Long live The King of PDAs 71
x136 writes "Despite being cancelled over four years ago, the Newton Messagepad is still getting better. You can now connect to an 802.11b network, install packages from OS X, and play the MP3s that you transferred from iTunes to your Compact Flash cards. It's pretty hard to imagine how great the Newton could have become had it not been abandoned."
Re:Like the Apple ][ fan club... (Score:1)
Re:Like the Apple ][ fan club... (Score:1)
Re:Macintosh homos (Score:1)
Oh yeah, for that immasculated AC: I got 3 Macs in my lab (one of the gumdrop variety), 4 Intels running Linux, an 18 year old callous on the side my right index finger from popping code in the front panel of my Altair 8800, and IMO, every program can and should be written in assembler, so thpthtphtpthtptpthtttt
Re:Like the Apple ][ fan club... (Score:2)
Hmmm - The same waning community [newtontalk.net] as this mailing list of over 1000 subscribers?
Re:Like the Apple ][ fan club... (Score:1)
Popular. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Popular. (Score:2)
Re:Popular. (Score:3)
Re:Popular. (Score:2)
Re:Popular. (Score:2, Insightful)
Impressive for its day (Score:3, Interesting)
That is remarkable.
-D
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:5, Informative)
The most recent and most capable model, the one which is largely being talked about is the MP2x00 series. It has 162 MHz StrongARM processor, 5 or 8 MB of RAM and a luxurious 480x320 screen (compared to the piddly 320x240 res of so-called modern PDAs). However, the MP120 and MP130 running Newton OS 2.0, with their 20-25 MHz ARM and 2-4 MB of RAM are also still incredibly useful, although not as powerful.
The MP2100 model is still impressive, not only in it's day, but today as well.
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:3, Insightful)
Still impressive - would it not be for its size.
That's mainly my point. I used to have a Newton 120, and I'm still longing for it. For example the cut&paste -feature with pen was something else. I would just throw the cut (or copied) text to the top corner of the screen. Then at my target application just take the cutted object from the top corner and paste it where I wanted.
Another feature was the ability to have links to other documents. For example in calendar I could link people and documents into a meeting the way I wanted.
These two are just some of the features I miss. I've tried Palms, Psions, even WinCE PDAs and they all lack the same ease of use the Newton had...
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:3, Interesting)
As far as size, yeah it was kind of a pain. Until recently, I carried around a MP2100u to my classes and generally most places I went. The size didn't much bother me, because it was better to carry the Newton than a book bag with a bunch of notes and books and/or my iBook- I had it all in the Newton. So, if you want a PDA just for an overpriced, status-symbol daybook, the Newton is definately not what you need. But, if you're like me, and want to be able to carry a huge amount of information around, take all of your college lecture notes, play games, read books, and hack on genetic algorithms all in one place, the Newton definately beats out the other options.
What a shame!
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:2)
As far as size, yeah it was kind of a pain.
It's not the size that bothers me, it's the weight. When I picked the Newton 2100 over the Palm five years ago, I wanted the extra screen space. If you use it for taking notes, as I have often done, it's really essential.
What I've come to regret, however, is how heavy thing is. If Steve Jobs hadn't killed Newton, Inc., I'm sure there'd be a much lighter version available today. As it is, I haven't seen a PDA to take its place.
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:1)
The only PDA that ever has come close to the Newton (IMHO at least) is the Psions. They did perfect their PDAs for long time, and it shows. The old Psion 3, even without touch screen is unusually well thought out. But with Psion 5 and the touch screen it was even better. And the keyboard on Psion 5 is still the best one out. And everything is packed into such compact package! (I know the Psion revo is smaller, but it has no backlight & no expansion, so I'll disregard it here!)
The only problem with Psion, if comparing to Newton, is that it still suffers from it's keyboard oriented history. One can do most things with the stylus quite easily, but after you learn the quick-key combinations you'll end up using less and less stylus.
I would say that in the Ideal World, The PDA would be the size of Psion 5 (with it's keyboard) and have the operating system & software of Newton. Yeah ok, maybe a color screen would be nice too, and Bluetooth and a MMC-reader and builtin IBM's 1gig MicroDrive and...
...and the I woke up, and read that Psion too has cancelled PDA production! Why do all the good things die?
And to get back to the original point of Newton. One thing that amaized about it was it's unbelievable style of memory management. I've never heared anyone using it after Newton in any other PDA! Was it patented or why?
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:2, Interesting)
Instead of doubling the screen resolution by increasing pixel density, they should have kept the resolution 320x240, and cut the size of the unit in half. Instead of going to the full 162 MHz processor, they should have used a slower, more power efficient one, so fewer batteries were needed.
It still would have been somewhat bigger than a Palm, but with all that Newton software to use...
Something to put up on the virtual "what could have been" shelf with my dual processor PowerPC NeXT system...
