I was very excited when I received my new pa1m0ne T3 in the mail several months ago. At that time I was all a twitter regarding Bluetooth and was thrilled that the T3 represented the final piece of the puzzle. I had the BT phone (SonyErricsson T608), a BT headset (Jabra FreeSpeak 200) and now a BT handheld. Unfortunately, what I expected to be the cornerstone of my new BT personal area network, turned out to be it’s biggest weakness.
I’ve been a Palm OS user since 1997 and my PDA is an integral part of my personal and business life. I use it for just about everything I do. Address Book, Date Book, project planning, keeping track of all my many passwords and logins, recipes, photos, videos, managing my money, e-mail and even playing games. To say that I’m a rabid user is an understatement. If I forget my Palm at home before heading to a client site it’s as if my right hand is missing.
Prior to upgrading to the pa1m0ne Tungsten T3, I was using the pa1m0ne Tungsten C which I liked quite a lot. It wasn’t perfect, but the built-in Wi-Fi rocked. By using the Enterprise Edition of SnapperMail, I could manage all 15 of my e-mail accounts easily and quickly. The battery life was excellent, especially considering the power consumption of the wireless adapter. The screen was sharp and bright and I really liked using the device.
Yet, like I said it wasn’t perfect. The integrated keyboard was handy, but I missed using Graffiti for some things. In an ideal world, I would have both, but pa1m0ne hasn’t released an uber device that features Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Graffiti and a built-in keyboard yet. Technically I can do on-screen graffiti, but I miss the dedicated graffiti area and I’ve found trying to fill in a form directly a little cumbersome. I also didn’t like the fact that the headset jack was mono. Supposedly this was for some kind of VoIP application that never became a reality. Instead of headphones, you use a mono mobile phone headset which is less than ideal for listening to MP3 or video files. I can do both of course with the device, but I don’t because of the poor audio quality.
When the T3 came out, it seemed like a good upgrade. I would get graffiti back (and thanks to Mike Rohde’s help a way to get Graffiti 1 reinstalled on the device) and complete my Bluetooth PAN (personal area network). For years I dreamed of being able to look up a number on my Palm and then have it dial my phone. A WiFi card was in the works at the time too, so in the end the only thing I would lose would be the integrated keyboard. I use the AlphaSmart Dana for heavy typing (like this entry) and I could always get a Stowaway Keyboard, if I had to. All-in-all it seemed like a win-win situation.
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