PalmPilot as fetish 120
Croaker writes "Hmm-the PalmPilot as a fetish object? This article makes a pretty interesting case that, since people are pushing the Pilot to do things that are really outside its simple, elegant design, that it's more of a fetish symbol than
tool " Interesting account of Palm experiences.
Trapped by Technology? (Score:1)
Most of us have figured out by now that when the phone rings in the middle of dinner, you let the machine pick it up. Or you use CallerID to screen. The only way technology will control our lives is if we choose to let it.
When I go home on Friday, I read my alphanumeric pager but have no compunction about ignoring anything that is not important enough to interrupt my day off. Likewise, my employer knows that something had better be on fire if I am getting work calls at home.
So, with a little common sense, don't bring the whole kit and kaboodle with you when hiking in the mountains, or learn to say "No" to whomever is bugging you while on vacation.
Ahhh...another idiot who never saw one... (Score:2)
In a way it's too fsking bad that Garry Trudeau apparently reached the height of his cultural influence with the Newton...he singlehandedly set the state of the art back a decade or so, because it's the first damn thing _any_one mentions when they mention the Newton, or handwriting recognition in general.
No 1.0 technology could stand up to that sort of ridicule, and it showed: no one but Apple and a couple of others tried to even enter the field.
The Palm, while it _is_ a neat hack, has exactly one thing, it's size, going for it. It gets around the handwriting recognition curse by not offering any.
You have to letter (not write) things in one letter at a time, in a made-up alphabet.
Even my aged Newt 100 lets me write anywhere on the screen, and if I use it in _letter_ recognition mode, it recognizes my handwriting pretty damn well.
In it's final incarntion, the Newton handwriting recognition was fast and nearly flawless. Too bad Apple's not doing anything with the technology...
It's ironic, too that one of the things the author faults the Palm for, it's tiny little screen, is one of the things everyone raves about: 'it's small enough to stick in my pocket!'
Re:From the personal ads: (Score:2)
--Shoeboy
P.S. Before anyone calls the cops, note that I said podophile not pedophile. There's a big difference.
Re:I'm lame -- Genius (Score:1)
As usual Jon misses the point... (Score:1)
Re:Ahhh...another idiot who never saw one... (Score:1)
The Palm Pilot instead takes a look at what people really want to do and impliments it. It solves all the complaints I constantly heard of the Newton:
- size
- handwriting (if it don't work, find a better way)
- Quick easy sync with normal apps
- price
I see lots of business execs I work with buying PalmPilots. They ALL do their work on their PC and hotsync it to the Palm. That quick one-button sync makes all the difference. Whereas Apple said "This is so cool, you won't WANT to work on your PC", Palm gives people what they ask for.
But IMHO mostly Apple just never got the idea that to cross the chasm into the consumer market you have to price accordingly - cut the bells and whistles that you think are nifty but no-one ever asked for, and chop the price down.
hitchhiker
Re:This is great, but why? (Score:1)
a) paper dayplanner -- don't make me laugh, sucks for so many reasons, but lack of backup and search capability top the list.
b) keep my laptop with me and open it on the passenger seat. Worked for a while, but it's slow and heavy, screen can't be read in bright sunlight, and battery life is about an hour.
c) keep my pilot with me and open it on my lap. Look up phone numbers. Jot notes and to-do's. It beeps when I'm supposed to be on a scheduled call and gives my the dial-in and access numbers.
Re:Forced to buy only what you need not what you w (Score:1)
Not that I would buy an SUV, personally I have no reason... but if you choose to, so be it. And I'll see ya in the rear view mirror..
Adapting to technology (Score:2)
This is such a specious argument. Learning to write on paper is adapting to technology. Learning to type and use a mouse is adapting to technology. Learning to drive is adapting to technology.
Until someone comes up with the perfect IUI ( Intuitive User Interface - an AI that can speak and hear and interpret pointing, head waggles, and other gestures), we will ALWAYS be adapting to technology.
Re:Nihilistic technofetishists (Score:1)
Re:You surprise me.. (Score:1)
I always thought Slashdot was frequented by people that were into using the right (command-line, GUI-less) tool for the job?
*sarcasm added for effect
Re:Geekdom? (Score:1)
Next I wrote a generic wireframe 3D rendering library. Scale+Rotate+Translate objects in the world, specify camera angle & position, then draw it. It was probably the only programming project I ever did that I thought would become popular. Then some asshole spammed it all over usenet and the Calc-TI/Graph-TI/Zshell mailing lists claiming he wrote it (Coz it was so 31337) I abandoned because of it and the library died, sadly.
