Why I still use a Palm Pilot (gasp!) —
Ok so I guess I’m a bit biased – I’ve been using Palms (and earlier PDAs) for a long time. I’m 34 now, and I started using PDAs when I was 16 (yeah, I’m a computer nerd). I’ve been able to keep the same memos, address book, and date book for a very, very long time. Through many different Palm devices. As long as I back up the data, I’m good. I just bought a second Tungsten C here actually, as a backup in case my primary one gets lost, stolen or broken.
Specifically, I love the Tungsten C because of the keypad. I mean, don’t get me wrong, I learned Graffiti a long time ago but I’ve never liked it. I constantly tried to find the ‘perfect’ replacement that had an actual keyboard/keypad, and with Palm, those are very few and far between. The Tungsten C is the one for me. I’m not going for WebOS as I hear nothing is backward compatible with PalmOS. I don’t even use the wifi feature as their web browser is horribly outdated, and installing Opera is near impossible even though there are sites that show you how to do it. The wifi kinda stopped working on mine anyway, showing a consistently stale list of available access points…whatever, I just turned Wifi off and now I have a great PDA that is disconnected from the world (which is what I wanted anyway). (Update 2014: I have physically removed the WIFI daughterboard, partly for removing any possible remote access possible, to give it an ounce or two less weight, and…well, just because. Normal operation is not affected by performing this surgery, only if you attempt to enable WIFI will the device reboot.)
My love for Palm’s simplicity in their primary applications (addressbook, memopad) and my love for the third-party apps I have come to depend on (Strip, Datebk6) is what keeps me from thinking “well, my cell phone has most of this functionality, why don’t I just use that?” I’ll tell you why. Because my wife washed my cell phone the other day. I’m probably going to upgrade my cellphone, and with the market/technology changing so quickly, I’d be crazy if I thought I could retain almost 15 years worth of data in a device that is going to become obsolete in a year. Palm sidesteps this with their older devices in that they are so PLENTIFUL to obtain and so insanely COMPATIBLE that you could pick up any old Palm and be able to restore your data easily. I own a technical consulting and support business, and use my Palm for appointments, tasks, addresses, notetaking, keeping encrypted passwords, etc… Thinking that a cell phone SHOULD do these tasks, I have found, is just insane. I want to keep them separate so I’m not tied to a certain cellphone for life. My Tungsten is my #1 receptionist – I rely on it for everything, even now in 2014. Palm devices have never let me down when it comes to tackling what a true “personal data assistant” should do. IMHO the Tungsten C is the best of breed PDA.
Categorised as: Blogs | Technical
Welp, it’s been 10 years since your last update; you still rocking a PDA? I guess if a 2014 smartphone couldn’t pull you away then I’m not sure why a 2024 model would. Maybe the newer Samsungs with their built-in stylus.
Throughout my 20s, I was really into the offline tech / NAS / “dumbphone” scene; that would have been a great time to look into the Handspring Visor that my parents had. Sounds like your use case for simpler tech is more practical/less idealistic than mine, because around 30 I burned out on caring about privacy and making tech last for decades and just dove headfirst into the Apple ecosystem. Fingers crossed they don’t lose my data, lol
I literally just put it down actually ;) Though I use it for much less every-day stuff, I do still use it. I have an Android smartphone (and have for a long time) but I *still* hate virtual keyboards after all this time. Some of that is relieved by carrying around a small bluetooth keyboard with me, but nothing will ever replace the premise of a truly offline personal data assistant. I honestly wish I had a few million dollars to blow, I’d design a modern-day PDA, based on the Tungsten C (but maybe smaller/thinner). Cheers!