Palm Tungsten Models Reviewed 211
Jason Weill writes "MSNBC has a slightly premature review of Palm's brand-new Tungsten models. These models, currently (as of 11:10 PM EST Sunday) unavailable on Palm's own web site, are the Tungsten T and Tungsten W. The Tungsten T includes a fold-out Graffiti area, new cross-key keypad, 144 MHz ARM processor, Palm OS 5, a 320x320 full-color screen, and 16 MB of on-board RAM. At $499, it's more expensive than most handhelds currently on the market. The Tungsten W replaces the Graffiti area with a thumb keyboard and includes GSM/GPRS phone capabilities. Unlike the Handspring Treo devices, the Tungsten W only works with a handset -- you can't put it up to your ear. The Tungsten W will cost $549, although most American service providers will subsidize at least part of the cost. These models will officially be unveiled Monday, October 28."
Will They Sell Them At Ikea? (Score:5, Funny)
Allen Wrench: "Help! They found me in a meteor! I need tungsten to live! TTUUUNNNGGGSSSTTEEENN!"
That's some power (Score:3, Interesting)
If PC games took off with the gaming enthusiasts to replace consoles, handhelds should soon become a thriving gaming market to replace Gameboys.
With that much power, a GBA emulator could even be ported to it!
Re:That's some power (Score:2)
probably because users are to cheap to buy the games when they are $30-50, that's an awful lot to spend on a handheld enterainment app.
Re:That's some power (Score:5, Insightful)
probably because users are to cheap to buy the games when they are $30-50, that's an awful lot to spend on a handheld enterainment app.
No, it's because this amazing new horsepower isn't actually on the market for another few hours and the vast majority of PalmOS developers don't participate in "pre-release hardware" development (unlike the major game companies).
There are quite a few games that push the limits of the Dragonball and look damn nice, but even the top of the line 33mhz isn't close to a 144mhz ARM. Patience, Young Jedi, the wicked games will come soon enough, especially with the new 5-way and improved audio support.
Re:That's some power (Score:2)
Re:That's some power (Score:2)
Re:That's some power (Score:2)
"Official" press release (Score:2)
Quote from article ha! (Score:4, Insightful)
The industry then laughs, as their marketshare increase due do stupid palm decisions.
Users on the other hand are probably drooling because they are sleeping through palm's big announcement, having realized long ago, that palm has overpromised and underdelivered over and over.
Re:Quote from article ha! (Score:2, Funny)
How do they sell anything in Japan? (Score:4, Interesting)
Just curious
Re:How do they sell anything in Japan? (Score:5, Insightful)
Or maybe because they don't want to pay the cell phone company for downloading new applications to them.
Oh, wait, your phone can't use new applications? I'm sure that somebody thinks that the phone's built in games and utilities are worth a damn, but I'm sure not one.
A PDA is more than just an address book. The killer feature of my Palm is the desktop sync. That way, even if my PDA dies, ALL that important information is ready for me to download into a new device. No hassle, no incompatibilities...it just works.
Phones are great, when you want to call people. For doing anything else, they're a user interface nightmare.
Re:How do they sell anything in Japan? (Score:2)
actually you CAN download new applications onto your cellphone.
here is a website with some info [nttdocomo.co.jp] on Docomo, by NTT. (the only cellphone provider with english info, AFAIK
The 504i series does what's called "iAppli" (nevermind the silly names for a sec) - but they do let you download software.
And hopefully you can see that the input / email capabilities is no worse than any Zaurus / palm / Sony keypad (it's cool looking at young people franticly thumb in emails on the train).
and the camera actually do better than you think. Imagine web-cam quality color pictures. be sarcastic all you want, but it's pretty neat feature (albeit one I will never use - my ugly mug will probabbly shock the phone system into some fratic emergency mode), and many people uses it.
the only thing you are halfly on-the-mark is the cost... but then, when you think about it, a cell phone that costs 180 bux or so (cheaper yet if you buy older model / longer contract) - that weights like 3 oz. compared to your palm for about 500... and if you are conservative on yapping, the monthly fee is no worse than US plans i have seen. - and considering that you recieve calls for free, it might be cheaper.
and the screen area is not even that much different : cellphones here have resolution as high as 176x216... it's tiny (like everything else) - but again, for the money and convenience and all that... not to quote anybody, but fsck palm... fsck palm in the ear.
Re:How do they sell anything in Japan? (Score:2)
One phone has a screen the size of a postage stamp. Another was designed by some freak who got bored with the ten-key layout on every phone ever and decided to rearrange it so it's more pretty. We've got a couple folding devices hiding keyboards that people with hands as big as mine can not use. Then we've got two Windows CE devices.
