Farewell to PDAs, Hello to Smart Phones 162
Roland Piquepaille writes "Is it time to get rid of your PDA? Apparently yes, according to General Motors, writes Ephraim Schwartz in InfoWorld.The subtitle of this story is pretty clear: "GPS, Java, and push-to-talk give smart phones a clear edge over PDAs." "General Motors announced last week that it will partner with wireless carrier Nextel to use Nextel?s Motorola cell phones with data capabilities to market a field-force management application to its commercial truck fleet customers." GM chose these cell phones because people feel more comfortable with, but also because they can run sophisticated applications. And of course, because they are cheaper than handhelds, both to purchase and to maintain. Check this column for a summary and references."
Darth Vader's PDA (Score:5, Funny)
Not quite right... (Score:4, Insightful)
I've had the chance to play with some of the new offerings from Sony-Ericsson, Nokia and Samsung and honestly they are barely different from a small Palm.
Re:Not quite right... (Score:3, Interesting)
Why two devices? Phones and PDA's have different technical requirements taht don't easily combine. A cell phone uses a minimal screen, needs about 12 buttons, uses audio and has a short battery ilfe. 2-5 hours talk time.
PDA's need large screen
Re:Not quite right... (Score:2)
You should take another look at the phone store, the new SonyEricsson p800 has a screen almost the size of the phone itself and instead of buttons has a touch-sensative screen a la Palm. Yet it acts and feels just like the cell phones that you use right now.
If it had G3 support and didn'
The merger of phone & PDA has begun. (Score:2)
After all, the Handspring Treo incorporates the function of the Handspring Visor PDA into a GSM-compatible cellphone; Samsung last year released a cellphone with similar features.
I expect within 2-3 years many high-end cellphones will be like the T-Mobile Sidekick, with full PDA functions complete with small keyboard on one unit with a separate headset; it will sport Bluetooth functions that allow the unit to ope
Re:Not quite right... (Score:2)
I'll keep my PDA/handheld and mobi
I'm with you entirely. (Score:2)
I've now replaced both with a P800. It's a little bit bigger than my old phone, but still easily fits in my pocket and more importantly does absolutely everything I want. Whilst
It may be smart. (Score:2, Insightful)
OK smart guy (Score:2)
Is it really time? (Score:4, Insightful)
Definitely no, according to anybody who wants to partition their personal data into a private space unconnected to snoops, spies, and busybodies.
I prefer to be the only bridge between some information and the outside world. So I say 'no thank you' to the notion that everything on my PDA should be connected in real time to a telephone/digital network every time I make a phone call.
Nope. Not interested.
Re:Is it really time? (Score:2)
Paranoia like this is stupid. Yes, you make a phone call. This doesn't mean that your entire address book gets sent at the same time, nor does it mean that your folder full of hot hot 120x90 pr0n get
Re:Is it really time? (Score:3, Insightful)
And ask Outlook Express users about their entire address book getting sent all at the same time...
don't be ridiculous (Score:3, Insightful)
The point is not what there IS, but the potential damage/loss because of the open availability of that information.
I can use the metaphor of an open house, "why lock your home, what do you have that is valuable?". Or furthermore, why don't you live in a completely transparent house where passer-bys can see what you are doing? What can be so interesting about your life that peop
Re:don't be ridiculous (Score:2)
That'd be a useful metaphor if I *did* lock my house. I don't. I don't have anything valuable in there.
Re:don't be ridiculous (Score:2)
Re:Is it really time? (Score:2)
A certian level of paranoia is stupid. Other levels of paranoia are not.
His level of paranoia seems reasonable to me.
He's not trying to protect against, say, a government attack using unlimited resources. He's simply insuring that the only possible way information crosses fro
Most cell phones are also closed platforms (Score:2)
Not for me... (Score:3, Insightful)
But let's face it, prodding at that kind of keypad with an index finger is not a convenient user interface. I use WAP quite rarely since it it's usually much more convenient to wait a little while until I have a moment to sit down at a proper computer.
