Pictures Leaked of 3 new Palm handhelds 242
ahecht writes "On Thursday, Palm's Solutions Group's CEO Todd Bradley announced that 3 new handhelds will be released in October. Within 24 hours, pictures of all three handhelds have leaked out
on the web. The first to be released, the sub-$100
Zire, can be seen here. The second handheld,
previously known as
Oslo, now has
the name Tungsten T,
and features OS 5 and built in bluetooth (pictured
here).
The third handheld is the
Tungsten W,
pictured
here,
which is a GPRS smartphone (although it does not have a built-in speaker or
microphone). Zire will be released October 7th, while
both Tungsten models will be released on October 28th." Could just be rumors or fakes, but it seems reasonable.
Nasty Screens (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Nasty Screens (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Nasty Screens (Score:2)
Patience grasshopper. The answer is in the very site you cite, you just have to read their July press release [eink.com]. I wouldn't hold my breath though. No projection for color and that's what would really be exciting.
Re:Nasty Screens (Score:2)
"simulated screenshots" (Score:2, Informative)
Bah!
We apologise for the misconception. (Score:2, Funny)
Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on earth (Score:5, Insightful)
Product development since then? Zero, zip, niente, nada de nada. They let go all of their competent techies, and are now a mass of marketeers without guindance, slowly sinking to the sound of Titanic's band.
It's really sad that these guys took Psion's market, and then managed to give it away to M$.
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:2)
I am a Palm III and Palm Vx owner. I carried a Palm for the last ~4 years. Its a good product, but one must realize that this is the computer industry. One doesn't sit tight on a good product for five years.
PPCs on the other hand, are horrendous devices. MS didn't resist on slapping the desktop GUI on those things. How dumber can you go over adding a taskbar on such a small screen?!
I believe PPCs are inferiour products. For equal evolution, Palm would give a much better platform (yes, I've programmed both PalmOS and PPCs). Monopoly has nothing to do with it.
Aw, gosh. I'm just feeding the troll...
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:2)
P.S. Although I used to think that PPC's were horrendous I changed my mind when I saw my friends Toshiba with Pocket PC 2002. The task bar really isn't as bad as you say. Although the price/performance ratio is not worth it for me personally, the next generation PPC's will probably be good enough for me to finally upgrade from my Palm 3xe.
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:2)
The last PPC I used was an iPaq. I don't like it. The iPaq seems nice in the outside -- perhaps a bit oversized. The interface, however, just doesn't feel right. Lots of little things. Smallish buttons, crowded interface...
It's just the opposite feeling you get from sitting in front of a Mac interface (I'm not a regular mac user, I use Windowmaker/Linux).
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:2, Insightful)
Not quite yet, they haven't [businesswire.com].
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:5, Interesting)
Note to get here it took two things -- Sony to pump up the Palm brand, and MS to fumble and not support Xscale routines in the PPC OS. I find it amazing, after years of Palm letting its OS rot, that the Palm OS will actually have a (rather large) advantage in at least one aspect -- ability to actually use Xscale routines and power-saving modes that will have to wait until the next version of the MS OS. Not to mention the Palm OS can use other processors as well. I would never have guessed this happening a year ago, when PPCs had a large lead in both software and hardware.
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:2)
Right now, Palm may suck in the hardware market, but the PalmOS is still strong. v5.0 is in the hands of developers, and can run an many platforms. Palm has definatly not been sitting on its hands. They have provided a top-notch OS with excellent support. No, the current off-the-shelf versions (3.x & 4.x) don't have all the bells and whistles, but it is solid, stable, and fast.
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:2)
I just replaced my 3 1/2 year old Palm V with a Palm M515, and you know what? It's not that much different.
The extra RAM is nice, but 16 megs of RAM is really nothing to brag about - a 16 Meg MMC card is only $30.
The color screen isn't very vibrant, gobbles the battery, and worst of all has thin vertical black lines separating every column of pixels.
My new palm is actually a bit THICKER and HEAVIER than the old one - oops.
Worst of all, memos are still limited to 4096 bytes. Unbelievable. I don't like having to shell out for a third party product to rectify such a ridiculous limitation.
I appreciate the snappier performance of the new palm's cpu, but it isn't enough difference to enable any different, new applications.
