matthew's profileMatt WhittinghamPhotosBlogLists Tools Help
    August 30

    Travel: Diving off Taveuni Island, Fiji

    The world’s most friendly people often seem to be in directly inverse proportion to the amount of wealth they have. Fijians are a case in point; you could not meet a more friendly, genuinely welcoming people, yet most eke out a subsistence level island life, living off the land and the ocean. 

    After a days diving I wander into the local village to take photos and meet the locals.  Pretty soon I’ve made new friends with the husband of the school teacher at the Catholic school, who invites me back the next night for an evening of Cava, the local alcohol. The following evening I meet the Fire Chief, easily recognisable from a brand new red fire engine parked on the grass next to his hut, who proudly tells me of his efforts to recruit most of the islands youth into his volunteer fire brigade.  I promise to send him a couple of new mobile phones when I get back to Sydney.

    Taveuni is Fiji’s third largest island, but is only 42kms long, and about 15 wide.  It is everything you’d want in a South Pacific island.  Blood red sunsets, azure blue seas with crystal clear waters, world class diving, very few tourists, at least in this part of Fjij, and the afore mentioned friendly locals.  Only thing it lacks is a bevy of scantily clad, welcoming female lovelies in grass skirts, but then again I’ve not looked that hard.

    Diving wise, it’s coral reef diving at it’s best. a comfortable 25 degrees, good visibility, and a vast array of vivid coral and fish.  The highlight is The Great White Wall, with it’s double tunnel swim through, massive wall of ivory white coral, and abundant fish life.

    Technology: Living with the Nokia N97

    I’ve had this flagship Nokia smartphone for about six weeks now, and it has been a love hate relationship.  For the first couple of weeks I wanted to put it on the floor and stamp on it repeatedly.  Even basic core tasks like answering a call seemed anti intuitive and irritating.

    Upgrading the firmware was a frustrating experience:  Even though other s60 users were happily reporting substantial improvements with firmware v11.x, attempts to update my phone from v10.x were met with a ‘upgrade not available’ message. 

    However, many weeks later, and with v11 of the s60v5 platform, it is much improved, and many bugs have been fixed.  There are still some significant cons – the keyboard is impossible to read in bright light, the resistive touch and interface is clunky to say the least, and belies it’s Symbian origins.  It also ships with the old version of Nokia’s email client, and not the new, much improved Nokia Messaging suite. 

    Overall it is an ‘OK’ device but the worrying thing for Nokia is that it is now getting on for 18 months since the original iPhone release, and Nokia still do not have a smartphone that can rival it.