For god sake, how conservative can you get? (Score:2)
Frankly, I don't really see the point. I walk when I want to make journeys. I can carry things in my hands. Lets face it, pushing on the handles of that 'cart' thing with the 'wheels' on is not a convenient user interface... and who needs this newfangled fire stuff to keep warm? It's usu
Re:For god sake, how conservative can you get? (Score:2)
Actually, this is what I have in my pockets at the moment:
wallet
phone (Ericsson T65)
ballpoint pen
keys.
I really don't see why I have to carry around heaps of crap just to look cool.
Re:For god sake, how conservative can you get? (Score:2)
Re:For god sake, how conservative can you get? (Score:2)
I'll keep my pda (Score:5, Funny)
I plan on
seeing my
====>next
information
in chunks
greater than
====>next
16kb at a
time!
Re:I'll keep my pda (Score:2)
Actually, it's 176x208.
Re:I'll keep my pda (Score:2)
The first thing I did when I got mine was uninstall all the bundled demo-ware games and apps. Oh yeah, and make sure you go to Nokia [nokiausa.com] and patch the video recorder so it records audio correctly.
-Pat
Already? (Score:1)
but I just got it [tigerdirect.com] on Tuesday!! Do I really need to ditch it already? It's soooo sweet!!! =D
comfort a question? (Score:1)
IMHO the people that are not comfortable with PDA's don't use the calendar and such features on a cell phone. What the cell-phone plan does is let people carry around less bulk. (IMHO people will leave there palms in the car and take there cell phones to the office and not the other way around)
All programs evolve until they can send e-mail, (Score:3, Funny)
Try it this way: (Score:2)
Health concerns (Score:1, Insightful)
My problem with current cell phone/PDA combos (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's what I would do if I were them: start with a really good PDA, much like the current line of PDA's from the well-known brands. That means you have Java, you could add GPS and whatever, you already have an address and phone book, and a means to enter phone numbers and SMS messages easily. To add phone functionality, all you need is a GSM/GPRS module, and perhaps a mike and loudspeaker.
Another thing: PDA's are fully programmable. Here's a tip for mobile data providers, we don't need proprietary mobile data applications, we just need data transport. Once we have that and our programmable PDA's, we can build our own apps. We don't have or want to rely on silly protocols such as SMS or MMS either: just let us send regular emails, perhaps with an attachment.
In other words, try making a cell phone out of an organiser, not the other way around.
Re:My problem with current cell phone/PDA combos (Score:2)
Too often though people buy in to the plans that don't have the email. They only have the direct-to-phone-number type (which aren't compatible between carriers here). Quite annoying.
Re:My problem with current cell phone/PDA combos (Score:1)
Well actually Kyocera has done a decent job of this. I just recieved my 7135 smartphone, and oh baby is it sweet. Only a little bigger than a Motorola StarTac too. 65k color screen, Palm OS 4.1. What's interesting is the phone itself is a palm application - if a call comes in while you're firing off an e-mail or playing Lemmings, it'll pause that app so you can take the call. Even upload MP3s as ringers
Suppo
Kyocera 6035 (Score:2)
I've had my Kyocera 6035 for over a year now, use it every day, and love it. The only things that I would change are 1)add a Color screen , and 2) get a somewhat smaller form factor. It's about the same size as a regular palm pilot, which makes it huge in terms of current gen cell phones.
When it gives up the ghost, I will move straight to the 7100, or to an equivalent *nix based one.
PDA cellphone already done? (Score:2)
Isn't that what the Handspring Treo [handspring.com] is? I'm not sure what can be done about the SMS problem, except that most carriers are building out their web services and may offer "normal" email one day. Old Palm software suffers from it's legacy roots as a plug it into the PC to work thingy. It would "sync" with an email client instead of having it's own mail agent. PDA's like the Zaurus are finally breaking away from that mod
What like the PocketPC Phone Edition? (Score:2)
Re:What like the PocketPC Phone Edition? (Score:2)
http://www.wirelessnewsfactor.com/perl/story/21 5 35
Also, you can't find their PocketPC Phone Edition available for sale on their website anymore.