All in all, I like my new Palm somewhat more than the old one (thanks to the extra RAM and CPU speed). But I wouldn't have upgraded if the boss hadn't been buying, because the M515 is just an incremental upgrade from the V I had before. It makes me wonder what Palm has been doing the last 4 years.
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:2)
Oh. By the way. Product development since then? Zero, zip, niente, nada de nada.. You are wrong [palminfocenter.com]. As simple as that.
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:2)
Zero development, my ass! (Score:2)
The screens are much better, supporting high resolution color, sometimes with virtual graffiti.
The amount of memory is, what, 32 times what the original palms had?
You have the option to go with rechargeable batteries, or not, or on some devices, either or.
SD expansion is now standard on all but the lowliest level Palms, and Sonys, which use a competing expansion card. Some devices do Compact Flash as well.
The new Palms' processors will go up to 175 mhz for this release, and the sky's the limit.
There are all kinds of different Palm devices coming out to fit different niches, with built-in cellphones, GPS, scanners, wireless, etc. There are also smaller elegant devices for executives. There is even a PalmOS ruggedized laptop for the educational market.
The base price has dropped to $100, while the top end has not shot out of sight.
Lastly, they continue to totally OWN their market, regardless of Microsoft's best efforts. And the number of licencees making Palm devices is growing, not shrinking like Microsoft's.
Step away from the crack pipe!
Jon Acheson
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:2)
Re:Palm must be one of the dumbest companies on ea (Score:2)
I Forsee Problems... (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Moving parts (sliding parts). Face it
2) The Tungsten W will end up in the courts with a lawsuit from RIM. A good reference is here [theregister.co.uk] where they've had success thus far.
Re:I Forsee Problems... (Score:2, Insightful)
I agree here, it's just a bad idea. The
If this thing is made to be carried around in a pocket, that sliding area will by its very nature become a lint vacuum. Hell, I've got a Nokia 8200 series phone that's got some dust sitting on the screen, under the faceplate-- and those things have amazingly tight seams.
Re:I Forsee Problems... (Score:3, Insightful)
Tungsten W may not fall under the patent (Score:5, Informative)
Besides the fact that this could probably be shot down by prior art, all Palm would have to do (if they cared about being sued) would be to change the angle of the key rows a bit and they would be in the clear. Seems like a patent so specific as this one really shouldn't be a threat to innovation; all it really stops is exact BlackBerry clones.
But I agree with your first point, important moving parts on a thing that's supposed to ride in your pocket all day are a Bad Thing.
Re:Tungsten W may not fall under the patent (Score:2)
LoB
Re:I Forsee Problems... (Score:2)
Longevity? Those built in batteries lose a bunch of power if their first year and are history in 2-3 years without much hope of replacing them when the time comes. Palm will tell you to purchase another PDA from what someone's told me.
When you apply this to the low/mid range PDAs like the Palm III, m10x, m125, and visors(except Pro) you're right, but not the high end ones. And the Tungsten IS a high end PDA. Love the Bluetooth though. :)
LoB
It's about time (Score:5, Insightful)
$500 for a laptop? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:$500 for a laptop? (Score:2)
Still, Palms do have an advantage in that they are easier to use than palmtops. When you take something that is designed to be bigger and cram it down, it doesn't work as well for what you are using it for as something designed to be that size. (I've used both libretto's and palms/visors before, and unless it's an L2+, I'd prefer a high end palm. I prefer an L5 to my current laptop). Plus, while the libretto batteries are impressive (10 hours charge with normal use, 13 hours max), they don't hold a candle to the battery life of a palm.
The Zire? (Score:4, Insightful)
But then I checked the details. 2 meg of memory? Exactly what can you do with that much space these days, even on a handheld? The idea seems to be to attract new customers, but why would you sell something that's obviously less powered than the lowest current model?
You're not going to attract new customers by putting out lousy hardware. Palm's gotten bad press lately for failure to innovate, and this is not helping.
Re:The Zire? (Score:2)
Re:The Zire? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The Zire? (Score:2)
Re:The Zire? (Score:3, Interesting)
I am a happy owner of PalmVx (I know, it has 8M) and I have 1M free. I have looked at memory stats and I have 2.5M in docs, 1.5M in plucker and around ~.5M of useful data, the rest is bunch of crap people are beaming to me (Palm based company with one really keen owner of m515).
