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Reviews
The following page contains reviews written by DPUG members who won the
product at a DPUG meeting:
Products reviewed/presented at previous DPUG meetings::
| Product:
|
BugMe! |
| Reviewer: |
Athan Papatheodore |
| Review: |
At my first DPUG meeting
I was lucky enough to win a copy of BugMe V3.35. It is basically
an "electronic sticky note" with some practical features.
First I must admit that I am a some what of a purist, so I was
skeptical of the hand written notes idea. My philosophy for new
people using Graffiti is to throw away that planner and dive in.
BugMe is fully featured to make it useful. The main advantage is
the fact that you can associate an alarm with the notes. Other features
like cut, copy, paste, and beaming of notes are all available. Preferences
include handwritten notes or Graffiti entry, font sizes, date &
time stamping, a large assortment of alarm sounds, and another good
feature, the ability to select many repeat alarms at just about
any interval. Again, the alarm feature is the strongest attribute.
BugMe offers an alternative to writing notes in your Palm calendar
if you need an alarm. (I haven't figured out why the Palm To Do
list doesn't have an alarm). If you like the idea of hand writing
notes you can get QuickNotes for free, but it is very basic without
all the features, and no alarm. |
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| Product:
|
Kodak
PalmPix Digital Camera |
| Reviewer: |
Tom Maryon |
| Review: |
Many of you who attended
the November meeting will recall my lucky day when I won one of
the two Kodak PalmPix Cameras that were given away at the November
DPUG meeting. I was ecstatic. I never win anything!
I wanted to evaluate the camera for a few weeks before I commented
on my experience. Prior to winning the camera this item was on my
Christmas list. I travel frequently, rarely carry a camera, and
thought this would be an excellent opportunity to begin to capture
some of life using my Palm. I always carry the Palm. My Palm device
is a IIIC so I was looking forward to a great marriage.
Unfortunately, I must report that the PalmPix has been somewhat
disappointing. The camera is very convenient to carry and easy to
use. Storage of the camera is a piece of cake.
The picture quality however is poor, even in well lit environments.
Resolution is fuzzy and color quality is poor. The other problem
was storage. I was only able to shoot about 20 photos before I ran
out of memory on my IIIC. Each shot takes about 100k. Since I did
not have my desktop with me on a recent trip to Boston, I had to
delete favorite programs to make more room for the photos.
I remain optimistic however and am going to continue to search
for tips on the net on how to improve the photos. I think Kodak
is on track but I am a little surprised that the product is not
more useful prior to it hitting the market. I will keep people posted
on my success. I am attaching a few photos as examples of indoor,
outdoor, day and evening shots. I may not be using the device correctly
but the documentation page at Kodak is brief on how to improve picture
quality. I am going to keep trying and will hopefully see better
results.
Click here to see some of the photos
Tom took and his comments about them. |
| Product:
|
FaceSavers
Screen Protector |
| Reviewer: |
Jeanie Certesio |
| Review: |
FaceSavers are a new brand
of screen protectors for your Palm. The product is a full screen
protector that clings to the screen after you peel it from the protective
backing.
The screen protector is cut to fit within the screen, so there
is no trimming necessary (not yet available for the V). It is slightly
smaller than the screen so it there is a slight gap between the
screen protector and case. The gap is very small so the stylus should
not ‘catch’ on the screen protector in normal use.
The size and shape (rounded corners) of the FaceSaver make it very
easy to center. It can be removed and will cling to the screen multiple
times if you need to adjust its position or try for less air bubbles.
Once it is placed on the screen it does not slide around under the
stylus.
Although the FaceSaver did not cause distortion, I never got it
installed without any air bubbles. As a result, the screen clarity
was affected. Any pressure applied in an attempt to smooth the screen
protector during installation created a mottled shadow. The best
results occurred when the screen protector was placed lightly on
the glass and no attempt to remove air bubbles was made. This installation
technique eliminated the mottled shadows, but each stylus stroke
produced a ghost effect.
At first, I had trouble with my Graffiti recognition due to the
product softening my writing style. Once I increased my stylus pressure
to compensate for using the screen protector, character recognition
improved dramatically. The FaceSaver has a slightly tacky feel which
I preferred to smooth glass.
Since this was my first use of a screen protector, I can’t compare
the FaceSaver to other products.
Overall, if the air bubbles that are causing the clarity problems
could be eliminated, this would be a good product.
|
| Product:
|
iSilo Document
Reader |
| Reviewer: |
Doug Gordon |
| Review: |
iSilo appears to be a decent Doc and
HTML reader. Surprisingly, when I first loaded it, it saw and was
able to read one of the documents that had been converted and loaded
on my Palm by the DocsToGo program. To use it for HTML, I downloaded
the "iSiloWeb" utility from their web site. This utility goes to
any specified web site, fetches and converts the pages, and sets
them up for downloading on the next HotSync. There are a number
of options for handling graphics, depth of links to follow, etc.
The package is similar to using AvantGo except that you have to
get your pages by manually running iSiloWeb instead of the automatic
conduit that AvantGo uses.
On the Palm unit, iSilo has a number of nice navigation features
for getting through the web pages. It also can handle graphics that
are larger (length and/or width) than the Palm screen. Or, you can
get it to shrink all graphics to fit.
iSiloWeb is probably worth the $12.50 that they're asking if you
want to get the contents of a particular web site into your Palm
for some length of time. On the other hand, if you are just looking
for daily updates of web-based material, then AvantGo is still a
better bet. A combination of the two would be hard to beat.
Note: I was having trouble with iSilo crashing, so I emailed iSilo
and it turned out to be a bug related to the 3.5 version of the
OS I was running. They got me a fixed version out within the day,
and it works perfectly. I was pretty impressed by their responsiveness. |
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