Scott R
Member

Registered: Oct 2001
Location: Simsbury, CT
Posts: 40 |
For what it's worth, I recently had a chance to play with several of these devices at my local CompUSA. I was most impressed with the Prism. The high res screen of the CLIE is beautiful. I also like the jog wheel and the form factor. The memory slot is kind of a wash because you can spend $40 or so and get a MemPlug CF for the Prism, which to me is more useful (I have a digital camera with CF).
So, why do I prefer the Prism over the CLIE?
1. Sony. I have several pieces of Sony A/V equipment and have always been happy with them there (though I've read numerous complaints about the quality of their A/V stuff within the last year or so). However, when it comes to a PDA, I prefer a US company. Why? Well, in this case (Handspring), we're not just talking about a US company, we're talking about the company that invented the Palm OS. Having said that, it does surprise me that they still are bent on not offering flash memory. While the Sony does have flash memory, I think we've seen recently with their upgrade plan that they don't quite understand the mindset of their consumers (the early adopters realize that their big upgrade is simply a software upgrade and shouldn't cost as much as their charging nor require the user to mail in their handheld and wait who knows how long for it to come back). My point is that, IMHO, US companies are going to treat these things as computers, offering better, more useful websites, neat info, etc. A Sony is going to look at this as a consumer electronics device. They release the device and that's it. I don't think we'll see them working closely with other companies to come out with neat add-ons to the CLIE or worrying about making new devices/OS upgrades which won't obsolete their older customers. Again, this is all my opinion. Maybe I'll be wrong here, but their past history with the older B&W CLIE demonstrates this.
2. The screen has faults. The high-res is great, but it's a reflective screen. I have this same type of screen on my iPaq and it accumulates internal dust after time. It seems that every device using this type of screen so far is prone to this, making this a technology which is not production-ready, IMO. Also, for me, I prefer the color vibrancy of an active matrix screen.
3. I feel embarrassed for saying this, but I enjoyed playing Galax at CompUSA on the Prism. As I said, I have an iPaq which, from a multimedia perspective, blows away the Palm OS for games. But what you won't hear too often from the PPC folks is that all of this wonderful hardware is limited by lousy gaming controls. The iPaq can't do simultaneous button and "joypad" presses. The speaker is built into the joypad, so you cover the speaker when you use it. Why am I talking about the iPaq? Well, IMO, th CLIE developers failed in this regard as well. IMO, the buttons are diffucult to press and the up/down button is even worse to use. The Prism buttons, on the other hand, have great tactile feedback. Plus, there's the Visor Gameface (never used it, so I can't comment on it) as well as some other snap-on device (not sure if it's out yet) for the Visors which looks to offer even better gaming control. I really don't expect to play many games on my PDA, but it's nice to have good buttons for when you want to.
4. More expansion capabilities. Tons of springboards abound. I, myself, will probably try out the VisorPhone (cost: free) though I'm worried that the coverage will stink and I also am not thrilled about the size of it and other usability issues with it as compared to a Kyocera 6035 smartphone, for instance. Want GPS? You can get it. Want always-on wireless (e.g. - Omnisky)? You can get it. Being in Holland, these wireless options may or may not be useful to you, but I'm guessing that you do have GSM coverage (right?) so the VisorPhone probably is. I will say, though, that I feel that several of the springboards make the device too big/bulky.
As always, everyone's needs vary. So, just because something seems better to me, it may not meet your needs. To be honest, I'm somewhat disappointed in all the current offerings. What I really want is something akin to a color Kyocera 6035 (if you're now thinking of suggesting the Samsung i300, note that I like the Kyo's hard keypad and Verizon's wireless coverage).
Hope this was useful.
Scott
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