It has been a week since I purchased my blackberry bold and my blackberry playbook and my reviews are mixed. While I have had no problems with the blackberry bold, it does have apps I would much rather have on my playbook. So when I heard that RIM was not doing so well in the stock department my mind started making a list of all the things they could make better with their playbook tablet.
My first complaint is that my playbook has frozen twice in the 7 days I have had it. It first froze during updates the day I bought it and again on the 7 day mark for seemingly no reason. I understand that this happens but should it happen so often?! There is also no reset option or way to remove the battery should this happen so you can either wait for it to unfreeze or wait for the battery to die. Seeing as I got the blackberry playbook for the travel convenience, this is very inconvenient.
Secondly, why does my smaller screened blackberry bold have great apps like kindle and wordpress but my larger screened playbook doesn’t? I’m pretty sure I won’t be typing up a blog on my cell phone. While typing on the playbook screens is something to get used to it is easier and faster than trying to type a bunch of paragraphs on a small cell phone. Reading a book would also take longer on a small curve then a perfectly sized playbook. I guess RIM needs to stimulate the playbook app availability and improve their OS.
Now that I have bashed a couple things how about I tell you what I like about the playbook. I love the size, it fits perfectly in my purse and makes for easy holding while traveling on public transit. The responsiveness of the screen to my touch is lovely, with barely any hesitation to the perfect touch yet not to a light accidental touch. What really sold me though, was the ability to tether blackberry products together to share the internet and phone plan.
I really had no clue what I could accomplish with the tethering but had a wee trip out tonight when my mother called the curve and a small window popped up on the playbook to tell me she was calling. That feature can be quite convenient for when your phone is on silent but you are working on your playbook, say, in class. Not to mention with tethering you pay one unlimited fee for your cell phone and voila you have unlimited internet on your playbook. Love it!!
I think further issues with the playbook really stem from web site owners, designers and builders who are not familiar with tablets and have yet to keep up with the demand. This doesn’t matter much to smaller businesses and individuals but to large popular websites such as facebook games, deviantart, amazon and wordpress. While many of them have moved to cell phones they have not yet jumped in to the growing tablet world.
I think that the playbook coupled with a blackberry cell phone can compete with other tablets if it addresses these issues and bring it shares back up but it needs work. Perhaps a wee drop on price would help too. All in all the playbook is not all that bad, it needs work just like most inventions do at the beginning but I’m very glad I got it. I’m sure it will be a great business investment in the long run!
Book Review: Emotional Fitness March 21, 2011
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Title: Emotional Fitness: Discovering our Natural Healing Power
Author: Janice Berger and Harry Hall
Genre: Self Help
ISBN: 0-14-305557-7
The author of Emotional Fitness seems to have made it into more than just a publication. She has made cds, hosts workshops and seminars and counsels people through their own healing. Her website has wonderful information about the process to healing ourselves. Janice Berger is considered to be a pioneer off Deep Emotional Therapy and has been counselling for over 30 years. Janice Berger co-authored Emotional Healing with Harry Hall who has been practicing Deep Emotional Therapy for over 20 years. Harry trained in the psychiatric practice of the late Dr. L. Macintosh here in Toronto.
To best review this book I began looking at the sections. The introduction to this book is filled with powerful emotions. The author has openly shared her pain with the reader in order to allow them feel more comfortable with their own past experiences. She has shared her path to where she is now and mentions books and authors that helped her on that way. She ends the introduction with what would be her mission statement:
“This book is the fulfillment of my desire to open doors for everyone willing to take responsibility for their own healing and willing to risk taking steps toward positive change.”
Her experiences, coupled with her reason for writing Emotional Healing make it feel like an honest yet hard read, yet worthwhile as well. If there were a theme to this book it would be self help which is of course the topic. The style of using a lot of well thought out and well placed examples that pertain to real life make it seem like something anyone can accomplish. There is no hocus pocus or preaching, no talking down to and no expectations. This book is simply a vote of confidence in our ability to heal our selves emotionally. Readers are probably not so sure they can accomplish what they are reading and many are not even willing to try, but one thing’s for sure; it will help you understand yourself better. Why do you feel how you feel about a particular situation? Why are you reacting in an irrational way? Why does something so small bother you so greatly? We have all had questions like these at one time or another. This book helps us understand the most important part of who we are; our emotions. We may be complicated but we now know we are not so misunderstood. In fact we are all textbook cases who deal with our pasts very differently. Mrs. Berger gives us one personally hard and emotionally demanding way to conquer the past and make our future what we want it to be by controlling the only thing we can; ourselves.
Not only is this book great to read through and work with but it is set up much like a reference book. Janice Berger has set up chapters on the most common emotions. So if the reader has an emotion they cannot understand they simply look it up and voila! They can identify their emotion and begin to work through it. I recommend this book if even just to read and not work through just yet. Reading through it will make a difference to your understanding and you may even start implementing it in small parts throughout your life without even realizing it. Normally self-help books are recommended to adults but I think even young teens could benefit from this book as they begin to explore their emotions more and have no clue how to express them or even understand them. Go on and get started learning how to understand yourself more. It’s never too late to make a difference in your understanding and appreciation of yourself and your complicated emotions.