I prefer to go there in a group. We decided to go and I invited a bunch of people. But eventually only Ralph and his girlfriend Tiff committed.

Early Saturday, Michelle and I met up with them at a Shell gas station on the the northbound side of NLEX. After a quick breakfast and Chow King and purchasing some supplies at Shell select, we went on our way.

Our route took us all the way to the tip of NLEX, SCTEX all the way to Subic, then through the various towns of Zambales. We made a quick stop at San Antonio for a visit to the pamilihang bayan or town market. It was a pretty long trip, almost 7 hours and at one point I got a bit lost and had to rely on Google Maps on my phone to make  sure we’re on the right track.

But eventually we got to Uacon, Candelaria, Zambales. For a change, I decided to park at Dawal Beach Resort instead of my usual Isla Vista Beach Resort. I was irritated by the unfriendly staff of the latter when Michelle called them up for directions. It turned out that Dawal is actually much better, not just in facilities but also in friendliness. Everything was a snap and in no time at all, we’re put-putting on a boat to Putipot.

The island was almost as great as it was as before though the crowd seems to be thicker . But there were some welcome changes. Gone are  the fugly Globe tents of the previous year and the island seems to be cleaner with some trash bags and cans in strategic locations. In their place are huts which, fortunately, are made of native material so it wasn’t so bad.

Of course we were prepared with tents so we foregoed the huts and set up our tents. After swimming, we cooked then ate dinner of grilled liempo and tuna. This was followed by tequila. I was tired so the tequila got to me pretty quick and I was off to an early sleep. I didn’t even get to see the stars at midnight and the sunrise at dawn :(

The next day, we went swimming again, packed most of the stuff up then cooked and ate grilled chicken for lunch. We then completed our packing, called for our boat, put-putted back to Dawal, washed up, and soon we were on our way back. It was much faster going, 5 hours, and we got home in time for dinner.

Not a bad start to the summer!

Top S60 Applications: My Own List

Aside from the enhanced calculator, I’ve installed a few really cool apps on my Nokia E51 that some might find useful:

  1. Joikuspot Light – Turns your phone into a wireless router and share your HSDPA signal (if you get one).  It’s free but supports only browsing (HTTP and HTTPS). The full version version offers more features.
  2. Opera Mini – A pretty nifty mobile browser. It uses a gateway that retrieves web pages for you, transforms it into a smaller mobile version, and sends the transformed pages to you. I prefer the built-in browser but Opera Mini has its place (like when your connection is slow).
  3. Fring – reach out and talk to your friend via you can interact with friends on all your favourite social networks Skype, MSN Messenger, Google Talk, ICQ, SIP, Twitter, Yahoo!, AIM, and more!
  4. YouTube – Watch YouTube videos on your mobile phone. You need a fast network connection though.
  5. Google Maps – Turns your phone into a navigation device complete with map. It even shows your location with GPS or without (via cell site)! How cool is that?
  6. Google Mail – You can configure your email to check Google Mail via POP or IMAP but you can also download this app for checking your Gmail account on your phone.
  7. Google Sync – strictly speaking, not an app but this service allows you to synchronize your phone (just contacts for now) via SyncML
  8. GooSync – since Google Sync doesn’t handle calendar synchronization just yet, GooSync steps in between your phone and Google Calendar to provide you synchronization via SyncML.

Enhanced Calculator For S60 Phones

One of the irritating things about my new Nokia E51 is that the calculator is so damn crude! The calculator from my recently-departed 5310 is so much better. And to think it’s an S40 not-so-smartphone. Thankfully, Nokia is aware of the issues and has actually been working on a replacement calculator. It’s still in beta but you can already download and install it. Way better.

Nokia E51

nokiae51My Nokia 5310 XpressMusic bit the dust after a horizontal fall. I went back to my trusty old Sony Ericsson K700i while searching for the perfect replacement phone.

The perfect replacement phone has to be small, slim, and most importantly black. My first choice, the Nokia 8800 Sirocco Edition fits the bill and is the coolest but is a bit too expensive. My second choice is still the Nokia 5310 which is the second coolest. Reason why I got one in the first place.

But lately, I was thinking of going back to my geeky roots and get a gadget phone. You know, those phones with everything but the kitchen sink. So what would that phone need to have? Bluetooth, GPRS (2.5G), EDGE (3G), HSDPA (3.5G), VoIP, WiFi, etc. aside from voice, SMS, and other phone things.

The Nokia E51 is all that (okay, less the GPS) and more. It comes from a line of business-oriented smartphones and so it has everything you need to remain connected wherever you may go. It’s so business-oriented it doesn’t even have Snake!!! But hey, all those three-letter acronyms is really where the fun is. So who cares, right? So I got it and so far I’m not disappointed.

UPDATE: Very good phone overall but after just over a year of use, ALL the rubber buttons along the sides have disintegrated. Talk about planned obsolescence. Makes me want to boycott Nokia.

Retrenchment Galore

The global recession is surely taking its toll. Accenture, Branders, Lawson… everybody’s been hit. This morning, I got to the office and Joyce told me another wave of retrenchments, the third in the company so far, have hit. Needless to say, it is very demoralizing. The first time it happened, they said they’re letting go of people whose skills were no longer aligned with the strategic direction of the company. The second time it happened, they said they’re letting go of people with redundant skills. The sad thing was that it happened just as a project wrapped up and a lot of the people who toiled in the project were let go. That sucked even more since it was just before Christmas. Now the third time, almost everyone not involved in any project were let go. And each time,the severance package becomes less and less consoling. When will this end?