Sharp C-700 English Conversion Pictures 100
BoogerBoy writes "When Sharp announced their clamshell designed
C-700 only in Japan I cried. Not anymore. It seems that only a week after its Japan release, the C-700 has been converted to English and for sale. Check out the pictures and brief English review."
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not enough ram... (Score:2)
Maybe when there's a 64M RAM and OpenZaurus is proven on it, but not as it is now.
Playboy Endorsed! (Score:2, Funny)
Actually it's not the link as such, its the fact that people actually DO read playboy articles
Playboy loves Mozilla, as well (Score:2, Insightful)
I understand that they have added slightly less coy naked people, too, but Playboy has always been a relatively well-rounded magazine, in fact considerably less horn-dog oriented than things like "Maxim," it's just that the women in Playboy aren't wearing clothing.
timothy
Maxim is a "men's" magazine run by women. . . (Score:1)
Stand up and be a man, and what's more, a *geek.*
Playboy really is the geek's magazine for nudity *and* content.
Asimov, Bradbury ( the space elevator appeared in Playboy before anywhere else. If you weren't reading Playboy you were behind the tech curve), Ellison and many other geek favorites were in the habit of publishing first in Playboy. Gahan Wilson and Shel Silverstien also called Playboy home. The "Playboy lifestyle" was always heavily geek oriented with the latest and greatest of tech, both mechanical and electronic.
A good review in Playboy has always been a highly desirable commodity in the electronics world. The idea that Sharp would link to one is hardly surprising or amusing.
And it doesn't hurt that they present naked women as objects of art and beauty without treating you, or *them*, as being some sort of perv. We were all born naked, and frankly, it's this neurotic focus on clothing and the denial of sexuality that's the perversion.
Magazines like Maxim are obsence they way they actually pander to this neurosis.
KFG
If it only had more memory ... (Score:5, Interesting)
This would be great on airplanes / in the car / anywhere a full-size laptop is overkill or just awkward.
However, as the review here points out, it doesn't have much storage space of either variety. I guess the ideal I'm hankering for would be something like this Zaurus (small, protected screen, built-in QWERTY keyboard) and the yet-unreleased OQO.
*Even* if it was only used as a small gaming / music / movie machine (a tiny all-media device), it would be very nice, if only there was more room on there. That it's also a nice computer for other things, even better -- if there was more room
(And Yes, microdrives can carry a fair amount, but a) they're quote expensive and b) maybe the bad apples get more news, but there seem to be a lot of complaints re: reliability. An ipod-size 10 or 20GB drive, that would be something, could carry several movies, days worth of audio, important files you don't want lost when the burglars invade your unoccupied home, etc.)
timothy
Get a Toshiba Libretto! (Score:1, Interesting)
Get a toshiba libretto! [silverace.com]
7.1" TFT screen, laptop hard drive (have a 40 giger in mine) and fits in your pocket...
http://www.silverace.com/libretto/librettocontent. html
;)
--
This baby is THE BEST tool I have for my in the field digital photography... 3x the display size of the camera LCD, and portable. Way better than any XDrive or other poirtable camera image storage devices.. and itll play mp3s, so its cheaper than an ipod
Used, about 100$ for a Libretto 110! It'll be your favorite pda sized PC!
Re:Get a Toshiba Libretto! (Score:2)
You must have BIG pockets! :) (Score:1)
Are you kidding? I will definitely agree that the libretto (I owned an s1100 for a while) is a nice smaller alternative to a laptop, but (IMHO) there is no way you can comfortably carry one in your pocket on a regular basis. But then again, you never claimed "comfort".
I think the size of the sl-c700 is close to perfect. It appears to be the same form factor as the older zaurus zr5000 which I could carry around in my pants pocket comfortably. Even if they COULD make it smaller, the keyboard size would become too small for comfortable "3 finger typing". What they need is a tiny butterfly keyboard like one of the old IBM thinkpads.
Re:If it only had more memory ... (Score:1)
I used mine with a notepad app to work on the ferry to work and on 9 hour flights, and the battery lasted most of the flight.
I've thought about checking Ebay to see what the prices are like now. It's too bad Microsoft and its' hardware thralls have abandoned that mini-laptop form factor.
If I needed
A full-sized laptop... (Score:2, Insightful)
Okay, okay, I'm sure a lot of people will disagree, but with today's laptops being relatively lightweight and inexpensive, I don't see the point of these little doohickeys.
