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A Cheap and Portable Word Processor?

An anonymous reader asks: "Last evening I was waiting for a bus and realized that it would be very nice to have a little portable word processor; not a fancy PDA, but something with a bare minimum of processing power, small screen, and a cheap mini-keyboard, so that it could fit in a jacket pocket. It doesn't seem like an infeasable product - consider the price that all-in-one 8-bit game machines like the C64 DTV go for, add that to the price that the cheap organizers go for, and you get a retail value under $50. The only major difference would be in the software, and with some attention given to expansibility it might even be a decent device for homebrews. Does Slashdot have any thoughts on what might fill these gap, or is there really no product that tries to be small, cheap and low-powered like what I'm looking for?" "When I got home, I did a search for any such devices, and came up with two choices: bulky 1980s machines with outdated connectivity options, found on eBay for pennies - some of these are actually programmable too, interestingly enough; and overpriced 'educational' machines which are almost equivalent to the 80s machines (over $200 or even $300). Electronic organizers are going for under $20, but they are woefully limited machines. The only other cheap option is to get a used PDA."

428 comments

  1. Sidekick by cookiej · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm a big fan of the Danger SideKick. It has the best form factor for text of all the typable phone/pdas. You can get one for a song if you sign up with the right provider. Me I signed up for a year and I paid -$35 (via rebates) for the unit.

    Plus, I love posting first.

    P.S. infeasable?

    1. Re:Sidekick by ProfaneBaby · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've had both a Sidekick and Sidekick II, and I agree. The Sidekick II is very nice, and the SSH and AIM clients are also very useful for people who enjoy being 'connected'.

      The web browser isn't great, but it's also relatively useful.

      --
      Video Phone Blogs send video messages straight to the web.
    2. Re:Sidekick by winkydink · · Score: 4, Informative

      I see you glossed right over battery life and the lack of a replaceable battery. Both were deal-killers for me. Well, than and there was no desktop sync software (has T-Mo finally released this?) No way was I entering 900+ contacts using that itty bitty kybd.

      --

      "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    3. Re:Sidekick by ProfaneBaby · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've never had a battery problem. I use it extensively (2000+ minutes per month of talk time, plus 20-30 emails per day and semi-regular IM use), and don't have any battery complaints.

      --
      Video Phone Blogs send video messages straight to the web.
    4. Re:Sidekick by winkydink · · Score: 1

      How often do you charge it? I was lucky to get 24 hours out of a Sidekick II that we tested.

      --

      "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    5. Re:Sidekick by cookiej · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yes.

      There is contact/calendar sync for both Wintel and Mac.

      Also -- while Paris Hilton might have issues, I love the fact that my data simply sits on a server and my phone just replicates as necessary.

    6. Re:Sidekick by ProfaneBaby · · Score: 1

      About every 2-3 days ... Mine's showing 2 bars left, hasn't been charged since Sunday morning, though weekends are slow, so maybe that's not indicative of normal usage..

      --
      Video Phone Blogs send video messages straight to the web.
    7. Re:Sidekick by toganet · · Score: 1

      I get about two days of normal usage. I wish it were more, but I charge it every night anyway.

    8. Re:Sidekick by admactanium · · Score: 2, Informative
      No way was I entering 900+ contacts using that itty bitty kybd.
      of course, you could also just import all your contacts using tmobile's own importing tools on their website. of course, that would be the simple way to do it i suppose and it wouldn't give you any reason to complain.

      the sidekicks I and II are both great form factors. the only major beef i have with it is that the camera is really awful and the lack of a good syncing tool. even with those limitations i prefer it to the treo.

    9. Re:Sidekick by bluephone · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is not a troll. I don't carry a cell phone (don't want one), etc. But how hard is it to let it charge overnight while you sleep? You say you can't get 24 hours out of it, but do you regularly use it for more than 18 straight hours? Or does it take forever to charge?

      --
      jX [ Make everything as simple as possible, but no simpler. - Einstein ]
    10. Re:Sidekick by winkydink · · Score: 1

      Well, some of the folks at the office are now carrying phones that have over 1 month of standby (no, they do not weigh 5 lbs :), so I guess it's a convenience issue. It's not about being able to charge it every night. It's about being able to forget to charge it for a night (or two) and not miss an important call because it wasn't charged when you need it.

      --

      "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    11. Re:Sidekick by KILNA · · Score: 1

      Well, one of the reasons I suspect the Sidekick has less battery life is the fact that it syncs its information with central servers near-realtime so you never have to back up your data, so there's a lot of transmitting it's doing that other phones wouldn't. I could shoot my sidekick and be up in minutes after stopping by a T-Mo store. To me standby times are not all that relevant, if a phone goes a month without use it's sitting in a drawer somewhere. So some phones can go a couple extra days in a high-use scenario, it's just not worth the trade for battery life against a pocketable, full network-sync'd PDA with QWERTY if you have a need like the OP, writing long docs while on the go.

      --
      Error: PANTS NOT FOUND. Press <F1> to continue.
    12. Re:Sidekick by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      " Both were deal-killers for me."

      How so? Even my year-old Sidekick II runs 24+ hours, regardless of how much I use it. Unless you're talking 5+ hours a day on the phone, what's the big deal? Charge it when you go to sleep and it's ready to go in the morning.

      "Well, than and there was no desktop sync software"

      Intellisync is now available. And you have always been able to import / edit contacts using the web interface.

    13. Re:Sidekick by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's not a big deal, until you go away on business for a couple of days and forget your charger. Or go on holiday and find the plugs are different. Or go to a music festival (where there are no chargers, at least none without a two-hour wait).

      For me, it's a convenience thing. I want to be able to go stay overnight at my girlfriend's on a whim, and not have to pack a small suitcase full of chargers for the gadgets I habitually carry. I don't want to be forced to choose between carrying around a charger (which effectively doubles the weight/bulk of the phone) or being shackled to my bedroom/study desk each night.

      I just can't wait for a simple ubiquitous induction-based charging system. Or even better, environmental options like flip-out solar panels or thermal charging. Or even just fuel cells or (well-shielded) nuclear micropiles. Anything that lets me Stop Worrying About It and get on with whatever I want to do.

      --
      Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
    14. Re:Sidekick by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Heh, that is why I still use a by now ancient Ericsson t39m (with the 'big' battery. With normal use, it gives over 280 hours standby time (normal use being calling for some 10-30 minutes each day on average, using bluetooth to connect to my pda for mail and web browsing etc)

      My z72 gives up after some 5 to 7 days of normal use, so all in all I get to be away from any chargers for about a week before this becomes a problem.. and for those cases I have a spare battery fot the phone and a chargepack (big battery that can be used for recharging the internal battery of the z72)

      2-3 days standby time, esp on my phone, would be utterly unusable for me.

  2. Pencil/Paper by fembots · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think there's a major difference between your proposed cheap word processor and a handheld game/organizer, which is the output requrement.

    I'm sure you would like to move your documents somewhere, maybe to a desktop for final processing, printing and whatnot? So maybe a USB, IR or a memory slot so that you can transfer data effortlessly?

    Although these "expansions" are not expensive, they still cost money. So it's commercially inviable to produce it, because "for a little bit more" one can probably produce a PDA or mobile phone.

    And what's wrong with the pencil/paper solution? Paper is a non-volatile memory so you don't have to worry about system crashes or forgetting to save your documents.

    From my experience with PDA, you'll write/type about as fast on a PDA as you would on a piece of paper

    1. Re:Pencil/Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
      From my experience with PDA, you'll write/type about as fast on a PDA as you would on a piece of paper

      You must be able to haul ass on your PDA...

    2. Re:Pencil/Paper by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      If I keep a pencil in my pocket I usually get stabbed when I sit down. Also I sometimes want a calculator, especially one that can do powers and sqrt. Doing sqrt on paper is tedious.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    3. Re:Pencil/Paper by tepples · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And what's wrong with the pencil/paper solution? Paper is a non-volatile memory so you don't have to worry about system crashes or forgetting to save your documents.

      Inserts take way too long, as they require recopying the whole document manually. It's also considered a Hard Problem (i.e. something not bundled with a scanner) to OCR handwritten text.

    4. Re:Pencil/Paper by pdbogen · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I type much faster than I write, and I enjoy it much more, and it's a lot readable (to me as well as other people.) Plus, even a small/old word processor like this (TI used to make one; I don't remember what it's called, but I've read stories about how it's solid as a rock and still in use) would have significantly more capacity than a pocket notepad, or anything else of equivalent size.

    5. Re:Pencil/Paper by daeley · · Score: 3, Funny

      and it's a lot readable

      You sure about that? ;)

      --
      I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
    6. Re:Pencil/Paper by msaulters · · Score: 3, Interesting
      And what's wrong with the pencil/paper solution? Paper is a non-volatile memory so you don't have to worry about system crashes or forgetting to save your documents.


      Until you forget and wash your pants with the paper still in the pocket. I've lost several business cards and even checks (ouch!) that way.
      --
      These people looked deep into my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined.
    7. Re:Pencil/Paper by Ewan · · Score: 1

      everyone knows that's why you should always carry your phone with built in calculator :)

    8. Re:Pencil/Paper by russellh · · Score: 1

      Inserts take way too long, as they require recopying the whole document manually. It's also considered a Hard Problem (i.e. something not bundled with a scanner) to OCR handwritten text.

      Nah, when those who grow up on word processors try to write by hand they encounter these problems. To write by hand you first Think. Having Thought, you then know what to Write. It's pretty easy to circle sections and draw arrows, write notes in the margin, insert references to other pages. And the best writing is rewriting. Not a bad solution when the small 'n simple WP is less than feasible.

      Or for $20 get a Palm V + keyboard on eBay.

      Oh yeah, this reminds me... I'd like a tablet computer, a super hi res, pen based tablet... but with NO HWR! gawd. am I the only one who can't stand hand writing recognition? I want my scribbles. I like my scribbles. I scribble far more than mere letters, words, and paragraphs. But it'd be nice for those scribbles to be vector objects so they're reasonably printable.

      --
      must... stay... awake...
    9. Re:Pencil/Paper by jhoger · · Score: 5, Informative

      I'd say the difference is the input and output requirement.

      You need a good keyboard, and you need a good display.

      Here's the short list of true-portable laptops to check out:

      Tandy WP-2
      TRS-80 Model 100
      Tandy 102
      Tandy 200
      Cambridge Z88
      Amstrad NC100 or NC200'

      All of these are 8-bit CPUs. Last for between 10 and 20 hours on battery (!!!). Available for between $10 and $50 on Ebay. Doesn't get cheaper than that.

      Or the Alphasmart Dana which is basically a Palm V with a bigger screen. USB, IR, and memory slot.

      Except for Dana, The interface for downloading to PC is serial port. You may need a $10 adapter if you only have USB on your machine.

      -- John.

    10. Re:Pencil/Paper by bluGill · · Score: 1

      You have not seen my handwriting.

      Back in school they tested me and discovered that at best my handwriting is like a second grader. That is when I'm really trying my best to write neat, normal writing that I'm in a hurry to get down is much worse. (There is a name for this condition, but I don't care enough about it to remember)

    11. Re:Pencil/Paper by peawee03 · · Score: 1

      On a tablet pc, I can see no HWR for the notebook-replacing attempt. I'd like it as much as you sound like you would- though I'd like to be able to turn it on for things like sending emails without having to sit down and fold it around or anything.

      PDAs, though, need that HWR, or at least I do. The screen's just too damn small and it doesn't write quite like paper so everything becomes illegible.

      --
      I wish I could write clever and witty sigs.
    12. Re:Pencil/Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From original Post: Last evening I was waiting for a bus
      and the reply was: I type much faster than I write
      But do you type faster while standing at the bus stop?

    13. Re:Pencil/Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      Lazy?

    14. Re:Pencil/Paper by trime · · Score: 2, Insightful

      With a lot of care and a lot of time important documents can sometimes be recovered from washing piles. The same can not be said for PDAs, which people also tend to keep in shirt pockets.

    15. Re:Pencil/Paper by Mr.+KFM · · Score: 1

      Why not just save money and paper by writing on things as you go by them?

      It's not like you can read it anyway.

      --

      If all else fails... RTFM

    16. Re:Pencil/Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most likely. Check with an occupational therapist, and they'll tell you that this sort of thing can be overcome; that or you have a motor skill disorder which isn't mutually exclusive to your handwriting.

    17. Re:Pencil/Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until you forget and wash your pants with the paper still in the pocket.

      What do you think happens when you forget to remove the PDA from your pants when you wash your pants.

    18. Re:Pencil/Paper by SirNonya · · Score: 1

      Square root on paper isn't really much more difficult than multiplication, when one is used to it, assuming that one doesn't need more than four significant figures; after four sig-figs, it gets to be a genuine PITA. Once mastered, it's fun because so few other people can do it. It's cube roots that are tedious!

    19. Re:Pencil/Paper by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1
      And what's wrong with the pencil/paper solution? Paper is a non-volatile memory so you don't have to worry about system crashes or forgetting to save your documents.
      I suppose next you're going to tell people they should write their passwords on paper too.
    20. Re:Pencil/Paper by leshert · · Score: 1

      If I keep a pencil in my pocket I usually get stabbed when I sit down.

      I hated this too until I got a Fisher Bullet Pen. At US$18 it's a little pricy, but it's a "normal" sized, hefty quality pen when it's open, and a tiny, rounded, pocket-friendly steel capsule when it's closed.

    21. Re:Pencil/Paper by mollymoo · · Score: 1
      Back in school they tested me and discovered that at best my handwriting is like a second grader.

      I had one of those tests too, with the same result: handwriting ability of a second grader. I think I was in second grade at the time.

      --
      Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
    22. Re:Pencil/Paper by jigyasubalak · · Score: 0
      And what's wrong with the pencil/paper solution? Paper is a non-volatile memory so you don't have to worry about system crashes or forgetting to save your documents.

      Try writing something on paper while standing in a Queue waiting for a bus. I certainly do see the point in the story post. It's easier to type into an blackberry or something of that sort is his point.

      I think the poster is rooting for an organizer kinda device with a bigger screen but w/o all the bells-n-whistles of a PDA with a data transfer cord. That's all. That shouldn't cost a lot!

      --
      The best planning can be done after the project completes.
    23. Re:Pencil/Paper by jigyasubalak · · Score: 0

      A lot of times I have got 'white' money from my pockets after a wash.

      --
      The best planning can be done after the project completes.
    24. Re:Pencil/Paper by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      That's why I want SimPuter.

      It looks to be all about orgonizing scribbles, not text.

      I emailed them about buying one (on their buy page) and never got a resonse, despite saying it was for everybody in the world and not just Indians in the who is it for page.

      You would think they would be looking for Amercican suckers since they arn't selling them in India apperently.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    25. Re:Pencil/Paper by torpor · · Score: 1

      bay, typical pscyho rubbish!

      just because they've got a 'name' for your 'condition' doesn't mean that "practice doesn't make perfect".

      you wrote, you got analyzed, you were told 'why' your handwriting sucks, you stopped handwriting. it was the wrong reason why.

      your handwriting sucks because you don't do enough of it, and now, because of a convenient 'analysis', you don't care either...

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    26. Re:Pencil/Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Typing" on a PDA is neither fast, nor legible(beacuse of typos). I have considered this problem extensively, and came to the conclusion that if you really just want a cheep, light, portable way to write, you can simply not beat a pad of paper. As a refrence, I can type much faster than I can write on a keyboard.

    27. Re:Pencil/Paper by tavilach · · Score: 1

      And if you wash your pants with the extremely small word processor still in the pocket, you'll be better off? :)

      --

      "Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world." -Archimedes
    28. Re:Pencil/Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somebody _always_ has to suggest the pen and paper option! Maybe we should have a Slashdot filter that saves us the bother of autoreplying:

      "We are sorry that we are unable to accept your pen and paper comment, smart as it is (better resolution blah, blah, blah). Didn't you know that:

      A) NOBODY, NOBODY, NOBODY want's to write a hardcopy document and then copy it all over again electronically

      B) As a slashdot reader you should long ago have lost the ability to even form your own signature at the local gas station"

    29. Re:Pencil/Paper by Dillan · · Score: 1
      You are missing at least part of the point.

      Most folks just use two applications; wordprocessor, and spreadsheet. They do so at the most basic levels, no embedded objects, no live links, only a couple of fonts at most. So with the addition of file manager and no windows manager therefore no mousepad it get a lot less complex. They also don't need a lot of storage.

      What they do want from the device are two basics: Fast boot and long battery life. Remove the HDD and replace with ROM/Flash and cut down the size of the processor/memory and hey presto you have something a lot of people would buy.

      I realise cutting off the gadgets is heresy to most of the Slashdot crowd, but it is the same thinking that is behind the boom in sales of minimal feature mobile phones.

      Provide a foc cross-complier and some APIs and folks would be kicking down the doors to buy the obvious successor to the Apple lle for all those "We need something programmable but simple to control this" jobs.

    30. Re:Pencil/Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah, Atari Portfolio rulez... ;-)

    31. Re:Pencil/Paper by bluGill · · Score: 1

      The test was in 6th grade. At that time I was writing everything out by hand, and showing no improvement. I'll grant that my hand writing has gone down since then (because I no longer have reason to hand write), but lack of practice doesn't fit, at the time I spent most of my day writing things out by hand. There was a computer lab (Apple //s), but we didn't use it for our writing.

      Practice only makes perfect if you body has the ability to become perfect. My muscles do not work that way, for whatever reason. Saying that I would be better at hand writing if I practiced is like saying that someone confined to a wheelchair should practice walking. I know a few people in wheel chairs who can walk (with help) a couple steps, but their body cannot do more no matter how much the practice. (MS does that) My disability is tiny, but it is still there.

    32. Re:Pencil/Paper by bluGill · · Score: 1

      I was in 6th grade though. Back in second grade I was well below my peers in ability, daily practice up until then brought me up to that level.

    33. Re:Pencil/Paper by torpor · · Score: 1

      "lack of practice doesn't fit"

      yes it does, you were in 6th grade. from that point on its at least 10 years of practice before you should be willing to write yourself off (pun intended) as a bad hand-writer.. 'muscles do not work that way' is crap, too. what a justification for laziness! in 6th grade, your muscles still have a loooong way to go before they're "done, fixed condition".

      honest, this is whats wrong with education: excuses, excuses, excuses ...

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    34. Re:Pencil/Paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If practice makes perfect, how come you suck at trolling?

    35. Re:Pencil/Paper by tabrnaker · · Score: 1
      I used to write like crap as well, couldn't figure out why. Once i got rid of my glasses and corrected my vision by not focusing on details and focused on objects i write a lot better.

      I realize now that my letters individually were ok, but words lacked similarity between the letters. So i could write letters just none in the same style. Losing the myopic viewpoint my handwriting has improved without practicing it.

    36. Re:Pencil/Paper by Waruwaru · · Score: 1

      To cut cost, you can do away with the screen and just provide a keyboard with memory. Life is random, why would you need a screen? Try the new Word Processor Shuffle today!

  3. Uh... by grumpyman · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Pen and paper?

    1. Re:Uh... by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 1

      I use an old police notebook I picked up at an Army Surplus store. Durable covers, fits perfectly in your back pocket, numbered and ruled pages. It's a delight.

      --
      Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
    2. Re:Uh... by iocat · · Score: 1

      Google. Better than pen-and-paper. The CalcuScribe is exactly what the poster is looking for. Cheap, AAA powered, can send text to any app. Actually, it's kind of pricey, but it's pretty neat. They've had things like this around for *years.* I've always wanted to get one, they seem neat.

      --

      Dude, I think I can see my house from here.

  4. Wordpad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Now if they would only throw in Clippy.

    1. Re:Wordpad by game+kid · · Score: 1

      I don't have many problems with teh clip. Then again, I haven't seen it ask many "It looks like" questions lately either.

      As long as it doesn't interrupt me with said questions, and my screen size is >= 1024*768, Clippit's welcome. On a portable device though, he'd be 100 pixels too wide. Seeing my notes is important, and Clippy'd just get in the way of my stylus (and be tortuously swept around the screen in the process, which some of you might want to do to him).

      --
      You can hold down the "B" button for continuous firing.
  5. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  6. Try this by RossTheHayes · · Score: 5, Funny

    Mead v1.0 carbon based cellulose WordPad. Unfortunately, you also need to purchase the Bic v2.0 ballpoint inkjet.

    1. Re:Try this by faust2097 · · Score: 1

      I prefer Rhodia and Miquelrius pads, but don't get me started on those Moleskine bastards!

      I went through 2 electronic organizers and 3 generations of PDA until I realized that for me the portability, durability and usability of paper really can't be beaten. If you have an idea that's REALLY good you'll be happy to transcribe it again.

    2. Re:Try this by bigbigbison · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Call me crazy but ever since Mead started printing "Mead" down in the lower righthand corner of each sheet of paper, I quit buying their paper. I'm not a subscriber to Adbusters or anything, but why do we need to have the company logo on each sheet of their paper???

      --
      http://www.popularculturegaming.com -- my blog about the culture of videogame players
    3. Re:Try this by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 5, Funny

      For many of us the installed font is unfortunately Times New Illegible. Some of us haven't used Cellulose WordPad in so long that we also get Hand Cramp exceptions even on small documents.

    4. Re:Try this by aluxeterna · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with the Moleskine, other than the price? My productivity improved drastically as soon as I started using the Moleskine pocket-sized graph-paper notebook--the pocket allowed me to keep both my business cards as well as other random things I needed to keep with me at all times, and the paper seems to be of pretty good quality.

      The other pocket notebooks I've seen with a pocket inside all closed with a magnetic cover--no good, considering the other items in my pockets.

      If there's anything like the moleskine, for a price closer to the Rhodia pads, let me know!