GoRK
On bending one's self to technology... (Score:1)
Well, it's true that quite modest homes own computers, and microwave ovens, too. But I wonder out loud how many of you could read an 80-column card, or for that matter have used binary arithmetic outside of technical life. (Note: Playing NIM as a sucker bet doesn't count.) Truth is, the history of computing since that time has been one of progressively increasing "user-friendliness"--we don't have to (personally enter the source code for every program we want to use, struggle with huge decks of potentially slippery cards, worry about paper tape chad, deal with large rolls of newsprint, keep our silicon friends--and ourselves-- in large glass climate-controlled boxes in order to work, READ TYPE THAT LOOKS LIKE THIS, etc.) The fact that the Palm only reads Graffiti isn't so much a experienced butler's demand from an aquiescing employer as it is the pleading of a newly hired counterman at Mickey D's to please, please, decide what you want before ordering, and to do so in English. Experience will come in time, and with it, a degree of sophistication. Till then, I suppose, we'll all be patiently having to explain that the Number 4 Supersize is a double quarter pounder with cheese, with large fries and drink.
Re:Forced to buy only what you need not what you w (Score:1)
Sorry, it's a sore spot with me.
matthew reilly
Re:Geekdom? (Score:1)
and nobody was the wiser
HACKERs (Score:1)
Reading the screen... (Score:1)
I tried writing long pieces on my Pilot, and found it to be more difficult and challenging than writing on something with a larger screen (such as vi on anything VT100-sized). The lack of context means that you have to mentally keep track of what you've written more than a few lines ago, otherwise you end up paging back and forth a lot, as well as omitting and/or repeating things.
OmniRemote (Score:1)
http://www.pacificneotek.com [pacificneotek.com]
This is great, but why? (Score:1)
Re:Sport Utility Vehicles (Offtopic) (Score:1)
The USRobotics Pilot (Score:1)
Pilot lovers, do not dispair. Do not be afraid to be a Pilot lover. Times will change, people will begin to accept you. Remain loyal to your 5000's those of you who love the youngest of the Pilots, they will be loyal to you.
Join NAMPLA!
hp48's rule... (Score:1)
Re:Don't need a palm, why do people get them? (Score:1)
The Palm Personal was on sale for a pretty low amount on the clearance rack at the local Office Depot, I'd just been back-paid three months of GI Bill benefits for courses I'd paid for already, and the job I had during last school year sometimes involved being a desk nomad. Worse, sometimes I wasn't given anything to do. I just sat, waiting for a phone to ring.
So I bought the Palm knowing, before I had it out of the box, that I was going to download a doc reader and Go. The four hour stretches at an alien desk became a little more tolerable, and I eventually converted some db's we used at that place into JFile format, so I could free myself of needing to scamper up three flights of stairs and down a hall to get at information I needed from time to time.
Sure, it's easier to get a book from the library or bring a magazine, and a nicely indexed printout of the sort of information I needed would have worked. Packing my old GameBoy (which kept me entertained many a night of radio watch while I was in Korea) would have provided the games. But like I said: it was on sale, I had the money, and it's useful without me bending my brain to make it so.
An ex-military note: I would never have used a Palm while in the Army. Some young staff officer had a Newton and a custom holster that he wore around Brigade HQ, and he was the only time, as a junior enlisted soldier, that I ever saw officers break down and poke fun at a brother officer in front of the enlisted. Plus, I'm sure I would have tried to drag it along on a jump or out into the field and smashed it.
----------
mphall@cstone.nospam.net
Re:Nihilistic technofetishists (Score:1)
I *need* my SUV, for the interior room, and the occasional ability to handle rough terrain/bad snow days, and the ability to crush Honda Civics that get in my way.
I do agree that 99% of SUV-drivers don't *need* SUVs, and would probably be much better off with a minivan or AWD subaru or volvo station wagon. But don't assume all SUV drivers are of that ilk.
As for your demographics estimate for the Palm, what doctor with a flashlight handed you that number? With the increasing whizz-bangedness of the computer age, the author of the article is way behind the curve. I am now expected to have all of this information at my fingertips, and though pocket spades is nice, the "basics" of what the Palm is intended to do are a necessity for an airhead like me to do my job. It also made my wallet MUCH thinner, as it is no longer used as a carrier for dozens of misc. sticky-notes.