Which leaves me on what You expect of PDA?
I think I can specify (and live with 2M):
- contact
- memo
- calc (custom, i hate palm calc)
- datebook (pretty satisfied with the default)
- one or two really stupid games to kill time on airport or business meeting
- infra to exchange info
which is good average, on top of this I would like the following:
- serial cable & terminal emulator
- IP range/subnet calculator
actually I think, that 2M is not a big win and 4M would be better, but I think this Zire would be my choice if I would be considering a PDA for employees in small bussiness...
again: consider the size of applications (excluding dictionaries, city plans and other similar things) - that 2.5M of isilo docs are FreeBSD handbook, compete all 5 volumes of Hitchikers Guide to Galaxy, 5 other books...
--
paja
Re:The Zire? (Score:2)
From that, I'll probably conclude that Zire will be a product family, just like the Palm 1xx series. I would expect them to announce more expensive models with more memory, more expansion slots, and even color display some time later.
Re:The Zire? (Score:2)
On the other hand, I have 4 years' worth of appointments in my palm and it only takes up 211 K. I have over a hundred addresses and phone numbers, and it's only 12K. I have the game "Pocket Chess" on there and somehow it's only 29K. So if you just want to use your personal organizer as a personal organizer, 2 Megs is really not that bad.
Smartphone (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Smartphone (Score:2)
OS5 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:OS5 (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:OS5 (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, what gives?... in Intro to HCI we learned the critical importance of changing the user interface as much as possible between OS versions. (Or was that, the importance of not changing... hm, well, maybe I shouldn't have slept through that lecture.
Re:OS5 (Score:2)
Care to back that up? Sounds like marketing-speak to me.
Sure, I have to pay nearly $50 for the software to do some of it (or more for hardware), but all the functionality I can imagine for a PDA, Palm allready has.
In any case, IIRC the biggest OS5 change will be a high-res screen--thus making it easier to read and an almost usable temporarly photo album.
Re:OS5 (Score:2)
The other major changes are better security with encryption and integrated Bluetooth and 802.11b support.
Re:OS5 (Score:2)
High-res on Palm is a non-native hack. OS5 will include native (and standard) functionality.
I think that Sony's & Palm's specs will be compatible... but I really have no idea.
Re:OS5 (Score:2)
>Care to back that up? Sounds like marketing-speak to me.
Essentially, you're right. Many, many articles, reviews, and commentary in the popular press say that. UNfortunately, the press tends to influence the general public.
Re:OS5 (Score:2)
My wife and I owned two Palm IIIce's, then an m105 and a Sony Clique s360. All have been wonderful machines, and aside from the screen shrink they're great.
Just for the record.
still dragonball (Score:5, Insightful)
A palm unit with an ARM is _long_ overdue. I want a decent, useful, modern handheld, and I don't want more windows.
Palm can't compete in the low-end electronic-diary market - Casio, Sharp et al will eat their lunch - and currently their concept of innovation seems to consist of putting the same unit they've been making for years in a cool new case.
Re:still dragonball (Score:2)
True, dragonball is slow - but battery-life is far more important to me than performance. I know I don't put my palm in the cradle every day.
Re:still dragonball (Score:3, Informative)
The older StrongArm processor required over 900 mW at 233MHz (in the Ipaqs of just a few months ago), while the older Motorola (like in the Palm V) consumed 50 mW (66 mW peak). Meaning the StrongArm required 18x the power at 233MHz.
The newer Xscales require about 50mW at 200MHz. Supposedly the Motorola's that this palm is using requires even less. That's the real benefit of the newer processor, the battery-life increase.
Ironic that the power-savings features in the newer Xscales are not used in the current OS for Pocket PCs. However, Asus in it's branded PPCs coming out will have a software patch to the OS to help this out a bit. For that matter, you can't really see that much of an increase in speed either in the newer PPCs.
Re:still dragonball (Score:5, Informative)
Bradley said that this high-end model will have Bluetooth wireless networking built in and use a Texas Instruments OMAP processor, which is based on designs from ARM Holdings. According to rumor, the Tungsten T will use the OMAP1510 processor, which combines into a single chip an ARM-compliant processor with a DSP for multimedia capabilities, and runs at 175 MHz. Sources familiar with this device say it will have 16 MB of RAM."
