cellio: (tulips)
[personal profile] cellio
Today we got together with my parents to celebrate mothers' day, our anniversary, and my father's birthday. We took them to Sunnyledge (I think that's the name of it), which does a very good Sunday brunch. Ironically, while the buffet usually includes a couple kinds of fish that I can eat (along with meat, which I can't eat, and other dishes, which I can), today the ocean-based offerings were shrimp, mussels, swordfish, lobster, and lox. So one out of five. :-)

My father recently got himself a PDA. I was curious to know more, because he has the same vision problems I do. He was constrained in also needing something Mac-compatable, so his choices were more limited than mine would be, but for one data point, his looks pretty good. He has a Tungston E, which has a crisp, legible display that can fit a fair bit of text in fonts I can read. The graffiti interface is also much easier than the last time I used one -- this was "Graffiti 2", and most of the strokes look like letters, rather than semi-thematically-related glyphs (like an upside-down "V" for "A", which I remember encountering before). I was completely unable to write a "k", and my attempts at "u" kept producing "v" instead, but I think a small number of hours of practice would actually fix that. And I could write resaonably quickly too without it getting confused, which had not been true before.

My father carries his in a shirt pocket. Women's shirts don't tend to have that pocket, and even if they did the placement would be, err, suboptimal, so I'd need to find something I could reasonably carry in a back pants pocket. I imagine this has constraints on size, heat-tolerance, and durability. (Or are there belt-based solutions?)

I'd also need to think about how I would end up using it; things like the calendar, address book, and standing grocery list are obvious, but can I use it as a text editor to, say, compose LJ posts or edit a D&D character sheet when I don't have a real computer to hand? I know there's a Hebrew calendar out there somewhere, and someone I know has a siddur for hers, both of which would be handy. I'd want some application that supports a table or database of all my books/CDs, so I stop accidentally buying duplicates; I assume that's straightforward. I'm going to assume that music applications are not feasible.

What do people who have PDAs end up using them for after the first few months? (I know that [livejournal.com profile] dglenn also asked this question recently.) What's involved in having web-browsing? (What do you pay in monthly service fees?) My father didn't have a browser on his, so I didn't get a feel for whether most web sites even render on such a small screen.

I'm not going to run right out and buy one, but I'm at least entertaining the idea now, which is a change.

Short takes:

Fun stuff: Anton Chekov's book-signing (and reading) in Union Square. Link from [livejournal.com profile] nickjong, who got it from Neil Gaiman.

Non-fun stuff: Soldiers in Iraq losing internet access, just in case they want to ship out more photos from prisons or something. (Link from [livejournal.com profile] insomnia; see also this one from [livejournal.com profile] tangerinpenguin and others.) Feh. Some of my coworkers are in Iraq right now (civilians, on a base, nowhere near prisons); if we stop hearing from them I guess we'll know why.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-05-10 10:03 pm (UTC)
siderea: (Default)
From: [personal profile] siderea
Aig. Typed long msg and browser crashed.

Summary:

No db, text files, with categories. I find that mostly completely adequate. Simply being able to put all the notes on the same topic into the same file is the main advantage.




(no subject)

Date: 2004-05-13 09:24 pm (UTC)
geekosaur: orange tabby with head canted 90 degrees, giving impression of "maybe it'll make more sense if I look at it this way?" (Default)
From: [personal profile] geekosaur
I don't think I've ever seen a recipe database like you describe even for desktop computers. It does sound interesting, though.

Re notes: the first line of each memo is used as a title, and the "top level" memo display is a listting of these titles. Additionally, you can replace the ROM Launcher application with other launchers, some of which (SilverScreen, at least) support "sticky notes" of various kinds.

Someone I know is working on a PAT schedule application. (The basic application is done; the hard part is parsing PAT's schedules to produce usable Palm databases.) However, I find that bus.maya.com is quite usable in Blazer. :)

Earlier you commented on just wanting an editor that handles text files. As far as I know, Documents-To-Go can do that; if not, TealDoc can edit both text and Palm DOC files, and there are other text editors available, including replacements for the built-in minimal text editor (mostly useful with the Note Pad in later versions of PalmOS; the 4k limit in Memo Pad makes it essentially useless for serious work).

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