Well, as I said, the disk was already formatted, and in any case, the usb cradle wasn't auto-detected as I would expect.
As far as service life for phones is concerned, I expect it to be for as long as I care to use the phone; I still have my Nokia 2140, and it still works, though I'd have to get a new battery for it.
And stop trying to get me to put fireworks in my battery powered devices!
The 222 will get a sensible NiMH or possibly NiCd battery, let's hear no more of this Li-BOOM stuff!
What in the world would you connect that 2140 to...? Your own 800MHz AMPS femtocell?
Oh, come on. Cylindrical Li-Ion cells are by now a proven "reasonably-safe" technology; no more dangerous if abused than an overcharged NiCd. Particularly now that we have "protected cells" with a BMS PCB integrated into the end of the cell. Talking about them that way makes you sound like a bit like a Luddite, and I know for a fact you are smarter and better educated than that. I carry each of these in my pocket all the time; Well, the big ones only occasionally - the small stainless AloneFire S106 220-lumen model is my current EDC. That big SkyRay one is 24 Watts of Cree XML-T6 goodness; I caught it on crazy mis-marked sale price of US$16 4 or 5 years ago. I power that with a 8800mAH pack made from a reclaimed laptop battery, and it's built 100% bareback commando-style because the particular controller used in this flashlight has LVC.
That charger is NiMh easy to use; I have a couple, and it will automatically detect and charge Ni-xx or Li-xx technology cells, plus it gives you useful information like iR in mΩ, as well as charge mAH and even a complete charge-discharge capacity cycle. Cost now is no more than a decent Ni-xx charger; $15-25 on Amazon (you can pay a lot more, of course) depending on exact feature-set.
While I agree that
Li-Po is still not ready for PrimeTime, arguably even in embedded systems like smartphones (it is the main reason for my characterization of mobile phones as a 2-3 year device),
Li-xx cylindrical cells are a mature technology, and inherently safe enough to exchange for Ni-xx wherever operating voltages and convenience of charging will allow. All it requires is an amount of enginerding thought roughly equivalent to subbing Ni-MH for Ni-Cd, or trial & error resistor substitution.
Robert sez the operating/cutoff voltage of the 222 is not within the correct operating window for convenient Li-xx substitution; that really is the only reason not to try it,
provided battery access isn't a total dicksore; even integrated charging is easy as all you have to provide is regulated 4.2V @100-500mA capacity and the protection/BMS PCB handles the rest.
Alternately, There are a number of cheap PowerBank control boards that automatically step up the ~3.7V nominal of a Li-xx cell to 5V @ 1-3A; they have an automatic sleep mode with quiescent draw in the picoamp range. These are completely automatic in terms of load-detection, but they vary greatly in terms of just how well-filtered the output is from the DC-DC converter stage is.
I might try such a mod with a couple 18650s in 1S2P config; but
I would not recommend that mod on something like embedding it into a tiny scope as a good first Li-xx modding project.
mnem