I personally use a Handspring Visor Pro w/ a VisorPhone attachment. True, it's a bit bulky, but that's never really bothered me. Plus, it's a full-sized PDA, and if something should happen to my Visor Pro... I have a 2 MB Visor I can plug the VisorPhone into in case of emergency.
Just my $.02...
Hahahah (Score:1)
I ditched my Palm two years ago. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I ditched my Palm two years ago. (Score:2)
Re:I ditched my Palm two years ago. (Score:2)
Form Factors (Score:3, Interesting)
I genuinely like my m125. But hold it up to my ear and talk? Nope, it's not a comfortable size and shape. My phone has a scheduler and various unused contact management features, mostly because it's a pain to input.
I drool at the gadget stores each time I see a new version, but so far I've been disappointed in what I've gotten my hands on.
My current thought: Bluetooth running from a PDA to a bug in my ear would be really cool. But cool does not make practical, and I expect to be disappointed with that, as well.
I think I'll stick with single-purpose tools that do their one job well, and hope that everyone gets their poop in a pile and offers good interoperability. It's a time honored tradition!
Is this the Linux-powered motorola phone? (Score:2)
Does anyone know if this is the Linux powered [bargainpda.com] motorola phone?
May not always want a phone (Score:5, Insightful)
"But, it's my organizer..."
"Sorry, it's a phone. Put it away."
Re:May not always want a phone (Score:1, Interesting)
Even if you did manage to persuade the stewards, every passenger would say something when passing you on the way to the bathroom.
Re:May not always want a phone (Score:2)
Atleast until my plan of labeling all fools is successful.
Re:May not always want a phone (Score:2, Informative)
Re:May not always want a phone (Score:2)
Re:May not always want a phone (Score:2)
I guess you could run into a cast-iron idiot up there, but by and large if you can make a case that you're in compliance they don't want to hassle you, and don't really have a lot of time to either.
This begs the question (Score:2)
Huh? (Score:2)
Is this something that will let them fire/layoff people remotely? That's what "force management" tends to mean to me.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Oh yeah, paperless pink slip. It's so much cheaper to give someone a pink slip, but hey this is the 00's. Gotta keep up with the newest way of shit-canning.
-employee recieves gadget labled "force management" and nervously turns it on.
Gadget: You are fired. Plese press the X to callibrate the screen, then follow the directions.
Cool, the supervisor does not even have to waste his l
Re: (Score:1)
Re:I don't like phones. (Score:2)
Mobile phone is the same, except now people can annoy me while I'm out as well as home.
Differing design requirements... (Score:4, Insightful)
PDAs have to be easy to use, powerful, flexible, colour, large screens. When you add these features to phones, you lose the easy to carry and battery lifetime features of phones.
All of the smartphones i've seen have made poor PDAs and poor phones.
Re:Differing design requirements... (Score:1)
Something most pda's are getting away from now is that pda!=multimedia. I want to use my pda as an organizer. I couldn't care less about video or taking shitty 640x480 pictures with it which seem to be the l33t features all these new cell phones have. Playing mp3s might be cool though....
My cell phone's a Nokia 3360, it's tiny, gets good reception, and is braindead easy to use (just like my Visor). I don't really want
Re:Differing design requirements... (Score:2)
If they merge, then neither is rendering the other obsolete. It just means that either one on it's own is no longer as important - once the cost is not important.
Re:Differing design requirements... (Score:2)
The QCP-6035 actually has excellent battery life. (Perhaps some of that stems from the fact the phone itself is on the large side, allowing a fairly good sized battery to fit in it. But in any case, it has standby and talk times greater than many r
Re:Differing design requirements... (Score:2)
Keep them separate! (Score:2)
However, I don't want a combination unit. Why? My cell phone is small, stylish, and convenient. Adding a reasonably sized PDA screen to it would make it bulky and inconvenient, at least for me.
