Comdex 2000 had over one million square feet of floor
space, a new record. It had over 2300 different companies
exhibiting. There were lots of booths showing the latest in computer
technology and crowds of people.
I wandered around the Comdex exhibit floors with Larry Clark, who
drove up from San Diego for the week. We had a great time at the
show and at the parties.
We ran into Milt Hull at the Novell party that featured Dana
Carvey. The elections gave him plenty of material. It was a great
show.
Palm Computing had a special deal for those of us who were
registered as press. They lent us a brand new Palm IIIc, the color
unit with 8MB of memory. At the end of the show we were given an
option of giving it back or buying it at a special low price. Not
surprisingly, Milt and I both ended up buying them at the end of the
week.
Kodak had a similar deal to lend us a digital camera that clipped
on to the Palm III. The camera took decent 640x480 images but not
good enough for me to want to keep it. Milt bought one and I think
he will have a review in this issue. A second Kodak offer was
available for a 4 megapixel camera that Larry tried but did not buy
after the trial.
Included on the Palm was a custom guide to Comdex, created by NearSpace. It had all of the
exhibitors and could show you where they were on a floor map. It
was, without a doubt, the most useful software I have seen in a long
time (even though it has a limited lifetime). They target small
areas and do special maps for them. Typical applications are trade
shows, shopping centers, and college campuses. Check these guys out
if you have a need for a high-tech map.
Another program included on the Palm was a city guide by Vindigo. This free city guide
program provides current information about where to eat, shop, or
play. They currently only support selected cities but they are
adding more all the time. The guide for Las Vegas was excellent. I
used it to find a terrific restaurant in downtown Las Vegas on
Thursday when there were no parties.
Palm was showing off
their entire product line, including their latest low-end model, the
M100. Palm currently has a 74 percent of the market share of the
worldwide personal companion handheld device market. We hope to get
them to come show us the product line during the next year. We will
be featuring portable computing products in a future issue of
Sacra Blue.
Handspring
(the company created by the original designers of the Palm) was
showing their line of Palm-compatible devices. This included their
new color Visor, to compete with the Palm IIIc, and a high-end model
to compete with the Palm Vx. Another attention grabber was the
VisorPhone, an expansion module that turns a visor into a cell
phone. I hope we can get them to come to a meeting.
Franklin Electronic
Publishers, Inc. showed off a new family of eBook readers. These
are larger than my Palm IIIc and that makes them easier to read
from; they are about the size of a paperback. I see one of these
devices in your future. I expect to develop an eBook version of
Sacra Blue so that you have an excuse to get one. I
look forward to getting them to present to the group so that you can
see for yourself.
Healthetech
makes an interesting program for Palm devices, called DietLog, that
keeps track of your calorie intake and how fast you burn them. This
program could be the one that gets you off that weight plateau that
you are stuck on.
DataViz makes a Palm
program called "Documents To Go" that lets you view Word and Excel
files. This may be the program that justifies a Palm instead of the
costlier Pocket PCs. I hope to do a full review very soon.
Seiko
Instruments USA Inc. makes a very interesting Palm accessory. It
consists of a notebook with a socket for a Palm, a small notepad,
and a special pen. Everything you write on the notepad is stored on
the Palm. It is a lot easier to draw on than a Palm. If you like to
brainstorm on paper, this one is for you.
DeLorme has
moved their excellent GPS-assisted map system to the Palm platform.
I think this is more convenient than laptop-based systems. I expect
to get the software and GPS hardware for a full product review. I
will try to get them to a meeting as well.
For Palm users wishing for a keyboard, check out Matias Corporation. They
makes a small keyboard for Palm devices to let you enter information
faster. The keyboard is about the size of a Palm device, only
thinner. It features half the keys of a keyboard with enough spacing
to let you type. The other half is reached with a special shift key.
There is a short cable version, and one that reaches from one hand
to the other that you wear. It is strange but I suspect that it will
work once you get used to it.
Paranoid Palm users may be interested in MemorySafe by Northstar Mobile. This
small device plugs onto the Palm and does a memory dump. Then you
have a copy of the contents of your Palm in a module about the size
of a car alarm key fob. This would be great if you are traveling far
without a laptop to sync to.
The folks from TechSmith were there, showing
the latest versions of SnagIt and Camtasia. SnagIt is the excellent
screen capture program that you saw last month if you went to the
meeting. A review is elsewhere in this issue. Camtasia goes even
further in screen capture technology by capturing movies of programs
that are running on a computer. I will be reviewing Camtasia in the
future.
One Voice
Technologies, Inc. has created Ivan, a free program that uses
Microsoft Agent software to let you browse the web through voice
commands. They offer a starter set that gets you a headset
microphone for only $8.75. This one will make a great presentation.
I do not know if they will bring the guy in the globe costume.
LIPSinc makes software that
uses speech synthesis and real-time animation. This could be used to
create virtual salespeople. Interesting technology, but they would
not discuss the pricing.