      --
      121. THE FUTURE.--N. future, futurity, hereafter, time to come; morrow, tomorrow, by and by, doomsday, day of judgement,
    5. Re:Try this by floodo1 · · Score: 0

      to remind you that mead is your friend

      --
      I KUT J00 M4NG!!!
    6. Re:Try this by eofpi · · Score: 1

      Not to mention those of us that seem to be stuck in Wingdings mode.

      (Seriously, all I use paper for anymore is math. And even that gets hard to read sometimes.)

      --
      Y'know, you blow up one sun and suddenly everyone expects you to walk on water.
    7. Re:Try this by Xyrus · · Score: 4, Funny

      With a little programming, you can change fonts to Arial Chicken Scratch, which is a sight upgrade.

      However,if you let the processor idle too long or it gets caught up in another task, the system has a tendency to revert to the Wingdings in obnoxiously large point sizes.

      ~X~

      --
      ~X~
  7. What is the problem you are trying to solve? by winkydink · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You want to type words into a cheapo, pocket device, that is clear. Then what? Keep it there and only read from the chepo device? Do more editing on cheapo device? grep text on cheapo device? transfer text to some other device? via what means? how much text?

    --

    "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    1. Re:What is the problem you are trying to solve? by kfg · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Keep it there and only read from the chepo device?

      Useless.

      Do more editing on cheapo device? grep text on cheapo device?

      Yes, please.

      transfer text to some other device?

      As per the above 'Useless" comment.

      via what means?

      vim, grep and a flash key drive.

      how much text?

      Well, lesse, Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire comes out at 1.6 megs. I think that 2 megs should cover it with a bit of overhead. I can't imagine typing more than that even while sailing from Marblehead to Plymouth (that would be the one in England, not just down the coast a hop).Appears to be a nonissue with todays flash key drives.I suspect that 640k is all anyone would really need.

      KFG

    2. Re:What is the problem you are trying to solve? by Ithika · · Score: 2, Funny
      I suspect that 640k is all anyone would really need.

      History shows that comments like that always come back to bite us on the ass. Or at the very least cause flamewars on Slashdot.

    3. Re:What is the problem you are trying to solve? by fermion · · Score: 1
      One presumes you want to write and then edit and transfer to your desktop. As geeky as this crowd is supposed to be, they sure are ludites. Don't get me wrong, I have my collection of fountain and glass pens and moleskins and fancy paper, but many of us do work better on certian things on a computer. If you are happy with plain text, the options are limitless.

      So, let me tell you the things i tried. I see on ebay that you can get an eMate for abou $100. This would let you write. Connectivity should not be a problem as there is a PCMCIA slot that can be used for a ethernet card. As long as you can work out the file transfer protocols, or someelse has, this should work great. (And it looks like several people have)

      The same is true for a newton, but those are getting harder to find, and the keyboard is is extra, and extra hard to find.

      For modern hardware, any Palm device will do. I used to have a Palm V with a pretty nice keyboard. it was a good solution. The only problem is that the processor is slow, and one can sometimes get pretty far ahead of the device. I have seen refubed palms for $50, and the keyboard should be about the same.

      If you want to try ancient hardware, and can use the tiny keyboards, you might be able to get a good deal on the zaurus. Used one of these for a while as well. I don't know how easy it will connect.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  8. Go used by 14erCleaner · · Score: 1
    What you probably want is a used Apple Newton or something like that.

    Or maybe a pad of paper and a pencil. Way under $50.

    A fundamental limitation of any device like this will be the crappy data-entry device. Blackberry users get RSI problems with their thumbs just from doing short emails, so you probably wouldn't want to write your PhD thesis on one of these things, even if they did exist.

    --
    Have you read my blog lately?
    1. Re:Go used by Dielectric · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yep, an MP2000/2100 with a keyboard is very usable day-to-day. Heck, even the HWR is good enough for me to have taken notes in most of my humanities electives. The outline mode was outstanding for this. It fit comfortably in the pocket of my field jacket, but so do small children, so I'm not sure it fits the pocket-sized definition.

    2. Re:Go used by mzieg · · Score: 5, Interesting
      I had one of these in the late 90's:

      Apple eMate

      Basically a robust plastic drop-proof word processor running NewtonOS, with built-in IRDA wireless uplink. Ran for 24hrs on AA batteries. Horrendously overpriced (got ours free through a school, natch), but quite visionary and functional. I often wish I still had it.

      I also worked for a company (well, several) that made these:

      VTech Postbox Express and Companion

      Our products pretty much sucked (sorry), but there were a number of s'okay competitors in the market. Rather than search for portable "word-processor", you probably want to look for "email/web appliance". It's a rich market, and there are some decent deals out there for $100.

    3. Re:Go used by who+what+why · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have a Psion Revo, sold in the U.S. as the Diamond Mako. It's a clamshell design with a small qwerty keyboard and a half-decent word processor. It runs the Epoc OS (which later became Symbian). There's plenty of third party software including a nice Python port and a bash-like shell. I also love the PIM software that comes with it - nothing like being able to actually enter in an appointment (with PDAs I usually just get a load of crap from Graffiti because my handwriting is awful.) It pretty much answers the O.P.'s question, since it was designed as a low price device in the typically expensive handhelds-with-keyboards niche.

      The Revo is a great size to slip in a pocket, and not too embarrassing to use on the subway. It's designed to be held in two hands and thumb-typed or held in one hand and one-hand typed. That works pretty well, even though the keyboard is hinged. The keys are hinged at the bottom, so you need to be somewhat careful when pressing them.

      The main problems with the Revo are the lack of backlight (nice reflective screen, but useless in really low light) and absence of expansion slots (it'd be nice to have a CF slot for storage or wifi).

      This has generally led me to try other similar devices. The obvious one is a Psion 5mx, which is the bigger brother to the Revo, with more expansion slots, a backlight and a non-hinged keyboard. The Epoc software really is great and there's even a linux distro for the Psions. I haven't been able to find one in my price range (they go for about $150 on eBay at the moment).

      I recently picked up an HP Jornada 680. That's a handheld PC formfactor, with a pretty nice qwerty keyboard with proper (if tiny) keys and a color backlit screen. I picked mine up for about $100. The downside is that it runs Windows CE from ROM (shudder!) although it comes with Pocket Word which is definitely sufficient for banging out text. There's a linux distribution for this too, but it's not really useable yet (no power saving, so the batteries die after a few hours) - although it is being actively worked on.

      So I second the recommendation is go used, and pick up a Psion (Revo or 5mx depending on price range). My worry is that these machines are all 5 years old and no-one is producing new hardware in the handheld form factor. I find a keyboard so much more useful than a stylus and I really don't understand why the markety just died (well, the $600 price tags probably didn't help). Hopefully phones-with-keyboards like the Sidekick may grow up to fill the gap.

    4. Re:Go used by tillemetry · · Score: 1

      Lots of ebooks on ebay within your LT $50 price range.

    5. Re:Go used by WhyCause · · Score: 3, Informative
      I was going to say the exact same thing (good thing I read the comments first), but I have two things to add.

      There are two companies (first for North America, the second for elsewhere), that will provide service for the Psion handhelds (your biggest concern will be batteries for the Revo/Mako models). So the fact that these machines are 5+ years old shouldn't be a real problem.

      If you do decide to go the Psion route, go for the 5mx or the Revo Plus (also sold as the Diamond Mako in the US). These were incremental upgrades to the originals that had solutions for some hinge problems the first versions had. I got bit by both hinge problems (Series 5 and original Revo), and I ended up with a Diamond Mako. One of the best purchases I ever made. If I have a choice (I probably won't), EPOC/Symbian handhelds with a keyboard will be the only handhelds I will ever buy. I keep hearing rumors that Nokia may be releasing an upgraded Revo-style handheld (NOT a cell phone), but I think I'm just grasping at straws there.

    6. Re:Go used by syousef · · Score: 1

      Our products pretty much sucked (sorry)

      No no -I'm- sorry...sorry for you that is.

      You haven't learnt that no one likes to hire someone who's going to bad mouth them later.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    7. Re:Go used by Spoing · · Score: 1
      You haven't learnt that no one likes to hire someone who's going to bad mouth them later.

      Depends. If the vtech products do indeed suck, it's not bad at all to point that out. Besides, do you think the other person would say that in an interview as the first thing, up front?

      --
      A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
    8. Re:Go used by mzieg · · Score: 2
      You're right. I should tell future employers "my previous company lost its funding and went bankrupt because of its steller management, outstanding product line, and unimpeachable support services."

      Or maybe I should boost my Slashdot karma by recommending other readers buy products that I secretly know to be flawed, but conceal that information behind a pleasant smile. If so, may I commend you to a reasonably-priced and rigorously secured operating system?

    9. Re:Go used by shallow+monkey · · Score: 1

      Gadzukes! No encryption on their (410palm.com) order site!!!

  9. Well I WAS going to say an old Tandy by toygeek · · Score: 1

    But it looks like you've got that covered. I am also interested in this. I must say though that I have a Treo 600 and it does admirably well. I take notes with it all the time. Its VERY useful for its purpose. A small laptop-sized keygboard with a 2 or 3 line LCD, and a USB connection would be uber-nice though.

    1. Re:Well I WAS going to say an old Tandy by SWTP_OS9 · · Score: 1

      I know you have already look at them but a Tandy WP2 is nothing to sneeze at. Decent keyboard. Rugged. Runs off of 4 AA battries. And you can use Xmodem and the terminal communication software on a PC to download your files. Crude but we can Freeze Young Skywalker! It also has a decent screen.

      The catch is what you want was avaiable about 10+ years ago. Today its either a PDA with or without a built in/ external keyboard. Or a very small noetbook. I think IBM has a very tiny one. So does Apple.

      If the constrant is your pocket then you are stuck with a PDA form factor. Maybe with an external keyboard.

    2. Re:Well I WAS going to say an old Tandy by magarity · · Score: 1

      what you want was avaiable about 10+ years ago. Today its either a PDA with or without a built in/ external keyboard.

      Or on eBay from time to time. Search for Tandy 100 from time to time.

  10. Black and white by jlebrech · · Score: 1

    A black n white palm pilot. or even a blackberry.

  11. Mcdonald's Toy? by kerv · · Score: 0

    If you wait a couple years you might find one of these in a McKids Meal! I just wish I had all these new cool gadgets when I was growing up.

  12. Tape Recorder by CypherXero · · Score: 1, Informative

    Just buy a cheap tape recorder from Wal-Mart, and anytime when you get some creative spark (I assume you want this device to write creatively with), just turn on the recorder, and speak to your hearts content. Then, get home, and transcribe your notes onto your computer.

    1. Re:Tape Recorder by cmowire · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Doesn't work. You broadcast halfassed ideas to the rest of the world, sounding like an idiot, and the pathway between mouth and brain is very different than the pathway between mouth and fingers. Typing on a keyboard is private, unobtrusive, and a lot of folks are far more articulate when they type things instead of say things.

    2. Re:Tape Recorder by SPY_jmr1 · · Score: 1

      Transcribe? Whattttttt?

      It's the 21st century, shouldn't we be pushing for speech-to-text applications for this sort of thing?

      I thought apple had a new thing just for things like this, to record a meeting, and dump it to a document later.

      All that said, transcription is probably more accurate, especially if you do a lot of it.

    3. Re:Tape Recorder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can see it now. Riding on the subway during rush hour, sitting next to a nun and a jacked ex-convict. "Pam rubbed herself against Biff's copper-toned body; slowly dragging her pert nipples across his sleek chest..."

      The submitter wanted a cheap, electronic word processor for a reason. Let's not stray from the desired advice in order to recommend voice recorders, tattooing the words on his forearm with a pin and Bic pen, or any other off the wall idea.

      "Biff moaned and began gyrating like a doberman in heat while his man-glaze began pouring forth like a hot testement to his..."

  13. PDA or Pocketmail? by molo · · Score: 1

    A used PDA would be good.. or maybe you could try Pocketmail (see pocketmail.com) - write yourself emails and hold the acoustic coupler up to the phone to transmit it. The service isn't cheap though.

    -molo

    --
    Using your sig line to advertise for friends is lame.
    1. Re:PDA or Pocketmail? by metlin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Get a used PDA and a portable keyboard, such as this.

      They are small, easy to carry and really work well. You can download one of the many opensource light-weight wordprocessors out there and use it quite easily in any environment.

      Even the older Palms come with IR options, and so communication is not a problem.

      Unless you're going to be churning out megs of text daily, it would do quite well.

    2. Re:PDA or Pocketmail? by GMFTatsujin · · Score: 1

      I had a Handspring Prism and a nice portable keyboard for a while. It worked really well.

      The problem was that back then the connectors on the PDAs hadn't standardized. (Heck, I'm still not sure if they have or not.) So *every* model of PDA had its own special connector and form factor apart from the other models, even ones made by the same manufacturer. In my case that meant when my Prism died, my (then) $90 keyboard became a useless lump of plastic.

      It's a pity. I called that rig my "laptop killer."

    3. Re:PDA or Pocketmail? by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      IR Keyboards will work with lots of models. One guy has even written an entire book on a Sharp Zaurus.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    4. Re:PDA or Pocketmail? by hotspotbloc · · Score: 1
      Sharp use to make the OZ-770PC which looks a lot like the pocketmail device sans the modem. Five years ago the retail was $100USD at walmart. They now sell on Ebay for twice that price.

      I had one and loved it. A great device. Gave it to the mother-in-law and she still uses it today. Why Sharp stopped making it is beyond me.

      --
      "I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence or insanity but they've always worked for me" - HST
  14. Just as you suggested - eBay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dell Axim PDA (used, ebay) $150 (just a guess)
    Dell External Keyboard $75
    Not only word processing, but playing games, holding contact information, restaurant guides, mapping programs, cookbooks - you name it - in one little handheld.... priceless.

    For most people, there's eBay and Google. For everyone else, there's Ask Slashdot.

  15. Dude, a pencil! by andawyr · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You know, that wooden thing with carbon in the middle? Carry a piece of paper in your wallet, and you're good to go. It's small, portable, and it doesn't need batteries! Heck, you could even use a pen if you're willing to talk on the wild side!

    I'm constantly amazed at this gadget obsession people have.....

    1. Re:Dude, a pencil! by coop0030 · · Score: 1

      I agree, sometimes it is better to just use the stinkin' pen and paper.

      I've tried a Tungsten E, and everytime I needed to write something down, it took longer than it should have. Then when I needed to look it up (like my password), I could never find what I wrote.

      Pop a little pack of post-its in your pocket and your set!

    2. Re:Dude, a pencil! by winkydink · · Score: 1

      People who use pens have sex with transexuals, or you have to have sex with a transexual in order to use a pen? :)

      --

      "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    3. Re:Dude, a pencil! by mstroeck · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm sorry, but your comment is definitely not "Interesting". The original poster wants something that he can use with a keyboard. That's probably because he is like me and can type 3-4 times faster than he can write with a pencil.

      Additionally, it's damn hard to cut and paste (of the non-adhesive variety) handwritten notes and email-drafts.

    4. Re:Dude, a pencil! by screwballicus · · Score: 1

      For me, the PDA+Keyboard combo, which I've been using ever since the Palmpilot Pro, is all about being able to touch-type anywhere, spontaneously, using a setup small enough to fit in any pocket. The difference between touch-typing and writing with a pen and paper is quite massive when I'm on the go and need to get a bunch of information down quickly. And when I get where I need to go, it's all already typed up and ready to be used to whatever purpose.

      It doesn't hurt that I have literally thousands of pages of useful reference works stored on my PPC if I need to look something up, either.

      But really, as a fast touch typer, I just can't tolerate the speed of pen and paper anymore for any extensive note-taking or message-writing or what have you. And not for lack of trying. I went as far as teaching myself some Pitman Shorthand to speed up handwriting, but it really couldn't compete with touch-typing on a PPC, much less does it justify the effort required.

    5. Re:Dude, a pencil! by Redwin · · Score: 1

      A pen you say, I suggest extensive research and development to design such a contraption that can write at any angle and even in space! Millions can be spent! I'm sure it will be a vast improvement on anything currently in existance.. Someone pass me a pencil so I can write down a proposal for this idea!

      --
      Warning, comments may not have been passed by the sanity department of my brain.
    6. Re:Dude, a pencil! by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      The full size folding keyboards for the Palm were as good as a laptop keyboard for touch typing. The only downside is having to set it down on a table. For handheld use I like the thumb keyboards better. It's only a little slower than the big keyboard.

    7. Re:Dude, a pencil! by nine-times · · Score: 1
      I mostly agree that people are overly gadget-happy, but I don't think this case is too ridiculous. I know I can't stay organized with a pen and paper nearly as well as using something as simple as MacJournal. Even simple text files are searchable and copy/paste-able. I mean, it's no fun to have to go home and transcribe something when your handwriting is as bad as mine.

      I end up carrying my laptop around all the time. I write a lot, and I've tried a pen and notepad, and it drives me nuts.

      Now, especially when you consider the advances with digital paper, would it be so insane to come up with a small simple word-processing device (doesn't really need to be more than B&W) with a decent fold-out or slide-out keyboard? Though, with laptops, PDAs, and such, I'm not sure there's much room in the market.

    8. Re:Dude, a pencil! by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because carbon dust from pencil leads is really good in recycled atmospheres. Doesn't give you cancer or anything. You might also note that pencils are pretty flammable in all-oxygen environments.

      Shockingly enough, some of the engineers that actually solve these problems are pretty clever.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    9. Re:Dude, a pencil! by Stolethis · · Score: 1

      Does that mean I can't build my space ship out of pencils? Damn! Hours of work wasted. Next you're going to say that copper wire I was using to insulate it is a bad idea.

      --
      What do Saddam Hussain and Little Miss Muffet have in common? They have Kurds in their Whey.
    10. Re:Dude, a pencil! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ohh, shut up! So you say that my habit of biting the end of my pencil, surely swallowing alot more than you ever would on a space-ship, is going to kill me?

    11. Re:Dude, a pencil! by technos · · Score: 1

      Hey, it was good enough! They flew with grease pencils for a long time. Mercury? Viking? Sputnik? Grease pencils.

      Oh, and the gas-charged pen? Not a NASA thing, not an engineer thing. Some random yahoo from a pen company invented it. But it worked better than a grease pencil, and both NASA and the Russians were using em inside a couple years.

      --
      .sig: Now legally binding!
    12. Re:Dude, a pencil! by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Precisely: Which totally invalidates the hackneyed "Well, the Russians were so smart, they just used pencils!" myth.

      Snopes is cool.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  16. Google?? by l810c · · Score: 5, Informative
    I took your exact article title and put it in Google

    The very first hit led me to these two devices which seem to fit the bill exactly.

    Alphasmart
    Quickpad

    1. Re:Google?? by MrAnnoyanceToYou · · Score: 1

      These are both 199$+. Doesn't fit the requirements.

    2. Re:Google?? by KingOfBLASH · · Score: 1

      In your effort to prove how much smarter you were than the OP, you forgot to check that the prices are greater than $200 -- and thus what the OP described as "overpriced 'educational' machines which are almost equivalent to the 80s machines (over $200 or even $300)."

    3. Re:Google?? by JawzX · · Score: 2, Informative

      That little Alphasmart thingie looks like a re-packaged TRS-80 portable (102)...

      Maybe an old TRS-80 would fit the bill? 25-30 hours on 4 AAs, and you can even program in basic on it! There are few WP's with spell check available for TRS-80 portables too.

    4. Re:Google?? by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 1

      Except of course that he is looking for something under $50, which neither of your links provide.

      --
      If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
    5. Re:Google?? by torinth · · Score: 3, Informative

      I took your exact links and put them into my browser.

      The very first link led me to a device priced at 800% of what the person reasonably expected. The second led me to one that only cost 400% more.

      So no, neither of your links, nor their smartass delivery, fit the bill very well at all. It's pretty clear that he was already aware of these too, having made indirect reference to their kind in the article.

    6. Re:Google?? by Karma+Farmer · · Score: 1

      OMG... the slashdot article continues under the advertisement.

      Which begs the question -- is the slashdot page layout done by drunken monkeys? Or, did go nuts when they were flush with IPO cash, and spend the extra money for the superior crack addled monkeys?

    7. Re:Google?? by clem · · Score: 1

      Well, there is the problem of having a portable display. I suppose you could just take it into a sport's bar and plug it into one of their widescreens using the TV adaptor. Play-offs, shmlay-offs -- I sure the other patrons wouldn't mind.

      --
      Your courageous and selfless spelling corrections have made me a better person.
    8. Re:Google?? by Usquebaugh · · Score: 1

      This is almost perfect for me. Now if somebody would just give me one of these with an 80x25 screen. I'd buy one if a flash. 700hr batter life that's more like it.

      I don't want a dvd player, I don't want a fancy color screen. I want battery life.

    9. Re:Google?? by gbulmash · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Aside from being too expensive, the poster asked for something that fit inside a jacket pocket.

      Simple Answer - Buy a Palm M100 used. You can pick them up on Ebay, Amazon, etc. for $20-25. Then pick up a mini keyboard for around $20. You've got 2 mb memory and can write freestyle in the "memo" app, then transfer via the Palm Desktop sync software.

      - Greg

    10. Re:Google?? by tverbeek · · Score: 1

      You seem to be thinking of the TRS-80 Model 1. He's talking about the TRS-80 Model 10x, which included a nice keyboard, a (by modern standards) barely adequate LCD, some basic software, and literally days of battery life into a package roughly the size of a ream of paper. They won't fit in a pocket, but other than that they're roughly the sort of tech the OP was asking for.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    11. Re:Google?? by KingOfBLASH · · Score: 1

      It did say "493 bytes in the body" on the front page.

