Handheld Programming?
dutky asks: "What devices does Slashdot recommend for the programmer on the go? Recently I went on vacation to Vietnam. Before we left my wife asked what I would do if I couldn't program for a month. I tried to assemble an inexpensive and portable programming environment using a Palm 130, but it was less than satisfactory. With the recent article on the Zarus PDA I have gotten to thinking about the problem again. Notably, I -don't- need a whopping amount of RAM, disk space, or processor speed, and I can live with fairly modest screen sizes. I was unable to find anything that matched all these criteria in about two weeks of occasional (and hurried) research. Do any such beasts exist?"
"My requirements are pretty simple:
- Small and durable (I was packing three and a half weeks of clothes and stuff in a moderately large backpack)
- Long battery life (able to get in a good 8-hour programming session without interruption)
- Able to use a keyboard (I can't write C code from Grafitti)
- Reasonable screen resolution (I need to be able to see at least 80 columns by 40 lines)
- Ability to run a wide variety of programming tools (at least a good editor, C compiler, and probably several common scripting languages as well)
- External mass storage of some kind (I'd settle for SD or CF cards)
- Relatively inexpensive: $200-$400 is a good range (I don't want to be too upset if it gets lost, stolen or dropped off of a cliff)"
The NEC MobilePro is probably the most elite handheld PC I've seen. I don't understand why they aren't more popular. There are lots of them on ebay, and on the newer ones you can run NetBSD with X even (have a big CF card obviously.) The 770, 780, and 790 are the ones to look for. The 800 also runs NetBSD with X, but it's a larger laptopish form factor.
-73, de n1ywb
www.n1ywb.com