Portable Word Processors?
paulcole asks: "I am currently an English major and short story writer, who is in the market for a word processor. My laptop is a good enough tool, but I feel that it isn't quite what I need for a portable writing tool. Namely, I want something smaller, more portable, and easier to use. Right now, I am looking at the QuickPad Pro and the AlphaSmart Dana. Any insight on either of these products, or any others out there, would be very helpful." Do these 'smaller and more portable' devices necessarily justify the trade-offs in power and flexibility that a laptop with a full fledged word processor would provide?
The first thing that comes to mind is, ta da! A pen. Or a pencil, you could try a pencil. Possibly a crayon, I hear some people even do legal briefs in crayons
Why? Palm OS, there's flexibility in the software choices. Choice is a good thing. Easier to sync with another computer, for printing, email, whatever. WiFi option could be a butt saver on occasion.
I always thought there should be more devices similar to this. A full blown laptop is great, but you lose some qualities like stellar battery life, low cost, lightweight. It'd be cool to have laptops with grayscale screens (if anyone made them anymore to keep the cost down in volume). I think it'd be great to have even 20 hour battery life, the thought of 100's of hours on AAA's sounds pretty damn good to me.
Exhalted dreamer...
You can get relatively inexpensive keyboards for most PDAs nowadays. The Palm ones fold down pretty small... not quite small enough to fit into a pocket, but close. The screens on newer devices are clear enough that you'd probably be able to work without too much discomfort.
Get a palm with a keyboard. Better yet, het a palm phone with a keyboard. You can type eveything out and then just email your work to yourself or sync it up. There isn't a need for a seperate piece of hardwar; don't waste your money.
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I knwo you said you didn't want a laptop, but have you looked at a TabletPC? I know you are stuck with Microsoft but it's quite the interesting gadget. They are usually smaller than most laptops and quite light (no floppy-disk or CD/DVD drive in it) and when you want you can convert it into a regular laptop! They are a bit pricey but Windows Journal is a great app. You can write by hand and then use it's great handwriting converter to change it into text so it's as if you typed it! And it is quite accurate since it works well for me and sometimes I can't read my own writing! Also you can "Print to Journal" so that you can 'print' regular files into Journals and then correct Journals by hand using the highlighter and pen tools. I use this when I'm doing research and I find an online source. I doodle and makes notes and arrows on the document itself. There is a free download from the Microsoft Update Centre for a Journal viewer in XP so that you can send you writings to friends and they can view it on their desktops. Just shop around since they charge a premium and some of them are insanley expensive. Disclaimer: I'm not affliated with Microsoft in anyway neither is anyone I know, I'm just a happy owner of a Acer TravelMate C100.
Your CPU is not doing anything else, at least do something.
with the keyboard accessory. Fits easily into two pockets (or one really big one)
-Grump
Is it true that more people vote for the winner of American Idol, than vote for the president? -Ali G.
You mention you'd like something smaller and lighter. The QuickPad comes in at 11.5" x 9" x 1.5", the AlphaSmart Dana at 12.4" x 9.3" x 1.9", and, for comparison, a 12" Powerbook is 10.9" x 8.6" x 1.18. The Powerbook weights twice as much as the other two, but is actually smaller than the word processors. So, you can get a work processor that is bigger, but weighs less, but can only do one thing and has a shitty screen. OR you can get a Powerbook that is smaller, can do many things, a great screen, and only weighs two pounds more. Is two pounds really going to make that much of a difference? Just get a smaller laptop.
Assuming, of course, that money is not a constraint.
I have seen some writers who like using the model 100/200 TRS-80. They are antiques (and unfortunately for the buyer, somewhat collectible), but they have really good battery life and an extraordinary keyboard.
You can find some on Ebay.
There's a good web column Writing on your Palm that's all about the topic of using a PDA as a writer. I recommend checking out the past columns for a whole slew of info on Palm vs. PPC, handy add-on software, and the like.
It makes sense to use a PDA with a full-size keyboard, in my opinion (you get maximum portability plus word processor compatability), and with the same purchase you'll have an MP3 player and organiser (and portable web browser and e-mail client, if you get a decent one). Something to consider.
I know a guy who has the Dana; he likes it. It writes text to a flash memory card, which will then upload, by sending simulated keystrokes (not as a single text file) to a text word processor.
Durable and cheap are it's selling points. But I missed having the resistance that an iBook gives, when I tested it, and it's really limited functionality--I guess i would rather carry something that weighs a little bit more, and be able to check email, surf, look at mapquest directions, and type, rather than one device that just types.
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$tar -xvf
Small is nice, but I have used various computing devices for the past fifteen years to write/edit with varying degress of success. First, about keyboards: They are personal choices. Some writers have favorite instruments: some use a pen and yellow-lined paper, others like Vonnegut use index cards and a pencil. Me, I touchtype. If you don't, you will not be slowed down by non-standard keyspacing. If you do, however, getting used to a smaller keyboard may get in the way of the "creative process."
