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New Sharp Zaurus SL-C760/C750 Linux PDAs

i4u writes "Sharp announces new models of their Zaurus PDA line. The new models are the SL-C760 (launch date: June 21, 2003) and the SL-C750 (launch date: May 24, 2003). The new PDAs have a faster CPU, more memory and feature a bigger Screen (VGA 640x480) than the former SLC-700 model. The start speed of applications improved to about twice (compared to the SL-C700) by adopting the Intel XScaleTM PXA255 400MHz CPU. Connectivty is possible via Wireless Lan and FOMA broadband wireless phones. The installed software contains also an MP4 Player for Movies. Nice for business users is the ability to connect the Zaurus to a projector (800x600) and present MS PowerPoint Slides. Photos and English translation of Press-Release available on I4U.com"

8 of 146 comments (clear)

  1. Linux Journal (June '03) Review by The+Oddity · · Score: 5, Informative

    Check out this month's Linux Journal for a review of this. It's currently only available online to subscribers

    Also, check out this site to buy one.

  2. Worth the money! by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 4, Informative

    The SL-C760 was one of the models I had a play with at CeBit, and the screen is so good that it cannot be described.

    They already had a working OZ build for it, so that should be available publicly soon if not already.

    The form factor is nice, it fits great in a hand just like a palm, but when you need a keyboard (ssh anyone?) this arrangement is much better than the pull out version on the 5500. They even remembered to put a | key on it this time :o)

    They were having a few speed problems with the XScale (it was running about the same as the Arm 206's in the 5500) but they may have fixed that.

    Build quality is fine, much more robust than the 5500, same good mix of CF and SD/MMC. Much better battery life as well. Not sure whatll happen with the arm-compiled packages that are in such surplus for the 5500 though - maybe someone will write an emulation layer.

    On the whole, definatly a winner, especially for Linux/UNIX admin types - go out and buy one now!

    --
    Beep beep.
  3. Options by BJH · · Score: 4, Informative


    The English article's slashdotted, so I don't know what it said, but the poster's comment about the 800x600 video output failed to mention that it requires an additional expansion card to do this.

    From the Japanese page, the other options are:

    Large lithium battery: 10,000 yen (same as supplied with SL-C760)
    Lithium battery: 5,500 yen (same as supplied with SL-C750)
    Battery recharger: 5,500 yen (only supports SL-C750's battery)
    Digital camera card: 24,000 yen (fits in CF slot; 350,000 pixels)
    Voice recorder kit: 5,000 yen

    Also, they've tested it with a variety of CD cards. The selection available includes:
    PHS wireless cards (PHS is a form of mobile phone in use in Japan)
    802.11b wireless cards
    Modem cards
    LAN cards (10baseT only, it seems)
    Graphic card (this is the one I mentioned above; I think it's the first CF-slot video card I've heard of)
    The usual CF memory cards

    According to the page, the SL-C760 gets 8.5 hours use on battery. The SL-C750 gets 5 hours.

    The software includes the usual Hancom apps, an MPEG-4 player, an MP3 player, presentation software, audio recorder, and a Java environment.

  4. Re:Size by BJH · · Score: 4, Informative

    From the Japanese page...

    SL-C760: W120mm x H23.2mm x D83mm
    SL-C750: W120 x H18.6 x D83mm

    Weights are 250g and 225g respectively.

  5. Re:These things are not PDAs. by alienw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You are an idiot. These are perfect for anyone who needs a truly portable computer. No, laptops aren't really portable. They have to sit on something flat, have a power connection (most have an under-2-hours battery life, thus rendering the battery useless for those of us who actually USE computers) , and not be moved around. They also weigh several pounds, and are very uncomfortable to carry around.

    With one of these PDAs, I can use it an entire day. For example, they are perfect for students (take notes on the touchscreen or the keyboard, put it back in your pocket when you are done). They have some very cool games available. They can do 99% of the things I need to do when I don't have access to a real computer.

    Besides, comparing the Sharp devices to the Libretto is just ludicrous. The Libretto was huge, heavy, and had a short battery life. It had all the shortcomings of a notebook with none of its benefits. You couldn't put it in your pocket, could you?

  6. Not just a pretty face, er, display by tz · · Score: 4, Informative

    The C700 screen is better than most laptops. I can see it in the Sun. The 760 has the bigger battery (1700 v.s. 950 mAh) and they are claiming 8 hours battery life, and it doubles the memory.

    Basically think of most of a Linux laptop in your pocket (although it uses Qtopia, not X unless you add it). For network diagnosis it is hard to beat. Plus you get the standard WordProc/Spreadsheet/Present/etc.

    Also it works as a SD and CF reader - it uses Samba to export the card mount points to your desktop. So you don't need another USB CF or SD reader. And it plays MP3s, and other formats (more than the iPod).

    I have a collection of map images which I serve using the Boa webserver, the usual collection of network tools like (t)ethereal, and I can even compile on it (I have a 512Mb SD). I can also plug it into my cell phone and turn it into a wireless access point - NAT - firewall (I recompiled the kernel to add iptables).

    It can replace a laptop if your eyes are reasonably good since the screen is sharp, clear, high-resolution, but still physically small (but there is the magnify button). I can't fully touch type (there is an external keyboard for that), but I can enter text reasonably fast.

    I suppose someone will get one because they are neat, but people buy sports cars and rarely drive them and then never go much over 55. But that is a terrible waste.

  7. I own a Zaurus 5500 by rkuris · · Score: 5, Informative

    I can assure you these are no desktop computers. Here's what they do GREAT:

    - Play MP3's, ogg files, and even video -- particularly with OpenZaurus (OZ).
    - Let you reference your contacts, appointments, to-do lists

    Here's what they're GOOD at:

    - Enter new appointments, to-do list items. Data entry is slower than on a laptop or desktop.
    - Synchronize with your desktop. Setup is tricky on these units, especially if you go with a pure Linux solution, but doable.

    And here's where mine is not-so-good:
    - Trying to store any good size software package (like a compiler). Yes you CAN add a 256MB SD card or a 1G hard disk, but the hard disk eats your battery..
    - Trying to do software development. Data entry is too slow without a full size keyboard (yes, I know you CAN hook one up, but that's difficult too). You have to build on a PC and deploy to the Zaurus. QT development is nice, though!
    - Surfing the web. It works, but the small screen size and zooming and whatnot makes it tricky.
    - Entering a long document. Without a full sized keyboard, it's slow.

    And, the impossible:
    - Trying to do something requiring a lot of CPU. You can try running xmame, for example, but most of the games won't work because the CPU is not good enough.

    Sounds like a typical PDA if you ask me.

    --
    Get rid of everything Micro and Soft: Buy Viagra and/or Linux
  8. Re:its the software stupid by cbiffle · · Score: 4, Funny

    I guess you sort of missed OpenZaurus, which addresses all of the concerns you list here? Ah, well, that's okay, you're an AC. :-)