I know a lot of people who feel the same way. Therefore, I think that stand alone cell phones, stand alone PDA's, and combination u
Reasons why NOT to combine the two (Score:5, Insightful)
2) PDAs should have long battery life. But they don't when part of a power-guzzling cellphone.
3) Can't talk and tap at the same time. Unless you've brought along the earpiece attachment. But then there you go carrying two objects again.
4) PDA/cellphones usually seem to be less expandable or a few OS versions behind the latest solo PDAs.
5) In the US, switching to a different wireless carrier means switching to a different phone. With a combo unit, you'd have to switch to a different PDA too.
Re:Reasons why NOT to combine the two (Score:2)
Re:Reasons why NOT to combine the two (Score:2)
The Kyocera 7135 [kyocerasmartphone.com] is only a couple of millimeters bigger than a Motorola Startac, a very popular phone. As for being too small for a PDA, the 2" screen of the 7135 is quite readable and bright (even outdoors). Also, because the number of pixels on the screen is the same as a regular Palm device, the pixel density is higher which makes the image sharper (more pixels/inch).
Re:Reasons why NOT to combine the two (Score:2)
2) Well if you're used to charging your cellphone every couple of days, then why can't you just charge your cell/pda every couple of days?
3) The earpiece should be a lot smaller than a cell phone or pda, so the only real weight/size is with the pda. If you can't carry around a little earpiece then where do you plan on carrying your pda?
4) This is something the providers have to workout. But it's
Re:Reasons why NOT to combine the two) (Score:2)
Interesting. (And informative +1). But what I was thinking about is the inevitable situation where your cellphone's battery dies. I realize this doesn't happen to super well-organized and methodical people who recharge every night, but it's happened to me on more than a few occasions. I don't wan't to be sans PDA because I've used up the battery yakking. And I suppose on
Corporate Decisions (Score:1)
Re:Corporate Decisions (Score:2, Insightful)
Bring on the smart phones (Score:1)
Technology schmechnology (Score:1)
In this case, Java/WebSphere has been available for PDA's for a long time, but isn't being used, because it doesn't add anything useful. Other technologies are being used just as much on PDAs as on cell phones, when actually useful.
Yes, phones may win, but Occam's razor t
PDA's stink anyway (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:PDA's stink anyway (Score:2)
Re:PDA's stink anyway (Score:3, Interesting)
The last thing I want anyway is to be constantly wired up so that idiots can call me and instant message me about problems they could solve themselves if they used their brains instead of their phones.
Try the following:
Phones Suck (Score:1)
Re:Phones Suck (Score:2)
That requires a keyboard to carry out with anything resembling efficiency, which I don't think anybody would want to do. Even the fold-up keyboards for Palms and such are a bit much to carry around. As for entering email in your phone, it's way too cumbersome when you have only 12 keys through which you enter 96 possible (ASCII) characters. Sending email through a phone is little more than a gimmick, and it will remain a gimmick until s
I agree with the guy from GM (Score:2)
For several years I've used different Palm PDA's with Nokia cell phones. But the Smartphone actually does both things well enough (i.e. being a PDA and being a phone), and it is small and stylish enough not to be a nuisance.
I know, I know, a lot of you will rush in to tell me how Microsoft Smartphones suck and so on, but I think that the UI of the Smartphone is really good and in some ways innovative and simplified wh
Re:I agree with the guy from GM (Score:2)
Pretty big leap (Score:2)
PDAs, maybe - pocket computers, no (Score:3, Insightful)
These limitations (and I know that not all Palm-style machines have them all, but it's a common impression) don't apply to all palmtops. Mine has a keyboard you can touch-type on; I've used it to write articles for publication, large applications, etc. It has a 640x240 screen that's plenty wide enough to read books, web pages, spreadsheets, etc. Its OS (EPOC, the forerunner of Symbian OS currently powering many mobile phones [symbian.com]) is exceptionally stable -- apart from hardware failure, I don't think it's crashed once. Although I have a powerful desktop machine, I only connect to it for backups; everything I use my Psion for stays there, and I've never felt the need to sync with anything else. I have lots of powerful applications at my fingertips: office apps that can exchange files with Word and Excel, route planning/GPS, capable web browsers, a Doom engine and many other games, you name it.
