Oh I wish I\'d noticed this thread before, but I\'ve been too busy beta testing a *full blown* commercial application. Say no more...
Ok Tony, why can\'t you have these things, well you can, if you have sufficient RAM, swap and diskspace you CAN have OpenOffice but it will crawl along, why? because floating point operations need to be emulated, this slows things down to a crawl. If you want to run \"full applications\", get a cross compiler and do it, what\'s the problem?
But OpenOffice, Mozilla, GIMP, Evolution etc will be SLOW! I run GIMP on my Z, compared to a 400MHz PC it\'s slow. Porting code with a heavy reliance on the FPU will always run slow the Z\'s processor. OpenOffice is a PITA on my 800MHz PC, it\'s tear jerkingly slow on a 400MHz PC, I\'d die of old age running it on a Z, it\'s enourmous!
Linux codecs, well most of them require FPU operations and many are illegal hacks anyway I\'m sure, but again speed is the problem. If you want them, get the source and compile it. In short \'full blown\' applications require two things, your effort in compiling them and the patience of a saint.
Why are there no full blown applications? Because you haven\'t compiled them yet.
As for PDA vs Palmtop..
A PDA is a handheld computer, usually tablet form with a stylus, such as PocketPC/WinCE, Palm etc. They are designed as PIM tools and sync with a PC or Laptop. Their primary use is for storing personal data like appoinments and phone numbers. The PDA as a concept is merging into phone technology, this will have only one effect, the manufacturers will cash in on our irrational love of changing phones like one changes underpants. But, the cattle-majority will chase this one like they are chasing video phones here in the UK right now, I don\'t see the appeal of watching 2fps 10x10 pixel video... ho!
A Palmtop is a full computer, it is used in ways that are similar to a desktop machine, although it may or may not replace a desktop/laptop\'s functions. A Palmtop has a form factor similar to a laptop or OS/Apps like one. The Zaurus is a Palmtop which *can* do some PDA functions, I get really pissed off with one individual who constantly tells me my Palmtop is mere PDA, it\'s insulting. It can do PDA stuff, but that is not what it is primarily for. That is why Sharp call it a Personal Mobile Tool, not a PDA. In fact I pass wind with rage at the thought, it\'s like these idiots who buy the most obscure device known to man (our Z) and wonders how to put PocketPC on it, grrr!
MANY HP LXers like myself came to the Z, why? Because it\'s the dream machine, a full Palmtop with Linux and multimedia and all the bells and whistles. People who come to the Z from a \'PDA\' background, unless they specifically want to learn Linux, will always want a PDA and will not be happy unless Sharp downgrade the Zaurus into a PIM tool - it evolved from that, it\'s not going to go back.
I do BTW use my Z as a laptop replacement, and as time goes on, more of a desktop replacement. I looked seriously into getting a UNIX laptop a couple of years back, like the Tadpole which ran Solaris. The Z filled that gap completely, it also filled any requirement I may have had for a PDA.
x86 compatibility in my opinion is touted too much, is an UltraSPARC system any less of a machine? UNIX has always been run on divergent hardware, as is Linux.
I\'ve said it before and I will again, the problem with the Z isn\'t the hardware or software, it\'s people with talent wasting it on producing things like pdaXrom or OPIE (this is not a personal attack) instead of writing or porting applications. Qtopia, X/Qt and Java should be sufficient for deployment.
I\'m not going to upset anyone by putting smiley faces in my posting, but I am smiling with gooey fuzzy glee! Believe it or face the trebuchet.