I'm not condending that at all. It's a very small niche market. No one wants to market to a small niche. They want the big pie, grandmother/teenybooper users that hardly know how to push the 'Send' button to make a phone call.
No one wants to make/sell, or god forbid, buy Sidekicks and Treo's?
I agree with most of your comments, but that's just a bag of horse (totally relevant to the transportation industry, too ) crap. The market is segmented, and each segment coul be served properly with an adapted software suite on top of linux. The fact that it doesn't exist doesn't make it any less true.
My personal opinion of what a PDA should be is an Archos with a keyboard, a GSM/GPRS radio, and bluetooth (so you don't have to hold that damn thing next to your head) but I tend to be demanding.
If someone made a Linux PDA that's functionally equivalent to a Treo, I would have bought that, but there isn't.
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I miss my sidekick I went through three of them before I was forced to change carriers.
It was nearly a perfect mix of phone and PDA for me, Decent IM, Email, Web browsing and even ssh.
What I want is another mobile communications platform, Something that'll keep me in touch when I'm not at a real computer.
Too bad the sidekick never had real third party development support due to greed on the part of T-mobile and Danger, a linux/qtopia based device would solve that problem and open up the options for a lot of programs.
Wifi + Bluetooth + GSM? That'd rock hard. IR and USB would be icing on the cake, You could interface the device with almost anything.
Wouldnt it be cool to have something like zroadmap on your cellphone connected to your GPS via bluetooth and sending updates on your position via APRS?
I guess It may be possible to do this now with my 5500, a bluetooth card, a phone with bluetooth networking and a GPS attached to a serial to bluetooth deal.