More Itsy in the News 47
DJ Jose wrote in to note that the Compaq Itsy is
making the PR rounds again.
We've mentioned this a few times in the past (seems that every
few months it gets some new publicity). For those who haven't
been here all along, Itsy is a tiny little butt kicking Linux
box that I lust after and occasionally have erotic dreams
about. But lets not talk about that now.
Re: Change Your Mind! (Score:1)
Re:Dont forget.. (Score:1)
I'm not against voice recognition in this or other applications--I actually think future applications could work quite well with voice recog.--but I would include an alternative input interface for more complex applications.
It's Digital (Score:1)
Then development was stopped.
It would be nice if Compaq actually _did_ something with it.
Dont forget.. (Score:2)
Re:freeley available kernel? (Score:1)
/El Niño
A long term view (Score:1)
Re:Other applications of Rock and Scroll (Score:1)
-
Editor - Dualism.org
President - Ophelan.com
Re:Updated link (Score:1)
Oops, looks like you forgot one of the moderator rules, don't reveal you're a moderator
I don't think it matters anymore, cos almost everyone is a moderator briefly now (AFAIK). Besides, since he posted a comment to this article, he's no longer able to moderate for this one.
dylan_-
--
Re:What I would pay for... acer travelmate ?? (Score:1)
The screen is 8.4 inch TFT and runs 800x600.
The keyboard is fine for me (JAPH typing speed), and it has a drag-pad thing rather than one of those terrible "nipple" things.
The built in 56k modem is a WinModem, so only works under MS environments - time for another PC card I guess.
It's almost exactly the same size and weight as a decent O'Reilly book (slightly thinner than The Perl Cookbook). The power supply is small enough to stick in a pocket - I just leave spare leads at work and home, the battery normally lasts about 90 minutes for me, which is fine.
But I haven't got Linux on it
I'd recommend it heavily, the only real competition right now I can see is the Sony Vaio Picturebook, but that costs at least 50% more.
Tim
Re:What I would pay for... Apple P1 ?? (Score:1)
Point taken, I didn't want a CE machine, I wanted something I could run/develop Perl on and enough of an OS to make it useful. Right now, that means an Intel machine, if PPC or the LinuxCE project gives me a usable environment on something better, well, I'll be even happier.
If I could get a realistic dev env (Perl, C++ and email) on a Psion 5
I will call him... Mini-Palm (Score:1)
"You cannot uncook Mushoo pork once is has been cooked" -- wiseman
Re:Contact Info (Score:1)
I use a RexPro now, and I love it. It's the size of a pcmia card.
But Franklin/Starfish have informed me they have no intent/plans to port the product over to Linux.
Idiots!
Re:Dont forget.. (Score:1)
IMHO, a pen/keyboard is a far easier (and less public) means of utilizing a computer than speech.
Palm functionality and PADDs (Score:1)
However, I do recall running across a hardware hack for Palm pilots that integrated an 'acceleration' sensor; it could detect the direction that the Palm was tilted - leading to similar applications (and a cool port of Onyx!). (I cant find the link, sorry!)
As for the limited size for writing and the eternal lust for the trekkie supercomputer-in-a-waffle PADD, checkout the CrossPad - Cross Pen Computing Group: Pad [cross-pcg.com] , it has limited handwriting recognition, and isnt really an organizer, but man, is it cool!
Where's the standard???? (Score:1)
What would be really visionary is if the linux standard base team did a 'CE' standard at the same time as the general LSB.
If anybody likes this idea, email them please.....
Updated link (Score:2)
http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~pleb/ [unsw.edu.au]
Cost? (Score:1)
And who can I bribe for a prototype? I love that Doom "rock'n'scroll" idea. . .
Re:freeley available kernel? (Score:1)
would be available from ftp.us.kernel.org . . .
Re:Is smaller better? (Score:1)
Ma-Ma...
Re:Updated link (Score:1)
Oops, looks like you forgot one of the moderator rules, don't reveal you're a moderator :)
My site contains 100% GPL'd source code
If you like Itsy, you'll love PLEB (Score:1)
http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~compsoc/linux/pleb/
Kaffe (Score:2)
Re:Cost? (Score:2)
Re:freeley available kernel? (Score:3)
--
Yep, Newton usage shows smaller not better (Score:1)
My first Newton was the MP110. It worked well enough, but you quickly ran out of screen when writing longer words on it. The size also limited the amount of information the Newton could display. The screen was monochrome at 320x240
My current Newton is the MP2100, and boy what a difference the slightly larger form makes. The screen is 16 greyscale at 320x480. The DPI is higher on the MP2100, so even though the resolution is twice the MP110, the screen isn't twice as big.
