Fave All-in-One PDA for Worldwide Connectivity? 31
dr-vjk asks: "I just bought a new *unlocked* HP iPaq h6315 PocketPC. This phone/PDA supports quad-band GSM, Bluetooth and Wifi. This is a huge improvement over my old travel kit (Sony P900, h4315 iPaq, and Apple iBook). I needed an unlocked unit as the standard h6315's are locked to the T-Mobile network which charges over a buck a minute to roam outside the U.S. I have tested it in Europe and Africa with pre-paid local SIM cards and it works great. It works out of the box with GSM networks around the world for voice and GPRS for IP Data. I loaded SJPhone in order to access my Vonage account over WiFI (Skype doesn't work on this unit yet). It was great talking as long as I wanted with friends back in the U.S. with no concern for long distance charges. They could also call my Vonage number in the U.S. and my PDA would ring in Europe."
"I would love to hear if any Slashdot readers have their own all-in-one device they would recommend for world travelers. At a minimum, I think such a device would need GSM, GPRS, Bluetooth and Wifi support. As a physician I need Windows Mobile for the O.S. today but would be willing to look at other solutions (especially open source)."
VoIP (Score:4, Insightful)
And yes this a good thing. There is no such thing as being 'to easy to reach' when you need to be in touch. On the other hand, if people get angry when you cut your communications (everything has an off button), that's when you have a problem. Remember, its not the technologies fault, its people who expect you to be on the job 24/7.
Linux? (Score:4, Interesting)
But
So
I know that Opie will run on most PocketPCs, but can they be installed on the combi-phones -and- use the phone features?
If so, they've got my money
Re:Linux? (Score:4, Informative)
There is no port here for Opie, etc. In fact, I don't know if there is GCC/libc!
Re:Linux? (Score:2)
Yes, but it is still an ARM CPU. The problem isn't the CPU - it's the rest of the hardware.
Re:Linux? (Score:1)
Corrections (Score:2, Informative)
Also Opie, as with most Linux software, needs just a recompile to work on other platforms. I have developed and run Opie using x86, x86-64, G4/MacOS and ARM processors. The only changes needed for Opie on different devices is for hardware components such as touch screens, keyboard mappings and so
Re:Corrections (Score:2)
I'd be interested if the gcc is fine!
Re:Corrections (Score:2)
Re:Linux? (Score:2)
Re:Linux? (Score:2)
Re:Linux? (Score:2)
I did not find any information on the links page for that article that identified what card that is.
The SL-6000 supports both a CF slot as well as a MMC/SD slot. However to the best of my knowledge the MMC/SD slot does not support a communications archetecture, so I presume
Legal considerations (Score:1)
1. In the US and other countries, it is illegal to modify/replace a phone's firmware (i.e. OS). Installing and removing apps is fine, but the low-level pieces is not.
2. Phone hardware specs are basically impossible to get. While this will always be a problem for FOSS development (unfortunately), the legal issue above makes companies even less willing
Re:Legal considerations (Score:2)
best pda? (Score:5, Funny)
hands down: the kiss [wikipedia.org]
T-Mobile (Score:2)
Re:T-Mobile (Score:1)
Locking a phone means the practice of forcing the phone to only recognizing SIM cards from a single manufacturer. Unlocked phones don't worry about it.
Since this is a quad-band phone it is perfect for AT&T/Cingular. That 4th band is the 850MHz band that AT&T/Cingular recently moved many of their old 800MHz analog towers to (though naturally not the single cell tower in my
Re:T-Mobile (Score:3, Informative)
T-Mobile -used- to but I don't know if they will anymore
They just unlocked my GSM phone (a SonyEricsson T610) after six months when I requested it and explained I was out of the country and wanted to use prepaid phone cards. This was only two weeks ago. I believe their waiting period is 3 months. I just called 611 on my phone and hit 0 to speak with an operator, and said I wanted to unlock my phone.
The HP is OK (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Skype (Score:1)
Link to the device (Score:2)
Treo 600/650 - good Internet access, phone sized (Score:3, Interesting)
The 600 doesn't have Bluetooth - the newer 650 does, though you should make sure the potential voice clipping issue discussed on treocentral.com is not happening or fixable (seems to be related to how high the ringer volume is set).
Re:Treo 600/650 - good Internet access, phone size (Score:1)
What type of software (server and client) can be used to sync calendars and everything else DIRECTLY to the server, without having to use the PC as the middle man? Right now we have to sync the PDA to the outlook client, which is tota
Compaq iPaq H3650 with PCMCIA GSM/GPRS card (Score:1)
motorolla MPx!! :P~~ (Score:1)
BT, wifi, 1mp camera w/ flash, tri gsm/gprs, unique form factor, keypad, external display.
http://www.bargainpda.com/default.asp?newsID=2327 [bargainpda.com]
WHAT MORE CAN YOU EXPECT? (except for more memory, it's got 32mb, maybe gps also?)
Re:motorolla MPx!! :P~~ (Score:2)
That decision has really pissed off at least one community of power users [howardforums.com] who'd been anxiously awaiting the MPx for many months.
Slightly off topic apology.. (Score:2)