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Think Outside Bluetooth Stowaway Travel Mouse for Pocket PC PDA (MSBTUE) |
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A brilliant middle of the road choice!
97.0%
Helpful
thelankyyankee - (July 15, 2005) The palmOne Tungsten E2 is a superb PDA for those who require a wide range of functions beyond a basic calendar and contacts, but who are not looking for a ‘techie-extravaganza’ that will blow the socks off even the most jaded geeks. Having said that, the E2 is wicked cool and will raise eyebrows out of most technically adept members of the general public, while still leaving the user with an intuitive enough interface to understand in only a few minutes. One of the things that put me off a PDA for years was the need to learn that bizarre method of communication know as ‘graffiti’, which, for the uninitiated, is the method of writing characters on the PDA screen to enter data
Product: Tungsten E2 Handheld PDA (200MHz, 32MB, SD/MMC/SDIO Card, Palm OS v5.4)
Tungsten E Handheld PDA (32MB, SD/MMC Card, Palm OS v5.2.1)
94.7%
Helpful
brimbleshoes - (July 05, 2004) I really like this palm. Its my second after I borrowed an old m100 for a few months. The reason I chose this PDA is because I didn't need a lot of stuff to go with it, or added on to it. I don't need a camera, and if I wanted to type, I'd get a laptop. This is not a multimedia center. It will do video, music, pictures, office docs, and games, but don't expect too much. If you're dreaming of all the "cool" stuff you can do if you purchase one remember what Palm has always done well; a streamlined OS, as well as applications. If you want to surf the web, get a computer. This does business and school stuff very well. I also use it as my mp3 player, and sounds really good, (in some ways I like
Product: Tungsten E Handheld PDA (32MB, SD/MMC Card, Palm OS v5.2.1)
Axim X30 PDA (624MHz, 64MB, SD/MMC Card, Pocket PC 2003)
89.3%
Helpful
teddymicro - (July 20, 2004) I have this PDA for one month now, I have to say I love it more and more. Here is report from PC magzine Dell has done a very good job on its latest Pocket PC-based PDA, the Dell Axim X30. Its numerous and impressive features include the newest Intel processor, the PXA270, designed for cellular phones and PDAs; Bluetooth, a first for a Dell PDA; 802.11b wireless; and the new Microsoft Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition for Pocket PC operating system. The best part? It all comes at a bargain price of $349 (direct). In terms of design, Dell didn't break any new ground: The X30 looks exactly like the Axim 3i. The flat stylus is reasonably comfortable to use (though we prefer weightie
Product: Axim X30 PDA (624MHz, 64MB, SD/MMC Card, Pocket PC 2003)
medpub - (08/18/2009) MOSTLY - IT WON'T CONNECT. I can never rely on it. why is there not a USB option. JEEEEZZZZ I already wrote the amount needed and when i registered it was deleted (and it wuz great)- why cant some one just put a comment without having to register to these damn sites - ruddy control freaks! Go back to pena nd notepad - much simpler and much quicker!!!!
Product: Universal Wireless Keyboard
pacohaas - (07/31/2009) very unfortunate about the cable, if I had known, I might have sprung for the official Apple Dock instead which allows you to plug any cable into the back. I just thought the amplification would be a bonus...
Product: AirCurve Acoustic Amplifier
ebok - (05/04/2009) For the price 5 years ago this has been a great device for use at work. Occasionally for play, too. I bought this for the memory and it hasn't let me down. I use Mac and can't use the music software that is on it but can use music with SD cards which I do. Then it works fine. Have also put photos and videos on it and display is good. All in all, would recommend to others.
Product: TX Handheld PDA (312MHz, 128MB, SD/MMC/SDIO, Palm OS Garnet 5.4)