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
-jafac's law
Re:Ahhh...another idiot who never saw one... (Score:1)
BUT
The Newton was WAY, WAY, WAY overpriced, and WAY, WAY too big.
Put a Newton in a Palm III - sized package, in an eBay - Palm III price range (not retail Palm III), and I'd buy one in a second.
Palms are also WAY WAY WAY overpriced compared to some of the Wince devices out there. (but I still love my Palm III).
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
-jafac's law
Whose convenience is it anyways? (Score:1)
If you pack your satellite uplink communications device in the mountains, you have no one but yourself to blame. When I'm off the clock, I'm off the clock. If I don't feel like carrying my cel phone or pager, I don't.
Yup, I've missed out on a party or two. Darn. That woulda happened if I didnt have these toys.
Oh, and I love my Palm connecte device.. but if I want to run FreeCell on it, I do. Guess who paid for it?
Re:I'm waiting for one of Jon Katz sexbots... (Score:1)
Ah, sexbots. Something to replace your palm and your Palm Pilot.
---
Have a sloppy night.
Help find Infrared App Mentioned in article (Score:1)
COOL!!!! Where do I find this????
Re:I'm lame -- Genius (Score:1)
--Shoeboy
Re:This is great, but why? (Score:1)
Re:This is great, but why? (Score:1)
Re:So this guy is in denial (Score:2)
Then I tried using it. I don't know if it is because it's Wince, whether I am a dyed-in-the-wool Franklin addict, or the state of the art isn't quite there yet, but the result was the same; I have never been more disorganized in my life. Since I couldn't use it as an organizer, it became a lame game machine, doing nothing but sucking up time. Worse, I can't hack it. I'm not buying a compiler for it, I can't find a Perl interperter for it, and you can't replace hardware boards. It's now sitting in the trunk of my car.
Part of what bugged me is that I can't set it up the way I want about it. The reason I stick with a dead-tree planner is that paper is infinitely hackable. The Wince box forced me to plan its way, which had nothing to do with the way I do things.
The other problem stems from the fact that a PDA is not an island. You need to sync it up with desktop stuff. That's well and fine by itself, but how good is the desktop stuff? The only thing I would consider would be the Pilot/Franklin Software combo, but the Franklin Planner desktop software is Windows-only.
The PDA technology just seems too limited and immature to help me. I figure it does help others, but it just doesn't work for me. I'll check the field out in a few years, but for now I am using dead trees until the twisted sand can do better.
Re:I'm lame (Score:1)
Once you get into using them, they become great PDA's, and you really learn to love 'em.
Plus also, you can write cool programs, play games, everything. Palms are so great that those who use them recognize each other as a fellow traveler. Yeah, I'm sure that there are some Wired-readin', coffee-drinking, fast car drivin' marketroids out them with 'em, but those are the only people who care about that kind of crap.
Veteran Palmists will get a kick out of you enjoying your new nerd-o-tron...
Palms are ok..but (Score:1)
HP48GX (Score:1)
Once I started writing progams for it that didn't fit in the machine, I bought a GX. Those were the good old days, ripping through Riemann sums, turning the television on in the middle of class, playing Christmas carols on the internal speaker (I actually wrote one piece that required 4 HP's to play in harmony), playing Baballe (this phat 3d game where you were a ball on a moving and changing set of planks), looking at a grayscale picture of Pamela Anderson in the middle of sex ed....
No joke, I stayed up until 4 or 5 the night before my Honors Physics exam writing programs that made all the problem sets unbelievably easy. The calculator would ask you questions in plain english then use its own logic to find the answer for you. I finished the whole test in 15 mins and got a perfect score. The teacher didn't have any problems with this because he realized that if I knew the material well enough to write the programs I deserved the grade.
Then I defected to Ti with my purchase of the TI-89. Good calculator (very nice screen), but I never had the time to really play with it, college essays and all. I still miss the HP.
I, too, could put to good use any spare palms
Re:Nihilistic technofetishists (Score:1)
Psions (Score:1)
press of this type. It's not like they invented a
new concept or anything!
I was doing most of this kind of stuff on a Psion
(an Organizer II LZ) back in 1989, FFS! Palm just
took an existing product/concept and refined it -
and now the converts are becoming zealots!
PDAs are great, sure. They can be life-changing.
But Palm != PDA.
Psion did it first, and for my money, still do it
best.
