LYCOS RETRIEVER
Palm Pilot
built 478 days ago
The Palm Pilot is a very smart hand-held computer based the on the Motorola 68000 Dragon Ball CPU. A few models are on the market: PalmIII, PalmIIIx, PalmV and PalmVII. (The older machines are Palm-1000, Palm-5000, Palm-personal and Palm-professional). All of the new models use the PalmOS-3.
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The Palm Pilot was a huge success, while the Newton and Momenta units failed. Nobody was able to forecast the eventual huge success of the Palm. The developers got the product close enough to what the customer wanted, viral marketing kicked in and the product validated an entire market segment.
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Palm Pilot eBook software downloads can be read on any Palm handheld device. Simply download the free Palm Pilot eBook reader software above. Then download your favorite Palm Pilot eBook software. You can select various fonts and font sizes, and you can control how much text is on the screen at one time. You can ... jump to any section of the eBook with ease.
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Palm Pilot applications use FORMS to interact with the user. These forms contain bitmaps, buttons, tables, check-boxes and many other user-interface objects. A great tool to build these forms for the Palm Pilot, called
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Monday, March 27, 2006 marks the 10th anniversary of the introduction of the original Palm Pilot. The little 5-ounce PDA, brainchild of Jeff Hawkins, was created on the conviction that the future of personal computing was mobile computing. A lot happened in the past ten years, and it wasn't always smooth sailing, but Palm built incrementally on that vision and this eventually led to the Treo, another Hawkins brainchild, and probably the most highly acclaimed smartphones in the industry. As the industry changes, Palm is now morphing from being the PDA leader to more timely and more capable products, currently culminating in the Treo smartphones. Palm still draws new customers and a new demographic with its PDAs that range from $99 entry-level organizers to multimedia-rich PDAs with integrated Bluetooth and WiFi, such as the T5 and the LifeDrive (which still hold four of the five retail top spots) -- all part of mobile computing. [see detailed Palm timeline PDF] -- Posted Monday, March 27, 2006 by chb
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You are being provided with a Palm Pilot for the next four weeks for this new project that seeks to incorporate the use of Personal Digital Assistants in to Ambulatory Care Clerkships. SM Med is the main program you will be using for this new project. Please follow the instructions below to set this program up so that you can begin to enter in data concerning your patients. Contact the Department of Family Medicine at (914) 594-4830 if you have any questions or problems with the program.
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