How do any of these improve my life? They're ALL critically flawed. None have the kind of text input I prefer. None run an operating system with a vibrant developer community. None have the sort of flexibility I want.
Behind the times, maybe. But I'm in Palm's target audience.
Re:How do they sell anything in Japan? (Score:2)
Re:How do they sell anything in Japan? (Score:2)
And cellphones have a limited screen size/ low resolution. And highend cellphones that have all these functionality anyway cost around 500-600$. As they say, the lines are pretty blurred between cellphones and PDAs.
Re:How do they sell anything in Japan? (Score:2)
I have yet to see one that can... you can send your data to a web-page for editing, but it still costs money to transfer it, and you cant back-up phone settings...
sorry, until the phone companies and phone services get their heads out of their asses and stop offering useless things like a fricking digital camera... they will never be as good as a PDA.
There ARE phones that sync ... (Score:2, Insightful)
I have an Ericsson T68m and a Mac with a bluetooth adapter, and I use iSync to sync them. It also syncs my work and home Macs, and my old Palm V, and my iPod, so that a change made on one of them is updated on them all.
The T68m can also beam appointments and business cards to Palms via infrared.
Maybe this is what you're looking for? Wait, you're saying you don't use a Mac? Oh, well
Re:There ARE phones that sync ... (Score:2)
great use for a Power Pc!
Re:How do they sell anything in Japan? (Score:3, Informative)
NTT does make an adapter that connects to a standard serial port with accompanying software to backup info on your PC. Additionally, the phone has a 8M memory stick that I can save anything I want on. I will admit that the ability to sync the phone to software such as outlook is missing, but then again, I've tried using that feature with my palm before and after the coolness factor wore off, I realized that I wasn't nearly busy enough to benefit from it. I am however, a mid-level executive with 40 people working for me and I travel about once every two or three months. I am also single and have a fairly active social calender. I would say a vast majority of people do not fall into a category of being more busy than I am and would come to the same conclusion. I also kind of enjoy the seperation. My cell phone is tied to my personal life. Sure, I keep my work calendar on it and receive work related phone calls, but the emails I get on it are entirely just from friends. I really wouldn't want to be reading work emails on my time off.
The phone has a Java VM on it and there are tons of applications to download for entertainment, or PDA like functions. FAQs and HOWTOs are available on the net on how to write apps for the phone, so I can even do my own custom code if I wanted.
As far as the camera being useless....It takes 640x480 256K
Re:How do they sell anything in Japan? (Score:2)
please I would love to find a cellphone dealer that isn't either....
A - staffed with idiots and morons that dont know their own products....
B - a den of thieves and rip-off artists...
Thanks! I'm going shopping tommorow!!
Re:How do they sell anything in Japan? (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, I can. I even do it on Linux. http://www.gnokii.org [gnokii.org]
Assuming OP has a Sidekick... (Score:2)
Assuming the original poster is talking about the new Sidekick [josef.org], 99% of all of the information is stored on the server, not your client device. Several people in a popular Sidekick forum [dangerinfo.com] have already mentioned that they put their SIM card into their replacment and all of the info is instantly there just as it was before.
The entire duration of the contract for the SideKick service (1 year) has unlimited data transfer.As to most of the other counterpoints in this thread, the SDK is coming soon...
Wow (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Wow (Score:2, Informative)
Don't buy into the megahertz myth. Just because the clock speed is greater means nothing. I'd still bank on the pentium.
Until recently [embedded.com], ARM chips designed for handhelds didn't do harware floating point math!
Re:Wow (Score:2)
They were smart: they waited untill the Pentium people worked out all the FDIV bugs.
Re:Wow (Score:2)
Another Review Here (Score:5, Informative)
Looks nice, but I don't see myself replacing my PalmIIIc yet (c'mon... someone make a non-Sony Palm that's as compelling!)
Cool features for the enterprise (Score:2)
The CD also includes BlueChat and BlueBoard. BlueBoard is a Bluetooth-based whiteboard-type image editing program. Users create an on-the-fly conference and can then all edit the same same on-screen image simultaneously. BlueChat is a Bluetooth-based chat program that allows users to create ad-hoc local IRC-like chatrooms with any users in range. We foresee a lot of employees talking about a presenter behind their backs this way.
I think the T sounds liek a great device. I like the features, the clever form factor (the telescoping stylus sounds great) and I love the idea of bluetooth support in a Palm and what can be done with it.