    12. Re:Google?? by SA+Stevens · · Score: 1

      An alternative, although it has a small keyboard, would be an HP-95LX portable. They're small and run MS-DOS, and have a built in text editor, and Lotus Spreadsheet. And it's an MS-DOS machine so you can drag in whatever smaller editor suits your needs.

      There's also the HP-100LX and the HP200LX, which have better connectivity, real PCMCIA, better screen, etc. But the 100 and 200 sell for a lot on eBay, while you can get a 95LX for under $40 if you shop aggressively.

      And these palmtops were made by HP when it was a good company, and by the Corvalis Division, which is the part of HP that also made the legendary HP Calculators. These palmtops have the same build-quality as the HP Calculators, too.

  17. Zaurus by menace690 · · Score: 1

    I have one of the original model Zaurus's. Has a keyboard, 16 shades of green lcd, weighs a but too much, several useful apps including a word processor annd spreadsheet, and it connects to the cpu with a serial to usb adapter (serial only necessary, I just don't have serial ports).

    --
    A conservative is a man with two perfectly good legs who, however, has never learned to walk forward. -- FDR
  18. PAA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Notecards, binder clip and a decent pen.

  19. toshiba libretto by demian031 · · Score: 2, Informative

    get an old toshiba libretto 70ct.

    http://ophinity.com/pix/?album=/geek/toshiba_libre tto_70ct

    wireless, linux, niceness.

    1. Re:toshiba libretto by StichCoder · · Score: 1

      or a vadem clio

  20. Check out some old school solutions by zzendpad · · Score: 1

    Perhaps a Psion organizer or an old HP palmtop would be your answer.

    1. Re:Check out some old school solutions by JawzX · · Score: 1

      Or a TRS-80 102?

  21. Hold off on the "It's called pencil and paper" com by Raindance · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Besides all the functional benefits something like this would have over a little notebook, which are significant (but also mixed), some people are more productive- and perhaps even think better- when at a keyboard than with a pencil and notebook.

    People should use whatever device allows them to get their thoughts out into some coherent form. For some, that's going to be a little pocket notebook, and for others who usually do their thinking in front of a keyboard, it'll be a device such as this fellow is looking for.

    I'm much more productive (at this point in my life, at least) with a keyboard under my hands than with a pencil in my fingers. Said like that it sounds so unromantic... but I'm interested to hear what sorts of devices are out there.

  22. Notebook? by JoaoPinheiro · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I don't know about you but I simply use a good old-fashioned paper notebook.

  23. Re:Uhh, no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bravo, simple and to the point, more importantly, practical and realistic.

  24. An old Sharp Zarus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An older Zarus (ala ZR-3000) comes with a handy built-in word processor that, as an added bonus (or penalty, depending on your point of view) is Word '95 compatible. There's a serial or USB connectivity kit included with most that will transfer reasonably quickly. If you want any faster transfers, I don't think you're going to nail it for under $50.

    QWERTY keyboard, backlit screen, and AAA batts. All for well under $50.

  25. a brush! by essreenim · · Score: 0

    Or you could be very elegant and use a chinese writing brush and ink.

  26. Blackberry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just get a Blackberry -- nice small keyboard and ultraportable and you can write decent-length memos with it.

  27. I got you covered by shift.red.avni · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Pen + Paper

  28. So Why not a PDA ? by Dale549 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I would think a PDA and folding keyboard could be snagged on eBay for not much over $50..

  29. Stop posting, everyone - the definitive answer! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Pen and paper?

    Exactly!

    And the beauty is that your response is not only the best answer, it's also sarcastic, cynical and funny! Holy smokes! It's like a work of art in three words!

  30. Obvious answer by Electronik · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I suppose the obvious one is pen + paper and a good text reading software package at home!

    Anyway, $200 - $300 is quite cheap anyway, no?

    --
    -=test-sig_0.1.5(NoWhitespaceVersion)=-
    1. Re:Obvious answer by reynols · · Score: 1

      Or, you could try Logitech's Digital Writing System here:

      http://www.logitech.com/index.cfm/products/feature s/digitalwriting/US/EN,crid=1545

      I don't have one, but a co-worker of mine does and he uses it all the time.

  31. Blackberry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I paid $25 on ebay for a used Blackberry 7230. It is locked to AT&T, but I use it only for a PDA and don't intend to get service. It has loads of memory, a serviceable screen, >1 month battery life on a single charge, and a keyboard.

    I use it to write short stories when I'm away from home, it works great.

    Why the heck would you want some little crappy device when you can pick up a cheap used blackberry that does everything you'd need and can accept J2ME applications besides?

  32. Don't forget... by rewt66 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You still need a way to get files off. Wireless would be cool (except for certain security issues), or cable (might be cheaper, too).

  33. AlphaSmart by ap0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I remember using these things in elementary school (I'm in college now) -- they seemed decent then, and I'm sure they're even better now. They're a bit bigger than what you were looking for, but they are a simple, portable word processor.

    1. Re:AlphaSmart by sammyo · · Score: 1

      Concur excepting the form factor. I thought this thing was totally stupid when my wife had to have one for her class. But for pure text input it is a great solution. Basically a solid full keyboard with
      a one line LCD display. Runs forever on two double A's. Solid product but as I said stupid unless you are just keying in something.

    2. Re:AlphaSmart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow... I thought I was the only person in the world who'd heard of them...

  34. The questions reminds me... by MagicDude · · Score: 4, Funny

    This question reminds me of a joke gift I had a while back. It was a small, elongated, yellow box with the words "Emergency backup word processor" on it. Inside was a pencil with the word "input" and an arrow pointing to the tip of the pencil, and the word "delete" with an arrow pointing to the ereaser. I don't have it anymore, I gave it to my roomate when his hard drive fizzled the night before a paper was due.

    1. Re:The questions reminds me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I gave it to my roomate when his hard drive fizzled the night before a paper was due.

      How long did it take to get that pencil removed after your room mate hammered it into your chest?

    2. Re:The questions reminds me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Back in the day, we used to call that a one-pin dot-matrix printer.

    3. Re:The questions reminds me... by superyooser · · Score: 1
      I gave it to my roomate when his hard drive fizzled the night before a paper was due.

      Did he have to write it again, and have to do it fast, so it wasn't as good?

      (famous words of a student)

    4. Re:The questions reminds me... by Infinityis · · Score: 1

      Kinda brings new meaning to the phrase "Hit any key to continue"...

  35. try wang... by ShineyMcShine · · Score: 1

    word processor central...

  36. The pen and paper comments are cute, but by jjsaul · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some of us type more than ten times faster than we write and like to transfer our text conveniently.

    There are easy solutions though - a used Jornada off ebay and a targus stowaway keyboard cost me less than $100. It isn't the perfect solution, but it actually addresses the poster's needs.

    For all of you writing those novels on notecards with pencils, good luck with that. Seems to have worked for Stephenson.

    1. Re:The pen and paper comments are cute, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can type 10x as fast as you can write using a PDA keyboard, there is something wrong with your handwriting. Regular keyboard....sure...PDA keyboard..even the clunky fold up ones...no way.

    2. Re:The pen and paper comments are cute, but by xinn · · Score: 1

      'Some of us type more than ten times faster than we write and like to transfer our text conveniently.'

      and some of what we write isn't even legible. I love that I can type rather quickly - but penmanship sucks now.

      --
      These are not the .sigs you are looking for. He can go about his business. Move along.
    3. Re:The pen and paper comments are cute, but by tardigrades · · Score: 0

      " Some of us type more than ten times faster than we write." and then there is those of us who cant read our own handwriting and cannot survive withour a spellcheker.

      --
      really bored? My blog
    4. Re:The pen and paper comments are cute, but by Angst+Badger · · Score: 1

      I actually prefer writing with pen and paper precisely because it's slower. I can type around 84 wpm, and there's no real limit on how much text I can crank out that way. With actual literature as opposed to rambling on Slashdot, that's a drawback. Writing with a pen makes me more sparing and careful in my choice of words.

      --
      Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    5. Re:The pen and paper comments are cute, but by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      Is it too much to ask that you decide to be more sparing and carful in your choice of words when you're typing?

      Seriously.

      It's the same brain and same hands, you can choose to be sparing and careful; regardless of the medium of your expression.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    6. Re:The pen and paper comments are cute, but by aduzik · · Score: 1

      My dad used to have one of those HPC Jornadas. It was pretty slick. The keyboard was big enough that you could actually use all five fingers on each hand, but the thing folded up into about the size of a checkbook.


      He finally replaced it with a laptop because he needed to do some serious typing, and his software needs also expanded. I wonder what he ever did with it, because it was a cool little device.

      --
      If it's not one thing it's your mother.
    7. Re:The pen and paper comments are cute, but by SA+Stevens · · Score: 1

      Yes, he probably _can_ be more sparing, but doesn't need to. With handwriting he writes at a good pace to be thoughtful, hence his position that writing by hand is entirely adequate.

      Or did you miss that point?

    8. Re:The pen and paper comments are cute, but by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      And for those of us who think visually, I can draw a lot better on pen and paper than on a PDA - sure, they can capture my chicken scratch, but the difference between pad and pencil and trying to fit everything onto a tiny PDA input is night and day.

      I draw *everything* - my whiteboard at work is continually covered with signal flow diagrams, three view drafts, transfer function graphics, and equations. When I need to send something to someone across the world, I employ this amazing invention called a *scanner*.

      So, yes, the Jornada might address some people's needs, but it fails miserably for others.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    9. Re:The pen and paper comments are cute, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're that slow with a pen, you'd probably quickly learn to write a lot faster. All it takes is practice.

    10. Re:The pen and paper comments are cute, but by tsehan · · Score: 1
      Those of us who can type fast will almost certainly agree that sitting at a desk in front of a full-sized keyboard helps. I am not quite sure how many of us can still claim to type faster than we write when the typing has to be done at the bus stop.

      Another issue to consider when comparing the speed of writing against the speed of typing is whether or not the writing technique is optimal. This is where alternative handwriting systems need to be considered. Shorthand techniques were designed specifically for situations like this.

  37. Sure, but... by HishamMuhammad · · Score: 1

    ...isn't it a bit cumbersome to transfer the notes to the computer afterwards? I don't think OCR is advanced enough to actually recognize my handwriting.

    1. Re:Sure, but... by fuck_this_shit · · Score: 2, Insightful

      90 percent of all those scraps never need to make it into any electronic device. and typing a phonenumber again isn't really something I'll break into tears over in sorrow over the time I wasted by not hooking up a pda, walking through some menus and then sending it over... oh... wait...

    2. Re:Sure, but... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      If I type something into my PDA (which is also my phone) it's available to me basically forever.

      Walking through some menus? I don't know what kind of PDA you're using. I just push a button when I'm near my computer, and it works. Look Ma, no wires.

      I've gone through four or five PDAs, and haven't lost any data. I've gone through three paper organizers, losing tons of data. Guess which method I like better?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  38. How about combining it with a cellphone?? by sourabhkothari · · Score: 1

    Combining simple word processor functionality with cellphones might not be a bad idea. I think cellphones are the only devices which people don't want to forget when they leave home. That is..now everybody carries them.
    With this u can read your fav eBook on your cell whenever you have a little spare time. That might be a bus stop ,train or even loo.

  39. Alphasmart products by guanxi · · Score: 2, Interesting

    http://www.alphasmart.com/

    Doesn't quite meet your specs, but worth looking into.

  40. google? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who needs google when you have the almost-just-as-effective only much slower option of Ask Slashdot?

    It's all the rage these days, didn't you know that.

  41. I've always wanted one. by OrangeTide · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've always wanted some cheap portable device designed for taking notes, hacking etc. sort of a sub-$100 electronic notepad w/ a decent keyboard.

    The Psion Revo/Diamond Mako was pretty close. It had a nice wide display (but it wasn't backlit), a decent keyboard (for being a 1/3rd size keyboard), a pen interface (for drawing a picture in your notes), and my favorite part is that it was a clamshell design so you could just fold-and-go.

    The draw backs were that when it was new it was fairly expensive (I got mine for $50 new, but that's because the stores were just trying to get rid of them). And it had no flash memory (you let the batteries run down and you've lost everything since your last backup), and no way to insert external memory (MMC/SD/CF would have been nice).

    A less powerful pda in the same form factor that sold for a little bit more than those "pocket organizers" would seem like a good idea to me. If oyu make it close enough in price to a pocket organizer, but flexible enough to do more than just addresses that'd be great.

    Honestly I don't need a 400Mhz cpu, color screen, wireless headset, and 64Mb of RAM. Especially if it means I will have a $300+ device in my pocket that can get broken or stolen.

    What would be neat is some arm-thumb or 68hc11 device with an MMC/SD slot(the interface to those is dead simple to do). Running maybe Contiki or some other 8-bit, but "modern" OS.

    Although they have compactflash readers(look for SuperCard) for Gameboy Advance, and it's not hard to wire a small or fullsize keyboard into a GBA. You could probably build yourself something interesting with a cheap used gba and some hot glue. :)

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    1. Re:I've always wanted one. by ameoba · · Score: 1

      Get over it - you have a fringe need that is met by a mass market device. Even if the mass market device is 10x more powerful than you really need, it will stil be comparable in cost to a device that is just powerful enough to do what you need it to do and no more. Just because you only need a tenth the power of a $300 device doesn't mean you can get it for a tenth the price. With a limited market, the dominating factors on price aren't going to be the hardware but the design, support, marketing & manufacture.

      The best solution is going to be an low-end (but still overpowered PDA) with an attached keyboard.

      --
      my sig's at the bottom of the page.
    2. Re:I've always wanted one. by EnglishDude · · Score: 1

      What about a 5MX? Similar to the Revo, but half VGA screen, backlight (abliet crappy), memory backup battery, CF slot. Fixes all the problmes you have and is only slightly bigger. Oh yes and it takes AA batteries rather than the built in rechargeable battery on the Revo which is prone to messing up the battery meter over time - common fault of the Revo.

      Nice organiser tho. Sad you can't get it new anymore.

    3. Re:I've always wanted one. by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      I would at least like something for 1/3rd the price. $300 + fragile is not acceptable. Maybe if it was $50 + fragile.

      So far I still like the idea of putting a keyboard and compact flash on a gameboy advance. They are small and quite tough and last a decent amount of time on battery. And places still sell refurb Palm IIIxc, buy rechargable batteries and a keyboard and that's no so bad. although most of the keyboards are kinda bad unless you have a desk to put them down on.

      I think the argument here is that taking notes electronically isn't a "fringe need". I'm certain plenty of students out there take notes (if not, then perhaps that is the problem with the education system in America).

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    4. Re:I've always wanted one. by ameoba · · Score: 1

      I've seen plenty of people try note-taking by typing - generally at the beginning of the semester. It seldom lasts more than 2-3 weeks before they get back to doing it by hand. Even if you can type faster than you can write, most people aren't going to be able to keep up with a speaker verbatim (notice how court reporters use special input devices?).

      Since notes are -not- intended to be transcripts, it's a lot easier to use pencil & paper to write down key points & draw a few arrows around. Once you start getting into anything that involves mathematical formulas and diagrams, it just doesn't make sense. The only thing I've seen that would really work is a tablet PC, but there's no real advantage to a tablet PC over a tablet of paper at that point.

      --
      my sig's at the bottom of the page.
  42. Something I've Been Waiting For Is... by KhaZ · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A revolution in input devices. Graphics cards, RAM, storage, etc, have all been making leaps and bounds in technology, but we're still hammering away at the same(-ish) keyboard. While I don't know what I'd do without my carpal-tunnel, I'm curious what the replacement for the keyboard will be. I'm not sure if it will be a voice recognition system, or something middle-of-the-road, but I definitely think something like that is a limiting factor for me and PDA's, or the organizer you mention. I just can't separate myself from a keyboard, where I can type ~100 wpm, versus a rickety little Graffiti-esque POS, where I'm doomed to five letters a minute on. Anyhow, rather tangential, but jus' what I'm thinking. :D

    --
    - - - -

    KickingDragon

  43. TI calculator + keyboard by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 4, Informative

    Take a regular TI graphing calculator (you might have one already from high school or college) and add the TI Keyboard. If you have a computer uplink of some sort for the calculator (either a GraphLink or on-board USB for the newer models), you can transfer your documents to MS Word.

    (Vernier's not the only source; they're just one of the cheaper ones. TI doesn't sell the keyboard directly anymore.)

    1. Re:TI calculator + keyboard by essreenim · · Score: 0
      Take a regular TI graphing calculator

      and type 8008135, hheeh

    2. Re:TI calculator + keyboard by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Actually, since it's a graphing calculator, it's easier to type "BOOBIES" (or draw them, if you're so inclined.) The font makes 8008135 look like...5{l8008.

      Oh, and it's 5318008, not 8008135.

    3. Re:TI calculator + keyboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Oh, and it's 5318008, not 8008135.

      I meant the finished highly word processed document, not the long creative writing process!! ; )

      73313

  44. Apple eMate / Sharp Zaurus by energylad · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'll agree with an earlier poster that the original Danger Hiptop (T-Mobile Sidekick) has the best keyboard of any other like device, it has the absolute worst connectivity. The likelihood of getting my data off the thing dropped as near to zero as made no difference, so I gave up on it.

    The old Apple eMate -- a Newton laptop -- did me well for years. It's got a tripod mount on the bottom, it gets 12 hours of battery life with no problem, it's a real trooper. They only made them for educational folk, but you can find them on eBay still for pretty cheap -- there are a number there now, from $28 to $100. And hey, no moving parts plus a great keyboard. It's the relatively modern equivalent of the '80s word processors mentioned above.

    Today, the Sharp Zaurus is the most awesome thing I've used in some time. By that I mean the C750-class clamshell machine, on through the modern 3000 & 1000 devices, only produced for Japan but also available on eBay. And there's OpenBSD for the durn things now, too. Only drawback is battery life. And price -- you're looking at >$500 for one of those.

    1. Re:Apple eMate / Sharp Zaurus by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      How do you get data off the eMate and into a modern computer running MacOS X or Windows XP?

    2. Re:Apple eMate / Sharp Zaurus by DVant · · Score: 1

      On Mac OS X its a bit trickier (classic and a serial adaptor) but on Windows XP and a PC with a serial port you can still use a number of different free utils as well as the original apple ones.

      Stick a new set of AA batteries and a CF card in an eMate and you've got a quite nice machine for wordprocessing and email that will not run out of battery for a week.

  45. European Carryall Required! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cellphone ... check
    PDA ... check
    Pen Drive ... check
    MP3 player ... check
    Graphing calculator ... check
    Handheld word processor ... check

  46. Check out Alphasmart by KingPrad · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Check out the Alphasmart website. They make modern word processors. Their products have full-size keyboards, extremely long battery life, and are very durable. The Dana, for example, is made of ABS plastic molded into a great form factor. It weighs 2 pounds and the rechargeable battery lasts 12-15 hours but can be replaced by regular AA's if you need to. It runs PalmOS.

    the Alphasmart 3000 is the cheapest version. The battery will last pretty much forever. It is an absolutely basic writing tool (other than paper and pencil) and has a good reputation also.

    --
    Stop the Slashdot Effect! Don't read the articles!
    1. Re:Check out Alphasmart by chriswaclawik · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I like the concept of an alphasmart. Its a barebones appliance for when you don't need the power of a labtop, you just need to type. To those who say you can handwrite for much cheaper, well, I'll challenge to a speed competition any day. And it is a really SIMPLE device, something that seems to be absent in modern gadgetry.

      The only thing I never understood was the price. $250, for the most basic model. Its a keyboard with a very small, liquid crystal display. You could get a pda for that much.

      If these things were under $50, I know I would by one. Considering how fast some of my teachers talk, typing would allow me to take legible notes.

      --
      A guy walks into a bar... well, I forgot the joke, but the punchline is that he's an alcoholic.
    2. Re:Check out Alphasmart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess I need to give the obligatory testimonial for Alphasmart. I have the Alphasmart Dana Wireless. I paid $429, but I have 2 SD slots, built in 802.11b, a screen that lets me view the whole width of a page, and the flexability of Palm OS.

      I used a regular Palm OS PDA before with a portable keyboard and I hated having to put it together before I wanted to use a Word processor. With my Dana, I just pull it out, turn it on, and fire up Documents to Go. Then I type until I get tired of writing. Later I go to my computer and spell check and line edit what I wrote, but I actually spend almost the whole day before I want to turn on my real computer.

      I got the Dana to write a Science Fiction novel. I am getting higher word count. Instead of looking at fishing and gun magazines in the barber shop, I can write. I can write on the bus, write at the coffee shop in the local Borders, or write anywhere I please.

      The Dana will not fit in a shirt pocket, but it has a messager bag(sold separitly) that works wonders to hold the Dana when not in use. It is the only PDA I have ever seen that uses a USB cable for a cradle. Never have to search Ebay again for a new cradle to hotsync on.

      In short, I love my Dana as it lets me write anywhere I choose to bring it and it feels like I am acually typing on a real keyboard because I am typing on a real keyboard.

  47. Clio! by Achra · · Score: 1

    One bit of outdated, too big to fit in your coat-pocket is the Vadem Clio, you can find these on ebay for varying prices... They shipped with Wince 2.11, Microsoft Word, and a scrunched little keyboard.. They flip open like a tablet PC and have a 10hour battery life. Very cool, totally useless.
    Other than that, I'd suggest a Palm. That grafitti stuff is pretty damn slick, and there are thumb-keyboards for them also. I'd suggest the i705 for a $30 really decent palm.

    --
    Each processor would proceed sequentially as if it had been better for them not to rise against Saul.
    1. Re:Clio! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about an old Palm M100 and the fold up keyboard? its small and lightweight, uses AAA batteries, the keyboard is fullsize, laptopesque?

