PalmPilot - The Ultimate Guide (2nd Edition) 28
PalmPilot: The Ultimate Guide (2nd Edition) | |
author | David Pogue, Jeff Hawkins |
pages | 597, |
publisher | O'Reilly |
rating | 9/10 |
reviewer | Janice Wright |
ISBN | 1565926005 |
summary | An excellent book to teach you how to make the most of your Pilot |
Now I think of my pilot as a computer, one that will provide almost as much hackish enjoyment as my Linux box... as a matter of fact I'm now following the microLinux project with great interest and wondering how long it will be before I can upgrade to a Palm/Handspring device that will run Linux, a POP3 client and support a wireless modem. In the preface, Pogue says "Taking your Palm further: that's what this book is about." He delivers on that one-hundred percent.
David Pogue's "Palm Pilot - The Ultimate Guide" is absolutely excellent. It did take forever to read, though, because I kept stopping every few pages to optimize my Pilot with the tricks I had just learned, or to turn an easter egg on (yes, the book tells you where all(?) of the easter eggs are). The book has everything from office productivity tips for suits (when transferring lots of data from the expense program to Excel, you can end up with multiple spreadsheets which you have to total seperately, p. 228) to great hackish tidbits for hardcore geeks (like how to turn on verbose hot-sync logging, p.142).
Like many people I completely ignored the manual that came in the box with my Pilot, so some of the stuff Pogue covers, like ferinstance the Ronomatic stroke, is probably actually in the manual (l've only ever looked at it once - to try to solve an installation failure problem. The manual was unhelpful, and I found the information I needed to solve the problem in the FAQs at PalmCentral.com. The problem and solution are on page 181.
What's good and/or my favorite bits:
- the musical notation for the palm chimes on p.137
- the official solution vs. the better solution to upgrading
- the way it explained why a backgammon game I had installed and then deleted kept 'coming back' every time I HotSynched
- even though I will probably never surf the web on my pilot the explanation of how ProxiWeb works is mega cool.
- didn't really need four pages on the various classic games that you can download from 3Com
- doesn't mention quickwrite in the 'graffiti alternatives' section
I. This Is Your PalmPilot Speaking
The 3x5 inch powerhouse
Setup and guided tour
Typing without a keypad
The four primary programs
Other built-in programs
II. Palm Meets PC
HotSync, step-by-step
Installing new palm programs
Palm desktop (win&mac)
III. The Undiscovered PalmPilot
The electronic book
The secret multimedia world
Database and number crunching
IV. The PalmPilot Online
Email anywhere
The web in your Palm
Paging, faxing, printing, and beaming
Palm VII: wireless email, wireless web
V. Troubleshooting and Upgrading
Troubleshooting
The Palm family, model by model
VI. Appendixes
CD-ROM
A few notes about the CD-ROM that comes with the book: Though it was
obviously outdated by the time the book went to press, it will save
you hours of hunting for the best software and, depending on the speed
of your modem of course, a significant amount of download time (for
those of us unfortunate enough to live in corners of the world with
metered phone calls, you will probably save yourself the price of the
book within weeks). I've been working my way through a variety of
'world' clocks (ones that show multiple timezones), trying to find
one that I like; because there are half-a-dozen on the CD, this is
pretty painless. The Catalog software resident on the CD makes it
easy to find what you are looking for, and in many instances, shows you
what the program is going to look like. I've 'trialed' a lot more
software on my PalmPilot than I would have ever been bothered to
download.
And yes - I did write this review on my Pilot, mostly on trains & on the London Underground. Speaking of which: as soon as I get the time, I'm gonna figure out how to make ImageViewer docs, so that I can update the London Underground map for the Pilot - the one that's currently available still has Mornington Crescent crossed out!
Purchase this book at Amazon.
Janet, please send your name, address, t-shirt size, and this article's URL to roblimo so we can send you your t-shirt. (Everyone who writes a Slashdot review or feature now gets a free t-shirt!)
Re:What's new in second edition? (Score:1)
Re:relevant to the visor? (Score:1)
Re:Title humour (Score:1)
Hemos -- may want to read this. (Score:1)
-= Making the world a better place =-
OS or usage (Score:1)
relevant to the visor? (Score:1)
palmtop v/s mini-notebook. (Score:1)
You can get a cheap AMD K6-2 mini-notebook for about 1300 bucks. about as big, but much more functionality?
Anyone agree? or disagree?
I did it all for the wookie... COME ON!
PimpSmurf
Re:palmtop v/s mini-notebook. (Score:1)
guess I will have to turn to wearable computers.
I guess palmtops just aren't that usefull for my life style. It will be a while untill you can compile a kernel on it
I read up a lil on palmtops this evening... and I suppose they could be usefull... and even fun...
but I would rather carry the extra 3lbs and have the ability to play quake2.
then again, if they get linux on a palmtop. I might have to get one.
