Reflective TFT color screen with brightness control and support for more than 65,000 colors
ARM-based Texas Instrument OMAP1510 processor
Integrated Bluetooth Radio and Antenna
Secure Digital/MultiMediaCard Expansion Slot
What's in the box: Palm Tungsten T handheld, stylus, protective cover, USB HotSync cradle, power supply (120 VAC), installation CD with user manuals, Software Essentials CD
Rating: - Recalibration problem
RECALIBRATION ! For me that's the main problem of Palm products. I had a Palm V and after a while I could not use it anymore because of calibration problem. No warranty ! Lost money. That's not fair. It's like having a wonderful girlfriend for a year and suddenly she broke up with me. I still love her but doesn't work ...
Rating: - Nice, But Longevity Not Good
I use this primarily with my ACT! database. Have never even come close to using the maximum memory even with hundreds of contacts and extensive notes. It has served me well for about 2 years; however now the standard plastic screen cover is hard to read through and the machine "resets" itself or locks up requiring a manual "reset" about once per week. For the purchase price I would have expected a much better life to it.
Rating: - Annoying digitization problem
Although I was happy initially with my Tungsten T, I am no longer happy because it needs to be redigitized several times a day. I am a teacher and use it for a lot of data entry, calculation, and organizing and it is time consuming and aggravating to have to double-check all the time to ensure that the correct item is going in the correct field. I was dismayed to discover within these reviews that this is a glitch that is endemic to all model T's. I am even more upset to discover that it eventually just breaks! At the price I paid, I expected to get several years of use out of it. I am hesitant to replace a defective product with a product from the same company, especially if Palm is not backing up their product with a meaningful solution (as is reported elsewhere in these reviews).
Rating: - Worked well for a while
Initially I loved my Tungsten T, but after 6 months, the touch screen began requiring repeated recalibration. This has become progressively worse, to the point that recalibrating or repeatedly soft rebooting does not help and the T has died. This all occurred after the warranty period, and the online knowledge base and phone support have been worse than useless. After reading customer feedback here, it appears that several other people have experienced the same problems with the T and the same frustration with Palm support. I'm now shopping for a (non-Palm) replacement. I would strongly discourage anyone from buying what appears to be a flawed product from annon-supportive company.
Rating: - A real good PDA
This is a really good PDA . It only froze up onze in the year i've had it probaly because of this corructed game i downloaded
for it . I have used it to death , and no problems .
Here are the good things about it:
How the Poor DieMy right-hand neighbour was a little red-haired cobbler with one leg shorter than the other, who used to announce the death of any other patient (this happened a number of times, and my neighbour was always the first to hear of it) by whistling to me, exclaiming "NUMÉRO 43!" (or whatever it was) and flinging his arms above his head. This man had not much wrong with him, but in most of the other beds within my angle of vision some squalid tragedy or some plain horror was being enacted.Previously Much of George Orwell's writings can be found online, including his essays. Here are a few from the site linked in the FPP:
You and the Atomic BombIt is a commonplace that the history of civilisation is largely the history of weapons. Books vs. CigarettesWith prices as they now are, I am spending far more on tobacco than I do on books. The Lion and the UnicornAs I write, highly civilized human beings are flying overhead, trying to kill me.
Mr Brooker was a dark, small-boned, sour, Irish-looking man, and astonishingly dirty. I don't think I ever once saw his hands clean. As Mrs Brooker was now an invalid he prepared most of the food, and like all people with permanently dirty hands he had a peculiarly intimate, lingering manner of handling things. If he gave you a slice of bread-and-butter there was always a black thumb-print on it.
HP is shortly to launch a 300GB 2.5-inch hard drive claiming it will have "more storage capacity than any other SFF drive in the market." Both Fujitsu and Seagate's have 300GB 2.5-inch drives already. What's going on?…