Re:So this guy is in denial (Score:1)
That's fine, if you don't mind the fact that it has no non-audible way of notifying you. (i.e. it just utilizes the Palm's beeping, there is no vibration-emitting device)
Re:I rock! (Score:1)
Even my mom likes it, and she thinks most technogadgets are dumb.
Don't forget the Duct tape.... (Score:1)
"Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"
Palm-fetish. (Score:2)
So, yes, thats probably a fetish.
Reclassify this under "Its funny laugh" (Score:1)
Corrected link (Score:4)
Joke. (Score:1)
So this guy is in denial (Score:1)
Working link (Score:1)
HOWTOs on Pilots Rock (Score:3)
The dates, memos, address book, and all that are handy, but the ability to read hypertext documents anywhere has been a great asset.
Re:Taken down (Score:2)
"Use the preview button, and check those links!"
truly words to live by.
too much even for the almighty palm pilot (Score:1)
but the "to do" list, and the calendar don't help me at all. i just can't stick to them...even modern technology can't make me STOP being a slacker....
i'm sure i'm not the only one. come on, you're wasting time reading
-iGor (pronounced like iMac
Fetish?!? (Score:2)
Using that definition, I guess there are a lot of us who have duct-tape and WD-40 fetishes...
And all of you running Linux PPC on your iMac: You've got an iMac fetish. Actually, that last bit seems pretty plausible. Running Linux on a big translucent butt-cheek...
Fetish? (Score:1)
---
Put Hemos through English 101!
Re:Fetish?!? (Score:1)
BTW: If the PALM is considered a fetish for that reason, Baking soda is light-years ahead.
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Re:Geekdom? (Score:1)
Geekdom? (Score:2)
Taking an object, in this case a Palm Pilot, and seeing exactly how much stuff you can make it do is not anything new. I'm sure there are tons of you who spent HOURS programming something on a TI or HP calculator... something totally worthless no doubt, but just to see if it could be done.
If it wasn't for people who constantly strain and push whatever systems their on, then there would be little incentive for advancement.
On that note, anyone have a spare pilot they want to send me
Re:So this guy is in denial (Score:1)
Re:From the personal ads: (Score:2)
for beaming, HotSyncing, possible LTR.
I'll be your cradle if you're into PDA.
Send picture of Palm Connected Device.
I should go home. I must be missing PalmOS Night at the fetish bar or something.
Re:So this guy is in denial (Score:1)
It's simply a workable version of my old Franklin "Seven Habits of Highly Defective People" Planner.
I can't carry my old Planner in my pocket.
The Palm III will actually cost LESS over three years than Franklin Planner startup and refills costs.
I'm not killing anywhere near as many trees.
I can do a global search in the Palm III's records for names or other information.
I can backup the data quickly and conveniently to my desktop PC, in case I lose the Palm III.
I can reasonably secure private data from casual prying eyes on the Palm III.
My Palm III proactively reminds me of appointments and birthday's I'd otherwise miss or forget.
- - -
Then there's all the other geeky toy stuff. Games, electronic books, etc. But that's under the starry-eyed geek love category.
-----------------
Then my boss showed me his Wince box, 4 times the RAM, stereo sound, a full-duty OS, full compatability with MS Schedule+ and stuff (which is what everyone else at work uses, so I pretty much have no choice). Rechargeable batteries. 90MHz MIPS processor (compared to the Palm's 16MHz DragonBallz) $130. $70 less than my Palm III. I was a bit jealous, even though the thought of actually paying money for a Microsoft product made me cringe. Then I watched my boss over the next week. THIS thing was only a toy to him. He never used it. Not once. He showed it off plenty, but he never used it. This was my first week with the Palm, and damn, it was in near-constant use. Bottom line is, the basic functions that make the Palm a necessity, are much, much easier to use than with a Wince device, even with attempts by the Wince designers to copy some of the basic Palm features, like the application hot buttons, etc.
Now I'm finding that I'd kind of like the Palm to do two things; be smaller, and have news on it (like my stupid text pager). Damn, I'd actually like to merge my pager with my PalmIII. Someone pages me with a text message, phone # or something, I can cut and paste it right to the address book. Palm/Cellphone combo? No thanks. I'm not in the mood for a brain tumor today, plus, the cell phone, not the Palm, is what causes the obligation for you to "be reachable all the time". Changing back from Cellphone to Payphone erects (heh heh, he said "erects") a big barrier to that kind of crap. It's a lot easier to say "no" when there's no payphone around.