I also really like the idea of the web portal Palm provides to let you really browse the web without consuming a lot of bandwith. That is a perfect feature for a handheld meant to be networked. The only missing ingredient (which I assume will be around soon if it's not already here) is a bluetooth hub to give local bluetooth devices network connectivity (just like 802.11 hubs, but instead could act as a repeater to give bluetooth devices more range in an office).
Although an integrated phone/palm seems like a good idea, for my own needs I think I like better the idea of a really good PDA and a really good phone in two seperate devices.
Re:Another Review Here (Score:2)
Also, some consider Palm's support to be slightly better than Sony's, although this is of course rather objective.
Re:Another Review Here (Score:2)
Mind you, this is generally true of most vendors - Internet support is so much better that you can often just bypass the official support. This is probably one reason why Linux has succeeded, because the lack of (as much) official vendor support doesn't really make much difference (and of course you can buy such support if you want it).
Re:Another Review Here (Score:2)
I think Palm apps shall remain compatible with OS4 for a very long time, the Zire and other new models running the dragonball CPU and OS4 have only just hit the market.
I rather buy something a little less up to date for 50% of the price, because you may have to dump it sooner (it'll be outdated sooner) but not twice as soon, i.e. the 'buck per month' ratio shall be better IMO.
Restrictions on free movement? (Score:5, Funny)
I bet you can.
Re:Restrictions on free movement? (Score:5, Funny)
--
Damn the Emperor!
Re:Restrictions on free movement? (Score:2, Funny)
Ah, that figures why Vincent van Gogh didn't have a PDA...
To the modders: Please mark this one Insightful :-)
Re:Restrictions on free movement? (Score:3, Funny)
New Palm? (Score:3, Funny)
PALM that never needs shaving.. (Score:2, Interesting)
But seriously, when is enough, enough?.
These are trying to fill a gap, somewhere between my mobile phone, and my laptop, but doesnt have enough functionality to do away with either.
With this in mind, it seems counter productive to carry yet another device around with me...
Just my 0.2c..
Too little too late... (Score:5, Insightful)
In short, there's no excuse for this device. Palm is dead in the water. For *LESS* than $499 I can get an 802.11b-equipped full color Toshiba E740 that will outrun, outgun, and outfeature any of Palm's new devices. Kiss your butts goodbye, Palm. This isn't 1997, this is almost 2003, and you just sat around on your market share. Watch Small-and-Flaccid(TM) eat the rest of your lunch now.
Re:Too little too late... (Score:4, Insightful)
If I can't use my PDA for at least a week without batteries, fuhgeddaboutit. I don't need to watch movies on the damn thing...I need it to WORK FOR A LONG TIME.
If I can get long battery life and all that other crap, well and good. But I won't buy a device that needs to be in its cradle every night before I go to bed.
Re:Too little too late... (Score:2)
I want my PDA to be an organizer. Sure, it's great if it can pull stunts like playing movies, but I don't really care about those gee-whiz features. For me, my Palm is a tool, not a toy. There aren't a heck of a lot of features I want in my pocket that my Handspring Visor doesn't already have. I'd like a higher resolution screen, and an onboard battery pack (that still lasts forever), and the ability to talk to my phone (not to do mobile Internet, but to keep my phone directory up-to-date), but apart from that I'm totally happy with the old slow processor.
Re:Too little too late... (Score:5, Insightful)
I admit the Palms don't do multitasking but I must admit I'm stumped as to what you would need it for. Playing media while you work on a document I suppose.
But more to the point of your post, I use my Palm to replace all the paper in my life. It doesn't play movies on a tiny screen? Sad, but not really that relevant, is it?
I prefer my Palm as it is tiny, has a long battery life, and runs a nice clean and simple OS that does exactly what I want it to do.
Re:Too little too late... (Score:2)
I hate having to sync with Outlook (I can't stand outlook). And I've never used multitasking.
In fact, I think multitasking (in a non-MMU protected environment) is a very very bad idea, and is one of the main reasons for the frequent lock-ups and crashes of the operating system.
In the years before with PalmOS devices I hardly had any crashes or problems, but the PocketPC crashes all the time.
Re:Too little too late... (Score:5, Insightful)
I've used Palms and WinCe devices (as well as various Newtons since teh MP100) since the original Palm Pilot and WinCE 1.0, and I've nevevr found WinCE (por PPC) devices to be far superior. Yes, they are more powerful than a Palm, but power never translated to usefulness.
The ability to play full-length color feature movies,
Excpet that it takes a large CF/SD card to store one, and don't count on the batteries lasting through an entire movie if you use the backlight. Battery life has been a really issue for me - I can't use my 565 a lot and get through a day.
MP3s,
Yes, although the Clie has done this for a while as well. In fact, my main use for my 565 is to play MP3's.
true wireless internet with a real web browser, document creation,PDF reading,
The web browser is nice - I use it with my CF modem in a pinch.