Also, Palm OS 5 includes PACE (Palm Application Compatibility Environment), an emulation enviroment of sorts that allows the running of existing Palm Apps. (It emulates the DragonBall)
That's Pun-ny (Score:4, Funny)
Palm can't compete high-end either (Score:2)
Re:still dragonball (Score:2)
A lot of people do not really use or need their PDAs but for those that do the palm is still the best. I cannot see why the new top of the range has a keyboard though and no graffiti pad. If I need to do a lot of typing I use a PC and could not use that stupid attempt at a keyboard. If I need to make a note I would find graffiti easier.
I can pray... (Score:2)
(My palm has issues syncing these days and the cell phone just sucks at reception, who the hell knows whats up with that)
Keyboards... (Score:4, Interesting)
If I am going to buy one of these devices, it is to reduce pocket-bloat by one device. That means that my primary motivation in getting one is size. Adding a keyboard only adds size.
I suppose I can see adding a 3x4 number pad for dialing, so if they are going to add anything I would rather see a usable 3x4 pad than an attempt at adding a full keyboard to aid in data input.
Currently I have both a Samsung SCH-3500 phone and a Sony Clie PEG-T665C. I would consider a combination phone/Palm device if one could do things as well as both of those devices. While I am all in favor of reducing pocket bloat, I find that dedicated devices do their job better than any combination device.
In the mean time, I will use a data cable to attach the 665C to the Samsung. Although I am really eyeing the new Vision-capable phones from SprintPCS...
Also - I have a Canon S200 camera. Until such time as a camera added to a Palm device can come close to the quality of that camera, do not even think about adding a camera to any device I am going to buy.
That camera is portable enough (and durable enough) to end up in my pocket for times I think I *might* want to take pictures.
Re:Keyboards... (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course you also need to realize that different people have different requirements. Beleive it or not, the world does not revolve around you. For you it's "pocket bloat," for me it's useability. The keyboard makes sense. Research in Motion was right all along. The new BlackBerries are much more useable than any Palm I've seen.
- j
Re:Keyboards... (Score:2)
Re:Keyboards... (Score:2)
Re:Keyboards... (Score:2)
Once you learn it, you can get really fast at it. I am faster with a thumboard (though haven't had enough experience to become a touch typist), but grafitti is hardly "braindead".
Re:Keyboards... (Score:2)
A downside to Blackberry tho, is that it does not have enough 3rd party programs to compete with Palm/WinCE's libraries.
IIRC the new Blackberry uses Java. It is the right direction - but still a good developer relation program would help a lot.
Re:Keyboards... (Score:2)
Re:Keyboards... (Score:2)
I have a feeling Microsoft's push into 802.11 has everything to do with Palm and Bluetooth. It's gonna be a very tough fight for WinCE from here on out if Bluetooth hit's the market this fall.
IMHO
LoB
New Kyocera (Score:3, Interesting)
Kyocera *finally* getting it right? (Score:2)
It's "old tech" by today's Smartphone standards, but so far, if you care about phone functionality, it's the only way to go. Almost every other Smartphone out there is a PDA first and not a phone first, and hence most of em' suck. (The Samsung I300 is the worst, Treos are much better but still not the best - From what I've heard the Treo 300 is pretty buggy. In addition, you CANNOT use "classic" 2G data services with the Treo 300 on Sprint, you can only use Sprint's ridiculously expensive Vision plans, which have gotten pretty lousy reviews.)
If you care about phone functionality, Kyocera smartphones are the way to go. I have a 6035 on Verizon and it is simply amazing. Not sure if I'm going to get the 7135 or not. Don't feel like killing my battery for a color screen.
The new Palm smartphone will be DOA - It's a PDA first and not a phone. (First strike against it) No comment on whether it's a Europe-targeted or US-targeted phone. If they're trying to sell a GSM phone in the USA, that's its second strike. The GSM footprint in the USA is dismal, even smaller than Sprint PCS coverage. (Apparently AT&T plans on transitioning to GSM, so this will change eventually. But it could take a while...)
If you want a smartphone your best bet is a Kyocera 6035 (or 7135 when it comes out in a month or two) with Verizon.
Re:Keyboards... (Score:2)
I ain't writing on no plastic screen after having a blackberry.
Thumboards/keyboards are about 100x better than touchscreens anyday, IMHO.