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
-jafac's law
Pilot Pricing... (Score:1)
I think the most interesting application I've heard of for a Pilot is the adjunct to the TV remote control program that will let you control a Furby. I should try that sometime.
Re:This is great, but why? (Score:1)
I'm on my second Palm now (IIIx) and it is just part of the scenary. Sure - sometimes it would be better to use a notepad, or paper organizer, or laptop, or calculator, or rolodex, or etc. but the Palm has all these, in a package that can certainly use some improvements, but is good enough. That's the Palm zen. Enough and available.
Can you say iNewton? (Score:1)
Re:Don't need a palm, why do people get them? (Score:1)
It's really too bad, because I am not sure anything else has caught up to where the Newton was when it "failed."
Phil Fraering "Humans. Go Fig." - Rita
Re:So this guy is in denial (Score:1)
Extra! Extra! Read all about it! (Score:1)
Re:Don't need a palm, why do people get them? (Score:1)
"Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"
Books (Score:1)
"Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"
Re:So this guy is in denial (Score:1)
Speaking as an ex-Franklin user and a current Palm user, the transition to Palm was a lot less painful than I thought, and I now end up using the Palm all the time. I organize info on the Palm in pretty much the same way I did with the Franklin, but it's significantly more fluid now. Errors are easier to correct, information is easier to find, and my notes are infinitely more readable.
The built-in desktop software that comes with the Palm is great for the same reason that the Palm is great -- it's simple, and it does just what's necessary and no more. What I personally like about the desktop software is that it's essentially a view into the same data I keep on the Palm, organized in the same fashion, presented in the same manner. It's a seamless information space.
When I'm at my desk (Windows box for client development, Linux and Solaris for server development, all on the same desk), I use the (Windows-based) desktop to track work activites and todos along with the usual phone number/address book usage. I sync up as a matter of course when I'm leaving the office for an extended amount of time, and I can pick up where I left off with that data using the Palm -- without any jarring feeling of transition. (Unlike getting Word documents into and out of my laptop, which is an explicit act of will...) It's great to pull of relevent data about the project in a meeting, to take brief notes, and have it all back at my desktop pretty much instantly when I return to the office. When I'm offline and I need to send an email, I can write and address it on the Palm (a III) and forget about it. Next time I hotsync, the email is automatically transmitted. That's pretty darn convenient.
A GNOME-based desktop package (using Pyrite or something similar for connectivity) would be great! True wireless connectivity wouldn't hurt either, but I can wait for that.
Re:Don't need a palm, why do people get them? (Score:1)
I'd be willing to bet you could keep your palm inside your' pocket at all times, the'd never know...
"Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"
Palm Pilot Fetish (Score:1)
The PP is nice but it ain't state of the art. It has some growing to do. And no, the VII isn't largely in the right direction. I want real full Internet access, not to pay through the nose for some speciality Internet services including even a per byte charge! Is this the third Millenium or what?
Re:Don't need a palm, why do people get them? (Score:1)
I do, however, work with a guy who codes on his palm and he has used it so much the touch screen has a lot of scoring on it.
-- Shadowcat
Re:Adapting to technology (Score:1)
The only intuitive user interface is a nipple. I agree with dillon rinker: That is such a specious argument.
Well, 2 good things (Score:1)
Re:So this guy is in denial (Score:1)
From the personal ads: (Score:4)
Case 1
Men Seeking Men:
GWM 35 fit, attractive seeks same for vigorous palm action.
Case 2
Men Seeking Women:
SWM, College student - 24 Tired of staying home on friday nights having sex with my palm. Looking for older woman for cheap meaningless fling.
The evidence cannot be denied.
--Shoeboy
"Real Hackers" (Score:1)
** Not really, of course, if you want to think otherwise, of course.
Re:Fetish? (Score:1)
Nihilistic technofetishists (Score:1)
You mean the glory days are over??? (Score:1)
I agree with the author: the Palm enthusiast craze is reminiscent of the early PC world. And they are ultra-cool. Heck, PalmChess is enough of a reason to own one.
BTW- All geeks should seriously think about picking up a Palm. They are almost requisite geek gear. The III's are really cheap right now, so you can jump on the boat for not much dough. Seriously, if I had waited much longer to get a Palm, my LUG probably would have kicked me out...
--Lenny
Re:Don't need a palm, why do people get them? (Score:2)
After months of searching, there was a "Managers floor display special" on a Zaurus. Picked that up for a hair over $200. The IR beaming device was $40.