Document creation is one area where MS really dropped the ball - why go to yet another incompatable document format? I want to be able to edit a Word/Excel document on my PPC, pull the CF card, and plop it in my laptop - and be able to open the PPC file. Currently, that is a no go. Even worse, converetd files lose formating - a real pain for excel files. Not to mention the lack of a native ppt viewer.
And, no one has really got a Datebook5 clone for teh PPC, not to mention decent expense apps. (I 've tried Fusion, Traveller, AgendaToday, etc. and none match DBK5- Gulliver - iambics Expense program (I forget the name) for managing a schedule and expenses.)
chat, console emulators, and actual MULTITASKING has been available for over a year and a half now.
MAME and NES are the other main reasons I still have a PPC. If someone ports them to the Palm, I could dummp my Jornada once again.
the PPC has a lot of potential, but has too many near-misses to really be useful for me - someone who travela s alot and would really like a portable device to use when it's just too much troubel to pull out a laptop.
It's really too bad Apple dumped the Newton - one product where they, not Palm, could have created a market. I really liked my MP2000.
Re:Too little too late... (Score:2, Insightful)
Although I disagree with this poster. The market has demonstrated over and over again that place low value on the bells and whistles of your typical pocket pc device.. preferring simple, long lasting PDA's.
I actually think the Cell Phone makers are doing this best. Particularly those utilizing symbian, Nokia has put together some really compelling devices that combine the best of the PDA with the best of the cell phone... its a solid solid combination.
Stowaway XT AKA Palm Ultra-Thin (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Stowaway XT AKA Palm Ultra-Thin (Score:2)
Finally... (Score:4, Informative)
I think Palm OS 5 will be a winner, as long as it does its mainstay well, while adding on some new features and doing those well too. In other words, it does all the organizing you need it to do and it puts that ARM to use.
The only problem I see with the T is the sliding mechanism. Anytime there's physical movement involved with a product like this, you have to wonder how long it'll last. If it's nice and durable, there goes my one complaint about the T. If it's really fragile, users won't like that much at all.
Myself, I hope to get one of these things after they come down in price.
This can't succeed in Norway (Score:5, Interesting)
Not what I want in a handheld device, at least.
Re:This can't succeed in Norway (Score:3, Interesting)
Tungsten W (Score:2, Informative)
However, the URL for Tungsten W is pretty easy to guess - http://www.palm.com/products/handhelds/tungsten-w
Re:Tungsten W (Score:2)
http://www.palm.com/products/handhelds/ [palm.com] has a big ole picture and link to the Tungsten-W.
Re:Tungsten W (Score:2)
Sounds good... I guess (Score:5, Informative)
What I have always liked best about Palm PDAs is that they run forever on their batteries. Palm is claiming the new device is good for a week of typical use, but how much is that? The InfoSync [infosync.no] review notes that under a torture test, the battery life was a little under 3 hours.
I was pleased to read that the emulation mode runs current PalmOS programs fast enough. Recompiled applications should be very fast.
While in many ways it sounds tasty, I don't really want one right now. And the price is going to need to fall in half before I'll even consider it.
steveha
Sliding design (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sliding design (Score:2)
Form factor just isn't there yet. (Score:4, Interesting)
Secondly, they're just showing that no one gets the form factor yet. I don't want to have a headset sticking in my ear all the time, but I don't want to hold a big-ass product like the Treo up to my head either (talk about dorky-looking). The new RIM blackberry has a better idea
They still miss the mark though. I'm going to get my cheekmarks all over the screen and that's no good.
I don't know what the right formfactor is, but I haven't seen it yet. Maybe some kind of clamshell design where the keyboard's on the bottom and the screen's on the top. IT'll open 75% in phone mode, like a startac or whatever, or it'll open 100% in palm mode.
Re:Form factor just isn't there yet. (Score:2)
Handspring tried that approach with the VisorPhone. Believe me, if you think the Treo looks dorky held up to your ear, the Visorphone/RIM approach is ten times worse [handspring.com].
I honestly don't get the complaints about the Treo's size. At worst, it's a smidgen larger than a StarTAC (and is shaped about the same), and nobody ever complained about them being funny-looking.
Re:Form factor just isn't there yet. (Score:2)
Re:Form factor just isn't there yet. (Score:2)
Ogg player! (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder how many hours of life you will get from one battery while playing Ogg or MP3 music, with the screen blanked.