Give me my *real* computer, with 256mb of DDR SDRAM, 40gig hard drive, and DVD/CDRW. I can play The Sims while I'm waiting for classes to start, take notes on a keyboard large enough for serious typing, listen to as many MP3s as I can rip onto my hard drive... and keep my schedule and appointments and everything else close at hand, too.
Give me that over a $700 PDA any day.
I agree -- most of the time ;) (Score:1)
given certain circumstances, I'd much rather have a real laptop for the same reasons you name -- screen, storage, battery, drives
However, I'd also like a way to have a computer with me at all times, for the same reasons that people go wild about wearable computers -- I'd like to have it as a (and these are just for instances
- walkman
- notebook
- address list
- to-do-list
- camera (even if that takes a little camera dongle)
- calculator
- book (lots of gutenberg texts loaded on),
- micro-TiVo (a few episodes of A&E's occasional Nero Wolf movies in DivX;), say)
- voice recorder
- GPS and map holder
And I want this magic device to be hand-sized, not cost to much, and use readily replaceable rechargeable batteries, AA for instance.
Sure, that might make it a jack of all trades / master of none, but being able to fit in a pocket would go a long way toward earning forgiveness.
A lot of these things are taken care even by current Palm OS devices or those little pocket PCs, but not all, and certainly not perfectly.
timothy
Re:If it only had more memory ... (Score:1)
I admit that it's a bit pricey, but hey, the geekness factor is hard to beat!
Re:If it only had more memory ... (Score:2)
* Newton 2100: my PDA. all my college lecture notes and field data collection in a spreadsheet;
* Jornada 720: Handheld/PC- great keyboard a nice 640x240 screen. Main drawback is that the screen isn't reflective and is impossible to read in the out of doors. Great for coding, writing in LaTeX, sshin around without having a full laptop. And yes, all of this is under WinCE.
* iBook: nice computer, but I really wish I could run all of my machines on solar. Silly dream perhaps, but we all have them.
I have a 2 GB Toshiba PCMCIA drive that I swap between the Jornada 720 and the Newton with music and data. Cost me a wee $80. It's the same kind you find in the iPod, but smaller. You can buy the 5, 10 and 20 GB versions, but at least in the 20 GB case, it'd be cheaper to buy an iPod and yank out the drive.
I was looking at the new Zaurus as something that could possibly do the same thing that I'm using my Newton and Jornada for, but it doesn't look like it. Without a reflective screen, there's no way it could replace them. But it would be nice to have a PCMCIA slot like my Jornada (it has both that and CF!)
I can't wait til the OQO. I almost did an advance order deposit (they're shipping in April), but I wanted to make sure it was what I wanted.
Re:If it only had more memory ... (Score:2)
You do realize that solid-state 1 GB CF cards have been on the market for some time now right?
There have also been announcements for 3 GB Type II CF cards from Pretec.
Granted, they will be pretty expensive at first, but they shouldn't have the reliability issues. I wouldn't be surprised if a 10 GB CF card came out in a couple years.
large CF cards (Score:1)
hmmm, checking pricewatch, I find a lowball offer of $142 for brand-unspecified 512MB CF card, which is really much better than I thought they were right now. Of course, prices tend to get non-linear toward the edges, and there are no listings for 1GB CF cards as of right now on pricewatch.
a 10GB CF card would be nice; I hope that SD and MM cards don't displace CD cards before that can happen
timothy
Ultra, cool?? (Score:2, Interesting)
Lets face it people, what is it a PDA can do, that a watch/planner/and calculator can't (and lets just say a highend TI calc for all of you who want to say "play games") besides "RUN LINUX" there isn't anything. Go get a cheap used laptop, it will run at 640x480, run linux, and have all the features a zarus has, well except fit in your pocket.
I think these things clock in high on the "neat-o" scale, but that's about it, how do you justify 7 bones on a PDA?
Re:Ultra, cool?? (Score:2)
Re:Ultra, cool?? (Score:3, Insightful)
I can't afford the C-700, I paid about $400 for my 5500 and I think it was worth the money. "Runs Linux" is nothing to sneeze at. It means that there are lots of free applications that I'm familiar with that works on the zaurus.
For me the biggest ones are emulators and network testing tools. A PDA that does all that plus fits in your pocket is worth the money.
I think these things clock in high on the "neat-o" scale, but that's about it, how do you justify 7 bones on a PDA?
Some people have the money and/or the need.
Re:Ultra, cool?? (Score:2)
But for equivalent functionality don't forget to budget for a monitor, an AC generator and a really huge (and well-ventilated) pair of trousers.
