Can people tell me why they think I should keep the 5600 and sell the Dell?
OK, having just eBayed an iPaq 4350 and picked up a 5600/PXA255, I\'ll tell you why
I made the switch: flexibility, stability, and transparency. My experience with the iPaq reminded me of what I went through back in the day with Win95--crashes, spontaneously corrupted configurations, and lock-step \"you\'ll-do-it-our-way-and-like-it\" setup (Bluetooth pairing alone probably took 10 years off my life expectancy).
I have the same concerns regarding software availability you do, but there is a bright side: in the PPC world,
everything you add (including a popular applet called \"PIE plus,\" which does nothing but fix the broken behaviours of Pocket IE) will cost money; in the Linux world, nearly all the software is free.
I also share your concerns about \"bricking\" the device, but remember: Sharp designed this thing for the mass market (sort of), not the Linux geek. You can tinker as much, or as little, as you want. The terminal client isn\'t even installed on the device by default, so you never have to descend into command-line hell if you don\'t want to. OTOH, there is a whole universe of stuff you can do with this device precisely because you can change almost everything about it, and from what I\'ve seen here, there are plenty of
very capable Linux geeks who will happily lend us newbies their expertise.
Linux--even on something as (relatively) simple as a PDA--may mean having to \"work under the hood\" occasionally, but at least you can get under the hood. My PPC experience was like buying a car with the hood welded shut--when steam starts pouring out the grille, you may as well just pull off the road, get out, and start walking...