You could carry some sort of emergency charger that uses AA cells or something. But that sort of defeats the smallness and convenience; you might as well carry some small player like the Diva.
steveha
fallacy of "If you build it they will come" (Score:2)
Hate to break it to you but there are (hotly desired by someone) apps that could fit on older PalmOS models and yet they haven't been written yet. For example I have seen a number of people ask, over the past n years, "why hasn't anyone ported vi?" Heck, there might even be more people who think they want vi than people who think they want ogg.
Still I do admire your "no matter what I want, someone will code it up for me, for free" optimism.
Re:fallacy of "If you build it they will come" (Score:2)
Because EMACS is better? LOL
Jim 'nothing like a holy war' Coffey
naive (Score:4, Informative)
My Palm m505 already has video clips on it, thanks to MGI's PhotoSuite, which came *included* with the Palm m505. As for it being able to do wave files... so what? PCM Wave files are big. One song takes around 40mb. With 16mb, we'll only be getting maybe audio clips of thirty seconds. So what's the point of having it? And one last gripe... graphics-intensive games are also usually space intensive - Diablo 2 didn't come on 3 CD's because of it's story line, I can tell you that much!
Re:naive (Score:2, Insightful)
Diablo 2 is mostly big because of the cutscenes and very stupidly compressed graphics. You can make graphics intensive games even in 8MB, check just about any older console that still used cartidges (or a bit older arcade machines). Or games like original Tomb Raider (8-9MB).
Zaurus - more value for your money (Score:5, Informative)
The Raven
I couldn't agree more (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I couldn't agree more (Score:2, Informative)
Tungsten T: 101 x 77 x 15 mm
Zaurus: 138 x 74 x 21 mm
No built-in bluetooth either. Although wi-fi is easier to hook up with the CF slot.
That being said, your PDA decision isn't all about hardware. The breadth and depth of Palm peripherals and software is pretty compelling.
Re:I couldn't agree more (Score:2)
P.S. The Zaurus's input methods kick the shit out of the Palm's. On-screen stylus entry, where you can actually see the letter you're writing? Awesome. Built in QWERTY keyboard? Sweet.
Re:Zaurus - more value for your money (Score:2)
Cellular carriers (Score:3, Insightful)
Begging your pardon? Isn't this a GSM phone? Do the US carriers lock users in even on GSM networks? What's the point of having GSM then if you can't use whatever phone you like on whatever network you want and roam freely?
We may be behind the US on a lot of things here in Europe, but at least we got that right. My cellular carrier doesn't care, and it's none of their business, what kind of phone I use and where I bought it.
Speaking of my phone, I own a Nokia 7650. Can't see replacing it for the new Palm anytime soon, the Nokia does the same job in a smaller package.
Re:Cellular carriers (Score:2, Offtopic)
No, you didn't. One standard is great, but in the long run competing standards are more benificial. Look at CDMA - there are several healthy CDMA carriers in the US (Sprint, Verizion, etc.), and there are several TDMA/GSM carriers (ATT, T-Mobile). No, you can't use any phone on any service. No, that doesn't matter - phones are pretty much free over here. Some carriers do lock SIM cards, but most carriers don't even use them. I don't know about prices in Europe but I do know that they are falling like plutonium bricks over here. You can choose how you want your cellular too, unlimited local usage for $32/month (Cricket), pre-pay (ATT, Virgin Mobile, Others), free nights/weekends (several carriers), lots of "anytime" minutes (several carriers), no roaming/long distance (Sprint, ATT, others), mobile internet (Verizion, Sprint, AT&T, others), SMS (almost all carriers), etc.
OK, it's nice to have one standard for a whole continent. But, when comparing size and population, the US is pretty much the same as Western Europe. Everytime someone brags about having universal service throughout Europe, I respond with the fact that our service is pretty universal also. Coverage is pretty good, no matter what carrier you use. OK, so you can't use your AT&T phone if you want to switch to Verizion. Big deal, Verizion is perfectly happy to give you a free or nearly free phone.
Cellular service is different here. We are not Europe, and we do not try to be Europe. For better or worse, the government pretty much keeps it's hands out of things (although that is slowly changing). Instead of forcing one communication standard, the government has let the market decide. Ultimately, CDMA will probably win. Europe is stuck with TDMA GSM service. Why is CDMA better? Mostly because it can handle two to three times more calls per channel. CDMA is a better technology; even the European carriers recognize this (and are rushing to change their networks). I am not sure about costs today, but in the long run mobile phone service in the US will be cheaper than it is in Europe. It happened here with long distance (remember 25 cents a minute?), and it will happen with cellular service. Switching to CDMA is not hard in the US because we never had a standard. Sprint was CDMA from the start. No standard = best technology wins. Unfortunately, no standard = chaos. Until a few years ago, US cellular service was a joke - mostly analog service, with terrible digital coverage. Europe laughed, with good reason - our system sucked. Then CDMA came out, and carriers began to use it. CDMA put the heat on, and carriers responded with digital TDMA that didn't stink. The cellular systems in this country became digital almost overnight.
