Linux carves niche in PDA market

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Gilger wrote in a recent e-mail that the device required little setup effort, other than telling the system which Exchange server to use. Some colleagues who use Palm OS or Windows CE are quite impressed, Gilger said. "I still hear complaints about how hard it was to tweak the other two products just to get them visible to the PCs they wanted to sync with." Kunzle, who travels frequently, also likes the Zaurus' ability to communicate through a variety of connections. At home, he connects to a wireless LAN with an 802.11 card in the CF slot. At work, he connects through the SharpMobile Pocket Spider CDPC modem. He can even connect from Europe using dialup via the IR port on his Ericsson tri-band phone. "Each connection happily coexists, and none of them took more than 30 seconds to set up," Kunzle wrote. "In fact, next time I'm in London, I probably won't take my laptop at all." Although he has connected with his networks quite easily, Kunzle hopes that Sharp adds Bluetooth capability in future versions. Familiar apps and interface
The two executives also had good things to say about applications performance. Kunzle was pleased with the Word and Excel edit capability, although he'd like to see it extended to PowerPoint (at this point, users can only view presentation slides). But the application that has garnered great affinity is Opera, the PDA browser. That got the attention of the high-tech engineers at Gilger's company, who use all Microsoft products. "You can imagine the rolling eyes and looks of disdain that I received after I picked up a device that wasn't running a Microsoft operating system," Gilger wrote. "Then I showed them a full browser (Opera)." After capturing their attention, Gilger showed them that the device was easy to update and that he could even code his own programs in the Linux-based OS. Thoughtful design
It's always a challenge for engineers to make a full-featured device that will fit into a pocket, and the Zaurus is no different. Kunzle likes its "thumb" keyboard, a small version of a standard QWERTY keyboard that is protected under a sliding cover when not in use. The removable battery is another plus for the device. Both Gilger and Kunzle were pleased that the SD and CF slots give them a couple of options for storing data. The SD slot accepts cards in the secure digital format, and the CF slot accepts cards in SanDisk's CompactFlash format. The hardware clearly has some features that impress tech-oriented users, but would the Linux-based OS be easy enough for the average person to use? According to Kunzle, the Trolltech Qtopia interface "hides Linux, unless you want to dig under the covers." He described the UI as clean and easy to use. "It proves what I always suspected about Linux -- it hasn't been tidied up yet because the geeks can't be bothered." Gilger also finds the Qtopia environment easy to use, and he's also looking forward to plenty of applications to come from open-source developers. Although he's happy with the SL-5500, Gilger thinks Zaurus could go much further in terms of capabilities and design. "When they create a large monitor and keyboard interface -- so that when it's docked, I can use it as a full PC -- then I wonder if I will even need my PC."
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