Intelliquis makes a
mass mailer program for sending e-mail announcements. I got a copy
while at the show that I hope to use for sending out the newsletter
notices. This will give me more freedom in the look of the
message.
Ontrack Data
International, Inc. was showing their SystemSuite, a suite of
utilities, and the EasyRecovery program, a program to recover lost
files. (It can even retrieve files after a disk has been
reformatted.) You may know OnTrack for their ZipMagic program. I
took a copy of EasyRecovery back with me from the show and hope to
print a review in the near future.
I.R.I.S. makes
IRISPen, a USB pen reader. It reads printed text and translates it
via OCR into something you can put in documents. It can not only
read text from a printed page but it can also read various barcode
formats. I hope we can get a review copy to try in the real world
and then bring them to a meeting.
Wizcom Technologies
Inc., makes QuickLink, an optical character reader that lets you
read text from a page and transfer it into your computer. It
downloads into your computer via a serial port or optical interface
(that can send the information to a Palm). An optional USB interface
is available. This would be a good gift for that child just entering
college.
IRobot was showing
off a great mobile robot that can be controlled via the Internet. It
has a camera mounted on the Robot's head that you can change in
direction and height. They claim that it could be used to let
customers take a tour of your facility. It currently can only wander
up to 150 feet from the main controller, but I am sure that will get
better in the next generation. At six thousand dollars, they are not
going to let me have one for reviews. If you always wanted a robot,
this Linux- based system could be a good place to start.
A consumer division of Intel Corporation was
showing off the latest versions of Intel Any Point phone line and
wireless home network. This is an excellent alternative to pulling
cat-5 cables through your home. I hope to get them to send someone
to one of our meetings soon.
Proxim also makes a
wireless home networking system that looks very promising. Their
latest products are a USB device that puts you on a wireless
network, and an Internet gateway that connects to your cable modem
or DSL. Imagine connecting all of your home computers without any
special wiring. The product manager lives in Placerville so we
should be able to get him to a meeting without any problem.
Are you ready for smell-o-vision? DigiScents will be shipping a
device to add scents to computer games in Q2 or Q3 of 2001. I
imagine it will also end up interfacing to DVD players so you can
smell movies. We will try to get these guys to come out when they
are actually shipping.
Gyration makes a
mouse with a pair of gyroscopes in it that detect directional
changes. Their target market is for presentations but I think it has
a broader market. They have had a version available for a while but
the new version is cooler. I hope to get one of these to review when
it is actually released.
If you have tried to use a laptop in your car, then you
will be interested in the products from Hoodman Corporation. They make
hoods for laptops that block most of the sunlight and make it
possible to see the screen in bright light. It also makes it
possible to use your laptop on an airplane without your neighbor
seeing what is on your screen. (Of course that will make them more
curious). The hood is nylon with a spring metal form that collapses
to a small size. Early next year, they will have a palm-sized
computer hood. If you want to use your laptop and a GPS device on
your next trip, you should consider one of these before the trip.
For the travelers among you, check the products being
offered by Portable Energy
Products, Inc. They make a lead acid sealed battery that
provides supplemental power for laptops or other battery operated
devices. This extends the time you can spend away from an outlet.
You have heard of Belkin-they make great cables. But
you may not know that they also make a lot of other accessories.
They offer everything from laptop cases to USB hubs. I expect to get
some of their products to review. If we can figure out what from
their line would make a good presentation, we will bring them in for
a meeting.
I want to get Creative
Labs, Inc. to come show us their product line. That includes
their NOMAD Jukebox (a disk-based player that can hold 100 hours of
MP3 music) and BlasterKey MP3 (a keyboard for learning and playing
music). I have tried to get them before, and maybe this time I will
succeed.
Q-Tek International,
LLC is offering a small USB storage device that can hold up to
one gigabyte of information. This device has no moving parts and is
just a little bigger than a ballpoint pen. To your computer, it
looks like a removable drive that you can read and write. Great way
to carry backup data. I do not think they will let us have one to
play with. Such a pity.
I found a strange service from Peoplestreet. They have
created an online service that keeps your business card updated on
other peoples' computers. When you change jobs, it updates
everyone's database to reflect your new information. While I am not
sure I want a self-updating business card on my computer, it is
noteworthy. Go check out their Web site and tell me what you
think.
zTrace, Inc. offers a free
service that helps you recover your laptop when it is stolen. They
say 5000 laptops are stolen every week in the US. That is over 700 a
day, or one every 2 minutes. I will be evaluating this service to
see if it is worth recommending. In additional to the free service
they offer a variety of other services that you have to pay for.
Expect more information on this company in the future.
McAfee has
launched a division, McAfee.com, that offers their anti-virus
technology as a Web-based service rather than just a software
package. I hope to convince them to come to a meeting. If they can
not come, I want to get a copy of the movie that they showed during
Comdex.
I think I have written enough. There were lots of other neat
products for future articles. Expect some great reviews and
presentations in 2001.