argent
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Registered: Jan 2000
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Posts: 391 |
1. The killer app for handhelds is already here. It's the PIM apps. That's what most people use a handheld for.
2. The problem with the PC market right now isn't hat the PC is dead, it's that it's gotten so fast and powerful that getting a new PC isn't interesting for most people. They don't need a faster PC. We're not there yet with handhelds.
What's going to have to happen to move forward is to split the PC up between its two roles: "where you keep your stuff" and "where you interact with your stuff". Microsoft knows this, but they're floundering around because they want to control the communications between the two. Right now the obvious way to do it is to have your "home server" talking to your "personal computer" using standard networking protocols you already have: TCP, HTTP, Microsoft Networking, RealAudio, Windows media, and so on.
The problem is Microsoft doesn't control most of these protocols, even the ones they originated: one of the best Microsoft Networking servers today is the freeware "Samba" package, for example, and Real Audio is kicking Windows Media in the butt.
That, more than anything else, is what's stalling the PC out. Microsoft has some people working on an Exchange server that will talk to any web browser, and an Outlook client that will work with any mail server, but they don't have it. Similarly, you can't export your Outlook PIM info as HTML.
3COM has their kitchen PC, but it doesn't talk to the rest of your home network.
What we need is something you can plug into a PC that will boot it up with a mail server and a web server and the webserver preloaded with PIM web pages and a Palm cradle attachment point. You talk to it through a set-top box, through your kitchen PC, through the big honking games box (PC, XBox, PS2) in the kid's room, and so on.
Give it a decent firewall and an appropriate encrypted client in the Palm, and you can control it on the road, initiate email...
OK, we could do this now. *I* have most of it already, but it hasn't been packaged for joe user. It won't come out of Microsoft... they won't release their home server until they can tie you up to Microsoft controlled protocols. Who else has the presence to kick it off?
Anyway, back to your Visor. It'll be ONE of the interfaces to the home server. But just one of many.
And the handheld itself would benefit from this same sort of client-server setup. rather than syncing directly to your Visor, you should be syncing to a personal data repository... of which the Visor is one example. Me, I want mine in an opaque black aluminum dongle on my keychain, all ruggedized and weatherproof, that I sync my Visor with using Bluetooth, which acts as a packet router between my Visor and the local 802.11 LAN or my bluetooth phone or with its own CDPD interface. If I'm going swimming, I tie it to my wrist, when I need the data out of it I log in from whatever interface is convenient: a waterproof console at the pool bar, maybe, or a cerdit-card-sized gadget in my wallet.
Put a webserver on *IT*, so if my Visor or Pcooket PC doesn't have a client for some applet I can access the data via a generic browser.
Ubiquitous, wireless, standards-based computing. It's the only way to fly.
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Rev. Peter da Silva, ULC<br>
<a href=http://www.taronga.com/~peter/>Ar rug t� barr�g ar do mhact�re inniu?</a>
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