Re:Ultra, cool?? (Score:2)
You can get pretty much the same thing by buying a Palm m105 and a folding keyboard to go with it. Minus a few features of dubious value, like a colour screen. It'll cost about 1/3 as much however.
The thing that a watch/planner/calculator/notepad/gameboy/e-book reader combination can't do that a PDA can is be all in the same device. That's one of the reasons they're so wonderful. You pick up the one device and you're set. It's also worth noting that there still aren't any watches that can function like the alarm clock feature of Palm's datebook, and no paper notepads that can rearrange themselves and be sorted alphabetically like Palm's to-do list.
Deja vu (Score:2, Informative)
Interface?? (Score:1)
Re:Interface?? (Score:2)
Swiveling screens.. (Score:2)
Lots of flaws in that unit (Score:2)
http://www.qart.com.pl/opisy2/Sony-Vaio-PCG-U1.
http://www.japanrush.com/pcg-u1.asp
lots of flaws in Windows (Score:2)
My younger brother's box (900mhz w/ winshit XP) can't run Quake 3 and gets a "Calender Error" whenever ANYTHING tries to open a socket! Who the hell calls that "easy"!?
a picture (Score:2)
This article seems to disagree with the one linked to on ram, but this article calls it "flash ram" which probably means swap. I use OZ with 64mb of ram and 0 of ramdisk on my SL-5500.
Manadory Bitching about *MY* Submission (Score:1)
Re:Manadory Bitching about *MY* Submission (Score:2)
Look at my nick...oh, hell.
Maybe I should change my nick to "Anime_Jedi_Master".
Re:Manadory Bitching about *MY* Submission (Score:1)
Re:Manadory Bitching about *MY* Submission (Score:1)
Re:Manadory Bitching about *MY* Submission (Score:1)
Why don't they ever include SSH as a base package? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why is it that when companies make these devices, they never consider the posibility that someone might actually want to use these things as portable terminals?
And that perhaps, just perhaps, that person will want to do it securely via SSH?
I'm glad it runs linux. It means that it is only a hop/skip/jump away from recompiling ssh to run on the device.
I just wish that SSH should be a defacto and not a "special" package you add on for a large sum of cash.
Re:Why don't they ever include SSH as a base packa (Score:2)
Its been awhile since I used the Sharp rom for the Zaurus, but atleast on OZ ssh-server and client are preinstalled.
Re:Why don't they ever include SSH as a base packa (Score:1)
Yes, I've been to the OZ site. But that is OpenZaurus. That's a non-standard configuration of the Zaurus. The standard one(5500 or 5600) doesn't have SSH installed.
Re:Why don't they ever include SSH as a base packa (Score:2)
Re:Why don't they ever include SSH as a base packa (Score:1)
Heh. I tend to agree with you. Most "pda" ROMs really aren't designed for flexibilty. I mean, don't get me wrong. My intent IS to install linux on the PDAs that I get. So I'm in favour of the OZ installation. My point was that manufacturers aren't taking the more technically minded into consideration as much as we would like them to.
I think I mentioned it in another post, but I think the OZ installation is great. Though stopping by the local Frys, the keypad is a bit small for me, which is why I opted for the Psion 5. ^_^;;
Not the intended market (Score:3, Insightful)
"special" package requiring cash, nope.
PS. I own one, heck I was the person to first get mplayer ported to it. We also have the battle of the media players xmms-embedded/mplayer vs opieplayer2/xine (right now, x/m is much much better), but your average person DOESN'T care. They just use the lousy built-in player for the most part.
Re:Not the intended market (Score:1)
Out of curiosity, is this on the "stock" zaurus or is this on a OZ installed Zaurus?
I realise that SSH/terminal isn't a functionality which the masses are interested in and that it puts a burden on the system. Still, it can be a deciding factor for the people who are actually buying it if it can communicate on more protocols.
Btw, I've visited the OZ site and the package is really sweet. Unfortunately, given the change in economy, I can't justify buying a new piece of gear. :| Kinda stuck with my Psion 5. ^_^;
Re:Not the intended market (Score:2)
when I get the time and such I am going to OZ 3, as it seems more stable (than OZ 3), haven't had a stability problem with the standard rom, etc.
sorta off topic... anime mice (Score:1)
Re:sorta off topic... anime mice (Score:1)
Yeah, I've seen them.
