|
80 of 86 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Tungsten T . . . medical use, January 11, 2003
By A Customer
I'm a physician and upgraded from a IIIc to the Tungsten T for more speed for electronic prescribing. Also purchased the SanDisk 64MB card. What I've found so far: -- 14 MB of user accessible memory on the Palm itself -- 59.4 MB on the SanDisk cardPeeves -- -- The sliding close is nice for smaller size for travel. When in frequent use, I'd really like to be able to keep the TT "locked" in full extension since I need to use the Graffiti area extensively. A little flip lock like on the barrel of zoom lenses would have been a nice addition. -- Palm shouldn't have cheaped out on memory -- should have 32ish MB of user accessible memory. -- Can't "subdivide" the SanDisk card into directories or categories -- it's one massive lump. -- The "snap" into the cradle isn't real secure -- a little nudge and it isn't charging. -- Comes with an inconvenient plastic cover. Touching the navigator selector in the front turns the gadget on, which frequently happens accidentally if put in a pocket. I like the flip-down clam shell arrangement on the IIIc better at this point. (I made my own cover out of other materials -- a little challenging -- pressure in the wrong place will turn the gadget on unintentionally unless designed right.) Pluses -- -- FAST, bright screen, good resolution. -- Sync's are fast -- With almost daily charges, battery life hasn't seemed to be a problem so far, but am not using BlueTooth yet and haven't been using continuously. -- Comes with Documents to Go -- Can scribble some brief notes (although I've done nothing but play with that) and dictate some voice notes (ditto). -- Can transfer address book and calendar from old Palm very easily if minimally computer literate (can navigate directories and copy files following instructions) -- Things that work with OS 5 ON THE EXPANSION CARD: Acrobat reader, LDL cholesterol (StatCoder), OK Cardiac Clearance (StatCoder), Growth2 (StatCoder), HanDBase main program (the applets I wrote for Palm v. 3.5 work but can't go on the card), MedCalc, MentStat, PowerOne Personal calculator (included from Palm), Shots2003 (2002 also worked), MOST of the Documents to Go programs (SheetsToGo, Slideshow, WordToGo, but not the Fonts), and Tarascon beta. All appear to work just fine EXCEPT the Tarascon beta, which is only partially functional. Writing to them, they say they will not be supporting OS 5 until the "fee" release. -- Things that need to be or should be on the "front" side: All the native palm apps -- calendar, address; DietCalc, EPOCRATES and its AvantGo companion, iScribe*, all HanDBase apps (but not the main program), WordToGo Fonts. *The iscribe folks say it will work on the card but advise against it because of loss of speed. With all the little pieces that that go along with these things, adds up to over 7M of the 14M on the front side. --Things that don't work that I'd miss without carrying my IIIC also: ATPIII and Hopkins Antibiotic Guide. ATPIII is in the process of being upgraded for OS 5; Hopkins I haven't gotten an answer and am not sure whether it is OS 5, that I've got the Guide on two Palms which is causing problems (or what) and have received no response to my inquiry. Would recommend for those who need/want the speed. My usage is probably quite different from the average bear, and I've found no use so far for the navigator thingies, and rarely use the buttons on the front. Often leave in the extended position and use the on/off button. I really needed it to continue electronic prescribing (IIIc and iScribe = getting to slow to use in real time). Think I'll be using Doc To Go and personal "notes" extensively as time goes on also. Am hoping the couple incompatible programs I'll (really) miss -- ATPIII and Hopkins -- are available for OS 5 soon.
|