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Posted by Zhooibaal
Mar
18
2007
The lovely lady (to the left) who supplies us with food every day at the TEFAF fair isn’t who she seems to be. She’s not just the food supplier, she’s actually a charity. Well, it’s not just her, but she’s the general director of the Upendo Children’s Centre in Nyeri, Kenya.
The Upendo Children’s Centre is an orphanage for abandoned and orphaned children and also mentally challenged children ages 7 months through 12 years old in Nyeri, Kenya.
More information about the Upendo Centre can be found on their own website. So you are now going to bookmark that website and maybe you are also going to volunteer for them or make a donation, but for that you’ll have to contact one of the board members (Tessa for example), because I couldn’t find a donation link anywhere on the site, just some bank account information.
And last but not least, Tessa also has a website of her own with a blog, a photoalbum and a link to the Upendo Children’s Centre ofcourse. Unfortunatly for my non-Dutch speaker/reading readers, Tessa’s blog is in Dutch only, so you won’t be able to read it, but you can go and take a look anyway.
Yes, exactly, what the title says and all that without a hack. All you need for this is the Nintendo DS Browser I mentoined in my previous post. The people over at ebuddy understood that there was a need for a web based messenger solution for some of the most popular instant messengers that would work on handheld devices like cell phones, PDAs, Blackberry devices and ofcourse the NDS.
When you enter the url http://www.ebuddy.com on your NDS it will automatically bring you to the mobile page where you can choose from the 3 before mentioned IM systems. When you have picked one it’ll bring you to a login page where you enter your user name and password and off you go.
I only tried the MSN one, because I’m not on the others, but I expect them to work pretty much the same way.
The mobile messenger doesn’t work as convenient as it’s desktop counterpart, but it works quite nicely, here’s a list of the major differences it has for MSN and this probably also goes for Yahoo! and AIM;
- only one ‘window’: you must do everything within one ‘window’ so switching from one conversation to another isn’t as quick as on the big version.
- No custom smileys
- No buzzers, winks, soundclips and all that jazz
- No voice/video chat
- Even the contact list and configuration options are in the same ONE ‘window’
- No contact groups, only online and offline are seperated
- Typing isn’t as convenient as on the big version
That’s about it, well, there are a lot more differences ofcourse, but these are the most noticable ones and probably the most important.
The best thing is that it works great on SSR mode, so you only have vertical scrolling instead of both horizontal and vertical.
Sometime soon I’ll post a couple of pics of this web based messenger, but I’ll need my camera for that and I can’t post those from my NDS from which I’m posting this.
I’m pretty sure that this ebuddy stuff works on other handheld devices, like a PDA or a Blackberry, as well.
Written on the NDS
I don’t know whether any of my readers are art lovers, but I thought I’d inform you of the fact that I’m at the world’s largest art fair as a crew member. Together with two classmates and a student from another group I’m doing the IT support at the Tefaf fair in Maastricht (the Netherlands). Rich people from all over the world come to Maastricht for this event and most of the exibitors, who also come all this way from all over the world, want to have a wireles connection to the internet. And that’s where we come in.
For some more info on the Tefaf fair you can click here.
It’s been pretty busy, but I was able to squeeze this post between all the calls we get.
So, what else is new? Well, I got a little accesory for my Nintendo DS. I purchased the Nintendo DS Browser by Opera Software and I must say that it’s really nice.
The NDS Browser is based on Opera 8.5, which is reflected in some minor webpage incompatibility, but even then most pages are displayed correctly in the overview mode. The SSR mode (Small Screen Rendering) only very few pages are displayed correctly. SSR mode is especially useful for webpages that were specially designed for mobile devices like cell phones.
The only drabacks I have encountered are it’s disability to save password and to the same thing to store cookies.This forces you to reenter your user name and password for sites you visit regularly over and over again.
But even writing e-mails and posting blog entries can be done really well with this program, I’m even writing this post using my NDS with the Browser.
Written on the NDS