I might actually buy one with a keyboard if it's cheap enough. Lord knows I've needed one of these for long enough...
Re:Keyboards... (Score:2)
As someone upstream pointed out, Kyocera is sticking with a Graffiti area in the forthcoming 7135. I can't decide what to feel about the form factor though.
Re:Keyboards... (Score:2)
Time for some.... (Score:2, Interesting)
zire (Score:2)
For sub-100 bucks, i'd prolly buy one in a heartbeat. It broke the pricepoint for me.
Triv
Sorry Palm... (Score:2, Insightful)
In addition, look at some of the cool things Sony builds in. My clie has a built in mp3 player, works off a memory stick. Their newest line is very different, it flips open at the top, and you have a keyboard and a screen all in one. And thats a 480 by 320 screen, if i remember right. Plus you can get that with a digital camera.
Palm, only entry level people are going to pay for what you're selling. Look at what other companies are doing, and make the best looking, great-screened, multi function Palm device out there. Maybe then i'll start looking at you when I need a new palm.
hehe (Score:3, Funny)
Anyone have a mirror?
I wouldn't mind... (Score:3, Funny)
Cellular phone with SSH? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, please correct my spelling and grammar mistakes, I'd like to improve my English.
Speaker Conspiracy (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean after all, the Zire looks like an Ipod mp3 player, and it has a speaker. Can't play mp3s, but hey, it's got the "look"...it's got the speaker!
Palm's philosophy is losing meaning ... (Score:5, Insightful)
I finally decided to dive into the world of PDAs after resisting for so long (forgetfulness being my main driver
I'm an OS agnostic - I just like what I can program, and this is infinitely more programmable, with ports of all your favorite unix tools already. In addition to that, I can get an expansion pack that allows me to plug in any USB keyboard and has a VGA port that will do 800x600 @ 256 colors - yes, I can put a powerpoint presentation on this and leave the laptop at home, and this thing is just a small attachment to the e740 - the functionality is all already built in. Way cool. (Note: the ipaq also has a Linux port, but not yet the newer e740 because it has new hardware)
What would I have gotten from Palm? Well, let's not even compare that because Palm gets blown away too easily. I was actually comparing against the Sony palm-based devices. They were a bit thinner and lighter, they had mp3 option in several players, and they even had the NR70V with built-in camera
All that for about the same price.
So what happened? Well, once upon a time, the only way you could get the functionality of these new CE devices was in mini-laptops (the original size of CE devices), and they were much more limited. Palm had the small form factor and all the same stuff. However, Palm is fighting an uphill battle against technology advancement by not adopting new stuff faster. Why are they still waiting to ship an ARM-based device? CE already is shipping units with the latest 400mhz Xscale ARM-based CPUs (think ~ to Pentium with MMX). Palm *was* great, but today all that "simplicity" just looks dated.
Two big groups buy these devices. For geeks, who love technology, it's hard to resist all the joy commanding this device can bring. For PHBs, who love spending as much as possible to get all the features that they'll never use, the CE devices are also hard to pass up.
OK, so what's the downside? I've been using my device for a while, and the only disadvantage is battery life. Using wireless without being plugged in can drain you fast. Add to that that it regularly powers over 100MB mem (32MB rom, 64MB ram, + whatever I'm accessing from CF or SD), color screen (standard on CE devices),
Re:Palm's philosophy is losing meaning ... (Score:2)
I would love to be able to hook up a keyboard, mouse and VGA monitor to one of those little units. Something I can work on a word document, or even use as my 'email everywhere' workstation for office and home, currently am using my tiBook for that. w/WiFi I can surf slashdot at home on sofa (already have the hub). The only thing that is holding me back, I feel like I won't really get the full functionality of it unless I can dock it with a VGA / mouse / keyboard. I guess I am waiting until I can do that before doing much more. A 400 mhz processor running embedded CE is fast enough to do the office docs / email.. but geezus the interface with a pen sucks.
Anyway, interested in your experience with that.
Cheers
Re:Palm's philosophy is losing meaning ... (Score:2)
As for the pen interface - I thought this would be a bit limiting, but have changed my mind. It has the 3 input styles - virtual keyboard, "letter" recognizer and block recognizer (graffiti rip-off). I have found that I can be very efficient with the virtual keyboard even while walking. I've also found that the letter recognition is fairly good with my handwriting. My fingers are also good enough to use as a stylus when I'm too lazy to get the real one out for a quick data check.