  48. Old Palm w/ Keyboard = cheap by coop0030 · · Score: 1

    Try a Palm IIIe, and get an old keyboard with it off of eBay. You could get that whole package for about $30-$40 bucks, and it would probably work better than a generic made word processor.

    1. Re:Old Palm w/ Keyboard = cheap by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      I've had success using the appropriate matching Stowaway keyboard with various Palm devices. It folds up into pocket size but is quite usable even for moderate touch-typing speeds when unfolded.

      In addition to the IIIe, there are a ton of cheap Stowaway keyboards for the many cheap and unwanted Handspring Visor models, most (all?) of which support USB (the IIIe is going to be serial without some sort of aftermarket upgrade). This is increasingly important as many laptops in particular are shipping nowadays without serial ports. I doubt you could put together a solution much cheaper than this while still having USB and a useful client for both Windows and Linux.

  49. Psion Series 5 (look it up) by jolyonr · · Score: 3, Informative

    Now available cheap. Someone will come along and tell you who sold/branded it in the US - but it does exactly what you want in the way you want it to. No messy external keyboards, decent keys, just enough CPU to perform, etc. etc.

    Jolyon

    --


    Please read my Canon EOS tech blog at http://www.everyothershot.com
  50. Alphasmart SUCKs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
  51. Nokia has done this... by Lazy+Jones · · Score: 1
    --
    "I love my job, but I hate talking to people like you" (Freddie Mercury)
  52. The Alphasmart Dana by kincho · · Score: 1

    I can recommend the Alphasmart Dana. Palm based with a large display, decent keyboard, and built in word processor. http://www3.alphasmart.com/products/dana.html Shameless plug - great keyboarding tutor for the Dana - http://www.bytesoflearning.com/UltraKeyProduct/UKP almOSEd.html It's listed at $379

  53. Like a mini Alphasmart Dana? by mjprobst · · Score: 3, Informative
    This is something I would really like. PDAs are too small to type on. I type at 115 wpm and can't stand using PDAs at all, yet there are things I'd like to do without the power consumption, size, and weight of a full laptop.

    I'd love something like the Alphasmart Dana except in clamshell style. Doesn't need to be incredibly tiny, just as big as a small keyboard.

    Unfortunately, even if I liked the size of this device, it costs around $600. Smaller and cheaper than a laptop, my butt. I'm currently using a used IBM T21 laptop that cost $425.

    1. Re:Like a mini Alphasmart Dana? by GMFTatsujin · · Score: 1

      The Dana is nice, but I went for the Neo. When I decided I wanted a word processor, I realised that was *all* I wanted, and the Neo fits a treat. No PalmOS, no distracting "fun" apps to keep me from working, no fancy, no schmancy.

      Just me, a keyboard, three alkaline batteries, and 4-8 lines of LCD text in a crappy front. BLISS.

      I banged out my latest novel on it, reviews of my students, countless notes and God knows what else. Instant on/off. It looks like a keyboard to the USB port, so I don't have to carry my software around with my to sync to a computer - just type 'n' run.

      I'm not a shill, but I'll rave on my Neo for hours at a time.

      Also, I type in bullet time.

    2. Re:Like a mini Alphasmart Dana? by metalligoth · · Score: 1

      I think you're looking for this.

    3. Re:Like a mini Alphasmart Dana? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got mine for maybe ...uhh...$200 USD? $300? Don't remember :(

  54. Handspring Treo 90 by thegrommit · · Score: 1

    Yes, it's a glorified PDA. However, it has a usable thumbboard and supports SD/MMC cards for file transfer. Being a PalmOS device, there is plenty of support for synching with the platform of your choice. It's also small enough to fit in your jeans pocket (unlike the fancier Tungsten C).

    Shame they're not made any more.

    1. Re:Handspring Treo 90 by webweave · · Score: 1
      I have the 270 which looks the same but uses SIM cards. If you upgrade the pen software and with some training and practice you can type faster with the pen input than the little keyboard which I hardly use now. It is easier and more accurate to use the pen (graffiti) then the keyboard if you are walking or moving in a vehicle


      I have never had trouble getting my notes uploaded by using the USB/serial cable, the IR port, email, SMS or SSL. Knoppix and Mandrake have an easy time talking to it as well as those other OSes. It is a lot of fun to surprise someone who has an IR equipped printer and does not know it.


      I have my Treo around the world with local SIM cards and use it almost every night to read ebooks and articles before going to sleep. Palm PDAs can be had cheaply and I have seen new ones on clear out for less than $50.

  55. Why not PDA? by bobthemuse · · Score: 1

    Why not a low-end PDA? I used to take notes in my class on a Palm folding keyboard and an old Palm IIIx. Downloaded a free editor that was way better than what came with the OS, I was in business. Entire thing could be folded up and easily carried. Syncing is already taken care of, and you have the additional programmability you're looking for.

  56. Software? by tepples · · Score: 1

    Yep, an MP2000/2100 with a keyboard is very usable day-to-day.

    I have a Newton MessagePad 2000. It came with file transfer software compatible with Mac OS 8, and that was fine when I used a Macintosh Performa computer. But now that I no longer use a classic Mac as my primary computer, where can I get software to move files between my MP2000 and my Windows PC?

    1. Re:Software? by maczealot · · Score: 1
    2. Re:Software? by macmaniac · · Score: 1

      I believe nSync is a solution on the mac (modern) side... it may be portable to Windows (it's open source).

    3. Re:Software? by Pandora's+Vox · · Score: 2, Informative

      don't need to port it to windows, the original windows connectivity software still works :-)

    4. Re:Software? by tepples · · Score: 1

      The original Windows connectivity software stopped working in October 1996, if I remember correctly.

  57. Poqet PC by linuxwrangler · · Score: 1

    I still have my Poqet PC from ~1989. Fujitsu bought them out and while they haven't been made for years, you can still find them on eBay - usually for less than $100.

    80x25 screen, MS-DOS, keyboard you can touch-type on, Lotus 1-2-3, etc. It's instant-on and runs for weeks on a pair of AA batteries. It won a 1989 Byte award of distinction.

    I suppose a Palm with a folding keyboard might do the trick nowdays but the Poqet was (is) a slick little machine.

    --

    ~~~~~~~
    "You are not remembered for doing what is expected of you." - Atul Chitnis
  58. It's all about the advertising! by Nomihn0 · · Score: 4, Funny

    [the following is a faux advertisement for pen, paper, and your dear brain]

    Ancient technology rediscovered for your business' convenience!

    This computer is manufactured using the most ancient techniques known to man. We at Saminger & Splenor Co. have combined these amazing processes with cutting edge technology to produce the most powerful mobile computing platform ever made!

    FEATURES:
    The screen alone is a worthy investment for your small business:
    13.9 inch viewable display that is only nanometers thick!
    Crisp viewing at any angle, even in bright sunlight!
    Can be rolled up or even folded lightly for convenient storage!
    Consumes no energy and emanates no heat
    A zero latency screen refresh rate allows for instantaneous feedback!
    The display also functions as a small scale topographical scanner!
    Stylus based input system allows for minute movements to be recorded
    Tip of stylus allows text and images to be rapidly entered
    Included stylus attachment functions as a non-linear and instantaneous undo function
    Optional stylus sets allow for thousands of tip shapes and thicknesses to be emulated

    The CPU/RAM bundle adds even MORE functionality to your system:
    -Utilizes a neural network based CPU based on a proven system that has been thoroughly tested at some of the most prestigious universities in the world
    -At its peak, the RAM chip is as powerful as your short term memory, guaranteed
    ______________________________
    To order call 1-888-555-SandS
    Operators are standing by 24/7
    _______________________________
    Saminger & Splenor Co. - © 2004

    1. Re:It's all about the advertising! by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if its more sad that you calculated the diagonal of standard letter paper, or that I felt the need to check that you had done it correctly.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    2. Re:It's all about the advertising! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While technically great, this solution requires weeks or even years of practice before it can be used fast enough. This is a fatal shortcoming, and I predict that the technology will fail quickly, unless they can make it more user friendly soon. Perhaps they could add a small on-screen keyboard to make it easier?

  59. Tandy? by Mr.+Flibble · · Score: 1

    http://www.8bit-micro.com/wp2wp3.htm

    These guys function on 4 AA batteries... Seems perfect...

    --
    Try to hack my 31337 firewall!
  60. nec mobilpro by way2trivial · · Score: 1

    wintel, but excellent

    I picked up a mint 880 for 300$ (and paid too much) it has 800X600 res, and can run terminal services into my xp machine.

    fits inside my Scott EVest inside pocket.

    the 790 are half the size, with a 800X400?300? resolution

    (half vga)

    seriously consider this...

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
  61. Jornada 820 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.hp.com/hpinfo/abouthp/histnfacts/museum /personalsystems/0038/ I've enjoyed using my little Jornada 820 for years now, for it's office suite (Pocket Office), internet capability, presentation options (can plug into a projector), etc.

    I bought mine on e-bay, I'm sure they are still around.

    Yes it runs Windows CE, no I'm not apologizing, it is a functional tool, just like my Linux system :)

  62. Under ten dollars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pencil and notebook.

  63. What level of sophistication? by jd · · Score: 2, Informative
    Something like WordWise, Smart Wordprocessor or WordCraft would fit onto a small machine, with the largest of these fitting comfortably in 64K and the smallest into 8K. That includes everything you need for the program, the document and even a simple spell-checker.


    On the other hand, if you want something that can create hevily stylized documents of high quality, but where you can enter the text quickly, you're probably after a TeX-aware text editor, where you can pipe the output through LaTeX to generate a quality document, but where the source is 100% editable on something that has very low overhead.


    But, then, if all you want is a jotter, rather than an actual text processor, you're really wanting something that's a graphics tablet that has enough space for only one letter/symbol, with no display, and two buttons - space and backspace. It would have all the power you'd need for a jotter, and wouldn't have anything you didn't need (such as word recognition).


    Now, if what is REALLY wanted is a very fast, very small device, then a 5-key chord keyboard, with memory, should be sufficient. 2^5=32, which means you've enough combinations for all letters and a good range of symbols. A bubble memory would be fine for this, as you're just storing and recalling linear streams. Bubble is good, because it is small, low-power and can survive total loss of power.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  64. They used to make this... by denttford · · Score: 1

    And now it is cheap - its called an HP100LX. I see them on ebay for ~$50. 200LX is still pricey tho.
    It runs for weeks on AA batteries.

    --

    Leben Sie jetzt die Fragen.
    1. Re:They used to make this... by narcc · · Score: 1

      My HP320 works great for portable word processing. The built-in keyboard is useless, but there is a keyboard add-on that you can find that has the best feel of any keyboard (large or small) I've ever used. I bought my 2 320' for $35 a shot (including the WinCE rom update already installed) I paid ~$50 and ~$30 for the keyboards.

  65. Pocketmail pricing by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    |3 Months | 6 Months | 12 Months | 24 Months
    Plan Cost | $49.95 | $90.00 | $149.00 | $238.80
    Monthly Cost | $16.65 | $15.00 | $12.42 | $9.95

    ps - I can't figure out how to format it nicely in a post.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  66. Three _magic_ words by paulius_g · · Score: 1

    Old 66mhz laptop (found at ebay).

    Here's one at $15
    http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&cate gory=177&item=5199094786&rd=1&ssPageName=WDVW

    Oh, there's another one starting at a buck!
    http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&cate gory=42202&item=6771867163&rd=1&ssPageName=WDVW

    Just search. You'll get waaay more features than on a PDA. You could install DOS, Windows 3.11 or simply Linux. Easy. Conveniant. Powerful. You use the floppy drive to transfer your documments or even the parralel port!

  67. Windows CE Handheld PCs by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 2, Informative

    A few years ago, a number of companies produced Windows CE powered "handheld PCs".

    Many of the second-generation models had full-sized keyboards. They are cheap (often sub-$150), and have excellent battery life (10+ hours).

    Not to mention that they boot instantly, have no moving parts, often have USB host ports, and have PCMCIA for adding Wifi or ethernet. Not to mention the color touchscreen and capability to add software like a full-featured web browser (NetFront) or word processor (TextMaker).

    1. Re:Windows CE Handheld PCs by Kujila · · Score: 1

      Here's a nice list of devices that ran this unique "Clamshell PC" OS...

      http://www.hpcfactor.com/hardware/devices/

      Also, here's some screenshots:

      http://www.hpcfactor.com/support/windowsce/wince 21 1/

    2. Re:Windows CE Handheld PCs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have an HP 320 CE machine which is perfect for this. Small, but not unusable keyboard which I can touch type on, B&W display so the battery life is great. Backlit display, touch input. It will run 40 hours on a pair of AA's. Creates/reads word/excel files.

      I was expensive when it first came out, but I bet they are cheap now, if you can find one.

      Don't you wish they still made things like this?

    3. Re:Windows CE Handheld PCs by Trillan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I had one of those. We bought it new, and it spent a few years in the box in a closet. It has a battery life of about 3 seconds, the digitzer didn't work, and the USB connection didn't work with any modern computer.

      I fiddled with it for three days then put it back in the box.

  68. The Future, Now! by thomble · · Score: 1

    "Imagine a portable device that runs on 4 AA batteries & runs for 20 hours+, has an address book, a date book, a notepad-like app, a built-in modem, a full-travel keyboard, a terminal application, even the ability to connect to a modern Windows or Linux based PC & transfer files. Sounds great doesn't it? But in 1983? No way I hear you say! What are you smoking son?"

  69. PSION 3c or 5x!! by wernst · · Score: 4, Informative
    Were it not for the need for wireless comunication, I would *still* be using my beloved Psion 3c as my daily PDA. While its time-scheduling abilities were top-notch, it came with, IN THE ROM, a very good word processor, spreadsheet, and flat-file database.

    The 3c has a small, but complete, keyboard, and typing with two fingers, I could get 20-25 wpm. It has a built-in spell checker, 80-column wide screen by at least 10 or 14 lines, can print to many printers, and with PsiWin software, import and export MS Word and Excel files seamlessly. And it runs for weeks on a pair of AA's, and there's a good backlight.

    The 5mx has bigger keys, a touchscreen, and a prettier GUI, along with all the benefits described above.

    Both fit in a hip or coat pocket easily. Both connect to a PC via a serial port, and your PC probably still has one of those.

    Check ebay for units with PsiWin software. Then Google around for a huge library of 3rd party software.

    Yes, they are both old, but Psion had more PDA experience in 1992 than Palm has now. Psion software is almostly always amazingly good.

    I use a top-o-the-line color wireless Palm these days, but I still think my Psion 3c had it beat in almost all areas relating to software, power, and convenience.

    1. Re:PSION 3c or 5x!! by tyagiUK · · Score: 4, Informative

      I used to use a Psion series 3 (http://www.psion.com/) as a portable PDA/word processor. In fact, when I was at university, I wrote entire chapters of my projects on it while in a coffee bar or any area away from the network. It was portable, had a usable keyboard once you got used to it, and had some great applications. PC connectivity was over serial and I just dumped all my edits in plain text and imported them later to whatever app I was using on the desktop system.

      One good thing was that I was using LaTeX at the time, and just marked up the text appropriately. Therefore, when it was dumped to my Linux desktop, I could just build the LaTeX and it was ready formatted.

      The Series 5 was a good step forwards from the 3, with more power, better screen, stylus input etc. There's some info on it over at Geek.com: http://www.geek.com/hwswrev/pda/psionser5.htm.

      If you can pick one up off Ebay, there's a great user community still there. Cheap now, too.

      --
      Contribute to the online videogame encyclopedia: GamerWiki
  70. How about.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...an Alphasmart? they're not incredibly expensive, relatively well-featured, light, and good with batteries..I use one for school, works quite well, granted, its not a laptop...
    http://www.alphasmart.com/

  71. How about this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  72. Re:Hold off on the "It's called pencil and paper" by kfg · · Score: 1

    I do not have a PDA. I have a little notebook. Frankly I think if you need a PDA to be "more productive" with keeping a phone list and showing up where and when you're supposed to be there is something wrong with you.

    On the other hand, I know for a fact that there is something wrong with me. I am disgraphic. I cannot handle paper and pencil beyond a very crude level, and only for short periods of time.

    Different lack of strokes for different folks I guess.

    I need to type. It's neuro-physical thing that nothing can be done about. Sounds like a job for a Z80/6800, a bit of flash mem and a Twiddler to me, if Twiddlers didn't go for a couple of hundred.

    KFG

  73. My solution that costs less than $5. by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 0, Redundant
    First, this:

    a small notebook for USD$0.75

    and

    some pencils which can be had for$1.86

    Given the amount of energy that goes into making a piece of high technology, and the loss of metals and petroleum to build something that is vastly more toxic to dispose of than paper and pencil, and how little energy goes into making a pencil and small pad of paper, I think it is the height of idiocy to apply such high technology to something that can be just as easily handled with a pencil and paper.

    I'll repeat the main point: Get A Small Pad of Paper and a Pencil. A small, all purpose, Swiss army knife is useful for sharpening them, also, small sharpeners are easily found. It will cost you less than $5 and you're set. You can even use parts of it to store important phone numbers and stuff.

    Just because something CAN be done with technology doesn't mean it SHOULD be done with technology.

    Given the state of the world, I would recommend we get used to such solutions...

    RS

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
    1. Re:My solution that costs less than $5. by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      And you, what, plug the notebook into your computer with a USB->wire-bound adapter?

      The point of the question is that he wants to be able to write things like emails or such that he can later transfer to computer without having to retype. If you have to retype it, you haven't saved any time at all.

    2. Re:My solution that costs less than $5. by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Given the amount of energy that goes into making a piece of high technology, and the loss of metals and petroleum to build something that is vastly more toxic to dispose of than paper and pencil, and how little energy goes into making a pencil and small pad of paper, I think it is the height of idiocy to apply such high technology to something that can be just as easily handled with a pencil and paper.

      I use a pen and a hard cover composition notebook. A bit higher tech, a bit more pricey, but still cheaper than $5.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    3. Re:My solution that costs less than $5. by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      There's always a scanner and OCR. If you print quasi-legible block letters, OCR won't do a half-bad job on them.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
  74. Re:Alphasmart products - used by my son at school by ringfinger · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My son had problems with writing. His hand strength wasn't great and writing for even a short period would tire his hands/arms. The teacher gave him one of these to use and he was able to transition from struggling with writing to actually getting ideas down on and focussing on the content of the stories. They may not be perfect, but in some cases these machines are great.

  75. Good solution: Palm V + Palm V keyboard by Dystopian+Rebel · · Score: 2, Informative

    I just solved this problem myself by purchasing a new-in-box Palm V keyboard for $1.25 on EBay. (I'm serious.)

    The used Palm V itself cost a little more, but it's one of the best products Palm ever made. The Palm V is pocket-sized; the keyboard, when folded, is not much bigger.

    This a much more versatile solution than a hunk of text-processing-dedicated hardware.

    --
    Rich And Stupid is not so bad as Working For Rich And Stupid.
    1. Re:Good solution: Palm V + Palm V keyboard by Rizuchan · · Score: 1

      I concur - I have a terrible time taking notes because I write so slow, and so bought a Palm Vx plus keyboard on Ebay so that I could take notes in class. It's a joy, and I can use it anywhere. Furthermore, it has a long battery life and a night glow screen option, so I can see what I'm writing durring a movie or whatnot. Also good for packing ebooks on for goofing off in class. ;-)

  76. Palm IIIXE (or compatible) + Stowaway + Docs2go by Wiseleo · · Score: 1

    I used this extensively in college.

    Endless battery life. Easy syncing.

    Should not cost much these days.

    --
    Leonid S. Knyshov
    Find me on Quora :)
  77. Used HP Jornada 680? by victor_the_cleaner · · Score: 1
    Seems like a used Jornada 680 would be a good fit. I used one for about 2 years and loved it.

    http://search.ebay.com/jornada-680_W0QQfromZR40QQs ojsZ1

    1. Re:Used HP Jornada 680? by Kujila · · Score: 1

      Those go for a lot on ebay, though... Sort that link by "highest price" and you'll most likely end up with actions ending in the upper one-hundreds...

  78. Re:Jung abg whfg fbzr cncre? by PM4RK5 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I see you submitted that comment using the trusty handwriting recognition capabilities of your Apple Newton.

  79. Moleskine notebook by caffeine_monkey · · Score: 1

    If you want to be insufferably hip, I recommended getting a pen/pencil and a Moleskine notebook. It's "the legendary notebook of Van Gogh, Chatwin, Hemingway, Matisse and Céline." Despite the pretentiousness of carrying one, I can attest that they are very good notebooks -- very nice cover feel; the binding lets you easily write to the margins; it has a built-in bookmark, elastic, and pockets; plus you can feel like Hemingway when you're jotting down your grocery list. Expensive for a pad of paper, but cheaper (and nicer feel) than a PDA.

  80. Sharp ZQ series by Lazy+Jones · · Score: 1
    Sharp used to make PDAs with small (but not too small) keyboards and incredibly long battery life - and enough RAM for simple word processing tasks.

    For example:

    --
    "I love my job, but I hate talking to people like you" (Freddie Mercury)
  81. Have you tried these guys? by prw404 · · Score: 1

    I've got one of these, and it comes in handy from time to time.

    http://www1.alphasmart.com/

  82. Sharp ZQ / OZ 770 by Denyer · · Score: 1
    I've tried the very-small-portable-editor thing, and unfortunately typing on a small device proved slow enough to get in the way of thinking... what I was using was a Sharp 770 (they were sold in ZQ and OZ flavours depending on geography) with OzOffice. About equal in complexity to a Psion 3a.

