Different Strokes for different folks, as they say. Had a Palm (Sony Clie NX-60). Loved the Clie, but hated the battery life. I LOVE graffiti. Hate thumb-boards. (I actually know how to really type, and thumb-boards just make me develop bad habits.) Bought a Zaurus because the Clie's battery life was... inadequate. The more I came to use it, the more the battery life became an issue. Bought a Zaurus. LOVED the battery life. Like the 'free' software. Thought the Zaurus was buggy as heck. (Free software, after all.) Bought the TKC apps (Calendar, ToDo, addressbook, mp3player, video-player, and zip). This eliminated the whole 'free' part of the equation, but I was still happy. Battery life was great. I got some stable apps that worked more or less all the time if I didn't beat on the Z too much. Then, my Z (SL-C860) just quit working. I baby my devices. (No dropping, case or not. No banging them into things.) Sent it back to the vendor. (Dynamism.) They were able to boot it without a problem. They say there's nothing wrong with it. Now, of course, I don't trust it. Bought a Palm Life-Drive. I have graffiti again. I have all the battery life I had with the Zaurus. The OS and apps are stable, and I don't have to pay for the basic applications (PIM-Suite). From a contrarian view-point, Palm has it's issues, but the Life Drive was cheaper than a Zaurus, has just as much storage as the SL-C3000, has built-in WiFi and Bluetooth (if that's a must-have for you), and 'just works'. The manufacturer's state-side, so I don't have to deal with any intermediaries if it breaks. My return to Palm has made me happy. I still bounce in here from time to time. I still think the Z is a great little gadget for the experimenters, and I have some crazy hopes that it might turn into an honest alternative to Palm/Pocket PC. Unfortunately, a lot of the guys who are really driving development are driving it only in directions that suit them. That's ok. They're doing it for free, and they do a heck of a lot more than Sharp EVER did. (God Bless you OpenZaurus/Opie/GPE and Cacko guys.) But not everybody is a Linux admin who is comfortable working in a shell, and not everybody likes thumb-keyboards. (Hate them, personally.) It would be nice to see some effort go in directions that broaden the user base. Unfortunately, I have a million other things to do, as I'm sure a lot of us here do, so I can't do it myself. So, for now, I'll lurk and hope.