But to compare to a tiBook
Re:Palm's philosophy is losing meaning ... (Score:2)
i have a CE device with not only a cursor, but a mouse pointer.
It's an IBM Z50. It runs Windows CE HandheldPC edition, 2.11. It has a 640x480 screen, is in a micro-laptop form factor. It has no moving parts. It has 48mb of ram. Its instant on, instant of. It has a type 2 CF slot, and a type 2 PCMCIA slot.
Cisco makes Aironet 352 drivers for it.
It gets 8 hours of battery life.
Microsoft makes a Windows Terminal Server client for it.
Add all that up ? I have an instant on, WiFi with wep 640x480 client with a usable keyboard and usable mouse (the ibm thinkpad eraser), that lets me terminal serve into my windows server at home and run IE 6 or any other app i want.
I get better batttery life than ANY laptop, it synchronizes with Exchange at work out of hte box, and it cost me $250 on ebay.
There isn't a better wireless web browsing experience.
Re:Palm's philosophy is losing meaning ... (Score:2)
The OQO has a 10 GB HD, 128 MB of RAM ( or more ) and a Transmeta 1 GHz processor. You can run regular x86 OSes- Linux and XP are the options available from the factory.
The Pen interface is great, if it's done well. For a PalmOS device, the pen interface falls apart when you're doing more than simple organization/PIM/game tasks. The Newton did it best, and the PocketPC does it OK- you can get a quite decent WPM (I can easily achieve 40-45 on my Newton) when you're using *real* handwriting recognition and not just a soft-keyboard or character recognition like graffiti or jot.
For me, the OQO is pretty much the Holy Grail of computing. When they're released (should be fairly soonish), I plan on selling my iBook and Jornada 720 to buy an OQO and use it as my main computer. Luckily, you can get *real* HWR on Windoze, but not Linux, not at least in a way that consumers can get to it. Motorolla has it's Lexicus QuickPrint system ported to x86 Linux, but there's no way to get it if you're not an OEM. QuickPrint isn't anywhere near as nice as Netwon HWR or ParaGraph's CalliGrapher, which is available on PocketPC, WinCE, and desktop Windoze.
Re:Palm's philosophy is losing meaning ... (Score:2)
I feel like I am doing the same thing. I have my handspring visor, cell phone, tiBook, linux box and a few workstations (not including my workstation at the office..)
I have found my handspring gather dust lately. I am just tired of carying around all the crap.
One thing I have taken a look at is the http://www.thinkgeek.com/stuff/computing/5a98.sht
Funny thing is.. I really don't need all the functionality of Windows XP. PocketPC would be fine, too bad no real docking though. Unless that machine is 1ghz plus (OQO), I cringe at thinking what it will perform like.
Cheers
Re:Palm's philosophy is losing meaning ... (Score:2)
Regarding computing environment, another link I forgot to mention is the PDA operating system/environment I'm working on called Dynapad. It is what I currently run on my Jornada 720 and will run on my OQO when I get one. Even now, on my iBook, I do most of what I do on my computer within the Squeak [squeak.org] Smalltalk programming environment. The only thing I use Mac OS 9/X for is to browse the web. Squeak includes a pretty simple web browser, but it is insufficient for a lot of web sites. For some web browsing, I simply use Links from within a vt100 terminal app that is native on Squeak. I've written some code on the Squeak side of things to allow me to open Opera windows from within Squeak to automate it, but I imagine that this may be a bit harder on WinXP than it is currently with AppleScript on OS 9/X, but perhaps Windows Scripting Host would be a good replacement.
In all honesty, the only reason I *may* use WinXP on my OQO is for ParaGraph's CalliGrapher [paragraph.com] HWR software. As I said, Linux doesn't have any real HWR, so for me, it's pretty useless as a PDA or other pen-based platform. Which is why I have a Jornada 720 running WinCE instead of a Zaurus running Qtopia.