So, no, I can't take my SIM out and use my phone with a different carrier. But there are really only two GSM carriers, and GSM is not the wireless standard in the US. There really is no standard over here, which is a mixed blessing. Ultimately, however, the customer will win. TDMA is going to go away in the US; even AT&T will eventually migrate their network to CDMA.
I wouldn't have it any other way.
decent hardware, hamstrung OS (Score:5, Informative)
However, the software isn't all that great. Basically, under PalmOS 5, your application code runs as interpreted 68k instructions. Only system calls and some specially written subroutines (which, presumably, cannot make system calls), run as native ARM code. Presumably, this will get fixed with PalmOS 6.
What apparently won't get fixed is the basic PalmOS architecture. PalmOS was designed as a very lightweight OS for simple PDA applications: calendaring, TODO lists, etc., on very simple devices. It was fine for that: small and memory efficient.
But $500 devices like the Tungsten are in a different class. With ARM processors, they are more powerful than many workstations of a few years ago. You don't need that kind of device for basic PDA functionality--just buy a $100 Zire instead.
The reason why people pay $500 for a PDA is either because they want an executive toy, or it is for running "enterprise applications", multimedia apps, scientific apps, speech recognition, etc. And for that, PalmOS just sucks: the window system and toolkit are resolution dependent and simplistic, the file system is a hack, the system lacks installers or package managers, multitasking is poor, image support is poor, and on and on.
So, what does it all mean? If you want a PDA, get a Sony SJ-30 or a Palm Zire, or a Palm m500--they are great PDAs with great built-in apps. If you want a handheld to develop custom apps for, to port software to, etc., get a Linux PDA (or a PocketPC if you must)--you'll pay less and get something that's a whole lot better for the purpose.
Re:decent hardware, hamstrung OS (Score:5, Interesting)
Would have loved to. Only thing is, none of the Linux based PDA's provide any software for actually syncing to a Linux desktop! ACK! Okay, so I actually run FreeBSD on my desktop, but the same applies.
Bottom line, the only reasonable way to put a PDA to use today for a Unix user is to buy a Palm. Need Windows to actually use a Linux PDA... irony outta control or what?
Re:decent hardware, hamstrung OS (Score:4, Informative)
They actually do: because they just run Linux and store things in a Linux file system, you can use any of a large number of methods for synchronizing (rsync, unison, NFS, etc.) and remote access (ssh, X11, VNC, etc.).
the only reasonable way to put a PDA to use today for a Unix user is to buy a Palm
Well, as I was saying, for basic PDA functionality using the built-in Palm applications, I agree.
My point is: for anything beyond basic PDA functionality, PalmOS is not a good platform, at least not in the near future. And for custom or third party apps apps, you don't get any support from Palm for hotsyncing on Linux anyway--you are definitely better off there with Linux and Linux tools.
Re:the honest hardware, OS which hinders (Score:2)
Hmm... how about... moderate down?
Uses TI chipset ??? (Score:2)
Why 16mb?? (Score:4, Insightful)
WHY do even the newest PDA's on the market still come with 16mb of memory?? I mean seriously, when I can get a 128mb CF card for ~$50, you'd think that a $500 palm with multimedia capabilities might have a little more room to work with than a fscking 386!
Re:Why 16mb?? (Score:2)
The usual practice is to keep your applications and PDA data on the Palm, for which the 8Mb in my M505 is probably plenty, and then use a cheap MMC card (MMC is imperceptibly slower than SD cards but much cheaper) to store any sizable data, such as e-books, dictionaries, databases, PDFs, or with the new ones perhaps MP3 files (once someone writes an MP3 player for the Tungsten).
Amateur Radio (Score:2)
--Josh
Re:Amateur Radio (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Amateur Radio (Score:2)
Nice, but I'll hold for the new kyocera (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Nice, but I'll hold for the new kyocera (Score:2)
The Palm W is GSM, so I will definitely consider it. Unless Kyocera comes out with a GSM version, I couldn't care less.
The Tungsten W is DOA (Score:2)
The market has shown that any cell phone/PDA combo that is a PDA first and a cell phone second (Samsung I300, Audiovox Thera, Visorphone) has failed in the market.
Treos have done OK since they have focused more on making a good cell phone.