People are often amazed by the things I've got to hand: the Concise Oxford Dictionary, Brewer's, Webster's, the Jargon File, and loads of similar reference works; three different Bible translations; MBs of fiction and other books; the core data from the IMDB, etc. Most of the time it's my only email client, and also my only Off-Line Reader for the CIX [cix.co.uk] BBS, holding well over 100,000 messages -- both connecting via my mobile phone as well as land lines. It has Java, Perl, Python, and also a powerful built-in language called OPL (recently open-sourced [symbian.com]); and it's possible to do full-scale development on it (I know coz I'm co-author of the OLR [itl.net] mentioned before). It uses standard TrueType &c fonts, displays PDFs, connects with FTP and telnet, plays back MP3s, and loads more. In short, it's a fully-fledged, powerful computer in its own right.
I mention all this not to show off (well, maybe just a bit :) but to show that there's much more to pocket computers than most people think. (Lots of folks, especially in the USA, have never heard of Psions, which is a shame. Although they're no longer made, second-hand ones are highly sought-after.) And yet most people still think of a palmtop as something just for looking at a few agenda entries, checking a few addresses, and playing a few games.
If that's all you think a PDA is good for, then no wonder people think you can squeeze it all onto a phone! But for those of us who really use our palmtops, this seems a waste, a travesty of what mobile computing could be.
OTOH, maybe things aren't so depressing. It's possible that once all those simple PDA functions have been transferred to phones, that there will be room for some market differentiation, and that more powerful palmtops might become more popular. When Psion pulled out of the consumer market, their message was effectively "everyone wants Palms; too few people want something more powerful". Maybe if all of those light users move onto something even smaller (in every respect), there will be enough of us left for it to be worth making powerful pocket computers again.
Well, I can hope...
Re:PDAs, maybe - pocket computers, no (Score:2)
As you say, I can't wait for a new machine of similar power arrives. Open-source based would be nice, but EPOC is so well optimised for best use of the available screen space, application switching, use of the touch screen, etc. that I'd be surprised to find anything else as useful for a long wh
Re:PDAs, maybe - pocket computers, no (Score:2)
Smartphone cheaper then PDA? (Score:2)
And of course, because they are cheaper than handhelds, both to purchase and to maintain
I wonder if this is because the smart phones are subsidised by the phone networks, who make additional income from a contract and services (voice, SMS, MMS, GPRS, downloading games/ringtones etc.. and any other features that can be used from the smartphone).
I'd doubt that the Bill Of Materials is much different for both device...
PDA? Laptop! (Score:2)
I wonder when the cell phones will get embedded printers, scanners and DVD-burners (keeping already embedded PDAs, camera and MP3 players)? That's the direction they push the cell phone market, isn't i
modular laptop (Score:1)
I dissagree (Score:4, Interesting)
Just like a PC + mouse + display are 3 devices but get really usefull as combined: computer.
I expect my phone to be very smal, enough power to phone for 4 to 6 hours and standby time for 3 days or more. It should be easy wearable at my belt or in my trousers pocket. Just liek the Motorola Star TAC or ist similar looking successors.
My PDA should be bigger, I dont want such a smal display like UTMS phones have on my PDA, neither I want a bigger phone to have a bigger display.
My PDA shold be a extension to my personal computer, having snapshots of my important data on it.
I expect PDA and Phone to interact seemlessly via bluethoos, where the phone recognices the adressbook on the PDA as extension
My PDA however should not need to get configured to be internet or local network aware. It should just recognize my phone as network adapter. Also via Bluetooth.
