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PDA experiences?

Fenris said:
So truly think about how much you will use it, what you will use it for. As others have said there are those that love them and can't live without them. I don't have many scheduling needs, so the usefulness is more limited for me. Nor do I have business contacts. I just wasn't using it enough to warrent the expense or time.

Figure out what you want, what you need and go from there. Even if it's just for Bejeweled ;)
Seconded. I used a palm for a long while, to help me juggle work and school, and then decided to upgrade to the treo 650. I use it a lot, and I use almost all of its functions. I use it for email, for wordprocessing (I took notes in class with a folding bluetooth keyboard), for scheduling, as an mp3 player, to play games on, and to browse the internet. Having said that, if I didn't use all these different functions more or less frequently, I'd have bought a different product. If you think you'll mostly do one of these things, and just want the option of doing the others, then I'd consider something else, because PDAs do all of them poorly.

There are phones that allow you to play games, mp3s, and browse the internet. I wouldn't have bought a PDA just for those. Phones have scheduling functions as well, but they're not worth much because they don't integrate with your computer and often don't offer other scheduling features that are indespensable (repeating appointments, integration with contacts, to do and calendar distinction, etc.). If you are seriously interested in a portable decive mainly for gaming, I would seriously consider a phone (cheaper), or better yet, a specialised portable platform (better games). PDAs aren't the most stable things on the market, and over the 5 years I've had to deal with my palms, I've had to reinstall the whole system 3 times. I didn't lose much because everything gets backed up on the computer, but the PDA was unuseable till I reinstalled. The main considerations here is that I can carry around one clunky thing instead of two, if I get a phone that does what I want it to do. And I need the phone.

As far as wordprocessing is concerned, I'm in my second semester taking notes on my palm, and I would really rather have a small laptop (I've been looking at one of 10" screen ones). The smaller screened ones are cheaper, and you can pick up a passable one for about $600 (plus warranty) if you're cheap about it. Not that wordprocessing is undoable, I do it, but I have go over my notes later on my computer (which is good for me: it's a review), so anything I do on my palm is far from a finished product.

For just plain old scheduling, the cheaper PDAs are unbeatable. I got my girfriend one on the cheap, and she really enjoys it a lot. It cost me about $80, and realplayer offers (offered?) a free mp3 player for it. Don't forget to sync often. A cheaper Treo is also coming out soon, and is an intelligent option if you're able to use cingular.

For email, the blackberry is still the best thing out there, by a good stretch. Despite the lawsuits and hype, it works seamlessly. I use a Treo, and I can well recognise the blackberry's advantage in this sector.

Another goal a few PDAs are really good at are storing info and media. This makes them a more flexible version of an ipod, but many will probably direct you to the original item (some version of ipod).

Again, I'd seriously consider your goals before dropping some loot on a gadget. Hope this helps.
 

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Fenris said:
Now I do miss extensive contacts and backing up the data and used the Palm Desktop for years after I stopped using the Palm.

So truly think about how much you will use it, what you will use it for. As others have said there are those that love them and can't live without them. I don't have many scheduling needs, so the usefulness is more limited for me. Nor do I have business contacts. I just wasn't using it enough to warrent the expense or time.

Figure out what you want, what you need and go from there. Even if it's just for Bejeweled ;)

I am glad he pointed this out ... the single biggest thing about Palms, etc. is that there is a learning curve. If you can make the transition this little creatures are incredibly useful. If not then they are simply paperwights, like others have said. :\
 

I love having a PDA. I use it so I don't have to remember all the little things. So the biggest uses mine sees are the task list, calendar and contacts. I also have several docs on there with various lists and references.

I started out with a Palm IIIxe and loved it. I eventually was drawn to the Pocket PC stuff and used one of those. It died pretty quickly (I bought a cheap one at the time, it wasn't very reliable). Were I buying one for myself I would go back to using a PalmOS, but since work keeps providing me with them I still have PocketPC based ones.

I prefer the Palm because it seemed things were better laid out than the PocketPC. In either case, I definitely like to carry one.
 

IronWolf said:
I prefer the Palm because it seemed things were better laid out than the PocketPC.
The Palm OS is definitely light years ahead of Windows mobile, in terms of computing power, memory use, hardware integration, screen resolution, and system stability. But windows offers greater compatibility with computer files like word docs and spreadsheets (although I imagine a big spreadsheet will still crash your system).
 

Ferghis said:
As far as wordprocessing is concerned, I'm in my second semester taking notes on my palm, and I would really rather have a small laptop (I've been looking at one of 10" screen ones).

Consider a tablet PC and/or MS One Note. Seriously.

I've got a tablet (Gateway M275) and it's absolutely awesome for taking notes. Handwriting is great, and integrates very, very well with MS products (really, I've only had problems with Java apps). I found that I use the hand-writing less than I thought I would, so I usually don't advocate tablets to a "typical" user, but your situation sounds like a good fit.

Get one that comes installed with Vista, though. I really like the new OS, but the built-in tablet buttons don't have a compatible driver. If it comes installed w/ Vista, all required drivers should be good.
 

Ferghis said:
But windows offers greater compatibility with computer files like word docs and spreadsheets (although I imagine a big spreadsheet will still crash your system).

Yup. That's why I went w/ an iPaq. Integrates extremely well with Outlook. Plus, I used to carry a lot of gaming docs (campaign notes, SRD, etc.) on the thing.

Plus, as a .NET developer, it was much easier for me to write my own apps (pretty much no extra effort). Coding for the Palm sucks -- I did it for 8 months, professionally, and it's unpleasant. Maybe that was a matter of my preferred skillset, though.
 

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