Get a powerful Axim PDA and free accessories for $179

Geeks.com has another great deal (note: we are not affiliated with geeks.com in any way): this time they sell the Dell Axim X5-Advanced model for $179, and the deal includes as extras a Belkin case, foldable keyboard and a sync/charge cable/car-charger. The X5 has 64 MB RAM, 400 Mhz XScale CPU and 48 MB ROM, SD/CF slots. It runs Windows Mobile 2002, but there is a neat hack to upgrade it to Windows 2003 manually.

Mobile Benchmark Data Reveals Widespread Use of Mobile Media

According to this recent study, in total, 13 percent of mobile subscribers in USA reported accessing news and information via a mobile browser in February 2005.

Poll: Most passengers don't want cell phones used on flights

According to the survey, 63 percent of participants wanted to keep cell phone restrictions in place, while 21 percent favored cell phone use during flights.

Wind River's Linux transformation

In the past two years, Wind River Systems got over its scorn for Linux. Now it's up to Ken Klein, chief executive for 15 months, to do more than embrace the open-source operating system: He's got to find a way to profit from it.

First VoIP-only Phone: Samsung WIP-6050M

Jørgen Sundgot snuggles up to Samsung's WIP-6050M, a wireless phone that relies on blazing Wi-Fi 802.11g rather than GSM or CDMA for a line out.

New Design House Targets Mobile Devices Only

It seems that the era of the mobile Web is here if we are to judge by the announcement of the first US web design house, Mobits.com, which only accepts jobs for developing mobile web sites! Their portfolio & demos show some nice screenshots of a number of mobile browsers being supported by the company and this begs the question: how does YOUR web site look like on a phone or a PDA? And if you do have a mobile site, is the user get redirected automatically to it?

Get a PDA for 25 bucks!

Manage your schedule, contacts and to-do lists, in addition to reading e-mail with this Royal Linea16 Handheld PDA: It features 16 MB memory, a touchscreen LCD screen with 160x200 resolution, it's compatible with Microsoft Outlook, has handwriting recognition, and a Lithium-ion rechargeable battery. With a built-in 56K modem, the Linea16 lets you send or receive emails at home or on the road (use rss2email to get news from the web on your PDA as the device can only use its included modem for POP3 email). Geeks.com currently sell it for less than 25 US dollars!

There is also an optional keyboard for it as you can see from this high-res picture of the PDA (couldn't find where to buy it though).

The Missed Opportunity of Linux?

Is it possible that Linux missed a huge opportunity to completely take over an operating system market? OSNews discusses the possibility that this might have happened around 2001 when the first smartphones appeared in the market. Since then, Symbian is thriving, Windows is slowly taking them over and PalmOS is fighting an uphill battle. And Linux has barely 1% of that market even if it's more capable than any of these embedded OSes.

Who Wants a Pepper Pad? Not Me.

"Yes, the Pepper Pad has some nice specifications (8.4" touchscreen, Intel PXA270 (624MHz) processor, 20GB HDD, QWERTY keyboard, SD/MMC slot, 802.11b and Bluetooth), but I definitely wouldn't call it compact, nor would I be substituting my Pocket PC for this. If anything, I'd use it as a complement, but then that's what my laptop is for, right? Anyone liking this $949, all-in-one device?" Read the discussion here.

The Sad Story of Secure Mobile Browsing

"As many of our readers know, I am a major proponent of mobile-friendly web design and browsing. Very few browsers in the mobile world are powerful enough to support modern w3c technologies (IE, NetFront, Opera & OpenWave) however they are good enough to do some basic browsing and even have SSL support. But especially in the case of IE (which is used a lot with PocketPCs & WinCE), Microsoft is still bundling IE 5.0x with these OSes. And we all know how unsecure 5.0.x is." Read more at OSNews.com.

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