    --
    Ph-nglui mglw'nafh Gates M'dna wgah'nagl fhtagn.
  83. Same Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I, too, have been looking for a small, inexpensive, clamshell-style wordprocessor with a decent keyboard for some time.

    I prefer typing to writing by hand. I am best able to organize my thoughts when I can pound them out on a keyboard. (Electronic wordprocessing also saves me the hassle of having to decipher my own handwriting later on.)

    It amazes me that there is no portable, inexpensive, bare-bones wordprocessing device on the market. Such a machine would surely appeal to students, writers, journalists, field scientists and anyone else that has to take clear, transferable notes on the fly.

    The device that comes closest to fulfilling my (and the original poster's) needs seems to be the Psion series 5 , although the keyboard is a little cramped.

  84. Recorder by Symb · · Score: 1

    Your more in the realm of a voice recorder. PDA, tape, solid state or otherwise. Otherwise, carry a pencil. Otherwise carry a laptop.

    What the hell? Did you think somebody was going to show you OpenOffice running on an 80's wrist band?

    Come on slash...

  85. alphasmart neo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A friend of mine uses one of these

    http://www.engadget.com/entry/6336767344488645/

    he likes his, writing a novel or somesuch, but he leaves it in the truck & goes to it when something inspires him.

    bad points:

    * its not going to fit in your pocket, its just a little smaller than your standard laptop.

    * small screen, more like a calculator, you can only see a few lines at a time.

    * SRP is over $200, you could just go with a used lappy if your going to spend that much

    good points:

    * runs for months on AA batteries

    * keyboard seems easy enough to touch-type on

    * USB, just plug it in & upload your crap... er um.. literary creations.

    * boots in miliseconds... theres no OS to boot.

  86. Enter: TRS-80 Model 100 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interestingly, there is an article in the Volume 02 of Make Magazine that fits squarely in the sights of this topic.

    The author talks about using his trash-80 while on hiking trips. It runs for about 20 hours on 4 AA batteries, and can be had on eBay for about $30. You can easily upload files from this l'il feller to your PC using a generic serial cable and a null modem adapter.

    Have fun.

    1. Re:Enter: TRS-80 Model 100 by Lije+Baley · · Score: 1

      Yes, that's the ticket. I sure wish they would reproduce these babies - with a little better screen though.

      --
      Strange things are afoot at the Circle-K.
    2. Re:Enter: TRS-80 Model 100 by NoxiousB · · Score: 1

      Ive got a friend that still takes notes on his 200. 14 + hours on 4 AA batteries, great text entry, light weight, and hack the serial connection and you can transfer stuff. sounds like the perfect solution to me.

    3. Re:Enter: TRS-80 Model 100 by YorgleLlama · · Score: 1
      And don't forget about ReMem: http://bitchin100.com/remem_project.htm

      2mb ram, 2mb flash, works on the tandy 100, 102, and 200. very cool project. The Tandy Model T community still has a lot of the old, late 1970s hacker-programmer-computer enthusiast ethic. very very cool people.

  87. Re:Hold off on the "It's called pencil and paper" by HyperBlazer · · Score: 1
    I'm much more productive (at this point in my life, at least) with a keyboard under my hands than with a pencil in my fingers.

    I can understand this, but how sure are you that your productivity would transfer to the tiny keyboard the post describes? I would think that it has more to do with "what you're used to." I'm most productive (for most things) at my laptop keyboard (which I'm using now.) I'd rather switch to pen and paper than either a tiny keyboard like the author wants, or, for that matter, to a typewriter. For me, it's not the keys, it's the overall feel.

    Of course, it's also activity-specific: I can't use Maple on an American keyboard, nor can I program C on a French keyboard. Just a question of where I learned to do what.

  88. 8bit Tandy... by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Tandy had a few of those things, pretty cheap on Ebay these days... ( such as the WP2, Mdl100 )

    They may not be 'full screen' but they are very portable, run forever on a set of batteries, and weigh nothing..

    You can still get *unopened* sinclair Z88's if you look around..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  89. IBM Z50 by Johnzo · · Score: 1

    It's a little big for your jacket pocket, but I wrote half a novel on mine.

    Pros: The keyboard is awesome and, with no moving parts to power, the battery life is fantastic--six hours for me, easy. The screen is bright and 640x480 will give you all the text you need to see. It weighs 2.6 pounds. Instant-on. Pocket Office is in ROM.

    Cons: Pocket Office is in ROM. WinCE is a little...buggy. You definitely want to store your documents on CompactFlash rather than relying on the battery-backed RAM of the unit.

    You can also look at the HP Jornada 820 for another example of a WinCE mini-laptop. I like the IBM better--the Jornada isn't as sturdy, it's slower, the keyboard isn't as nice, and the screen gets hella-bad interference from something in the machine. But if you can get one cheap, it's okay. I wrote the other half of a novel on one.

    1. Re:IBM Z50 by YorgleLlama · · Score: 1

      Agreed. The IBM Workpad Z50 is awesome. $100 on ebay, CF card, 20 hour battery life, ($20 for an extra high capacity battery) It even has VGA output, sound support, voice recording, and an awesome-feeling IBM keyboard. And BSD has been ported to it... in case you wanted to use that. I've not noticed problems with the built in WinCE apps and such.. I tried running VIM on it, with a shell, but it was a bit wonky and awkward to use, so i just use Pocket word and save out .txt files.

  90. HP 2000 or Psion 5a by Will+Sargent · · Score: 1

    There are a number of PDAs out that that sport full keyboards. Of them, the Psion 5a was probably the best. I still don't understand why clamshell keyboards aren't more popular.

    My dad still owns an HP 2000, going on for more than 10 years now, and refuses to even touch Palm or Windows Mobile.

  91. Nokia 9210 on Ebay by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    The 9300 and 9500 are out so owners are upgrading to the newer sleeker kit. It's basically the next generation Psion palmtop that Psion never made, with a mobile phone attached, a bit of a brick but you'd have all of your information with you, everywhere.

    And I mean some weird shit information as well, there's quite a community of people creating stuff for these machines:

    e.g.

    http://3lib.ukonline.co.uk/pocketinfo/

    And it has a useful keyboard, unlike all these useless Palm clones. I have one, but I'm terrified to get rid of it, my life would basically stop working without it.

    --
    Deleted
  92. One handed by vrimj · · Score: 1

    Frogpad does this with a most used letter format http://www.frogpad.com/ And then there are cording keyborads like the BAT Keyboard http://www.onehandkeyboard.com/product_view.asp?Re cordNumber=12&sbcolor=%23FF9966&option=keyboard&su bcategory=&CatTxt=&optiontxt=Keyboard These do make a lot more sense in a world where one hand is on a mouse and they adapt to smaller form factors more gracefully

    1. Re:One handed by Infinityis · · Score: 1

      Like the parent and grandparent, I've been thinking the same thing...graffiti writing is horrible, and using only a stylus is horrible. A one-handed input system would be nice, but the pricetags those have are a bit excessive.

      I thought a simple 5-button interface, one button per finger, with the ability to multiplex based on how many keys can be pressed would be nice, but it only gives 24 key combinations, which isn't enough for the alphabet, much less numbers, symbols, etc.

      However, I saw something much like it in Star Wars ROTS where General Grevious is in the circular rolling vehicle, right when he starts it up, they show a close up of his hand on a 5-button control.

      Anyways, thanks for the links, it's comforting to know such things exist, and also comforting to know that it probably wouldn't be too hard to sell similar devices at a lower price...just can't wait till it happens.

  93. eBay by scarolan · · Score: 1

    Get a Handspring Visor (or Palm Pilot) and portable keyboard off eBay. I picked up a new Visor Platinum for $22 a few weeks back. Keyboards are available around the $25-30 range.

    The great thing about the older visors is they are cheap and run on AAA batteries, with battery life of 3-6 weeks depending on how much you use em.

  94. eMate 300 by enkidu · · Score: 1

    small, portable, good battery life, good keyboard. Only fly in the ointment is connectivity, but if you just want text download/upload, it shouldn't be too difficult to hack up a solution.

    --

    There is no trap so deadly as the trap you set for yourself
    -Raymond Chandler, The Long Goodbye
  95. I use a $3 notepad by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 0, Redundant

    It's blue, it's got lines, and it's portable.

    Mind you, you have to refill the ink in the black pens I use, but if you get the Human Brain add-on, this is no prob.

    Geesh ... slaves to the machine, or what?

    Why not just buy a cellphone with all that added in and get it over with if you need it that much? The new ones have them built in, and I'm sure I'll make money from my PalmSource holdings since most use that for the OS and apps.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  96. m100 by asciiRider · · Score: 1

    The radio shack m100 from way way back would probably fit the bill, but it wouldn't fit in a jacket pocket. If I remember correctly, it ran on AA batteries. I think it had a serial port too. 64k ram, and a built in word processor...

  97. I want a portable ssh terminal by baboon · · Score: 1

    It seems to me this could've been done a decade ago, but I guess maybe it's too niche for any providers to care.

    Clamshell "phone", modest keyboard facing, say, an 80x40 screen. Give it a text-only ssh. That's it for a base model. For unlimited low bandwidth, that could be worth, I guess, $200 down and $30 a month.

    Optionally, you can up the resolution and perhaps do some X11 over the ssh. The key is I don't want some poor PDA apps and annoying syncronization issues. I want to talk to my home server anywhere. I don't need frilly widgets or pointless toys.

    1. Re:I want a portable ssh terminal by Grahame · · Score: 1

      I use SSH (puTTY) on my Nokia Communicator. It works great over WLAN. Over GPRS, the network latency is a bit disconcerting, but you can get used to it.

  98. Re:Hold off on the "It's called pencil and paper" by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

    Strangely enough, I have a PDA *because* i can write on it, the fact it keeps tabs on what i'm meant to be doing is a handy side effect.

    My recommendation is to get a cheap PDA and use Graffiti or something similar to transcribe your handwriting. Just check if the input is touchscreen or styluspoint, because touchscreens can't be leant on.

    --
    How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
  99. Mailstation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get and old Mailstation Mivo 100. It is a little email device with a nice 8-10 line LCD. Out of the box these thing would only connect to a specified server. On the older ones, you could reset the thing and change the phone number and email server that it called.

    Regardless these things have a lpt port.

    It won't fit in your shirt pocket. They are about size of a large paperback.

    Here is some more information:

    http://www.linux-hacker.net/cgi-bin/UltraBoard/Ult raBoard.pl?Action=ShowBoard&Board=mswhatever&Idle= &Sort=&Order=&Session=

  100. One more time! by fm6 · · Score: 1
    It doesn't seem like an infeasable product - consider the price that all-in-one 8-bit game machines like the C64 DTV go for, add that to the price that the cheap organizers go for, and you get a retail value under $50.
    It seems that out of every 10 Ask Slashdots, at least 1 is based on the "features = cost" fallacy. One more time: the cost of something is not based on the number of features it has. It's based on the cost of developing it, marketing it, starting a production line, and distributing it, divided by the number of people who actually buy it. If only a few people are interested in buying a piece of hardware with a particular set of features, individual units are not going to be slightly more expensive than similar standard hardware -- they'll be a lot more expensive or (more likely) not available at all.
    1. Re:One more time! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which is why a Graphing calculator + external keyboard add-on could quite possibly be the cheapest low power portable note taking device ever ;) Graphing calculators are a staple of modern education, nearly Everyone has to buy one, so economy of scale applies, the low power feature comes standard with calculators (they are always designed with months of operation time per battery change, because that is what people 'expect' from a calculator ;) Since the graphing/programing ability go hand in hand, word processors already exist for all the major brands of graphing calculators. And there are companies that sell keyboards for popular model graphing calculators... Although a high end graphing calculator typically goes for $100+ and the keyboard accessory is another $40 on top of that.. but like I said, most people need a graphing calculator at some point in thier education... So, it's more like 'upgrading' your already purchased device into a portable note taking machine for $40 ;)

      But considering the feature sets of modern graphing calculators no wonder some are banned from use on SAT/ACT etc... you could program it in to have an answer sheet of typical questions on those types of tests, and breeze through with a perfect score ;)

      http://education.ti.com/us/product/accessory/keybo ard/features/features.html

  101. my solution by spir0 · · Score: 1

    I love writing, but I'm also a gadget geek. Both actually conflict when trying to actually do some writing.

    I used to own a compaq ipaq with targus keyboard, and although I felt cool, I was always knocking the thing about.

    In the end I settled for a $250 pen and a $3 notebook. I take them everywhere. Having a nice fountain pen not only makes me want to write, it's a great experience when I do.

    Of course, I then have to transcribe pages of scribbles onto the computer eventually, but I find it easier to think on paper where I can write and draw pictures, cross out stuff, and generally sort out the mayhem.

    YMMV.

    --
    The reason girls and Windows users don't understand UNIX is because all the documentation is in Man files.
  102. Oregon Scientific Osaris by flipmack · · Score: 1

    I've got an Oregon Scientific Osaris...which is basically a PDA running EPOC similar to a Psion Revo/Mako...with the addition of a CF slot. I used it for the purpose of portable word-processing on the go. I don't have the serial sync cable, but even if I did, the transfer rate is pretty slow, so I just store everything on the CF card and transfer that way. Having all of my stuff on the CF card also prevents any accidental data loss... I'm actually willing to sell it...since I've found that I scribble on paper much faster than I can touch-type.

    --
    semper ubi sub ubi
  103. AlphaSmart 'Dana' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heard of the AlphaSmart 'Dana'. It's a PalmOS based word-processor with WiFi. There's some other products in their range as well (although I'm unfamiliar with them).

    See http://www.alphasmart.com/

  104. Watch out for deals by Ugodown · · Score: 1

    Last Friday I picked up a Palm VIIx with folding keyboard for $50 CDN. This is my fist PDA and am very happy with it. With 8 MB memory, I don't forsee a problem with filling it up with text anytime soon. Although this PDA is 4 years old and has a vestigual antenna for Palm.Net (which doesn't exist anymore), it serves my purposes very well, especially with the keyboard. It was $600 four years ago, so I was pleased to pick it up at a fraction of the cost. I bought it at XS Cargo, and they are sold out now, but things like this might come up again so keep your eyes peeled.

    --
    --- to swing on the spiral...
  105. I hope, I hope, I hope! by bigbigbison · · Score: 1

    I have long been lusting for a really light, low-powered laptop I could carry around and write with. I'm thinking something with the power and screen of my old 233mhz laptop, but with in a thinner form factor. I paid something like $2000 for the thing back in 98, and it still works for writing papers and internet, but is too bulky to lug around. I don't need a super clear screen, with a fast harddrive and cdburner. Just give me something lightweight that has a fairly normal sized keyboard, can edit text documents and get online.

    --
    http://www.popularculturegaming.com -- my blog about the culture of videogame players
  106. Go for the PDA by digitalgimpus · · Score: 1

    I had a Palm IIIxe, and a Palm Folding Keyboard (Accordian Style).

    Used to take it to work (lifeguarding). When nobody was around (crummy days, especially early in the morning), would write my papers for High School.

    Got paid to do homework! Rather than sit around and play with my toes.

    Got home, would sync up with my computer, spell check, and print.

    No problemo.

  107. Companies sell FEATURES not SOLUTIONS by vhogemann · · Score: 1

    That's what I think...

    A cheap, notebook thing, with simple word processing capabilities and long battery life would be perfect for my wife.

    She's studing History, and right now preparing her graduate thesis. She have accumulated amazing quantities of hand-written text... and now she is stating to compile all this text into the thesis, if she used a notebook to do her annotations it would be a matter of "copy-and-paste".

    I cant afford a notebook for her, not even an used one, and even if I could those things are so heavy and cumbersome that she wouldnt carry it around.

    Something with the power of a Palm, with a decent monocromatic screen, and a keyboard would be perfect for her. Better, if it could run a light word processor like AbiWord it would be the perfect solution.

    An ARM or PPC processor @100Hz, with 512MB of Flash RAM, a SD Card expansion slot, 1 USB host port and a monocromatic 800x600 passive LCD. I guess that this would become a very decent Linux platform, expecially if you use the FrameBuffer directly, instead of a XServer. And it would give you insanely long battery life!

    But, as I said, companies are selling features, not solutions. They need to do this, so you actually have a reason to upgrade your machine... The same happens with cellphones.

    --
    ---- You know how some doctors have the Messiah complex - they need to save the world? You've got the "Rubik's" complex
  108. If you speak German, this should interest you: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's a special kind of paper notebook called the "Löhnmethode Planbuch". It's an element of a Self Management Method called "Löhnmethode". It's easy, learnable in about one hour, and ganzheitlich (wholesome). Check out http://www.loehnmethode.de/

    It's 115,- for the starter kit, but in comparison to other fanzy-schmanzy pda-overkill-devices, it works.

  109. Go retro by defile · · Score: 1

    Go out and buy a journal. A really nice one costs $15. Buy yourself a fountain pen. A halfway decent one costs $25. Dust off those memories on cursive handwriting. The writing flows smoothly and I find it to be quite pleasant, relaxing even. Ink cartridges last about a week apiece.

    I must take two or three pages of notes a day, that have nothing to do with work. Really useful for looking up what you were thinking about last month, errant phone numbers, confirmation codes, and the like.

    Fits in a jacket pocket. Always on. No software to manage.

    I feel vulnerable if I leave the house without it.

  110. Calcuscribe,etc. by voteforkerry78 · · Score: 0

    This is the first thing that came up on a google search for portable PDA. Only can be bought in large quantities for lots of money (240 for 1-5) http://www.calcuscribe.com/ Here's another discussion about them. Should offer good reviews. http://www.itreviews.co.uk/forum/353 Here's the cheapest one I've found in what little searching I've done. http://www.adapt-it.org.uk/products/neoportablewor dprocessor.asp

  111. Libretto by tahuti · · Score: 1

    In Canada they weren't success, but I knew few people who were using these as backup to their more powerfull laptops/computers.

    Old:

    LIBRETTO 50 Pentium 75MHz CPU, 16Mb RAM, 810Mb hard disk, 6.1" TFT display
    LIBRETTO 60 Pentium 100MHz CPU, 16Mb RAM, 810Mb hard disk, 6.1" TFT display
    LIBRETTO 70 Pentium 120MHz MMX CPU, 16Mb RAM, 1.6Gb hard disk, 6.1" TFT display
    LIBRETTO 100 Pentium 166MHz MMX CPU, 32Mb RAM, 2.1Gb hard disk, 7.1" TFT display

    Toshiba Libretto 100
    Launch date: 3rd February 1998
    This is a major revision of the model - for the first time since its inception, the size of the overall unit has changed, along with the size of the display.
    Intel Pentium 166MHz MMX processor 32Mb EDO RAM (expandable to 64Mb) 2Gb hard disk (9.5mm high) 7.1 inch TFT display, (800 x 480 resolution), 16.7 million colours External display options: 640x480 x 16M, 800x600 x 16M, 1024x768 x 65K, 85Hz refresh rate Neomagic 128XD graphics system (2Mb video RAM) Dimensions (W x D x H) 210 x 132 x 35mm Weight 910 grams Sound Blaster Pro compatible sound system (Yamaha OPL3 SA3) 2 x PC Card (PCMCIA) Type II slot (32 bit "CardBus" type) Universal 100 - 240V power supply Speaker and socket Microphone Serial infra-red port (supports Fast Infra-Red standard) Mini port replicator with ECP parallel (printer) port, RS-232 serial port (9 pin), SVGA monitor port and PS/2 mouse/keyboard port 1.44Mb external PC Card floppy drive (Note: not included with "Japanese" models) Microsoft Windows 95 and various Toshiba utilities included

    New:

    Model: Libretto U100 Motherboard Features CPU: Intel Pentium M 733 1.2 GHZ L2 Cache: 2MB RAM: 512MB (1GB max) Storage HDD: 60GB (Ultra ATA) Graphic / Video Features Chip: Intel 855GME VRAM: 64MB Display: 7.2" WXGA Clear SuperView LCD Resolution: 1280 x 768 pixels External Resolution: 2048 x 1536 pixels Sound system Sound Card: 16-bit Stereo, AC ' 97 conformity Interface PCMCIA: 1 x Type II CardBus compatible Modem: fax/modem 56K flex V.90 internal voice Integrated ports: USB 2.0x2; modem RJ-11 x1; microphone x1; headphones x1; 100/10baseT x1; 802.11b/g; SD Memory Card Slot x1; Bluetooth Version 2.0+EDR conformity;I.LINK (IEEE1394) S400 (4 pins) ×1 Input / Output Devices Keyboard: 14mm key pitch, 1.5mm keystroke Pointing Device: AccuPoint Pointing Stick Battery Life: 5.3 hours Power Consumption: 45W A/C adapter: 100~240V / 50-60 Hz Physical Features Size: 8.27(W) x 6.5(L) x 1.17 - 1.31 (H) [inch] 210mm (width) ×165mm (depth) × 29.8mm-33.4mm (height) Weight: 2.2 lbs / 999g Other Package contains: A/C adapter; Standard Battery; Mini RGB Cable Operating System: Windows XP Professional

  112. Graphing calculator by toddestan · · Score: 1

    That's not a bad idea. Back in High school I got pretty good at typing on the TI-85. Even better would be a HP-48, as there are some pretty powerful editing program for the HP's. I've had one called MinWrt on my 48G for as long as I can remember.

  113. Jornada with linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about a jornada 680 with jlime (jornada linux mobility edition) http://www.jlime.com/?

    They are dead cheap and with linux as an option they are a bargain.