At this point, Dynapad wouldn't do quite everything that PocketPC does, but in the coming months and years it will. In about a 6 MB footprint, Dynapad includes:
* PIM applications: Notes, Todo, Names (Contacts), and Dates (Calendar)
* Net apps: Simple web browser, IRC client, email client; and coming soon, a LiveJournal client as well as an app with very similar functionality to Watson/Sherlock 3
* A full Smalltalk development environment using the Morphic GUI toolkit; with the ability to create entirely new apps on the device itself, or modify existing apps to better work with the user's expectations
* An OODB as the "blessed" means of data storage- makes sycing with desktop machines or other Dynapad devices as well as sharing the data via the internet very easy
* Character recognition, rather like Graffiti,but without a dedicated space- write anywhere in a text box
* A GUI builder for rapid application development
* An advanced, extensible, dynamic, reflective architecture that allows end-user programming and scripting
Welcome Slashdot visitor! (Score:5, Funny)
Thanks, www.palminfocenter.com
Damn! They're on to us! How are we supposed to slashdot sites if they do this?
Re:Welcome Slashdot visitor! (Score:2)
Just have your revenge on them by actually reading a few of their articles and clicking on the pretty pictures.
That'll teach 'em to try to get an actual readership.
What the - (Score:2)
Re:What the - (Score:2)
Cheer up, you could have jumped ship to Handspring, like I did a while back when I found myself saying that. (Oh well. Springboards were a fun ride while it lasted.)
Stop wasting space for dedicated handwriting pad (Score:3, Interesting)
I currently use a Palm V and while I love it's small size (thickness) it would be SO much better with out all that space wasted (hell, same goes even for the buttons).
My ideal PDA would have come with a very thin footprint, hi-rez color, and all screen... as big as they're going to make these things, why not get down to the business of letting us view, read, type, watch things on the _whole_ PDA?!?*
*Of course... wireless, tons of memory (slot upgrade), and good quality sound are also desired (in as small of a package as possible). : )
Re:Stop wasting space for dedicated handwriting pa (Score:2)
Zire is perfect for my needs (Score:2)
Nice but ugly.
The Zire does the same but looks nice. When are they coming to the UK?
Oh and to the naysayers. I'm still not using all my 2meg. Not by a long shot. Great battery life too.
Woah! Hold on... (Score:2)
This sounds more like a "smart marketing phone," but it doesn't surprise me. Walking down the Palm Accessories aisle at Frys, I sometimes get the sense that Palm's accessories division is really bloated and desperate. I hope this doesn't become a trend: "You simply must buy our new 32.6-gigahertz cordless phone (speaker, microphone, and other electronics not included)!"
But... (Score:2)
Check out the sales figures... (Score:2)
Screen resolution (Score:2)
real pictures? (Score:2)
I was expecting real pictures after reading the story.. the first couple of pictures were definately computer rendered and the last was horribly grainy.. The idea of a sub $100 palm device is cool tho.. so I hope the rumors are true.
New.Google found this article (Score:2)
M@
Re:moving to mobile phones (Score:2)
Re:What about ARM? (Score:2)
I think it must be you...
Re:Tungsten - the new heavy palm? (Score:2)
Re:Hmmmmmmm..... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:that last one (Score:2)
Except when there's no way to shield it from the world. Really bad design.
Re:6035 is a value (Score:2)
So, started looking around and found a deal at CompUSA-$150 with a $150 rebate from CompUSA AND a $70 rebate from Sprint. That's right, -$70 and YES I have received both rebates
NOT BRAGGING, but maybe, just maybe, someone else is still liquidating these and you might find a similiar deal.
Good phone, some of the integration features are a little cumbersome, but pretty much everything you would expect is there-Dialing from Phone book, web clipping, "always on email", etc.
Bulky? Yes. But less than my Jornada was, and lets be honest, I didn't use anything really that needed color (I am envious of the web clipping enabled phones with color tho!) And I had already sold my Jornada by then because I knew that I would not carry it and my former cell.
Definitely better than carrying a phone AND a PDA.
Disadvantages? Looks like an old school early 90s cell phone, even has the pullout antenna. I received some slack about it from my co-workers when I first got it, until I pointed out that its was both a PDA and a phone. Then I had a couple of "where'd you get it?"
The speakphone works great if there is no background noise *shrug* Which basically means that in the car, which is the main place I want to use it, it is fairly useless
If you are going for G-whiz factor, spend your $500 and get something else, its far from flashy. But if you want have a phone, PDA and look up movie times every now and then without spending all your cash, give it a look
If you can find one...