John Nowak
Member
Registered: Nov 1999
Location: Redwood City CA
Posts: 472 |
quote: Originally posted by sowens
Since the PDA is equivalent to the early PC, what can we expect from the PDA's of the future?
My first computer, purchased in 1981, was a $4000 IBM PC with, I believe, 128k of memory and two, yes, two 1.3 meg floppy drives and a screaming 8Mhz processor. My stock Visor comes with over twice the memory and speed.
Toss in a Stowaway keyboard and the only thing the IBM had which the Visor doesn't have more of is a large color screen.
While the WinCE devices have better screens than the Visor, they still don't match the old 10 1/2" CGA monitor I had back then. Now, I don't mean this in the sense that the CGA had a higher resolution (which I can't recall, honestly) or greater color depth (which it did not -- the CGA was 16 colors, if I remember aright). I mean that it was physically bigger and despite the very nice text on a PocketPC, it was easier to make extensive edits on a document on the CGA screen.
I guess what I'd like to see someday is four small LCD panels which fold or assemble into a screen analagous to the Stowaway keyboard, which would then break down to form a package about the size of a folded Stowaway but perhaps twice as thick.
Naturally, the OS of the PDA would need to be able to handle -- oh, I don't know -- 640x480 at 256 colors at a minimum.
At this point, the PDA begins to overlap the notebook computer with a few important differences: first, the PDA is modular so you don't need to carry the whole thing around with you (you can leave the screen in your hotel room and take the keyboard to take notes at a seminar, or take out the PDA and use Grafiti to take down a phone number), the PDA starts more quickly, has better battery life, and (very likely) a more robust OS. On the down side, the notebook's raw power and storage space would almost inevitably dwarf that of the PDA.
Oh, and I'd also like a pony.
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