I like to work with that part of the combo I find more appropriated at the certain moment in time.
I dont want a mixed beast where several teams of hardware and software developers work hard to put the combined dissadvantages of both kinds of devices into one device.
Regards,
angel'o'sphere
Like almost all instances of convergence.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Farewell to Schwartz (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess a big part of this is GM/Nextel spin. The device has a lot of PDA functionality. But a smart phone is "less threatening", so they call it that even if drivers mostly use it to access the network and run Java apps. Though I seem to recall that Nextel's network is CDMA, and my experiences with data over that kind of network is not positive.
Contrast this with UPS's deployment of a super-connectable PDA [slashdot.org]. Not to mention the recent release [slashdot.org] of bunch of new PalmOS devices. Some of which, yes, are smart phones. But when you base a smart phone on PalmOS or Symbian, do you have a phone with PDA functions or a PDA that makes phone calls? Not that I like either -- I want two separate devices, connected by Bluetooth.
GPS and push-to-talk...every taxi has this already (Score:2)
Granted, it's great to have a stable, widely-developed platform built-in, but it remains to be seen what it will be used for. Geotargeted coupons? Kill me now. "Excuse me, my wife's in labor, I have to take this call...$5 OFF THE STAR
The main reason I carry a PDA (Score:2)
It's one less thing I have to lug around with me. I doubt smart phones will be able to do anything like this anytime soon.
I just wish my Handspring would act as a phone, play MP3s and connect to the 2-meter ham repeaters around town. That'd be three fewer pieces of junk I'd have to lug around with me. But, I'd probably have to recharge its battery every 20 minutes or so.
Not quite time yet, until... (Score:2)
The problem is this: turning a PDA into a phone keeps it as a decent PDA, usually, but makes a terrible phone from a user interface standpoint...touchscreen buttons are a pain in the ass, and nobody wants fingerprints all over their PDA screen. And it's a pain to hold the entire damned
This is absolutely correct (Score:2)
Case in point: I am using my treo now to enter this message and browse slashdot while waiting for my oil change to be completed.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Gargoyle Devices (Score:2)
The salient points are these:
- Phones are more important to more people than organizers. That's the one overriding rule. Organizers are very handy, and even indispensable for a very small percentage of people.. but everyone needs a phone. Everyone. Soon 'mobile phone' w
All we really need..... (Score:3, Informative)
Make the phone as small as you can, with no buttons (save for Power and BT interface), speakers, screen or mike, with as much battery as you can.
Then supply a phone interface app for PalmOS/PocketPC/Linux PDA's and you're set to go.
You can hide your phone anywhere on your person as you'll never have to reach for it, you can do every wireless data thing on your PDA and take teh calls on your headset and use it for mp3 playback as well.
Taht way, everything is at it's optimal size, and they all don't drain 1 battery. If the phone dies you still have your PDA and vice versa.
Screw that... (Score:2)
Sure, now I want high rez (480-320), dedicated mp3 support, removable storage and graffitti area, but just a IIIc with an internal GSM would have done it for me too.
And I've been saying that since I got my palmpilot...which is in the first month the IIIc was available. Palm/3com/whoever is just plain fucking dumb not to have done it since then (and no, Tungsten C is shit...I do not want a phone/pda without graffitti or which only wo
I don't want a cell phone you insensitive clod! (Score:2)
Re:one thing we are all forgetting (Score:1, Funny)
Zaurus software sucks. (Score:2)
Oh, wait, that's exactly what they're doing...
http://www.symbian.com/
Except Motorola of course, but then, look at the other decisions the Motorola management have been making over the last decade.
[1] There is one single piece of software that makes the Zaurus worth using and that's freeware which doesn't come built in; IQNotes.
Re:Zaurus software sucks. (Score:2)
It's so good, that the OpenZaurus guys have to clone some of new ideas from Sharp (this is the first time that this isn't the other way round
But I second the feeling that Sharp launched a beta quality product (even after that did public beta testing with th 5000 model
Bye egghat.