PDA OS and hardware recommendation

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PDA OS and hardware recommendation

Nick Thompson
All,

As other people with restless freeranging intellects (i.e, marginally
ADHD),  I hope that some body can suggest a pda with an os so slick, so
seamless, so downright FUN, that I can actually be induced to use it.

Nick


Nicholas S. Thompson
Professor of Psychology and Ethology
Clark University
[hidden email]
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/
 [hidden email]



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PDA OS and hardware recommendation

Owen Densmore
Administrator
PalmOS is my favorite.  You can get discontinued models, which are just
great IMHO, and save interesting bucks.

I've gotten comfortable with my phone+pda -- the Treo 600.  I believe
there are good deals for it now that the later model, the Treo 650 is
becoming available.  I particularly like the GSM capability because
traveling in Europe is made considerably easier.

Dede just got a Palm m515, just recently discontinued, thus inexpensive
via third parties.  Make sure to get a bright color screen, makes it
*much* easier to use.

Weight is a slight issue: the treo is a bit bulky so when I pick up
Dede's 515 it feels like a feather.

PDAs are *extremely* personal devices, so make sure you get a chance to
hold and use one for a bit.  The personal equation matters a lot here.

Most folks suggest you consider how you're going to use it and look for
devices that excel in that area.  I disagree.  Because one does not
know how they're going to use it, the surprise element sneaks in.  In
our case, for example, the camera feature on the treo was far more
important than we had thought.  Sending quick pictures to friends
creates an interesting bond.

Owen

On Dec 28, 2004, at 8:14 PM, Nicholas Thompson wrote:

> All,
>
> As other people with restless freeranging intellects (i.e, marginally
> ADHD),  I hope that some body can suggest a pda with an os so slick, so
> seamless, so downright FUN, that I can actually be induced to use it.
>
> Nick
>
>
> Nicholas S. Thompson
> Professor of Psychology and Ethology
> Clark University
> [hidden email]
> http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/
>  [hidden email]
>
>
>
> ============================================================
> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
> Meets Fridays 9AM @ Jane's Cafe
> Lecture schedule, archives, unsubscribe, etc.:
> http://www.friam.org
>



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PDA OS and hardware recommendation

Parks, Raymond
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson
Nicholas Thompson wrote:

> All,
>
> As other people with restless freeranging intellects (i.e, marginally
> ADHD),  I hope that some body can suggest a pda with an os so slick, so
> seamless, so downright FUN, that I can actually be induced to use it.

   I use a Sharp Zaurus, an ancient Palm IIIx, and a more ancient HP200.
  They each do different things and my primary motivation is not the PDA
functionality (although they are all adequate for my purposes).  The
Zaurus is currently running Sharp's Linux version, but I have and
probably will again put OpenZaurus on it.  The Palm, of course, runs
Palm OS.  Both of these synchronize smoothly with computers running
Windows and Linux and less smoothly with Mac OS-X.  The HP200 runs DOS,
which is sometimes useful.

   For PDA purposes, the Zaurus is currently my PIM.  However, I don't
need any more functionality than provided by the Palm or HP, so I will
probably once again turn the Zaurus into a really portable Linux system
for things like running kismet and Java.

--
Ray Parks                   [hidden email]
IDART Project Lead          Voice:505-844-4024
IORTA Department            Fax:505-844-9641
http://www.sandia.gov/idart Pager:800-690-5288