Handheld Help Needed !!

johnyboy

Original..Non Original
Jul 19, 2002
521
37
28
In Someones Will Hopefully!
I am always amazed at the level knowledge on this board
and was wondering if someone may help me out on this one

I have a desktop and just gave my laptop to my daughter and would like to use a handheld for business without replacing my laptop.

I have just broken my palm Vx and am going to replace it.

So within in reason say>$600 give or take...

the most functional

$ 4 $ - best value

user friendly

paging... emails..phone...gps...all in oneness

compatibilty withother popular models

platform longevity

I also use Office 2003

What would you do?? Thanks Jay Bee
 

Falconer

Strangers in the night
I have a Palm (now palmOne) Tungsten T3 and love it. I use SnapperMail for emails, and Documents To Go for Word and Excel documents. You need the slider-type PDA like the T3 to truly appreciate Excel on a handheld. Everything synchronizes beautifully with my desktop.

Although I am proficient with Grafitti2, I do have an external Stowaway keyboard and also the ability to link my T3 with an external LCD projector for presentations using Margi Presenter-to-Go, which also includes a small infrared remote for controlling the presentation.

I don't have GPS but you can buy a GPS attachment to go into the SD slot.

All of the above I bought via [u]www.directdial.com[/u]

The only thing is, I do use another phone/pager in combination with the T3. You might want to look at palmOne's Treo 600 if you want a PDA phone combination that is killer - the next generation Treo will likely be my next purchase.
 

xarir

Retired TERB Ass Slapper
Aug 20, 2001
3,763
1
36
Trolling the Deleted Threads Repository
You don't mention if phone type (CDMA vs GSM / GPRS) is an issue. Anyhow, my $0.02 ...

I use the Kyocera 7135 from Bell. I quite like the functionality, but the size (weight) is a little more that I'd like and the battery life quite frankly sucks. But as long as I'm wearing a suit or at least a jacket the phone fits nicely in a pocket. And if I just recharge every day the battery lasts long enough. The colour screen is very readable, and the phone part of the unit works adequately well.

If I had a choice I'd switch to the Treo600 which currently only works on the GSM / SPRS (Rogers) network. That phone is much smaller than my Kyocera and has the keyboard built in which I find a good idea. I'm quite happy scribbling in Graffiti, but the keyboard has it's advantages.

I recently tested both the Blackberry & the Blueberry. While the Blackberry felt awkward handling as a phone, it was actually a pretty good unit. I'll stress that I was testing the RIM devices in an enterprise setting - that means we had the Blackberry Enterprise Server (BES) running behind our corporate firewall which gave me seamless access to my work email. I imagine the experience is similar if you don't have a BES but I'm not sure.

The Blackberry had very good battery life and email was a breeze on it. I quickly became addicted to the unit, though I generally fall in love with technology quite easily. (Hmm ... kinda like seeing a beautiful lady ...) We were able to use the built-in web browser to connet to our internal intranet and go out to the internet as well. The experience was slow, but usable. The biggest drawback to surfing was predictably screen size - as large as they are, websites designed for 800x600 resolution or greater just don't size properly on a 200-ishx100-ish size screen.

The Blueberry with it's smaller size was appealing as holding it to your head as a phone was easier. The Blackberry sometimes felt like holding a side plate to your head by comparison. The colour screen on the Blueberry was nice, but for general reading of emails etc I preferred the contrast of black & white. The screen on the Blueberry is also smaller, but the images are not proportional - rather the come out squished. So even reading emails was an odd experience on that screen size. Since my RIM testing, Rogers & Bell have both released the Blackberry with colour screen. I should be getting my test unit any time now. :)

Both the Blackberry & Blueberry had excellent battery life. And the integration with our Outlook Exchange server (via BES) was outstanding. There was absolutely no difference in using the RIM vs Outlook Web Access vs laptop in the office connected to the network. Both email and calendar came through seamlessly - this is the true power of RIM.

If you want an email solution, you won't do better than RIM particularly in a corporate environment. At a personal level such as accessing your Sympatico email or whatever it is you use, I would think that RIM still comes out ahead for email access.

On the other hand if you want the install your own little apps, you really should stick with Palm. My experience with RIM showed it to be more of a "closed" operating system than Palm. While there are thousands of 3rd party apps (both shareward & commercial) for Palm, I doubt you'll ever see that level of external opportunities for RIM.

Based on my testing I'm taking my group to RIM at work. But I'm going to miss my trusty and faithful Palm and all the goodies I have installed on it.
 

xarir

Retired TERB Ass Slapper
Aug 20, 2001
3,763
1
36
Trolling the Deleted Threads Repository
Oh yeah - forgot to mention (damn I'm long-winded today!) that Bell is introducing GPS service this fall. A lot of their phones already have GPS built-in but that's mostly for 911 service. If you dial 911 on your cell, they are able to pinpoint your location via GPS and send help accordingly. This service will be expanded to both corporate and personal users this fall. So you'll be able to open your phone and using the built-in web browser, find say, the nearest bank machine. Corporate users will also be able to pull the Big Brother routine and monitor the locations of phones and by extension, the presumed location of the phones' users. If you have a remote sales or service force, this may be useful.
 

kwong_1978

Who Am I? U first!
Jan 2, 2003
574
0
0
RIM all the way!

I can't imagine functioning without my Blueberry. It's really hard explaining the benefits but once you've used it for awhile-you're hooked.
 
E

eyeofthedragon

Ive always been a Palm fan myself (not just the palm sisters) I use the T3 as well and have a bluetooth gps for it - Another all in one solution is the Garmin Ique - it is palm and GPs all in one and is user freindly. I hesitate myself to have all my eggs in one basket
 
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