2Mb ram, Wordprocessor, Spreadsheet, stylus, clipboard, notebook (for stylus writing), 3 data books, 3 phone books, vt100 and ansi terminals, fax sender, search utility, games, PCMCIA slot, the whole thing... and the keyboard
I don't think it's that much larger than the Pilot either.
Right now I loaded a list of some 4500 available DVD's and going through the list as to which ones I want to buy and which ones I want to consider buying...
I use mine, but not in public situations:
Me: Let me give you my office number
Them: (3 minute rigamarole getting out Palm and going to application to write down number) Ok.. shoot.
-m
Re:Trapped by Technology? (Score:1)
BTW: I'm organized and I have a good memory, when that fails me I have a post-it note folded in my pocket and a pen to write down my shopping list, daily contact list or to do list. I recycle it once a week and with the proper caffine induced states, I can play tetris on it. A palm would be neato but I'm a student with my eye on a new PPC750.
Re:Geekdom? (Score:1)
I used to use my 42S all the time but ever since the end of High School (calculus AP, physics AP, chemistry AP) I haven't really needed to actualy calculate anything except checkbooks. Even in college.
"business erotica" (Score:1)
"Magazines that specialize in what might be called business erotica, such as Fast Company and Wired, often describe such futuristic moments in rapturous, almost orgasmic tones."
Can't top that.
Re:I'm lame -- Genius (Score:1)
Invaluable little tool (Score:1)
Re:From the personal ads: (Score:1)
-Lisa
Re:HOWTOs on Pilots Rock (Score:1)
--
John Kramer
I've got it bad... (Score:1)
I confess: I have a Palm organizer and a Nokia cellphone. Both have changed my lifestyle in subtle yet profound ways: the organizer let me let go of the little yellow stickies that always seemed to hide when I most needed their help (and let go of the frustration that ensued); it gave me the scheduled ammunition to tell people "no" -- I have the same 24 or so hours in a day as everyone else and now have a handle on how I use my 24; and it became another little burden to carry around. However, it's there for me to use as I need.
Unfortunately, choosing the progressive, cellphone-is-my-only-phone stance was not the best choice for me. It made me a perpetual resource for others: I'm always on, always available, always ten digits away. It's so convenient, yet so frustrating. Even my beautiful girlfriend complained that every time she calls, I answer. Everyone needs time "unplugged," whether we geeks admit it or not... she was irked that my continual availibility made her feel intrusive. Fortunately, I'm finding a balance by using the "silent" mode more and refusing calls at inopportune times. IRL, have you ever been momentarily ignored while your conversation partner takes a call? It's a silent compliment to refuse the call, apologize for the interruption, and continue with the conversation.
[mental note: it's uncool to get a call from clueless customers while mugging at ALS]
I enjoy being a geek, and I don't regret my early-adopter tendencies. But even geeks are social animals -- I'm working to find a balance between being wired and having privacy.
How do you manage your connectedness?
rm
Re:Nihilistic technofetishists (Score:1)
Anyway, I always thought SUV stood for Suburban Utility Vehicle?
Re:Don't need a palm, why do people get them? (Score:1)
Now I am in sticky note hell. At pressent I have 13 stuck to my monitor and keyboard. Oh well... the Compaq still lives... i sold it to my sister for 100$. She, now 11, loves to play Solitare on it. hehe... She even has a modem for it... CRAZY when you think about it.
---------------
Re:Don't need a palm, why do people get them? (Score:1)
I would never have bought one myself.
I'm not an organized person, but I am a pretty hardcore geek. I usually carry it with me and I find I use it for the things I WOULD use a paper/pen for IF I didn't abhor paper. Notes, phone numbers, etc. My life is a little more organized than it was before...
In addition, I commute (via train) to work. I sync my email and read it en route. I used to sync
It's not hard for me to imagine I'll read 40 literary (or not so literary - I have to check out more of Guttenberg) works on my palm - making it worth the $200 it cost (for work) to buy it...
It sorta is a fetish.. (Score:1)
The fetish part of it is the consistent, driving to go further, with something. In this case, people are trying to drive thier palm's (yes you momo's.. they've been renamed a year or two back) to do more. It's not a geek thing.. it's a motivational thing. I'm a psych minor.
I'm lame (Score:1)
Now, if I got one, I'd just be a wannabe.
-Lisa