Re:The _Ultimate_ reference? (Score:1)
If you're just offended at O'Reilly publshing something other than a ultra hard-core tech book, you've obviously never heard of The Whole Internet User's Guide & Catalog [oreilly.com] which validated a publishing category (internet books) by it's well deserved success.
I wish one out of ten books I've bought were as usefull as either one of these.
AFAIC Palm Pilot: The Ultimate Guide is just another case of Tim O'Reilly & crew tending to do it better and/or first && better.
-Roger
Which PDA!? (Score:1)
Thanks
Re:palmtop v/s mini-notebook. (Score:1)
Re:Handspring Visor (Score:1)
I bet it's covered.
A great book (Score:1)
BTW - Any Canucks interested in buying the book, I'd suggest Chapters.ca. They've got the book on 20% discount right now, and delivery's free in Canada till the end of October. Click here [chapters.ca] to go to the product page. (Heh, note that if you go to it through that link, you also give me a 5% commission, awfully sweet of you.
The _Ultimate_ reference? (Score:1)
Sad to see good old O'Reilly jump on the bandwagon.
Urgleburgle
Re:Handspring Visor (Score:1)
Well, the Handspring Visor isn't specifically discussed in "PalmPilot: The Ultimate Guide," 2nd Edition (which came out in July). However, as you probably know, the Visor is almost 100% identical to the Palm III, which is exhaustively covered in the book... the only part that's not covered is the Springboard modules that the Visor can accept.
And since there aren't any yet, I think we're safe. :) Seriously, though, I'll probably write a Visor update to the book and post it at the "PalmPilot: The Ultimate Guide" Web site (http://palmpilot.oreilly.com/)... when there's something to say about it.
David Pogue, author of "PalmPilot: The Ultimate Guide"
Alternate opinion (Score:2)
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This is not what I want (Score:2)
What's new in second edition? (Score:2)
I picked up the first edition at a local used bookstore over the weekend ($15 including CD, I couldn't resist) without knowing a second edition was in the works..
Is there anything about the second edition that would make it worth "upgrading" to?
I couldn't care less about the software on the CD, but what about real content, specifically for the newer models like the III(x,e), V(x), and VII?
-LjM
(seems like I always buy something right before something newer is announced.. wish I'd held off on my IIIx untli the Visors or Vx were out)
Wireless Palm (Score:2)
Well I don't know about the first part but if you are interested in wireless POP and telnet there is a palm-cellphone [http] that will make you drool. It is currently supported by Sprint Spectrum, and the other carriers are picking it up too. You've probably seen the ads but they just becams avaliable last week.
Telnet from a cell-phone; every security administrators nightmare (or dream).
Peter
And don't tell me there isn't one bit of difference between null and space, because that's exactly how much difference there is.
-- Larry Wall
Handspring Visor (Score:2)
i was wondering if the book would be useful
to me? does it center around the palmOS? or does
it mention physical aspects of the pilot?
Re:What's new in second edition? (Score:2)
And a TOTALLY new CD-ROM with 3,100 apps (over 3 times more than the 1st edition) in an all-new, searchable, illustrated, auto-installable catalog program.
How can you POSSIBLY say there's not much new!?
Your pal, David Pogue (The author of "PalmPilot: The Ultimate Guide")
Re:This is not what I want (Score:3)
Of course, I haven't wrote any Palm Programs, yet. I'm getting around to it... Get off my back!
Palm Programming: The Developer's Guide; O'Reilly & Associates; by Neil Rhodes and Julie McKeehan; ISBN 1-56592-525-4
Re:palmtop v/s mini-notebook. (Score:3)
As an owner of a PalmPilot, and an owner of a Laptop, AND an owner of a Newton Messagepad (RIP), I can tell you that
A) A laptop is too big and bulky to carry around on a regular basis.
B) a Newton-sized object (slightly smaller than a VHS tape, and only half as thick) is too big and bulky to carry around on a regular basis. Oh sure, in teh beginning its no big deal. You show it off to your friends, use it to meet chicks on the bus or at the coffee shop. After about 2 months you start leaving it at home more often. Eventually, it sits in its special bag (the one you had to buy for it so that you could carry it around comfortably) collecting dust, and you only pull it out to program it, or to play games on when you're on an airplane.
C) The Palmpilot I've had for many moons and I still carry it with me. I don't have to have a special bag for it. I use it daily. I carry it everywhere. I use it when I'm on the throne. How's that for lifestyle integration?
This question is actually almost moot, now that Handsrping is manufacturing PalmOS devices for sub-$150, the question of cash vs. power just went out the door. When I palm can be had for about 1/10th the cost of a subnote, where's the comparison?
Title humour (Score:4)
:-)
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<SIG>
"I am not trying to prove that I am right... I am only trying to find out whether." -Bertolt Brecht