I first used an old (even then, in 1990) IBM PC-II 8086 with the usual 9" yellow-on-black display. I discovered that the more of what I have written is displayed on the screen, the better I edit -- and write, too. Scrolling up and down looking for where a long sentence or paragraph started is no fun at all on a small screen.
I then tried a Full Page display, which was tits, but I had a devil of a time getting WordPerfect to display the full screen on it.
Then, about 1992, I bought a new laptop, my first new computer and a huge investment. Big mistake, as it had a cramped 8 1/2 in display on which I could barely make out the text.
Small keyboards and small displays suck for me as a writer; they may for you too. My favorite road instrument now is an old IBM Thinkpad without the floppy or CD-ROM drives installed to save weight. Its 12-inch display is OK for editing and shows enough lines to keep the scrolling to a minimum.
At home, I have replaced the old FP with a 19-inch monitor and I write/edit in 2-column in WP-8 for Linux at the smallest point size I can read easily. For displaying lots of text, choose a serif style as it is quicker to be recognized by the eye.
Think thrice about the PDAs unless you don't touch-type and your stories are very, very short.
A couple of those devices look AMAZINGLY like the old Cidco MailStations. Anyone have any idea if these are repurposed Cidco IP or vice versa?
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DanTE Advance.
try a palm pilot, the palm portable keyboard, and something like pedit. seriously, for under $200 USD you can have a very functional word processing environment, and a whole lot more.
i used the palm keyboard for a while and was constantly amazed at both how portable it was (folding up to roughly the size of the palm pilot itself) and how much like a real keyboard it felt like.
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I had the opportunity to test drive one of the original AlphaSmart K-12 editions back in middle school, they were the poor-man's (or schools) laptop for students. We'd have writing assignments on them and everything. The originals had a 4 line LCD screen, very small. They had a ps/2 & ADB port on the side, plug it into one of the classroom's 2 macs, push a button and *poof* I loved the suckers, i'll definatly look into this new line.
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I've been using a Palm Pilot IIIc with keyboard. If you want something that takes like 2 pockets in a pair of combats then Palm + Keyboard is about as small as you can go while still having a hear fullsize keyboard. You can then sync your work to your laptop. This way you can carry around all your current projects and when the muse hits, you got what it needs to make it happen.
Also any Palm type computer that is priced over $350 is a waste of money! What makes them good value is small, cheap, light! If you get any of the more costly ones you'll have heavy, expensive, and short battery life. Make sure you get a rechearable one, none of those AAA crap. That's the cool thing about the Palm IIIc it will recharge from its cradle, even if the battery list is only about 2-3 days because first generation colour.
You should get used to paper+pen, as once you graduate, you won't be able to afford upgrading your computers anymore. English as a major doesn't go too far in life.
The educational discount I got on my 15" PowerBook was only $50.
Sounds like the long-discontinued Apple eMate is just what you want. I saw a new-in-box eMate 300 on eBay for a buy-it-now price of $200, you could probably find a good one for around $100. It's basically a Newton with a keyboard, it seems designed for writing, good keyboard, basic B&W screen, good battery life. Zap your text over a serial cable to your main CPU for further work.
You could try this. Here's another article (give it some time to load) on it.
You can use any portable USB keyboard with it and it has full featured browser and much more and you can plug it into any phone jack to connect to web to send emails etc.
Here and here are some features...
It doesn't get better than WordSmith from BlueNomad on a PalmOS PDA.
I've used it for years and love it. It even works as a plaintext HTML editor! With an FTP client and some way to connect, you've got a mobile web publishing tool as well.
This user account is inactive account replaced by the PDA
For a nice and cheap alternative, why not get a used Palm M500 or M505 with a Palm keyboard (both very reasonable currently on ebay) and you have a perfect Wordprocessor for less than 100 $.
A bit more expensive than other solutions, but very handy is the smallest VAIO notebook from Sony, the TR-Series. It is a Windows XP computer, which can almost fit in your pocket...
How about a Psion Netbook or Series 7? For that matter a series 5 has the best keyboard any PDA has ever had.
They're not made any more, so there are support issues, but these are good products. I see them for about $300 on ebay.
I myself find Palm + Palm Keyboard an excellent combination, although possibly you might want a larger screen if you were using it all the time, hence my suggestion of the Psions.
~~~~~ BigLig2? You mean there's another one of me?
I'm also a writer and I thought about the dedicated word processors for about 12 seconds, and realized that they're over-priced and underpowered.
I'm currently using an old Palm IIIc with a folding keyboard that would only cost you about $80 off of ebay and would serve the purpose, but not be nearly as satisfying as a laptop. If you're only looking at word processing on it, you can get an older G3 iBook for about the same price as one of those dedicated word processors.
I'm saving for a 12" G4 iBook (the most bang for the buck in the small laptop market IMHO), but if you've got the money... the 12" powerbook or some of the tiny Sony Viao series would work as well. The dedicated WP market seems to rely on people who haven't done the math on how much you get for how much you pay compared with small laptops. IMHO the value just isn't there.
