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Posts: 165 | Thanked: 5 times | Joined on Jan 2007 @ Boston MA USA
#1
Here's an N800 testimonial I never thought I'd write.

Last week I encountered a range of medical symptoms that made it impossible to sleep, notably abdominal bloating and pain with intense full body itching. My doctor ran a series of blood tests which confirmed elevated liver enzymes and bilirubin, in the absence of hepatitus or other known risk factors. Yellow eyes and other factors completed the classical picture of jaundice, normally treated by procedures that restore bile flow by removing the impeding gallstones and/or the entire gallbladder itself.

I checked into my local hospital Friday June 8, carrying my Nokia N800 (+2 8GB SDHC), ThinkOutside SuperSlim Bluetooth Keyboard, and Verizon MOTORAZR V3m w/data plan. Connection Manager instantly found an open "Patient and Family Nework" access point which presented one page of terms and conditions followed by free unlocked unlimited internet access. From here on out, I declare it as indispensable as the telephone, if not more so. Google, WikiPedia, Medscape and the local specialist sites are in my pocket, even in my hospital johnny between appointments. I look up each new provider and greet them from their mug shots. I backfill my understanding of new and experimental protocols, drawing the medical professionals into more extensive discussions of details and options.

When I'm overwhelmed with the technical stuff, the Canola audio player is a welcome relief. The internal speakers are entirely adequate for the hospital room environment, and if I felt the need for more isolation, I'd bring ear buds.

By June 13 my case had become more complex and I moved to a specialist unit at Massachusetts General Hospital. Once again I was greeted by ubiqutous WiFi. To me, the N800 form factor and basic functionailty are nearly ideal for this usage case. I only use the external keyboard rarely (such as for this email) and unlike a laptop, the main unit can go practically anywhere without raising an eyebrow. Those who do take notice tend to respond favorably. iPodders appreciate the big display and built-in speakers. My surgeon sees many advantages over the Palm Treo "they make us carry," whose web browser he finds next to useless, and its overpriced $110 data plan.

To me, the benefit of instant access to information in the middle of one of the most isolating and possibly scariest situations we are likely to face is incalculable. My heartfelt thanks go out to NOKIA and to the Internet Tablet community for making this device what it is today.
 
Posts: 7 | Thanked: 1 time | Joined on Jun 2007
#2
All I can say is get well soon.
 
maxilogan's Avatar
Posts: 701 | Thanked: 21 times | Joined on Feb 2006 @ Italy
#3
Originally Posted by UberSpod View Post
All I can say is get well soon.
Yes, my best whishes too.

Besides, I should say that wifi in hospital is a dream that I think here in Italy we will never see. Regular hotspots are rare, and me as a fonero I do the best that I can, but we are eons back from you...
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Posts: 92 | Thanked: 2 times | Joined on Feb 2007 @ Toulouse, France
#4
Originally Posted by maxilogan View Post
wifi in hospital is a dream that I think here in Italy we will never see.
I'm not sure what the situation is like here in France, but I expect it's closer to that in Italy than in Massachusetts, unfortunately.

It's a shame that the medical staff have to carry Treos, when presumably the wireless would be available to them too. I suppose the Treo is a more flexible option when they're outside the hospital.

Best wishes, jpj, and thanks for the post.
 
anidel's Avatar
Posts: 1,743 | Thanked: 1,231 times | Joined on Jul 2006 @ Twickenham, UK
#5
I wish you good luck, jpj.

Everything will be fine and you'll thank someone else for it other than Nokia
As I am Italian too I second maxilogan, and I sold my Moto A1000 for a SE 618i that I can carry everywhere and that serves me as Internet provider for my N800.
The UMTS plan is pretty good. 9€ a day for 50Mb-soon-to-be-100Mb a day is a pretty damn good plan.
 
SeRi@lDiE's Avatar
Posts: 919 | Thanked: 37 times | Joined on Aug 2006 @ /dev/null
#6
I hope you get better!
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Posts: 73 | Thanked: 1 time | Joined on Apr 2007
#7
Great post jpj I wonder if Nokia are listening.
Hope the E get well cards are fooding in.
All the best for swift recovery
 
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Posts: 25 | Thanked: 3 times | Joined on Jun 2007 @ Rexburg, Idaho
#8
All the best, and yes, a fantastic story.
 
sondjata's Avatar
Posts: 1,076 | Thanked: 176 times | Joined on Mar 2007
#9
Get better soon. And I agree that N800 is so much more convenient than a full blown laptop (even my prized 12" powerbook).
 
Posts: 474 | Thanked: 30 times | Joined on Jan 2006
#10
Best wishes! While my local (Newton-Wellesley, to be precise) hospital lacks wifi, it was still insanely useful to keep in touch with the family and send out e-mails when I last went in.
 
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