Is smaller better? (Score:3)
If we're talking about a PDA, I might not mind something so small (my primary concern being the input interface--Graphitti?--where would you write?). But for more general purpose portable computing, I think I'd go for something about 4"x6" or 5"x7" (somewhere around the size of a Star Trek DS9 data report pad).
I'd love to see 3com (or someone else) put together a device this size for electronic books, general web browsing and the like.
Then again, I also want an ntp client, procmail, and Perl in my VCR, so it'll never not know the time and so I can program it by e-mail (TiVo, maybe?). But companies never listen to me . . .
Voice Recognition (Score:1)
What I would pay for... (Score:1)
rock and scroll... (Score:2)
but...but...but...apart from being Linux based and running generic PDA functions in savvy style...it plays DOOM!
not sure about the COMPAQ coined "rock and scroll" to describe the navigation through the video game universe by tilting the Itsy forward and back. hello! rock and scroll?
more info on this product tease [digital.com] here. what about a limited edition then eh?
she wore an itsy bitsy teeny weeny...hey i'm rock n' scrolling!
Great other uses... (Score:1)
My god!.. perfect for the traveller, either the power suit, retired couple or the backpacker. Buy a flash card or better yet one of those Sony mini HDDs and plug in translation modules for different languages/alphabets (can you say Strategy Pattern?)and you've just made it extensible. A REAL universal Translator or Babel Fish.
Does anyone know if this is going on? If I knew how to program PDA's (like the Casiopia E-100, sans the WinCE) man this would be one cool GNU/OSS project...
Don't ya think?
Contact Info (Score:1)
I have wanted something like this for a long time, but Palm Pilots don't have the resources to do anything useful, and CE devices require MS VC++, NT Workstion, and an additional $100 bucks for the CE dev kit...
Other applications of Rock and Scroll (Score:1)
"There is no surer way to ruin a good discussion than to contaminate it with the facts."
Re:Voice Recognition (Score:1)
Having to use keyboard gloves to interface with a device the size of the credit card, as well, rather defeats the purpose of having a device that size, IMHO.
But taking the keyboard glove idea and running with it: what I can envision as the future of the Itsy could be the primary controller for a wearable computer--input could be based upon eye movement or keyboard gloves or voice recognition. But until these input interfaces provide a facile means of input, I'd go with a larger pad thing.
Re:Kaffe (Score:1)
CE devices may make decent Linux platform (Score:2)
The closest shipping match to the Itsy are the Casio E-15 [casio-usa.com] and E-100 [casio-usa.com]; with 69MHz/131MHz CPUs and 16M of RAM, they're somewhat larger machines than the 8M 486SX/25 I bought to run Linux 0.12, and you can get larger CompactFlash cards (IDE interface internally) than the 60M SCSI disk that was home for a few years. Both Casios are a bit bigger than the Palm III, although I suppose you could get an Everex Freestyle [everex.com] if you wanted the exact size.
If Digital---uh, I mean Compaq---had seeded the right places with proto hardware, I think the excitement about this project would be more justified. I'm glad they're finally releasing their port (dunno where, but this slide [digital.com] has it as a bullet); if nothing else, it will make work on other Linux PDA environments easier. But the commercial marketplace is serving up almost everything the Itsy hardware has except the prototyping ability today. That's where to funnel all that nervous energy you get when you think about how cool it would be to have a Linux PDA.
Re:Dont forget.. (Score:1)
voice recognition input would be very
cumbersome are overlooking one obvious
point.
Assuming _good_ voice recognition, there is
no reason to be spelling out mnemonic forms
for commands, or using arcane shortcuts designed
to reduce and simplify the amount of typing.
What's wrong with
'parent directory'
'list files'
'go home'
and similar forms of more verbose commands,
when using voice recognition. These as
spoken commands are much more intiuative
and memorable than the convoluted syntax
people subject themselves to when using
linux or other CLIs
Possibly this doesn't scale so well to more
complex, precise commands, but most GNU
CLIs for example accept long versions of commands
which could be much more easily spoken than
spelling the contracted forms.