Search DominoPower's 11,443 Lotus-related article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
MOBILE ENTERPRISE POWER
Mick's travel tricks
By Mick Moignard

Being a Notes and Domino consultant in the UK and Western Europe, I spend a lot of time on the road, or rather, in the air, which means carrying everything I need and doing it in as small and light a package as I can to save time and effort at airports. Post 9-11, I need to do it in one bag, to ensure that I get to carry it on the plane as hand baggage and not have to check it with the baggage gorillas. Keeping it all as light and practical as possible also reduces the wear and tear on my body; hiking around airports and train stations with 15 kilos of luggage is not my idea of fun.

This means being organized, thinking ahead, and employing a little personal discipline. Being organized so that I don't carry stuff I won't actually use is the most important part of this. So let's start by looking at the tools I carry around with me.

Tool 1: the laptop
This is my key working tool. I've always been a fan of IBM's ThinkPads (at http://www.pc.ibm.com/us/thinkpad/index.html), having abused quite a few over the years, and they've stood up to me quite well. I currently use a ThinkPad T20, having moved up from a 770 a year or so ago -- mainly because the 770 was just too heavy. Using a conventional laptop bag with the 770, I had started to walk leaning sideways, which implied I needed a lighter machine. This made me think about what I actually wanted in a traveling laptop, one that will be my only computer. I concluded that the most important thing is the keyboard. If you don't like the keyboard, you just won't ever get on with the machine. Next in importance is the screen. If you plan on any serious use, particularly any development work, you must have a 1024 x 768 screen.

Now neither of those attributes is specific to the nomadic user. However, the next two are. Here I'm talking about disk space and battery life.

Disk space
You need disk space, because you should carry as much as possible on disk where it weighs nothing, rather than on paper, which has bulk and weight. I carry as much as I can in Notes databases, including file attachments. That way I can easily replicate with other servers both at home and at customer sites, and I can always lay my hands on the information I need. You need at least 10GB on your laptop, and more is not only better, but also no heavier.

Battery life
Battery life is critical too. You must be able to get two hours of decent performance. You should also plan to get to know how to juggle the power management regimes to get even more life when you need it.

Ethernet and modem
Having built-in Ethernet and modem saves carrying lots of extra bits and pieces. Ethernet is becoming the standard, so you may be able to get away with no other network adapter, and with an RJ45 socket you shouldn't need to carry a cable. You might even get away with no modem cable if the machine has an RJ11 socket. Look at the phone on your desk--or rather, underneath it. Chances are the line cord is plugged in to the phone with an RJ11. If it is, and I can get it out of the handset, I can plug into my laptop directly.


1  ·  2  ·  3  ·  4  ·  5  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Mobile Technology (32 articles)
   Troubleshooting Lotus Notes Traveler: the basics
   How Holt CAT mobilizes Notes throughout the enterprise
   Interesting new solution for making Notes Mail mobile
Home > Lotus Technologies > Notes (84 articles)
   A walk down Memory Lane with Lotus Notes
   An application for scanning physical mail and distributing it virtually
   Managing Notes deployments with Teamstudio Build Manager
Home > Strategies > Travel (7 articles)
   Troubleshooting Lotus Notes Traveler: the basics
   Mick's travel tricks: miscellaneous tools for your traveling needs
   Micks travel tricks: rationing your valuable laptop real estate
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent DominoPower Articles
Syncing Notes with Android phones
Application development, William Shatner, and the origin of the universe
Learn Domino Designer 8.5 for free
The (near) future of Sametime, Quickr, Connections, and Symphony
Inside the IBM Innovations lab
Lotusphere 2010: Hot fixes and cool news for Notes, Domino, and LotusLive
Lotusphere 2010: mobility and collaboration
Latest Lotus Headlines
Xpages not loading? JVM errors? - Solution
How to implement an iCalendar feed into your Notes calendar with XPages
DWA Hotfixes for Domino 8.5.1FP1 - A Gotcha
IBM Adds DB2 to Lotus Foundations SMB Package
SNTT : XPages onclick Ghosts in the machine
Ports used by Lotus Sametime 8.5 servers
Exploring a Domino Date Bug
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: Online safety for virtual learning
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
OutlookPower: Seek and find: Strategies to locate filed-away emails fast
-- Advertisement --

Sophisticated Meets Simple For Document Management
Share. Control. Manage.
Documents, emails, and content in the context of how work is done. Native to Lotus Domino. The User Experience unseen for Lotus Domino. Do more with less. Really.

See the possibilities Docova unleashes for Lotus Domino.
-- Advertisement --

Struggling with exporting Notes data to spreadsheets? No More!
Try IntelliPRINT, The world's leading Reporting, Dashboards, and Analysis solution for Notes & Domino

  • Don't spend unproductive time maintaining different versions of the same spreadsheet
  • Preserve data integrity and security in multi-user environments
  • Create reports in minutes INSIDE Notes
  • Get freedom from iterative report requests, deliver self-serve capabilities

Experience Reporting, Dashboards, and Analysis INSIDE Notes.

Try IntelliPRINT NOW!

ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 1998-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login