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:1)
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:1)
Palm came from US Robotics, later bought by 3Com, and then spun off on its own. Handspring was founded by ex-Palm founders.
Re:Impressive for its day (Score:1)
Newton Replacement (Score:4, Interesting)
shameless plug out...
Not a bad idea, but... (Score:2)
Re:Not a bad idea, but... (Score:2)
I have a newton, it won't power on. (Score:1)
ago. I tried some tricks i found on newton fan pages but it's still not getting any better.
Re:I have a newton, it won't power on. (Score:1, Informative)
Re:I've read an interview with interface developer (Score:1, Informative)
Two years later Apple released version 2.0 of NewtonOS, with a far FAR FAR improved handwriting system (Rosetta) developed in-house at Apple. To this day, Rosetta is still basically the best handwriting system out there. Too bad it's only available on Newtons.
iFake (Score:1)
Simply a fake or is it a prototype?
Hey, i can keep dreaming can't I?
i'm in hell (Score:1)
hoping to get one soon..
and it will rock.
soap, shampoo and conditioner clean it.. ah mean it..
Got a Newton 130 (Score:2, Informative)
Still amazes me (Score:3, Insightful)
The incredibly well done data soup architecture, fantastic hand writing recognition, the intuitive interface are still unparalleled/unmatched. Hats off to the Newton visionaries!
Re:Still amazes me (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Still amazes me (Score:1)
Newton in Ricochet network (Score:3, Interesting)
Check this [ucsc.edu] out.
No April fools- Newton *is* still cutting edge. (Score:1)
I still use mine for keeping a journal- when people see what it does for the first time, they're typically fascinated. When I tell them it's 5 years old and no longer available, they're shocked.
What I'd like to see (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd like for either Apple to bring back the Newton (I've never used one, so that explains my next comments) with an iPod storage enhancement, or to contract with Palm to use the iPod.
Imagine a world like this. You have your PDA (Newton/Palm/otherwise), and there's a slot where you can slid your iPod inside. Now your iPod is supplying the power/disk space for your PDA. When you slid it out and plug it back into your Mac, now you can just pull whatever files you edited/autoupdate your calender software/send emails composed/etc, etc, etc. Leave your iPod inside the device, and you can still play MP3's while editing a document/spreadsheet with your little PDA. Or read e-books. Or do your calender thing. Or...you get the point.
Or with digital cameras. Why worry about uploading/downloading, if you had a digital camera that used the iPod as the storage device? (Probably would need extra battery power, but you get the idea.) Plug it back into the Mac, and there's the image files, ready to be edited/copied. When they're good, copy them back to the iPod, and plug it back intot the camera, and "preview" the pictures with other folks.
With Apple's whole "digital hub" idea, using the iPod as a major piece of that as a PDA enhancement/camera system/digital video (maybe not high quality - "good enough") would be an interesting move on their part.
Re:What I'd like to see (Score:1)
What would be nice is a hybrid of a PDA and the iPod. If Apple was to release such a beast - a PDA with 5gb of hard disk storage along with its 32mb of memory and a firewire connection all bundled with an Apple creation of a mobile OS (it's Apple so I would expect an amazing interface and fully capable PIM) then I would be sold on it.
It wouldn't have to be colour (probably decide not do that to retain battery life) and I'd imagine it would look like the current iPod but have the screen longer (75%) and wider (5%-10%).
I'm not sure if such a thing is possible but with the current technology that it is going into the iPod such a creation can't be that far off.
So in closing, I don't think the way to go is an iPod/PDA dual combo I think it's for the iPod to take over the functionality of the PDA and replace it. As for hooking the iPod up t a digital camera (video and still) I totally agree. Especially considering some digital still cameras will take video for up to 30 seconds - if they had 5, 10 or 20gb to work with then there would be much more flexabilty.
Oh well, till then I'll dream.
Re:What I'd like to see (Score:2)
Re:What I'd like to see (Score:2)
It'd have to be able to record and playback MP3s and MPEGs. You could save VCDs on it. At this point, it doesn't have to be a handheld computer. It could just be the ultimate portable media device. The soul of an iPod. If you wanted it to be a Palm/PPC/Newton replacement, then you would have to change the interface, purpose, processor, etc. It would exactly be an iPod anymore.
This is a serious question (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This is a serious question (Score:2)
not bloody likely.
for one, the OS is in ROM, so you'd have to bypass it and put linux into RAM, which, even on the highest-end newton 2100 is still only 4 megs. the newton OS normally takes up about 3.5 of this, leaving the rest for user stuff. a very very tight linux implementation might work, but there are a lot of issues to deal with - namely, where to put your OS? in flash? a custom ROM?
Re:This is a serious question (Score:2)
The Newton was before its time (Score:1)
Newton 2100 web server (Score:1)
Re:Newton 2100 web server (Score:1)
Re:King of PDAs? (Score:1)
Long Live the Amiga of PDAs