  114. Electronic pens by Obliviously · · Score: 0

    Nokia makes "electronic" pens that operate like a regular ball point. Using special paper (available in multiple sizes, including notepads) you can write in ink, but the pen remembers its movement on the paper. Once back connected to a PC/laptop you can download the pen contents (hundreds of notepad sized pages) in either the original hand written form or have text recognition software (can't vouch for accuracy) convert it to a OO doc or Word doc.

  115. Obsolete options by justfred · · Score: 1

    I can relate to this; I'm an occasional journaller and I've gone back and forth btw paper and pen and handheld organizers.

    The Newton, of course, was awesome, but the external keyboard was big and clunky - would have been great if it folded over the screen.

    Have used a Palm and a folding keyboard; this was great as well but the sync software still is somewhat lousy when it comes to uploading documents as plain text (why can't I just have a directory appear, like on a flash drive, and drag-copy documents from there?) There are third-party solutions for this, of course. Palm sync is still a pain on the Mac, more so with Sony which makes (or used to) cuter hardware.

    One of my favorites, tho, which I also used as a fantastic portable RS-232 serial terminal, was an HP200LX. Sturdy (i.e. droppable), relatively inexpensive. Difficult to sync with Mac, IIRC.

    My dream machine would be a 200LX form factor, running UX of some flavor, with USB, network, and 802.11 connectivity. Which would of course price it out of the market of your question. Needs to have a clamshell keyboard though.

  116. Headless, perhaps? by cmstremi · · Score: 1

    I tend to agree with most of the pen and paper posts - I think you can't really get a useful device that does it all for twenty bucks.

    But that got me thinkin'. How about skipping the display? Maybe a little UBS hub with a power source that you can plug a thumb drive into and a little folding usb keyboard. I mean, you can't really edit without a display, but if you just want rough input for ideas - you can capture them here, plug the key into a real computer and do your fixing and formatting there.

    I'm not aware of a device liek that on the market. Personally, I wouldn't use it - I'd pony up for a PDA...

    1. Re:Headless, perhaps? by cbr2702 · · Score: 1

      What about a standard ps/2 keyboard and a hardware keylogger. You'd need to hack a bit for power (5 volts DC) but it wouldn't be too bad. And you could hide the logger and batteries inside the empty plastic of the case to give the patented "it's a looney typing on a disconected keyboard" impression.

      --


      This post written under Gentoo-linux with an SCO IP license.
  117. AlphaSmart by Schrockwell · · Score: 1

    We used AlphaSmarts in English class a few years ago... They worked really well for typing stuff up during class, and we'd just pritn everything out at the end. It's not quite as portable as one would like, but it's the closest I've seen to such a device.

  118. Re:Hold off on the "It's called pencil and paper" by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    I resemble that remark. And I do have (multiple) something wrong with me, from Asperger's syndrome to just plain over-30 lowered brain space.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  119. I use by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    bound notebooks and a mechanical pencil.

    Later, I can scan or photograph pages and if it's still interesting enough to convert to text, type the thing up. It saves a lot of time in the long run and if it gets wet nothing is lost.

  120. None of these items have the simplicity by MattFlower · · Score: 1

    I'm guessing that you want to write something somewhat long. If you didn't, you could use paper more easily. Anything more than paragraph though, and you run into editing problems.

    I'm guessing that you won't really be happy with anything you try. Pencil and paper is too slow, and anything short of a laptop won't be fast enough to get your thoughts out.

    I'm not saying this to be a troll. If you can type fast enough, there isn't the intermediate step of storing the words in your head while your sluggish right hand tries to spit out words with a pencil or pen.

    I've tried a number of solutions. These include an old Windows CE machine with a keyboard, a Palm m505 with an external keyboard, and the same Palm m505 using the "Fitaly" input. In the end, I'm not using any of them.

    The problem is that none of them allowed me to express myself with the ease I feel with a keyboard. (No, I'm not saying my writing is fluid or even good -- I'm just saying that I feel fluid.)

    I never tried it, but one thing that was suggested to me was to try to learn shorthand. You may have to re-type everything later, but at least you can get the words down quickly.

  121. Use a voice recorder by CrazyPDA · · Score: 1

    if you want to store ideas when you are out and about just get a small voice recorder. They are cheap and can store information fasther than you can type on a small keyboard. If you have a good voice recorder you can use a speech to text engine to convert it to text when you get back home.

  122. I would like just recorder instead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That would be enough. Better if it can do voice recoganition later with software

  123. Older Blackberry by ochampaugh · · Score: 1

    An older Blackberry can be had pretty cheap ($100) off ebay, and the interface for entering text from a small and durable device is hard to beat. I think you can use the desktop sync software and even run your own non-networked J2ME apps without turning up service with a wireless carrier.

  124. How about an old Blackberry? by Curmudgeonlyoldbloke · · Score: 1

    In GSM markets the old black 5800s are getting replaced with newer models, and some new BB server versions don't support the old handhelds, so you may be able to get some second-hand.

    Without a SIM card (so no phone line costs) you may still be able to syncronise "memopad" items with a PC (never tried it though...), and the options include ASCII text as well as MS Outlook.

  125. I used a Palm V + Keyboard on vacation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used a Palm V + Keyboard on vacation in Europe for a month to type journal stuff.

    Both collapse into a tiny space of two paperbacks and the Palm V lasted for a month with one charge in the middle. Text uploads to a PC without even thinking about it. I didn't even load up any special software; i was only interested in typing fast.

    Later when I was in the hospital for a weekend (after being hit by a truck) I tapped my experiences into the same Palm V via one handed grafitti, and had all kinds of stories to upload into my website. Along with my crappy camera phone, I kept my brain busy and entertained despite being bored and alone for hours.

    http://www.roughlydrafted.com/

  126. AlphaSmart by at.splat · · Score: 1

    I work in the library at a semi-under privileged high school. A lot of our kids don't have computers at home, but they still have the same requirements as every other high schooler in the country. Reports: typed, double-spaced, etc.

    So, we check out AlphaSmarts. Basically, they are keyboards with a 3 or 4 line LCD screen and built-in word processor. The units we have can store 8 different files of decent length.

    When kids are ready to transfer documents, they hook it up to ANY computer with a standard USB cable and hit Send. The AS then emulates keyboard input and transfers all the characters to whatever application is active (ideally, a word processor).

    They are pretty slick and robust enough to withstand high schoolers, and not too expensive second hand. A quick look on eBay shows newish models for $50.

    (*Obviously, I get no compensation for this plug. Just a satisified middle-man spreading the word.)

  127. my idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this is how I envision a portable word processor.
    its foldable!
    (made in paint)

    http://img277.echo.cx/my.php?image=thejaymanswordp rocessor9bf.png

    1. Re:my idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dude you suck!

  128. That already exists by houghi · · Score: 1

    little portable word processor; not a fancy PDA, but something with a bare minimum of processing power, small screen, and a cheap mini-keyboard, so that it could fit in a jacket pocket.

    Not a fancy PDA? Check!
    Bare minimum processing power? Check!
    Small screen? Check!
    Mini-keyboard? Check!
    Fits into your pocket? Check!

    It is called a cellphone. Here is one There is even a demo on the site and I believe you can even run ssh on it, so you can connect to your server and work on that.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  129. portable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    single handed is the key. the first company to combine an LCD, some flash memory, and a bluetooth interface with a frogpad gets my $200

  130. Best solution: by Tavor · · Score: 1

    Search Ebay for a cheap, used laptop. Go for an older model, like something powered by a Pentium III, and you can get it very cheap, with enough power for most anything save for the newest games. I/O would not be a problem.

    --
    Windows has detected an undetectable error.
  131. Re:Nokia has done this...and cheaper! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nokia 3300. 60$ on ebay. newish.

  132. cell phone input by KarmaBlackballed · · Score: 1

    while commuting i do all my writing as txt msgs using my cell phone

    who needs all those space wasting keys on a regular keyboard when you can layer several symbols onto each button like they do on my cell phone. fits in my pocket this way!

    i am writing this comment using an rs232 hacked cell phone connectd to my pc as the input device!

    --

    --- -- - -
    Give me LIBERTY, or give me a check.
    1. Re:cell phone input by Pulse_Instance · · Score: 2, Funny

      So that was a first post you were trying for was it?

    2. Re:cell phone input by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hahhahhahaa.

      he should have used morse code.

  133. Psion Series 5MX by biglig2 · · Score: 1

    Is exactly, exactly, exactly what you need. They don't make 'em any more, so it'll have to be ebay.

    The youngsters may not know Psion - they were makers of some of the earliest PDAs, and were the company that begot Symbian, the people who make the best smartphone OS software.

    Why the 5MX? Because it has the single best keyboard any PDA has ever had, no question. All the other PDA keyboards have buttons like calculators or mobile phones; the 5 has a keyboard like a... well... like a keyboard actually. Some very clever engineering means it folds up smaller than seems possible.

    Runs on AA batteries, too.

    Decent word processor built in, also various text editors etc. are still available to download - http://www.ericlindsay.com/epoc/siedit5.htm#text has plenty.

    There are good open sync tools for Linux too. Come to that, it has a CF slot so you can use that to move your files about no matter what machine you have. Hell, before now I've transfered files by using zmodem out the serial port on the back!

    Seriously, you need to check out the 5mx.

    --
    ~~~~~ BigLig2? You mean there's another one of me?
  134. how about legos? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=17 3

    Generally cheap, easy to reconfigure, easy to upgrade, color-customizable, and can be made portable, but generally not very drop-proof.

  135. Psion, Poqet by tverbeek · · Score: 1
    The Psion Revo/Diamond Mako was pretty close.

    Psion really only had two problems: not enough U.S. marketing, and product-design people who overestimated the durability of the materials that the devices would be made of. Otherwise their devices were first-rate. A couple years ago, my Revo broke beyond repair and I finally gave in and bought a PalmOS PDA. Within a couple months I was on eBay looking for Revo; PalmOS just couldn't hold a candle to EPOC. I take the Revo with me just about any time I leave the house, and use it frequently for logging ideas and so on. In a pinch, I use it to actually compose text, but the keyboard's a bit cramped for much of that. I have a Windows 98 machine with an RS232 serial port that I maintain specifically to run the backup/link software for it. I plan to hold out as long as I can, using it until something with a comparable combination of portability and usability comes along.

    (The older Psion Series3a is worth considering for this sort of use. The software isn't as sophisticated, and the keyboard isn't as good, but it has the advantage of using replaceable AAs, so its prospects for long-term use are better than for the Revo, whose batteries will eventually refuse to hold a charge.)

    Another example of old tech that would meet the OP's wants (if adapted for modern standards) is the old Poqet PC, a DOS-capable 8088 with an 80x25 character screen that runs for days on a couple AAs and a just-typable keyboard, in a package the size of a VHS cassette. Replace the PCMCIA slots with a recessed USB port and a fitted flash drive, load it with a wordprocessor app that can write RTF files, and you'd be good to go.

    --
    http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    1. Re:Psion, Poqet by Breetai · · Score: 1

      You can connnect to your REvo with RS-232 under linux. The tools allow you to export the Revo-Word files to ascii or html.

      Synchronizing agenda's becomes more troublesome. So I only use my psion agenda and make regular back-ups of the whole system. The Revo even recognizes my Siemens M65 mobile phone and let's me export the address book in the SIM card.

      At the moment I can't think of any replacement of my Psion.

    2. Re:Psion, Poqet by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      EPOC's C++ API is quite braindead though. It didn't support new/delete, you had to use a method to allocate memory in a non-typesafe way. There were other odditys to the API. PalmOS api is actually quite nice (even though it's C). It's just that PalmOS apps blow up and take out the entire PDA. And multitasking was/is non-existant on PalmOS.

      I actually use an HP200LX with PCMCIA to CompactFlash so I have a 256MB C: on it. It's keyboard is a bit tiny, but usable. 80x25 text (640x200 graphics). It's pretty nice, plus you can play Police Quest, Space Quest and Leisure Suit Larry on it.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  136. A Solution (not cheap or low power) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a similar need. I wanted to be able to go to any website (i go to mainly Java heavy sites) but i didnt think that the PDA/Blackberry were meeting the needs. I settled on a $2000 Sony 10" laptop. Its not cheap but it is fully powered with a full version of Windows XP.
    Its not cheap; it is fully powered but it is much much more portable than my 14" laptop and it is much more feature rich than a Treo/BlackBerry/AudioVox cellphone/internet device. I believe when it comes to flexiblity; dont look at the price; look at the value it is providing versus the cost. I think $2000 is steep but for me the benefits outway the costs. I think its a pity so many people look at cost first and not benefit first.

  137. Cheap PDA + Keyboard by jalefkowit · · Score: 1

    I understand where the submitter is coming from completely -- this type of device has been my Holy Grail for a long time too.

    The closest I ever came to the perfect solution was pulling together the following kit:

    • Handspring Visor PDA. Nothing special about this device, it was just a cheap PalmOS device with a good amount of memory (8MB) for not much money (around $150-200 new). You can't get Visors anymore, but a roughly equivalent device, the Zire 21, can be found on the street for less than $80 new -- or you can pick up someone's used device off EBay, as others have mentioned.
    • WordSmith word processing software. Provides an amazingly robust editing environment right on any PalmOS device. This is not just a viewer for docs created on your desktop -- it's a full featured word processor that interoperates seamlessly with your desktop copy of MS Office (I know, I know). Free to try, $30 to register.
    • PrintBoy -- amaze people by printing to any printer straight from your Palm device, over infrared or Bluetooth. $30.
    • Stowaway keyboard -- a tiny folding keyboard that nonetheless has decent typing "feel". I had the original model; the new one, the XT, is even smaller and more portable. $50.

    Total cost: approximately $200-250. Others have pointed out that there are devices that wrap all this functionality into one unit (the much-loved Psion devices such as the Revo and the 5mx spring to mind), but with the PalmOS solution you're at least dealing with stuff that's all still currently manufactured and supported, so you won't have to futz with hunting down obscure software and strange replacement parts just to get things done. And if the device dies, big whoop, at $80 it's not the end of the world.

    (If you're into this sort of thing, Jeff Kirvin's blog Writing on Your Palm is a good source for advice on mobile writing.)

  138. Practical issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While a small and cheap word processor may be a Good Thing, it would be restricted by its size. I don't know how many people are able to compose documents on tiny PDA-style screens-- which would be necessitated by the cost.

  139. Its called a Radio Shack Model 100 by hqm · · Score: 1

    I'm serious. It is the best portable machine ever made, in my opinion.

    I'm retrofitting one I got on eBay to have a Linux coprocessor, connected via serial port. Someone wrote a termcap entry for it.

    1. Re:Its called a Radio Shack Model 100 by LazLong · · Score: 1

      Did you actually read the post? I don't know what size jacket pockets you have, but mine won't fit an object that is 11.8" x 8.5" x 2".

      In any case, EVERYONE knows the Model 102 is superior in every way, this is definitely the way to go.... ;-)

  140. Cheap pda? by Virtua+Omake · · Score: 1

    How about just buying a low price pda instead. I've had a Palm Tungsten E for a few years and loved it. It was the $100 range and is probably much cheaper now.

  141. I had the same problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I went with a sony Palm os clie, sj22.

    http://sonyelectronics.sonystyle.com/micros/clie/m odels/sj22.html

    It is monocrome, so the battery lasts a long time.

    I thought I needed a keyboard, but the onscreen kb worked fine for the typical 15-30 minute writing sessions. I was surprised at how useful it is. It syncs with palm desk on the PC via IR or usb.

    The Philips Velo are also good. They run win CE and have a built-in kb. Also a modem!
    http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&cate gory=38331&item=5777062126&rd=1&ssPageName=WDVW

    And there is always the analog solution:
    http://www.moleskineus.com/pocket.html

  142. You really could make it fully featured too by bill_kress · · Score: 1

    My trs-80 model 100 had pretty much everything you'd need but the size. It was also fully programmable.

    It didn't have a tonne of memory, but it was all text base. You could type for a month straight and still not fill it up.

    I agree, why can't this be reduced to a tiny format and sold for $39.95/ea. Hell, put a wireless adapter inside and Lynx and you're set.

  143. It's obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Psion revo or 5 mx quite good keyboard there's some software for it damn .. there's linux for it ;]revo is small enough to carry it allways and fits in almost every pocket. 5mx is a bit bigger but u can load CF in it :]

  144. Psion Series 3 by Ratbert42 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've never used a better pocket portable device for typing documents than a Psion Series 3a (or later a 3c). I've since used a Psion Series 5, a Windows CE clamshell, a Palm Zire 71 with an external keyboard and none of them could keep up. If all I did was type docs and couldn't carry a laptop, I'd carry a Series 3a (or look at an Apple eMate).

    1. Re:Psion Series 3 by Ratbert42 · · Score: 1

      Oh, and on the Series 3 devices, the non-backlit screen is much clearer.

  145. IBM's z50 would have been nice for this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The WOrkpad z50 (links on their site are probably dated by now, out of embarassment) looks like a subnotebook, and the keyboard was meant for real fingers, not styluses. Instant-on, still a wet dream of today's widescreen laptops.

    Now the cons:
    Battery power suffers from amnesia
    It ran WinCE.
    And you're going to need a *big* pocket. Unless you really are happy to see me.

  146. $10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For ten dollars I got a palm III with a keyboard.
    There are a number of editors for this. I've used
    it when I have to be outside but also have work
    that deperately needs to get done. I use a text
    conduit to sync. I was using my fossil wrist PDA
    IR port for file transfer, but strangely, it gets
    stuck after beams. Anyway, I can type as fast as
    I want with the $10 rig.

  147. Try a TRS Model 100/102 by EverLurking · · Score: 2, Insightful
    http://oldcomputers.net/trs100.html

    Type it out in plain text/ascii and format it properly when you get home and u/l the files to your real computer via it's RS-232 serial port. 16 + Hour battery life on 4 AA batteries that you can find anywhere. Full sized keyboard, small form factor. There have been many a journalist/writer who swears by one of these for use in absolutely primitive/harsh 3rd world conditions. These little suckers are apparently very tough and tres retro. Wired had an article about the TRS 100/102's and other old/obsolete but still serviceable computers.

    Some of the lower memory versions are avaiable /near-mint/used/refurbished starting at $75.

    Or check out E-Bay, found a few going really cheap right now:

    • Model 100's
    • http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&ca tegory=74947&item=5197944964&rd=1

    • http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&ca tegory=1247&item=5199719083&rd=1

    • http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&ca tegory=74947&item=5200179003&rd=1

    • http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&ca tegory=74947&item=5201521879&rd=1

      Model 102's

    • http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&ca tegory=4193&item=5200512388&rd=1&ssPageName=WDVW

    • http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&ca tegory=74947&item=5200683165&rd=1&ssPageName=WDVW

    • http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&ca tegory=74947&item=5200683165&rd=1&ssPageName=WDVW

    I sound like a relic, but ahhh, they don't make them like they used to...

    DaveC

    --
    There are no stupid questions...just stupid people.
    1. Re:Try a TRS Model 100/102 by Trillan · · Score: 1

      This would get my vote, too.

    2. Re:Try a TRS Model 100/102 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i found one of these at a local thrift store for $5 very versitile little machine.

    3. Re:Try a TRS Model 100/102 by AbraCadaver · · Score: 1

      Exactly! When I wrote for PCWIZE I did an article on just this sort of thing, talking about how I was writing the article in the air en route to japan, I think it was. The batteries on that thing lasted forever, ZERO boot time, and enough space to write up quite a bit of text. The keyboard was comfortable, and the screen was large enough to show you where you were at in your story/etc without making you feel claustrophobic. And you don't have to buy them off ebay, either. I got both of mine from local thrift shops, for about $2.00 a piece.

  148. Re: Jornada 680!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These things really aren't that expensive. Some things to watch out for on the eBay auctions are that it has a reasonable batterly life left in it (I have one battery that only holds a charge for about 2 hours of on time, and one that lasts for about 6 hours of on time.) Also make sure it comes with the serial connection cable.

    They have one PCMCIA slot, one CF slot. The largest CF card I've tried in it was a 512MB card, and it worked great.

    The best part about this, though? It runs NetBSD. Bonus!

    Another option might be a Jornada 820. Little bit more like a mini-laptop. I got one for my wife. She loves it. This one goes for aroun $150 IIRC. It also has the same things to watch out for with online auctions (battery & serial cable.)

  149. How about a Mailstation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about a Mailstation? Too large?

  150. I've been bitching about this for ages! by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1
    The fact is, PDAs today have taken a step backwards over the last decade. Although they're advertised as being compatible with tools like Microsoft Office, you can't actually do anything useful with them. It's pretty blatantly obvious - Palms and PocketPCs don't actually have a usable input device! They can play mp3s and movies. So basically the whole PDA thing is a scam for geeks to buy toys disguised as useful gadgets.

    I miss my old Psion 3 (stolen). Even my old Psion II was better for typing documents than just about any modern PDA. I've been tempted to build my own PDA, with a decent amount of RAM and Flash, from a microcontroller, an FPGA and some other parts. But I can't find a supplier of small keyboards. I guess I could gut an old Psion off ebay...

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  151. Psion 5/5MX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I have a Psion series 5mx (used to have the Series 5). This is a bigger brother to the Revo, it has a backlight screen and a larger keyboard. It also runs on AA batteries instead of a built in battery and the serial connector is via a cable rather than a dock (good for connecting to other mobile devices). The series 5/5mx also feature a compact flash slot making it easier to backup and transfer data.

    I think the word processor it includes is also better than the revo one (built in spell checker). The series 5 has 8 meg of memory and a 16mhz CPU (more than enough for word processing) and the 5mx has 16meg of RAM and a 33mhz CPU. They still fetch quite a high price on ebay when compared to Palm and WinCE machines of similar specs.

    I used my Series 5 to take notes throught my first year and a half at university and it prooved more than adequate for this (and playing games in boring lectures!). Definately a lot easier than using a laptop.