Kyoceras are VERY popular in the integrated phone/PDA market because of the following:
a) Phone first, not PDA. The Kyo 6035 has a keypad on top of the flip so you don't need to dial on the screen. (ugh, what crackhead came up with using the I300's creen for dialing?) In fact, the keypad has VERY large buttons compared to most cell phones, making dialing a breeze.
b) Battery life - The 6035 can go for a week or so between recharges in standby mode. 2-3 weeks or more if you turn the phone portion off. The Thera can go less than a day. The Tungsten W will probably be in the same boat.
c) Looks - The 6035 looks in form factor like a large phone. Not something dorky like the Visorphone. The 7135 will simply look like a large StarTAC. It wasn't long ago that normal cell phones were the same size or larger than the 6035 is today.
I have a 6035 and LOVE it. I can wait for the 7135, although if Verizon drops their data plan pricing to match Sprint's, that may change... (Sprint is not an option - They can't even cover 50% of the most densely populated state in the country and I regularly travel into Sprint non-coverage areas.)
no speaker? (Score:4, Insightful)
Handspring sure got it right when they decided to make the Treo a real phone. They make great phones without this headset nonsense.
Re:no speaker? (Score:2)
However, I believe Palm's take on this is that the W is a data access device, not a phone - the phone capability with the headset is an added bonus. They also mutter about using the headset allowing you to access data during a call, but this is a bit bogus, as of course you can do this with a speakerphone option or an optional headset.
Tungsten W - NO Graffiti ? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Tungsten W - NO Graffiti ? (Score:2)
Model name in Scandinavia? (Score:2, Interesting)
"Tung sten" means literally "heavy rock" in Swedish. I wouldn't buy a hand computer called that.
What is this 14MB==16MB thing? (Score:2)
Also, did anyone else notice that the "T" logo they use is remarkably similar to the Japanese symbol for Post Office? Maybe it will be a point of confusion or ridicule in Japan.
Size , etc m500 (Score:3, Interesting)
On the other hand I stuck with palm because its a useful device. I have a good graphing calculator for it, and I use it like a standard day planner with a book/news reader. My old palm IIIxe was great on batteries. They only required changing once ever few months. Combine that with the fact that the battery monitor accually seemed somewhat accurate meant that I had plenty of warning to change them. I don't want to have to carry a charging station for a week long trip. So, when I went looking for a new one I had a few things I wanted. Higher res, color screen, mp3 player, smaller, faster, more ram.
Well it turned out I bought a m500 not something with a higher res screen, color, mp3 player, or a device with more ram. I purchased it simply because it was the smallest palm I could find. My second choice was one of the little cli devices because of the higer res screen. The only problem is that for most applications the high res screen seems to be run in low res, the color isn't particularly useful, its nice to have... and its probably about 50% thicker than the m500. The m515 might have been a good choice if it had been the same size as the m500 (its about 30% thicker).
So in the end the deciding factor was size, my importance factors went something like.
Size most important, Useful battery life, high res display, ram, color, mp3 playback. In the end I came away from the whole market pretty discusted. The m500 isn't as small as I want (pcmcia card size), it has the same amount of ram(8 megs worked on the old device should contine to work) and the display is the same crappy low res greyscale.
Re:Holy crap (Score:4, Funny)
The same people who paid that much for less than 2 shares of VA Linux?
Oh wait... It's not 1999 anymore. I dunno. NOBODY???
Re:Don't even think about buying one. (Score:4, Insightful)
"Those Slashdot editors are right... If I had moderator points - bam!"
Your post is blatant flamebait. Cell phones are NOT PDAs for SEVERAL reasons:
Games and other applications are tightly controlled by the cell phone provider. While you may be able to find "cellphone Java" (the name of the Java variant they run escapes me) applications, good luck getting them to download to your phone. Cell phones ALREADY HAVE the worst of what we expect Palladium to be. If an app isn't signed and delivered (usually with a FEE) to your cell phone by your cell phone provider, you're not getting it on there. Another nice feature of some applications is that they expire or require you to be using Internet airtime minutes while they're running. Even if you want to download something as simple as images or ringtones to your phone, you're likely to be hit with a download fee and only able to download from your cell phone provider or a company that has an agreement with your provider.
Next comes the issue of getting data onto your phone... The screen is small and the entry interface (press each button over, and over, and over) is awful. You can't begin to compare it to the Palm or any other PDA at all.
Cell phones are designed to be a glorified phonebook and self-setting clock if you don't pay for service. The providers nickel and dime you for every feature you're used to getting for FREE with a PDA or portable PC device. If you want wireless communication - get a cell phone. If you want a personal digital assistant - get a Palm.