CharlesP
wordtrip.com
When I was working on my BA in English, my preferred writing implement was a Pilot Precise pen, Very Fine tip, and a stack of legal pads.
When I started working on my thesis, I bought a Powerbook Duo because it weighed less than most of the books I was toting around already.
Since your laptop seems to be unsatisfactory for some reason (too heavy, maybe?) you might want to look at either an older subnotebook (a Duo, or perhaps a Toshiba Libretto or a Sony Picturebook) or something smaller. Apple made a Newton with a built-in keyboard called the eMate that was pretty nice. Fantastic battery life, decent screen, and designed for elementary school kids so its damned near indestructible.
--saint
Pick up an eMate on eBay - it's a Newton in a clamshell case with built-in keyboard. Compact, weighs about 4 pounds, reasonable screen size.
No sig? Sigh...
For typability, battery life, and moderate weight, it's hard to beat a Model-T: the 20-year-old TRS-80 model 10x line. The main downside is that its wp app is just a text editor and the display is a quaint pixels-so-big-you-can-measure-them LCD that shows only a few lines at a time. But the keyboard is probably better quality than the one on your desktop. Transferring text files to another machine also takes some work (i.e. RS232 serial).
If size and weight are your main concerns, but you still want something you can type on (and your fingers are fairly slim), I'd recommend something about half that age: the Poqet PC. It's a little longer than a VHS cassette, runs DOS out of ROM, can run a decent wp like WordPerfect 5.1, and you can use certain PCMCIA cards for storage and moving data to a "real" computer. You do need good eyesight, because it squeezes a full 80x25 screen into that little real estate. A couple AAs lasts ages.
The PDAs that Psion used to make (Series5, Revo/Mako) are even smaller, and the keyboards more cramped, but still far more useable for typing than Blackberry-style little dots. The software is on par with anything available today (the wp module frankly has more features than you'd want in a device this small), and they're (obviously) useful for schedule management, and such. File transfer through their docking cradles is easy. I go nowhere without my Revo, so I always have a decent word processor at hand.
Increasingly I find myself using my 12" iBook for portable word processing. It's a bit much to lug around (compared to what I've used previously) but I can run OpenOffice on it, and it has a USB port for my "key drive" so file transfer to my desktop is a piece of cake.
(I've considered trying the AlphaSmart units. Durability compared to a laptop would be a big bonus there. I see them as the 21st century version of the TRS-80 model 100.)
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
Get an old visor, and add a portable keyboard.
This one, while a bit pricey, feels like a regular keyboard while in use, but folds up to about the size of a wallet otherwise.
Being a writer, I always struggled with this issue. I tried the palm with a keyboard, and while theoretically a nice solution, ergonomically it's not. The screen is too small, it's awkcward, and there is a serious lack of word processing software available for the palm platform. The builtin note pad application has a 4K limitation on entry.
Lets face it, when you write you want to be able to enjoy it. This means the screen is pleasant to look at, the keyboard feels nice to type on, and editing and organizing your work on it is easy.
The HP Jornada 820 has all of these, it's VERY compact, and has a plus a 10 hour + battery life. This last point I kid you not on. It's largely a Win CE device with keyboard and 640x 480 colour screen, and so has no hard drive. I easily charge the thing once a week, and take it with me where ever I go. It runs like a lite version of Windows 95, which wile not glamerous, is pretty functional. Plus it has PCMCIA, CF Card, USB, and VGA out, built in v.90 modem. I actually can (and occasionally do) hook up to the internet with it.
Seriously check this out if you can. After I got it, through a friend, it completely changed my writing. Now, instead of having to chose between bringing a note pad to write in, or bring a dangerously expensive laptop that would only run for an hour or two on battery (ikn this case an early viao), I just pop it in my bag and bring it out whenever I need it. And since it's instant on, I can just turn it on, make a quick note and turn it off...
Your question is like asking what brand of condoms to use. Just buy what fits.
My solution has been a folding keyboard and a Palm compatible with wordsmith. At present I use a Clie TJ-37 with the KB100 keyboard. It's very comfortable to work on especially in the cramped confines of an airlines coach seat. The overall price of the system is $380 the same cost as a Dana. The integrated wifi vga camera and color display may compensate for the display size depending on your temperment.
A neat feature of the KB-100 keyboard is that it accepts a sony power supply jack (the annoying 3 pin type) allowing you to charge the Clie while using the keyboard. When I get a chance I'm rigging a battery pack using the connector. (any help on the pinout would be appreciated.
A few years back, my mother bought a computer like item for me from a charity shop. It turned out to be a Canon word processor. It was so easy to use that in the space of two minutes, I had plugged in the wall adaptor, switched it on, typed up a test page and printed it.
Two minutes! It seems crazy that many GHz PC's take longer than that to boot up.
Do not underestimate functional simplicity when it comes to getting real work done. I'd also consider a Psion 5 myself. My one concern is a question of their robustness. "Normal" PDA's are not designed with authors in mind and colour displays suck battery juice bigtime.
My hyperlinks aren't worth the paper they're printed on.