MIDs: PDA 3.0? OMG!
Created 2008-07-17 15:34

RELATED ARTICLES
  • Fast Forward: Intel's Atom: the Smallest x86
  • Another One Bites the Dust
  • Linux on Your Smartphone
News
  • PC Mirror's Edge Bounds Over Consoles, Gains Robust PhysX Support
  • Millions of LIFE Magazine Photos Now Available on Google Images
  • Konica Minolta Developing Projector That's Smaller Than a Thumbdrive
  • New Law Says Tennessee College Networks Must Filter P2P Traffic
  • Flash Headed to Smartphones; Apple Still Holding Out
SEE MORE NEWS
Columns

MIDs: PDA 3.0? OMG!

Posted 07/17/08 at 05:34:53 PM |  by Tom Halfhill

comment Commentsprint Printemail EmailDeliciousDiggStumbleUponReddit

Tom HalfhillIntel’s strategy for Atom processors and WiMAX hinges partly on a new class of handheld computers called mobile Internet devices (MIDs). Larger than cellphones but smaller than subnotebook PCs, MIDs are supposed to make the Internet available anytime, anywhere.

Actually, MIDs aren’t new. They’re the third major attempt to establish the nebulous product category of personal digital assistants (PDAs).

The first wave of handheld computers broke in the early 1990s. Most were underpowered, clunky tablet-size prototypes that never made it to market. The second wave crested later in the 1990s with Apple’s Newton and Palm’s initially successful Pilot. They failed to sustain their early popularity when cellphones absorbed most of their functions while adding the crucial ability to communicate.

Today, the few surviving descendants of PDAs are smartphones, such as the RIM Blackberry, Palm Treo/Centro, and especially Apple’s iPhone. They emphasize telephony but also provide email, texting, and web browsing. Generally, they substitute tiny keyboards for the handwriting recognition once considered vital for PDAs.

But smartphones have three problems: input, output, and throughput. Although young people don’t mind typing with their thumbs, it gets tiresome, and the most sought-after affluent consumers tend to be Boomers whose eyesight and dexterity are waning. Ditto for output: Smartphone screens are too tiny for comfortable web browsing. And throughput is limited by cellular networks, which need more bandwidth for serious Internet usage.

The MID prototypes I’ve seen are somewhat larger devices with bigger screens. They have touch screens with better user interfaces, like the iPhone’s. WiMAX can blanket wide areas with broadband Internet service, especially when using reassigned analog-TV frequencies.

Critics say that no mobile communications device larger than a cellphone will ever become popular, especially with men, who generally must carry such devices in pockets or belt pouches. Women, of course, have purses. But lately I see more men lugging purse substitutes—briefcases, backpacks, messenger bags,  and man bags. If MIDs conveniently combine telephony with universal Internet access, I think people will find a way to carry them. Not long ago, packing a phone everywhere seemed equally impractical.

COMMENTS:
0
TAGS: 
tom halfhill, fast forward, columns, pda, mobile internet devices, mids
comment Commentsprint Printemail EmailDeliciousDiggStumbleUponReddit
COMMENTS
  • Login or register to post comments
  • Technology News

  • Computer Cooling Fans

  • Computer Cases

  • PC Game Controllers

  • PC Games

  • Computer Hardware

  • Headphones

  • MP3 Players

  • Stream Video

  • Computer Mouse

  • Monitors

  • Motherboards

  • NAS Storage

  • Networking

  • Laptop Computers

  • DVD Burner

  • Digital Cameras

  • Portable Storage

  • Computer Accessories

  • Smartphone

  • Antivirus Software

  • Sound Cards

  • Speakers

  • Computer Systems

  • Thumb Drives

  • Video Cameras

  • Video Card Reviews

  • Water Cooling

  • Gadgets

  • Keyboards
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • RSS Feeds
  • TechBlips
  • PCHardwareBlips
  • Site Map
  • Customer Service
Future © 2008 Future US, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Source URL: http://www.maximumpc.com/article/columns/mids_pda_30_omg

Links:
[1] http://www.maximumpc.com/user/author1
[2] http://www.maximumpc.com/article/fast_forward_intels_atom_the_smallest_x86
[3] http://www.maximumpc.com/article/columns/another_one_bites_dust
[4] http://www.maximumpc.com/article/linux_on_your_smartphone