Designed by various anime artists. There are supposed to be three models. One is designed by the artist behind "Ghost in the shell". There are two more, but they don't immediately come to mind. It was covered on slashdot a few months back though, so it might be worthwhile to do a search. :)
get a real laptop instead (Score:2)
Although I haven't used it myself, from the specs, the Fujitsu Lifebook P1000 [fujitsupc.com] looks like a much better alternative, and at $1200 it isn't all that much more expensive. With an extended battery, it runs for 9 hours. Sony's Picturebook series is another ultra-portable choice.
Re:get a real laptop instead (Score:1)
The newer Librettos are probably more what you're looking for (and slightly more Linux-friendly than the Sony sub-notebooks).
Re:get a real laptop instead (Score:2)
The Libretto isn't officially sold or supported in the US, and it's $600 more. I don't think it's a real alternative to either.
Re:get a real laptop instead (Score:1)
Re:get a real laptop instead (Score:1)
Re:get a real laptop instead (Score:2)
Dave
Re:get a real laptop instead (Score:2)
Awww.. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Awww.. (Score:2)
Give it time, bochs is running on it.
Is it just me... (Score:1)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2)
Sharp Zaurus SL-5500 for sale- like new! (Score:2)
it also works as a netowrk monitoring tool (Score:3, Informative)
Well the Zaurus first of all is a Handheld - not a PDA - clear distinction there.
And to talk of the tools, you can remotely SSH into it, use it as a network too, demo (note I said demo, not use, so dont flame me there) Apache with PHP pages (even MySQL databse) on it to client on the move, SAMBA to Linux/Windows machines for tuning/Administering etc, use for VoIP long distance from a decent internet conncetion location, of course check your emails and all that regular stuff, do a full fledged internet browsing using Opera/Netfront (not your palm web-clipped stuff here), tenet into your university unix box and fetch your emails etc or lab notes...
I could tell you some more such PRACTICAL apps which the Zaurus provides and it IS a lot more carryable than lugging around the laptop - you got to agree to that.
What about an 80-column screenshots? (Score:2)
(I'm running the Crow ROM on my Zaurus, which lets me put /home onto an SD card and get 64Mb as application RAM; can the '700 do something similar?)
no, no and no. (Score:2, Interesting)
1) The ugly gui. [rr.com]
2) the high price.
3) the people who like it eat at McDonalds. [rr.com]
Is it just me... (Score:1)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:3, Insightful)
the 320x240 is about the same size as my Zaurus, so screen shots for it look about right.
scaling one of the images down, it doesn't look bad, but I agree the icons look flat, the widgets don't look bad. (of course IMO)
Why can't Linux developers create a decent GUI? (Score:1)
Re:Why can't Linux developers create a decent GUI? (Score:1)
Looking at the picture... (Score:2)
Thank you for the interest... (Score:3, Interesting)
Please understand that my efforts have been in the conversion and I have not dedicated as much time into using the unit, but for the few things that I have used it for... it is remarkable.
LD
Re:Thank you for the interest... (Score:1)
Re:Thank you for the interest... (Score:1)
This is Linux and new applications are coming out every day for it.
LD
If it really were... (Score:1)
This was also pointed out on zaurus.com.
LD
Sharp bringing to US 2003q1, lots more story links (Score:2, Informative)
Here are some other useful SL-C700 links I've found in the last week or so:
MobileNews article with LOTSA pix [mobilenews.ne.jp] (in Japanese, but the pix are easy to see).
Here is a mobigeeks blurb (with several off-links to other interesting places, also a forum).
About a quarter of the way down this page [digit-life.com], there are some good closeup pix.
Here is an nvmax.com article [nvmax.com], describing Dynamism's efforts, and several other off-links.
Here is Sharp's own page [sharp.co.jp], also in Japanese, but has a couple of decent pix.
Here's a German article [golem.de], with a good description of the specs.
Re:Sharp bringing to US 2003q1, lots more story li (Score:1)
I have spoken with Sharp USA about this. They are going to test the US market interest in January, but do not know if there will be a release. They did tell me that if there was a release, it would be after Q1.
LD
DOH! (Score:1)
yep, innovative (Score:1)
yep. it's just about as innovative as the toshiba portege 3500 I'm writing this on right now. Too bad it doesn't have the MS Tablet PC API, or an electromagnetic-resistive screen. what a tragedy. It occurs to me that it must be lame when MS does it, but innovative if it runs linux. And no, I'm not a troll. People here just tend not to like anything that microsoft puts out, but will call it the greatest thing since sliced bread the second someone ports linux to the damned thing.
Last Post! (Score:1)
so etwas wie ein real existierender Sozialismus der besseren Art...
-- Christian Seel in der Berliner Morgenpost v. 9.3.1997
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