    If you want something a little modern then I recommend the HP Jornada 720. This is slightly bigger than the Psion, runs WinCE (will also do Linux), includes a colour screen, PCMCIA and CF slots. In many ways it sounds like the modern(ish) incarnation of the Poqet. Its a shame there haven't been any more systems using this form factor recently.

    1. Re:Psion 5/5MX by Scorchio · · Score: 1

      I still have my Psion Series 5... it's a nice little machine, but my biggest gripe is that it doesn't (or didn't) include any flash based storage as standard. It continually draws power to preserve it's RAM based file system, even when turned off. If you forget to put in fresh batteries and leave it for a few days, you can find the batteries dead, the small pricey backup cell drained, and all your files and non-default applications gone.

      On the plus side, the software is pretty good, the screen is large, and the keyboard is the best I've used at that size.

      Just remember to get a flash drive at the same time!

    2. Re:Psion 5/5MX by WhyCause · · Score: 1
      I think the word processor it includes is also better than the revo one (built in spell checker). The series 5 has 8 meg of memory and a 16mhz CPU (more than enough for word processing) and the 5mx has 16meg of RAM and a 33mhz CPU. They still fetch quite a high price on ebay when compared to Palm and WinCE machines of similar specs.

      The Revo and Series 5 had hinge problems (as noted by another poster), such that the cables connecting the screen to the motherboard eventually wore out, and the fix was basically to buy a new one (I know, I ran through both models). I eventually bought a Diamond Mako, which is actually a rebadged Revo Plus (larger RAM, better hinge). The Mako came with the US spellchecker on the CD (that and some Diamond wallpapers were the only extras added).

      If you buy a Psion used, I would strongly suggest a Series 5mx or Revo Plus/Diamond Mako. They fixed the hinge problems in those models.

  152. K-Byte ZipIt wireless IM device + Linux re-flash by Ender_Stonebender · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You could get a K-Byte ZipIt Wireless Instant Messenger and flash it to run a customized version of Linux. Probably slightly more work than you were looking for, but it would be a great little toy. (Retaining the instant messenging ability would be cool, too.)

    --Ender

    --
    Loose things are easy to lose. You're getting your hair cut. They're going there to see their aunt.
  153. HP 4355 - Not cheap but it's what you want by HangingChad · · Score: 1
    I bought one for exactly the situation you described. I'm writing my spare time book with it. Any time I'm waiting in line, or waiting for my wife to finish eating (she pushes her food around and pouts at it instead of actually eating), or even in the bathroom.

    It's got an integrated keyboard but still fits in my pocket easily. It's thin and light weight but powerful enough to handle the word processor the media player and the integrated wireless connection at the same time.

    To me what makes it perfect is I can clamp on the headphones and it comes with enough memory that I can carry two hours worth of music while I work.

    It's not cheap but to me it's some of the best tech money I've ever spent. And it comes with the software to sync with your desktop and backup your writing.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  154. as a writer... by maryjanecapri · · Score: 1

    i have to agree with this question. sure i carry a pad and paper with me most everywhere i go. you never know when an idea will hit you. however, if you get rather prolific with that pen and paper you eventually have to transfer those words to the word processor (OpenOffice preferably).

    now before you toss up your arms and say "how hard is that?" you have to understand that some people write a LOT. and when you write as part of your living the last thing you want to do is to have to waste time writing over and over the same words (i would think coders would appreciate that).

    of course even if you were to get something portable enough, entering text into one of those horribly user un-friendly keyboards would stink. so i guess what we'd be looking for was something of a micro-laptop like device.

    anyway - i was just standing up for the man's question because i think it's valid.

    --
    nature loves variety::society hates it get your variety at http://www.monkeypantz.net
    1. Re:as a writer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are a writer, I think having to re-write your words over a few times might not be such a bad idea. Perhaps you might consider this new-fangled thing called "capital letters" while you are at it.

  155. Look for a used Psion by bferrell · · Score: 1

    Small, reasonably powered. Mine is a 5MX I wish it was a 5mx pro.

    you can fairly often find them on ebay. expansys has them refurbished for... ouch! quite a bit.

    and of course the obligatory linux plug:

    http://linux-7110.sourceforge.net/

    Yes Virginia, it does run linux :)

  156. Poqet PC by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

    The Poqet PC ran MSDOS programs, 80x25 screen, used ram cards of various size for disk, battery life 50-100 hours, although the Plus version had NiCads.

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  157. QuickPad by chasingporsches · · Score: 1

    My girlfriend has one called a QuickPad and she uses it a lot. it has a 4 line LCD, and transmits to your computer over IR. it comes with an IR receiver which taps into the PS/2 jack. here's a quick google: http://www.enablemart.com/productDetail.aspx?store =10&pid=945&dept=15

  158. Workpad Z50 by johnny_sas · · Score: 1

    Pick one up on eBay - they're cheap.

  159. There have been such devices... by laird · · Score: 1

    I have owned a few devices that would qualify:

    - Radio Shack Model 100 (http://www.club100.org/), was a great very simple computer that was completely indestructible. Sure, it used cassettes for storage, but who needs storage when you have a serial port and a modem? They're on eBay for $25-50.
    - Atari and HP both made stripped down DOS handhelds with decent, if small, keyboards. They were great for taking notes in class/meetings.
    - Apple's eMate was wonderful for this. It ran the Newton OS, so it was fast and simple to use, and had a real keyboard, so it was pleasant to type on.
    - I often wondered why Apple never sold a stripped down Apple II with AppleWorks in ROM as the perfect word processor. You could make a PDA with a 6502 and 128 KB of RAM for under a dollar (my watch and cell phone both have better tech), stick in a B&W display and a keyboard, and perhaps a CF or CD slot for storage, and have a perfect "workstation" for trivial cost. Sure, no web browsing, but for text editing, spreadsheet, and simple database work, it's just great. I still think that someone could crank out tons of these things and sell them in the third world...

  160. RE:A Cheap and Portable Word Processor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WORD processor? how about a small pocket tape recorder, mutter your thoughts, type it when you get home..

  161. Perfect solution! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I had one of those for a couple years before I upgraded to an M500. The M500 is similar, but has an SD slot, and slightly better scroll buttons that actually make it a lot easier to use for reading books. I use Plucker to read books, and Convert LITto convert those pesky Microsoft LIT files to HTML.

  162. Won't somebody think of the... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... typewriters!?! No one mentioned the typewriters. They feel left out.

  163. Accepted Answer! Great battery Life too.. by Neuroelectronic · · Score: 1, Interesting
    I second this solution. I have a Vx personaly for the extra memory. the palm keyboard is quite impressive because it folds up quite small, about 2 times the size of the palm but still pocket possible. It would be nice if it had bluethooth wireless but then again this would just kill it's impressive battery life.

    the applications are bloatless and cheap. you can find alot on p2p and newsgroups if you are cheap. The case is metal but if you are looking for more durability like I was, rhinoskin makes a fited aluminum case. the palm with its included leather cover, would last 100 years in a shirt pocket or a breif case but if you are putting it in a jeans pocket or are a college student the rhinoskin is a must, if you want it to last that long ;)

    The keyboard isn't as nearly as durable but it comes with a foamish bodyglove type case that will protect it from most drops that are impossible for an iPod.

  164. OT: wife may not be pouting at food by count0 · · Score: 3, Funny

    >waiting for my wife to finish eating (she pushes her food around and pouts at it instead of actually eating)

    If your wife is with you for dinner, and you start typing while she is eating, it may not be the food she is pouting about...

    On the other hand, this is slashdot, so any relationship advice here is suspect...

  165. Try an AlphaSmart by greenlead · · Score: 1

    It is really dumb, basically an intelligent keyboard that remembers what you type. When you get to a PC, you plug it into the PS/2 keyboard port and it types it all in for you.

    1. Re:Try an AlphaSmart by qub333 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      http://www2.alphasmart.com/ its incredably handy, my brother used to own one, not perfect in a corperate setting ,but we just called it 'the poor mans laptop'

  166. I have one of these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  167. Alphasmart reccomended to me too by LadyVirharper · · Score: 1
    I'm a would-be SFF writer, and I've been having the same problem the original poster has--a simple word processor that does its one thing well. A word processor that's not paper-and-pen or cobbled together with my non-existant crafting skills. For one, my handwriting is horrible and slow, and two, I hate tiny floppy not-durable keyboards. And I'm a small woman--it's not like I even have as much trouble with them as big-fingered men and women do. I still hate 'em.

    Alphasmart was reccomended to me--I've not had a chance to get one, but it looks like the best bet so far. Or actually Dana--because it has wireless abilities, something that will be useful getting my data back onto my home machine.

    I don't want a PDA with keyboard--I want something durable that's one piece with a full sized keyboard that I can carry around like a keyboard in my backpack. I don't want it SMALL. I don't want a fancy shiny PDA thingie. I want it sturdy and durable, and to last for a few years.

    I don't want all the features of a laptop--else I'd get a laptop!

    I want something I can transfer data into and out of easily to common word processing programs.

    Thus far, Alphasmart looks like the best bet for authors. :)

  168. Here's what you want by lj535i · · Score: 1

    NEC MobilePro 770 http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&cate gory=38331&item=5776147486&rd=1

    I used to have one of these- great keyboard, Pocket Word, Internet connectivity with built-in modem.

  169. AlphaSmart by magefile · · Score: 1

    At 200+ comments, I'm sure someone's said it, but the AlphaSmart is quite nice. Not too expensive, and the transfer is easy - plug it in via USB, put your cursor in a word processing program, and it simulates a keyboard to transfer everything. Not sure, but I believe the higher-end ones can use a floppy, too.

    I've used em' a lot; they're not Model Ms, or whatever the "keyboard of the day" is right now, but they're not uncomfortable or chiclet-like. Worst thing is that the key action is a bit heavy, but a bit of use should solve that.

  170. PDA + Bluetooth keyboard by Ophion · · Score: 1

    I use a Dell Axim x50v and a Bluetooth keyboard. See the details.

  171. there have been legions of these devices by penguinstorm · · Score: 1

    try pocketmail, which would let you email your files to yourself:
    http://www.pocketmail.com/

    there have been others in the past, although some not as portable. ascii output saved to floppy disks was a common interchange format, which you may find useless.

    i'd second the sidekick as the best of it's ilk, although i don't own one (and won't buy one.) i may need one for work, in which case I'll bite the bullet perhaps.

    an old Psion device (readily availalbe on eBay) might fit your bill, depending on your interface of choice. the keyboards on these were quite palatable.

    finding something with USB might be difficult; you may be able to use IRDA to get data off of these, although finding a reasonably modern machine with IRDA appears to be tough - adapters are available that might bring you bliss.

    --
    Skot Nelson music is my saviour / i was maimed by rock and roll
  172. DreamWriter or MailStation... yes, MailStation! by sracer · · Score: 1

    DreamWriters are incredible little devices that were originally designed for use in schools. They have readable screens, full keyboards, and include calculator, calendar, address book, etc.

    I bought a few different DreamWriter models off of eBay for $5 each. For those without a floppy drive, I cobbled a serial data cable. They worked great. Although they are older than dirt, Branium of Canada provides some amazing support for them.

    If you are looking for something new and enjoy a tinkering challenge, then pick up a brand new MailStation from OfficeMax for $9. Even though they are configured for their own ISP, it is a simple matter to wipe out the presets and customize it for your own use.

    For Linux tinkering types, it is possible to transfer data via a null modem cable. For those of us not inclined to tinker to that extent, simply attach to a phone line and email your docs to yourself.

    A pretty neat device for $9

  173. Re: Jornada 680!! by victor_the_cleaner · · Score: 1

    I played with a Jornada 820 for a while in 2000/2001 and loved it. Especially with a Sierra Wireless CDPD modem.

    Another great unit is the IBM WorkPad z50. Looked just like a ThinkPad from the outside.

  174. Palm w/ a Stowaway by epall · · Score: 1

    I have a two-year-old Clie T665C (man that thing is trusty) that can be had for a little over $100 hooked up to a $30 Stowaway keyboard. They were having a deal a few months back for Clies, I'm not sure about now. I can type upwards of 100 WPM into my Memo Pad and when I hit the Sync button, poof! The data's in JPilot. Now, there is a better option if you run Windows. Get a Pocket Word-type app (The PalmOS versions are wayyy better than PPC Word). It directly syncs Word, Excel, and PowerPoint docs. WHen you edit it on your palm and sync, boom! the word doc is updated. There is even some limited formatting. The screen on this little puppy is amazing. It's a few years old, but it's bright, clear, beautiful, and I only have one dead pixel.

    Oh, and this is what I prefer over my Sidekick. I have a Sidekick Color that I use for web surfing etc. and sometimes typing, but nothing beats a full sized qwerty keyboard. I love the Sidekick, but I'm not ditching the palm until I get a laptop.

  175. My Portable Laptop Adventure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I went out and bought a mac laptop ... I took it back 3 hours later when I realized it sucked. I cant play games on it, the close button is on the other side of the window, the MOST ANNOYING THING ... the file,edit,help menubar thingy of every app is built into the taskmenu thing and if you close a window. The app is still running but you dont know it. WTF when I close the last window of an app the whole thing should close.

  176. Old palm + keyboard attachment by epheterson · · Score: 1

    Your absolute best bet is an old palm with a keyboard attachment. Theyre going for under 20 bucks on ebay used, and it allows for data transfer to your PC. Theyre not that heavy and theyll definately get the job done!

  177. Old Palm Pilot + Folding keyboard by torklugnutz · · Score: 1

    I used to use a Palm IIIe with a fold up keyboard to take notes in class. It was pocketable, lasted about 30 days on two AAA's (very handy since I was in school in a foreign country, so I didn't have to deal with 220v conversion), and did more than word processing. I always had ALL my notes with me, so whenever I felt like studying I could. In the park, on the toilet, waiting for friends, etc.

    Downsides? It crashed on me twice while taking notes. No data loss, but I was worried. Occasionally, I could type faster than it would display. No spell check (I'd just upload to the home PC and put it into Word). The screen on the old Palms were kinda lacking; in low light, forget about it.

    I'll sell you the whole kit for $50. ;)

    --
    Often in Error, Never in Doubt.
  178. Solution by tfcdesign · · Score: 1

    Buy a used Palm Pilot, MS Word for the Pilot, and a fold up keyboard. Less than 200.00.

  179. Some Retro Advice by kilodelta · · Score: 1

    Find yourself an HP 95LX or 200LX. The 95LX is pretty cool - it's a DOS based clam shell with full, if mini kb and a decent sized display.

    The only caveat is it eats batteries. I'd strongly recommend getting ni-mh's for it.

  180. But is it sufficient for my word-processing needs? by jkj5301 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I don't know if a real word processor would work with such a cheap little processor. My computer dealer tells me I really can't live without word processing software at least as powerful as Microsoft Word. Word is, of course, the choice of most professionals, who do have a lot of money to spend to get the very best. I did once have an older version of Word (Word 6.0), but it wouldn't open any of the newer documents that my friends write with their newer Word 2000, and MS Office XP. (I'm sure I need something with an "X" in it.) It would cost only about $200 or so to upgrade. But I'm told I would need a much faster computer, and at least 512MB of memory, as well as an upgrade to Windows XP. (I do need an "X"!)

    I know it sounds expensive, but do really want to be able to add all the fancy stuff (icons and pictures and sounds!) to emails and letters that I write. And I want to be sure to have all the features that the best word-processors are capable of, like macros that run in the background and record my credit-card numbers, then use them to order stuff that I may really, really need -- before I even know that I need it!

    I just don't think a cheap little gadget like you're talking about is going to be sufficient.

  181. Alphasmart products are excellent by squeedelyspooch · · Score: 2, Informative

    I have owned an Alphasmart Dana for about a year and a half now, and it lives in a backpack that goes with me pretty much everywhere I go. It is not as small as a clam-shell style device might be but it is lightweight, has a full size keyboard (that is a joy to type on) and is durable as hell. The battery lasts about 20 hours even after a year and a half and it will take three AA batteries in a pinch. It runs Palm 4 and has two SD/MMC slots, allowing for back-ups on the fly (with 3rd party software like CardBkup or Back-Up-Buddy) and a whole lot of additional storage (I have the complete American Heritage Collegiate Dictionary and Roget's Thesaurus on mine, as well as a bunch of other things).

    At the time that I bought it, the other option from Alphasmart was the AS3000, which did not appeal to me at the time. Since then, though, they have released the Neo. It is essentially the same as the AS3000 but with the form factor of the Dana and a screen that falls somewhere between the two. It runs for 700 hours on three AA batteries. If they had these when I was buying I would likely have chosen a Neo over the Dana. In fact, my mom and I split on a Neo for my sister who is in college now. She has a laptop (a fairly nice one, too) but wouldn't take it to classes unless she absolutely had to (for the normal reasons: weight, boot time, battery life) but the Neo is light and tough and instant on.

    Alphasmart has a great user forum that I lurked through for quite a while before purchasing. I still go there from time to time to see what's up.

    And no, I don't get any kickbacks from the peeps at Alphasmart. I am just a fanboy, apparently.

  182. Kaypro by ONOIML8 · · Score: 1

    OMG....this has been on my mind a lot in the last few years. My old Kaypro had a simple, but sufficient, word processor. Was it WordStar? I don't remember but it seems like it fit on a floppy (5 1/4" and all of about 120 K per disk) and you still had room on the disk to store plenty of documents. It didn't do anything fancy but you could put out some pretty good documents with it.

    So that was mid 80's and todays PDA's blow that hardware away. So yeah, how hard would it be to take some of those old word processor concepts, dust them off, and make something work?

    --
    . Quit playing Monopoly with Bill. Switch to one of many non-Microsoft products today.
  183. Re: QED on a Palm by johnrpenner · · Score: 2, Interesting


    i've been using a palm m500 with QED for three years now,
    and have used it primarily for long text file (400k - 1Mb) editing
    and readingfound it a really good system for this. i couldn't care
    less about the palm's 'organizer' capabilities, but as a wee portable
    text editor and word processor, it rocks!

    regards,
    j.

  184. Amazing... by simpl3x · · Score: 1

    It is frankly amazing that with all of the friggin companies in the world trying to make gadgets, that nobody has matched the Newton/eMate. The Psions are very cool! But why can we not get a device in this profile with a good screen for a reasonable price. This should be given to evry student in the country, as opposed to them carrying around $300 in textbooks a year!

    I develop education materials. Paper is great! But, we expect to educate children to function in a world were the only people who are not using computers and continuously online are flipping burgers!

  185. PDA lite by slothman32 · · Score: 1

    Is there anything like he is asking for but allow you to read as well. Sometimes I like to view a computer page like a book but obviously can't leave the monitor. It's like a PDA but only has text editing and viewing capabilities. It could be PDA sized but only have scrollbars but with a mini-KB attachable to write as well.
    Do stores sell anything like that? Or would I have to get it on something like Ebay? I just like getting it new.
    If not then is there a real PDA that does little but that. It would be more like a palm, et al. but much less powerful.
    Are there any new store-bought ones that are $50 or less? Or at least less that $100?

    --
    Why don't you guys have friends or journals?
  186. The HP100LX/200LX by marciot · · Score: 1

    While I was in college, I used to use a HP 100LX as a mini-word processor and I wrote many journal entries on it. It works fine if you don't mind typing with your thumbs.

    Review and Screenshots: http://www.crypticlife.net/attic/www/hp200lx/lx-re v.htm
    Pictures: http://images.google.com/images?q=100LX&hl=en&btnG =Search+Images

    The HP100LX still my favorite miniature computer and I feel bad it was discontinued. It runs for months on two AA batteries and has a very nice and functional user interface created by a parnership between HP and Lotus. For those who don't know, the 100LX is a IBM PC XT class microcomputer that was shrunk to fit in your pocket.

    It has DOS 5.5 on it, so you can run PC software on it. During college I had loaded up MATLAB, Derive (a symbolic algebra package), TURBO C++ and all sorts of goodies that became indespensable during my studies.

    Today I still use my 100LX as a password database and an alarm clock.

    -- Marcio

  187. Typing on not-a-keyboard sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Typing on small keyboards sucks.
    Pointing at letters with the pen of a PDA sucks.
    Typing on a cellphone sucks.
    It is so annoying.

    And having a laptop is too big and bulky to be carried everywhere.

    What would be awesome is that if there was an device that could type what you think!

  188. Sidekick development model stinks. by cbreaker · · Score: 1

    The sidekick is a closed system. In order to install your own apps with the USB port you have to "prove" you're a developer by uploading them your sidekick programs.

    Otherwise, it's freaking $10 for a lame SSH client, $4 for each of their *terrible* downloadable ring-tones, and $4 - $10 for each little game.

    I was excited when I got it because I would be able to install all sorts of fun little applets that people make. But you can't.

    --
    - It's not the Macs I hate. It's Digg users. -
  189. No, it's not bad at all. by cbreaker · · Score: 2, Informative

    The sidekick has a big problem in that the battery is not removable. However, my sidekick lasts two days of regular use (several calls, usually short, sometimes an hour or so) and it charges from dead empty in less then 60 minutes.

    But I still hate the thing because you can't install your own programs without applying for a special developer key, which you can only get if you submit your programs to Danger *before* getting the key. (they have a windows-based dev tool you can use to write programs.)

    --
    - It's not the Macs I hate. It's Digg users. -
    1. Re:No, it's not bad at all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      with the proper tools, everything is removable.

    2. Re:No, it's not bad at all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      indeed.

    3. Re:No, it's not bad at all. by cbreaker · · Score: 1

      Perhaps so, but the Sidekick appears to be mostly a "Snap Together" device with a couple support screws so it won't bust apart into a hundred peices when you drop it.

