Slashdot Mirror


Batteries For Your Pen And Paper?

An anonymous reader writes "We've been hearing about the paperless office for years now, but we never seem to get any nearer to that environmentally friendly nirvana. It's just too easy to jot things down on a piece of paper, far easier than using a PDA. So maybe a digital pen and paper is the answer? The people at Pegasus, inventor of the Mobile NoteTaker certainly think so. Unfortunately, the guy who reviewed the NoteTaker thinks otherwise."

2 of 120 comments (clear)

  1. Why not a PDA? by lecithin · · Score: 4, Informative

    This sums it up for me:

    "Now, as a cheap gadget this would all be perfectly acceptable. But when put within the context of its price it borders on crazy. I am all for convergence technologies, but when you consider the Mobile NoteTaker is priced at just under £150 I cannot see many takers. This is more expensive than some colour PDAs we have had in the labs and 50 per cent more than the very useable palmOne Zire 31 which can be found for less than £100. "

    I figure that if a person cannot use a PDA they are not going to be able to really use this. If you are one of those people, carry a pack of yellow-stickies.

    --
    It could be worse, it could be Monday.
  2. poster forgot to RTFA by Jason1729 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The reviewer didn't say a digital pen and paper is a bad idea. All the negative comments in the article are aimed at this implementation.

    The build quality is cheap, it's big and bulky, it requires MS Office, etc.

    The reviewer seemed to like what the technology had to offer, this implementation was just junky.

    Jason
    ProfQuotes