Two months of LG L1400 use is enough
I’ve been using the LG L1400 for the last couple of months and I’m longing to have a Series 60 or at least MIDP 2 powerhouse back as my main mobile.
Stacked against the L1400 for developers:
You can’t test any ideas you might have for Nokia’s new Python implementation. No MIDP 2 support severely constrains MIDlet hacking, too. Worse than that is the lack of socket support, which means none of the open source J2ME SSH clients you might normally use to firefight on your server will work. The lack of USB or Bluetooth synching makes installation of MIDlets much more painful, especially for a developer who needs to install fairly frequently. The limited memory size (somewhere above 61KB but below 85KB based upon MIDlets I’ve tried to install) renders many potential MIDP 1.0 installs impossible.
Comparing the L1400 to Nokia’s latest Series 60 MIDP 2 handsets wouldn’t be fair, but heck, even my trusty old Nokia 3650 beats the LG in most of the above areas, and the 3650’s been available for a couple of years now!
OK, so that’s the bad news for developers. The good news for consumers:
- The LG L1400 seems to have a reliable antenna and works well in relatively weak GSM and GPRS signal environments, at least as good as my Nokia 7610 did
- WAP just works, at GPRS speed mind you, but it works
- L1400 fits better in my pocket than 3650 and many other MIDP 1 phones, even if it really isn’t much smaller than a lot of them
- LG’s VGA camera does a decent job for what it is, probably as good or slightly better than the 3650’s at outdoor scenes and much less blurry at indoor pictures
- L1400 includes an AIM client (but none for Yahoo! Messenger, my IM of choice, so you have to use Y!M via SMS)
- You’ll feel like you sold your soul to the cheap fold cellcam devil with the constant Cingular ad scrolling on the outside screen everytime you close the phone, but the outside photo caller ID is quite nice otherwise
- It’s a heck of a lot cheaper than the Razr for the same res camera (click here to read my earlier post on that)
- Taking pictures with the flip closed can be particularly useful for skiing self portraits 🙂
Verdict: Non-developers should consider buying the L1400 if it meets their requirements. Developers, there be dragons here, enter only to better understand what your average US mobile user can and cannot do with their phone. Hackers, steer clear.
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I have had success sending cellcam photos from the L1400 in certain locations, no success in others. On a recent trip across the western part of the US I had no trouble sending MMS in California or Oklahoma, but none of my attempts in northern Arizona or New Mexico worked. The AZ and NM messages appeared to go through (the phone gave a success status and there were no error messages from the network), but nothing was ever received at the recipient email address.
I’d guess the problem was/is a Cingular network issue since the phone worked in CA and OK. I haven’t attempted to send MMS via Cingular in Texas, so I’m not sure if there might be network issues there too.
I’d suggest you call customer service (611 on your mobile) and ask to be transferred to technical support. They’ll probably have you check your WAP gateway settings (access these by pressing the “Menu” softkey, then in turn selecting 9, 6, 3, and then the number for the access point you’re configuring, most likely 1 for Cingular’s MEdia Net).
I’ve had reasonable luck troubleshooting Cingular issues in the past once I got an actual techie on the phone.
my LG1400 wont save the ringtones I select. It just plays the defauld cingular one and I dont know how to change that…I was wondering if anyone knew?