      --
      - It's not the Macs I hate. It's Digg users. -
  190. Old enginer's adage by rssrss · · Score: 1

    is there really no product that tries to be small, cheap and low-powered like what I'm looking for?"

    Pick two.

    Second thought, only one.
    --
    In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.
  191. Get a Microwriter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Small device, second hand should be dirt cheap, using combinations of keypresses across five buttons to construct each letter.

    With some practice you should get rather quick at it.

  192. what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    tandy model 100?

    Or roll your own with a mini pc keyboard, pic/z80, flash, generic graphic lcd, usb, whatever you want.

    Takes a little programming but whatever. Won't cost no goddamn $300 either.

    Also, fuck, slashdot is doing the retarded HEY ENTER THIS RANDOM TEXT IN A BOX TO WIN shit now?

  193. Authors that use Alphasmart swear by them by SockPuppet_9_5 · · Score: 1

    I'm married to an author and through her know three dozen other authors, and many of them swear by the Alphasmart keyboard. Instant On, Instant Save, runs on three AA batteries for days...

    I called the thing an overpriced kid's toy. At first. Then I realized the simplistic beauty of what just a keyboard can do for the muse. The Alphasmart Pro, with it's translucent green plastic, has the worst keyboard I can think of. The keys start sticking, making it harder and harder to press.

    I'm told the more expensive models have better keyboards, but then why pay so much for JUST a keyboard?

    I need to learn how to attach a better keyboard to the guts of the Alphie we now have.

    But the psychological impact of using something to type stuff in with that you CAN'T use for ANYTHING else is underrated.

  194. Cheap palm pilot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Use a pen and write on your palm. When you run out of memory, use your arm. You are only limited by the amount of skin you have. For those super secret documents, you would write those on your ass. Public documents that you want to share and collaborate with others could be written on your head. Why do i even read these kind of stories on slashdot anymore.... Can we please have some good stuff on slashdot again? Will the real employees of Slashdot please come back ? Really guys... I'm begining to wonder if there are some better tech sites out there . I used to never think that there could be... It says news for nerds... not nerd wannabes.

  195. Mead by danielsfca2 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I guess they just felt their paper wasn't differentiated enough from generic Office Depot brand paper. Before that, once you removed it from the bag, it looked just like any other paper.

    This way, the slightly-richer kids can lord it over the rest... "Where's the logo on your paper?"

  196. Re: QED on a Palm by Chicago+Wolves · · Score: 1

    Hey! Thanks for the link. I'm going to put this on my Palm m515.

  197. Good old days of swapping ROMs to upgrade software by cheesy9999 · · Score: 1

    I remember in middle school at the computer teacher's TA I was given the task of opening up a couple dozen Alphasmarts and replacing the ROM chips to upgrade the software.

    It doesn't even seem that long ago.

    --
    -tom
  198. My Series 5 died... by Marvin_OScribbley · · Score: 1

    Like the parent says, the Series 5 is a great device. Unfortunately one day mine stopped working... screen went berserk, made a faint high pitch noise, etc. I would have replaced it, but I suspect small devices die rather easily when you keep them in your pocket all the time because of all the stress, humidity, etc.

    --
    I'm not a journalist, but I play one on slashdot
  199. Speed of typing versus writing in todays world by tod_miller · · Score: 1

    Speed of typing: z
    Speed of reading handwritting: y
    Speed of writing documents on paper whilst travelling: x + y + z.

    For everything else there is mastercard.

    If you write things on paper, how do you propose to make them useful? File them somewhere? OCR them?

    Anything noted on paper is a waste of paper, if it is worth you reading it again, store it electronically. (Yes, even shopping lists).

    I was thinking this morning, I would ike a connected device to be able to edit a version of my project docs when something occurs to me. The immediacy of having the document open everywhere makes writers block a thing of the past.

    I saw a great system using two 8 directional thumbpads for input, or even better, a one handed ergonomic a-e-i-u-o then multiples of combinations to spell things out. Type on a vga eye screen while walking, talking etc.

    No 'one handed typing jokes' please. Oops too late.

    --
    #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
  200. etch-a-sketch by Errtu76 · · Score: 1

    it's portable, has unlimited storage, easy to use, cheap, comes in nice colors, doesn't require batteries. what more do you wish for?

  201. I happen to be planning one now. by Voxus · · Score: 1

    That's right, I'm in the planning stages for just such a device, because I need something like it for my writing projects. I plan to use Gumstix boards, some form of portable, battery-operated display (hopefully not the terribly expensive head-mounted displays I've been looking at recently) and Python scriptable code gluing the system together behind the scenes.

    Does anyone have a lead on some nicely hackable portable displays, like used in many (most) PDAs? I don't necessarily need a touch-screen, as I'm not sure what I'd use it for if the system just uses a Bluetooth/USB mouse, but you're welcome to suggest uses for touch-screen ability.

  202. speaking of mp3 players by AussieVamp2 · · Score: 0

    Some of them can display text, and have massive hard drives (for a pda) in them - so an editor and a keyboard for ones with a screen would do at a pinch for small amounts of writing?

    Can this be done?

  203. Cassiopeia with loose keyboard by LosManos · · Score: 1

    hejdig.

    My 5-10 years old Casio Cassiopeia running WinCE with a keyboard/cradle works nicely for me when writing short stories.

    There are some drawbacks like WindowsOnly(R) and serial interface but buy a slightly newer with USB and PocketPC and it might work. /OF

  204. no no no - you have it backwards by drDugan · · Score: 1

    companies do NOT want products on the market that are cheap and meet a simple need. such products will cut DIRECTLY into their bottom line - competing with their (much higher margin) bleeding edge offerings.

    Unfortunately capitalism is NOT set up to offer the best value to the consumer, it is set up to push the market to the lowest value still acceptable by consumers. if you doubt this, go walk around Wal-Mart, check out the wall boards in the corner of the room you're sitting in, or try finding a printed book today that will last more than 5 years before it falls apart.

    1. Re:no no no - you have it backwards by chibitoku · · Score: 1

      I cannot speak to the other parts of your reply, but as for books --- what are you smoking?

      Most books are printed on acid-free paper and bound with hide glue in a traditional sewn binding. So called softcover books are bound with a glued binding using more hide glue. This is the exact same process that humankind has been using since before Gutenberg. Hide glue and acid free paper will last for centuries if taken care of properly. Keep them in a low, humidity, but not no humidity, low light environment. Only handle with linen gloves and they will last for your grandchildren's grandchildren to read and enjoy. Most of the books in my shelves will last for more than 100 years.

      As for so-called "pulp" books like novels, since they are printed on acidic paper (since it's cheaper than the alternative), they won't last as long, but they will still last for more than 50 years. If you keep them in plastic bags to control the humidity, they will last far longer.

    2. Re:no no no - you have it backwards by cbr2702 · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately capitalism is NOT set up to offer the best value to the consumer, it is set up to push the market to the lowest value still acceptable by consumers.

      But the lowest value still acceptable to consumers is still acceptable to consumers. Why pay extra for a product that more than meets your needs?

      --


      This post written under Gentoo-linux with an SCO IP license.
  205. Sharp PC3100 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to have a Sharp PC3100 (MS-DOS) subnotebook -- about the same footprint as a Libretto, but much thinner; fairly similar keyboard. Very handy for making notes when out and about.

  206. Old single-application Word Processors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought everybody had these in the 80s - small non-pc compatible word processors with a mono LCD screen. In the UK Amstrad did them, and the UK Government commissioned a design from Thorn called the 'Liberator'. I wonder what became of that?

    Of course the rise of PC compatible laptops, especially the early Toshibas, soon overtook the market.

  207. NC100 by singleantler · · Score: 1

    I had an Amstrad NC100 about 10-11 years ago. It was pretty good and lasted about five years of some heavy and some intermitent use.

    It did have a few bugs though - Amstrad's standard dodgy keyboard driver, e.g. if you type 'wer' quickly it appends 't' on the end for you. It would crash very occasionally, which was annoying, and uploading my text through serial took an age.

    It's got a version of BASIC built in, and some comms software so occasionally a mate would use it to log in to his Linux box through serial so he could kill an awkward process. So it gets some geek cred.

    Even though it had it's faults, I did miss it when it finally broke. The simplicity, lightness and general robustness of it was great.

    --
    "What if they're using IE?" "I've dumbed Mozilla down to cope with it." - BOFH
    1. Re:NC100 by david.given · · Score: 1
      I had an Amstrad NC100 about 10-11 years ago.

      I have an NC200; it's fabulous. Amazing keyboard, decent screen (80x16 characters), ten-hour battery life, instant on... the word processor is a bit poor, since it can only cope with 38kB files, but I can live with that. They would appear to have solved the stability issues; it's never crashed on me.

      It's also a great hacking machine. It's pretty much all documented using standard components. The built-in BBC Basic has a built-in assembler... someone's done a CP/M port, which will let you run standard software such as Wordstar.

      I keep meaning some day to do a proper review of this machine, from a modern perspective; we could learn a lot.

      (BTW, I have some software that will let you read the files off an NC-formatted SRAM card.)

  208. Digimemo by hotzeyboy · · Score: 1

    Not exactly sure if this is what you are after exactly, but i was considering using it for university.
    digimemo Its basically a special notepad and pen combo that generates a digital image of whatever you write on the paper.
    I decided not to get it however, as the redundancy of having to write your notes on paper to begin with was a major turn off

  209. A Cheap Ebook Reader ...? by earthstar · · Score: 1
    I have a little different question from the story submitter.

    What iam interested is not typing, but reading ebooks.
    I have never used a handheld before, and I would now like to get a cheap handheld [ since iam a first time user ] kind of thing ,so that I can read ebooks when Iam traveling etc..

    Any suggestions?

  210. Cybiko by poolmeister · · Score: 1

    If it's 'cheap but functional' you're after, what about the Cybiko Xtreme?
    Aimed at teens but looks like an affordable solution for what being discussed here.

    --
    CN=poolmeister.OU=lurkers.CN=slashdot
    1. Re:Cybiko by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      I have a Cybiko Classic lying around somewhere, and I don't recommend it for this. Granted, there were some fixes with the Xtreme, but the keyboard is crap, the memory is too small, and you need either the $(*#$@ expensive memory upgrade or the rare MP3 player.

  211. Cambridge Computers Z88 by instantiator · · Score: 1

    Yes, it's an 80s machine - but: Really good functionality. A4. Light. (1cm thick approx.) Still supported by knowledgeable community. On/Off, no boot up time. Good wordprocessor. All apps support suspend/task switching. Programmable, expandable (up to 2Mb Flash). 23 hours ON time. Several months OFF time. AA batteries. Mains adaptor. Full size keyboard. Just beautiful; and the best bit: a stockpile still for sale brand new at 80gbp, or second hand at 40gbp. (The only drawback to buying second hand is that the keyboard collects a bit of dust - but its nothing you couldn't wipe down.)

    Screen is about 180chars x 10chars (this approx, as I don't remember) - which, again, is plenty for wordprocessing. (Also manages to squeeze in a page-view down the side as well.)

    Well thought out software design with fast and easy to learn shortcuts.

    Connectivity over serial is fine for transferring wordprocessor documents (which is basically all you'd really be wanting to transfer); and maybe backing up any applications you write for it.

    I am not an advert. I am just a happy user! Google or ebay for a seller.

  212. A Cheap and Portable Word Processor? by jonoverdose · · Score: 1

    ... That'll be called a pencil and a bit of paper.

  213. ultimate wordprocessor: psion5 by perler · · Score: 1
    two words: psion series 5 - i use them since '98 and they are great for writing in cars, trains, everywhere (with the 2-thumbs system).

    they tend to break every one, two years (the display cable is the culprit) but there are companies who still repair them.

    it's a pity that psion has such a lousy management, a psion 6 with bluetooth, wlan and a color screen would be a dream machine..

    PAT

  214. HP Jornada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use an HP Jornada 680e for keeping track of my gas milage and doing my work logs on a daily basis. It has a 70% keyboard, and is a hell of a lot better than using a palm with the on screen keyboard.

  215. portable? word processor? by jbbrwcky · · Score: 1

    Well here's a thought: a pad of paper and a pencil, very cheap, very portable!

    --
    Honi soit qui mal y pense.
  216. Re:Hold off on the "It's called pencil and paper" by fermion · · Score: 1
    it really is silly. Not only are many of the comments 'you are idiot for wanting to use technology', and this from a group that probably does or has or will make money from peoples use of technology, but these useless comments made the higher ratings.

    What is doubly silly is that pencil and paper is technolgy. The leap from previous technologies to the paper and pen probably made as much difference as the leap from paper to computers. It is really no different.

    So this guy wants to do something different. The technology is not quite there. But it is possible, and it is practical. Unless we want to go back to the technology of stone tablets.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  217. Psion Series 5 also fits into a jacket pocket by Burz · · Score: 1

    I carried one around for years and the keyboard is tops for any handheld. It is still the closest to "whip it out and touchtype" you can get.

  218. Re:A Cheap Ebook Reader ...? by scatterbrain · · Score: 1

    You can pick up a used Palm off of ebay. I used to use a Palm Vx. Thin, rechargable battery, and plenty of ebook software out there. Go with a Palm III if you'd prefer batteries.

    Now I just use my cell phone, a nokia 6620, with mobipocket reader software.

  219. get an emate by option8 · · Score: 1

    it has a standard PCMCIA slot which will accept an ethernet or wireless card - drivers available online, but you'll likely still need a machine that can connect over serial to do the initial install. there's a number of shareware and open source apps for pc, mac and linux that you can use to sync data, contacts, etc. links below

    i have a 2100 that i sync up over my 802.11 network at home.

    for that matter, you may be able to save your documents on the a pc flash card, and pop that into your laptop or other device that accepts such cards. i'm doubtful of this, tho, since the newton os stores everything in "soups" instead of a traditional filesystem - built from the ground up to use flash memory instead of spinning media.

    anyhoo, specs for the emate are here:
    http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/messagepad/s tats/emate_300.html

    emates for $50 here:
    http://macsruscomputers.com/apple-newton.html

    nsync software here:
    http://homepage.mac.com/nowhereman77/hacks/newton/

    another similar package here (tho it may be defunct now)
    http://www.everchanging.com/newton/

    if you've got one, subscribe to newtontalk for a very active and helpful community of newt users:
    http://www.newtontalk.net/

  220. Stowaway/Palm keyboards can be VERY inexpensive. by Richard+Steiner · · Score: 1

    I only paid US$4.00 + S&H for the two Palm-branded Stowaway folding keyboards that I bought for my Palm m105.

    eBay is a great place to find used Palms and add-ons. My second m105 was only US$28, and my two V.90 ClipModems (yes, a Palm m105 can do PPP and can also telnet via pTelnet or do web browsing via Xiino) were US$1.50 apiece, etc.

    --
    Mainframe/UNIX Bit Twiddler and long time Windows/Linux Hobbyist.
    The Theorem Theorem: If If, Then Then.
  221. Re:Hold off on the "It's called pencil and paper" by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

    I usually type better, but sometimes I need to sketch something out. I can work with a keyboard, but it... takes... forever...

    Makes me want a Tablet PC, so I can type AND draw at the same time (flip the screen back (to eliminate gorilla arm), sketch, bring it back up)...

  222. Tandy 100 by cgreuter · · Score: 1

    TRS-80 Model 100

    I have one of these. I used to use it to write in the subway. (That was a while back. These days, I'd have to drive for an hour to get to a subway and I've invested in a (used) Thinkpad running Linux.)

    Pros:

    • It's cheap. You don't have to worry too much about it getting stolen.
    • It has a really nice keyboard. Modern laptops pale in comparison.
    • They're very, very light.
    • They're pretty durable, due in part to their lightness and because they have no moving parts.
    • They have a standard RS-232 serial port and a zmodem (IIRC) transfer program. I was able to move my work to my PC without too much trouble.
    • The built-in word processor uses plain ASCII text, so no decoding is necessary.
    • Powered on ordinary AA batteries.
    • Ludicrous battery life. I managed to get a couple of weeks' use out of each set.
    • No WiFi, games or anything else to distract you from writing.
    • There may still be a user community for them. There are certain niche uses that the Model 100 filled that nobody else has managed to get to.

    Cons:

    • Limited storage. There's (IIRC) 32K of (battery-backed) RAM. I found I could fill that pretty quickly, although not in a day. As long as you offload your work to a real computer regularly, you should be fine.
    • The word processor seems to have some O(n) algorithms in it. I found that as my documents got longer, certain types of movement (e.g. page down) would get progressively slower. But this wasn't bad enough to make it unusable.
    • The display is pretty small. You get maybe six lines of text on it, which may or may not be a showstopper. I found I could deal with it but that was irritating.
    • Also, the display is flat, flush with the unit. This makes it more durable but is a pain to keep staring at.
    • Built-in BASIC. Ewwwwwww!
    • The system software was one of the last projects that Bill Gates worked on personally. So you'll need to wipe it down with holy water every couple of years to get rid of the evil buildup.

    Anyway, the Tandy 100 et. al. are pretty much what you want.

    Also, it has two advantages over pencil and paper:

    1. You can type in your text.
    2. You can transfer your work to a computer without having to retype it.
    1. Re:Tandy 100 by jhoger · · Score: 1

      There is a vibrant user community for the Model T: club100.org... users can join the list on that page.

      We are also adding more RAM (2Meg + 4 Meg of flash): http://bitchin100.com/remem_project.htm

      You can offload files to a Palm with this: http://bitchin100.com/dlpilot

      I'm trying to get a magazine/newsletter off the ground for our tight-knit community:

      http://bitchin100.com/webad.html

      BASIC is nice to have for short programs. Power users program in assembly on 8-bit machines ;-) . But I am working on a Forth ROM replacement for use with ReMem.

      -- John.

  223. I use an ePod with a flexible roll-up keyboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Epods are great instant-on WinCE web tablets from the mid 90s. Runs PocketWord, PocketExcel and ActiveSynchs just fine. Since I also sketch, the 9" touchscreen is nice to have. Cardslot, USB for any kyboard (and mouse if wanted). I gutted a leather folio and velcro'd it in for carrying. Can be wirelessly networked. I used a Tandy 200 years ago, but it died - it's in the garage somewhere. My ePod folio is smaller.

  224. What you need is a secretary by Mythrix · · Score: 1

    Then you could just call her and have her write things down in Word or whatever. No synchronization issues, but it'd of course be a problem whenever she's out of the office.

  225. Re:Hold off on the "It's called pencil and paper" by kfg · · Score: 1

    Yes, most of my use of pen and paper is as an engineer, making sketches of concepts, and even working drawings. Most of my use of portable devices is for typing text and reading ASCII ebooks, currently handled by a 486 laptop. Just the right kind of tablet would fit both uses quite well. A current Toshiba offering comes sooooooo close, but not quite. And it's expensive.

    I keep threatening to just build my own, but the need just isn't that pressing. That still leaves the cost of the Twiddler, which impresses me as the ideal primary input tool for such a machine and the story is about low cost devices.

    My ideal device would be about 4 1/4"x7"x3/4", the size of a 300 page "Pocket Book." All the buttons would be on the top edge of the device, leaving the entire face free to be used for the glass stylus activated touch screen, perfectly workable by wrapping your fingers over the top of the case, but unpressed by just sticking it in your pocket. Just enough flash memory to support the Linux/BSD operating system and relevant apps, a 4GB flashcard should do, data storage being handled by the recessed flash key drive. It would have a couple of USB ports free for external devices so you could use a standard keyboard, Twiddler, mouse, printer, whatever. Don't bother wasting space on the device itself for some brain dead, nonfunctional, mechanical input device. If I want to type slowly and painfully I'll just use the touch screen.

    Nice features would include color, a mini CD drive, GPS and sound, but these would be subservient to the form factor and getting 8 hours of use from a couple of standard AA batteries.

    Wrap it all up for $100 less i/o devices and I'll take one.

    KFG

  226. What about a digital pen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  227. My girlfriend and I want one for writing our books by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And that's it. Just a writer's only type wordprocessor?
    Excellent Idea.
    Battery life of over 10 hours.
    Rechargable
    1 ethernet port.

    That's it. Enough harddrive space to hold a book or two and
    you're golden.

    Make it now.. I want one!

  228. Step up by MrCopilot · · Score: 1
    http://www.mobilegazette.com/nokia-770-internet-ta blet.htm

    Closer to $350 but handles your problem nicely. WiFi for portability, Linux for any editor you want + grep. Extendable. Faster than 8bitter, Damn, dealbreaker.

    Ok here ya go.
    http://search.ebay.com/brother_Consumer-Electronic s_W0QQsofocusZbsQQsbrftogZ1QQmaxrecordsreturnedZ30 0QQfrppZ50QQfromZR10QQsacatZ293QQcatrefZC6QQsargnZ -1QQsaslcZ2QQftrtZ1QQftrvZ1QQsadisZ200QQfposZQ5AIP Q2FPostalQQfsopZ1QQfsooZ1QQcoactionZcompareQQcopag enumZ1QQcoentrypageZsearch

    --=
    God, If only there was a script to do this. /oblig CAPTCHA joke.

    --
    OSGGFG - Open Source Gamers Guide to Free Games
  229. DANA Alphasmart by loukelly · · Score: 1

    I'd like to recommend looking into the Dana by Alphasmart. It runs over 10,000 Palm OS Applications, and costs $379.00. Or, you could try the dana wireless which uses 802.11b and costs $429.00. I haven't personally tried it, but it looks like it might be worthwhile. They have a Quickoffice Pro module that looks a lot like MS Office: http://www2.alphasmart.com/danastore/software-feat ures-quickoff.html Dana can be found at this site. http://www2.alphasmart.com/danastore/dana-features .html