Re:Don't even think about buying one. (Score:5, Interesting)
With Siemens M50 we have not been able to load any midlets by any means. We even set up a WAP-server, but the phone just hangs.
But I wouldn't say the applications are tightly controlled by the provider, I don't think they are actively trying to hinder people, I just think some are being stupid with how you can install them.
Re:Don't even think about buying one. (Score:2)
This is complete FUD! You can also and very easily use a data cable to manage and transfer images, melodies and games if you have a data cable and it won't cost you anything. I do it all the time with my Siemens ME45. Also, I believe network operators aren't so keen on letting viruses/worms running wild on free downloads for freakin' mobile phones! Imagine the mayhem in countries with over 80% of the population having a mobile phone! Tech support hell! Most mobile phone owners aren't control-freak geeks, they just want to follow the instructions and get their game or whatever on their phone and have it running within a minute, period. Since most phones in circulation are under warranty, no wonder operators and manufacturers limit the kind of apps you can get, after all it'll cost *them* if *you* screw it up! If you really need a particular applet (you can even make yours!), use a data cable.
As to the download fee, it costs about the same than a couple of standard SMS to transfer a ringtone, logo or whatever you want and you may download from whatever source you want! As long as they support your phone, there shouldn't be any problem, no matter where they are. And if you want to transfer more, there are chances you'll use HSCSD or GPRS data transfer, in which case you shouldn't worry about the fractional costs of said games/ringtones/etc, given what you're already shelling monthly for all the services. I mean, you're not gonna have Kazaa running on it, right? There aren't *that many* games you can download yet and phones have limited memory.
Is it perhaps that you don't agree with paying for software or even paying for the data transfer? Wait for 3G or WiFi phones to pay a flat fee (hopefully) and stop bitching then!
Ever heard of T9? Works in my phone's agenda for data entry, damn quick. Sure it doesn't replace my real agenda (pen and paper, thank you) but is useful for setting alarms to important things. Oh, it also syncs Addressbook (complete Vcards) and agenda with Outlook (yuk) smoothly out of the box. May I suggest you try a better mobile phone before dismissing all of them?
Some cell phones, such as my Siemens, have decent enough PDA fuctionalities so that I don't feel the need for getting a new Palm (my IIIx being dead). The phone and a paper agenda do the trick perfectly and I only need a power outlet once a week to recharge the phone's battery. Also, I have one less worry about breaking the Palm and losing all my stuff, my phone is a ruggerised version which doesn't fear falling on concrete or in water. Try that with your Palm! As to the thin paper agenda, well...
You, sir, should open your eyes at what phone manufacturers produce nowadays, rather than basing your opinion on your 3 year-old Nokia. Heck, PDAs have already merged with cell phones, why not the opposite, to a limited level? Some manufacturers do it better than others. I suggest you visit the Siemens mobile phones site [my-siemens.com], their phones have much geekier functions than Nokia (except Communicator) and Sony/Ericsson ones.
Cheers,
max
Re:Don't even think about buying one. (Score:2)
There s nothing that these do that my old Palm III doesn't do other than the useless multimedia eye/ear candy. Palm made a HUGE mistake when they atarted making palm pilots.. they made them too good. I see many palm users still using their old devices and not buying new... I foolishly bought a Journada 420 back in 2000... I just gave it away to my ex-step-son last night It cost 3 times what my palm IIIx cost me, had a much faster processor, was color, etc... but completely and totally sucked compated to the palm pilot because of the instability of WinCE and how horibly slow it is compared to a palm device. (as well as the conduits and synch software really stinks/sucks/etc....)
I have tried many of the new palm and paml clone devices... the Treo 90 is really cool and the addition of a keyboard is plain awesome.... but I'm going to stay with my Palm IIIx until it dies or get's broken... as there is no other reason to buy another palm device....
Palm got it right the first time.... why should I replace a perfectly useable device that I am quite happy and comfortable with?
So you are right on the phones (I used to have a Qualicomm frankenstine that was phone+palm... it sucked!) but the other guys is also right.... no need whatsoever to buy a new one.
Which Qualcomm? (Score:2)
It seems like the pdQ got bashed by reviewers and by users, and overall just sucked. Didn't help that they were all single-band digital only.
The Kyocera 6035 (Essentially the pdQ version 2) had FAR better phone/Palm integration and is a VERY slick device. http://www.smartphonesource.com/ is the place to go for info and user comments on the phone.
Note that SMS won't even touch the pdQ. I think a total of 1 member used it and said it was a pretty crappy unit. Everyone LOVES their 6035s (including myself), and are drooling over the upcoming 7135.
Re:Don't even think about buying one. (Score:2)
Re:yes but... (Score:2)