Sony Clie PEG-UX50 (retro review) ================================= Disclaimer: I'm still being ill and unable to do anything useful, I have some time to play but I can be too much negative in my opinions. After some cleaning we have found the CLIE PEG-UX50 at home. I got it for my wife several years ago as a replacement of her beloved Palm T|X. The poor T|X has several issues accumulated which rendered it beyond repair. So I decided to get a machine of similar class (color screen, WiFi) but of a reportedly greater build quality: a device build in Japan. This particular model I selected because of its QWERTY keyboard: my wife never liked the Graffiti input. Unfortunately, my wife found the device uncomfortable for her and abandoned it. As the battery wasn't charged for a long time, it would be unfair to discuss battery life here. By the way, the battery is "integrated" but can be related by removing of several screws and pulling its cable for the socket: no destructive operations nor soldering is needed (unlike the Palm T|X, for example). Hardware ======== Well, there are some strange features: the device has to be charged via impractical dock. But the USB sync cable cannot be connected to the dock: it has to be directly to the device. There is no up-down button (as in ANY normal Palm) but a small roller which is much less comfortable. For a Palm-compatible device, it has a lot of strange shapes, ports and buttons. There is a backlit keyboard: it looks great but it's non-flat surface and unusual keys make it less useful (the key top is in the level of keyboard surface - thus key press requires to push the key inside keyboard, which is strange). The device shape reminds me the clamshell Sharp Zauri - but they are much more conservative. There is a lot of rounded surfaces, a rotating camera (640x480 but with nice colors) or a telescopic stylus (but too thin for my liking). On the other side, it lacks part of standard Palm hardware buttons (there are only three: Web, Email and DateBook). In theory, only one is lacking (DateBook, AddressBook, ToDo and Memo) but in practice it makes some applications (read: games) useless as the expected buttons are not in their places or even are not present. The positive thing is that the screen (640x480), albeit smaller than the one on clamshell Zauri, is very good (good colors, nice brightness and so). But there is one issue: it's a PalmOS thing so rotation of screen was probably hard to implement. Thus the screen is always used in a landscape mode. It's not nice because the screen hardware can be rotated in order to hide the keyboard. In this configuration it can be expected that screen should work in portrait mode but it doesn't: it's rotated for 180 degrees so it is still in landscape (the Sharp Zaurus is better here: it can work in landscape mode). The Clie is relatively small but writing Graffiti (2) strokes on the side of the screen is not too comfortable. Of course, do not expect that the device will accept standard cards (SD/MMCs): it's using SONY's MemoryStick format (fortunately there are adapters...). Software ======== It's less or more normal PalmOS 5 device. There are some SONY-specific pieces of code (an image viewer, a camera application,...) but not too much. The camera application is nice, easy to use and the camera itself is of relatively high quality (for it's time and for a PDA: images are nice but they are only up to 640x480). Some of programs can work with this resolution but some work only in 480x480 and they leave the rest for an emulated silkboard (even some SONY-originated program do this!). The integrated music player ignores files copied on the MemoryStick. Probably more magic has to be done (I have an original CD but I use Linux for data transfer so there is no use for the original programs). After some searching I have found the DioPlayer [1]. Probably a basic program but sufficient for the purpose. I installed few of my favorite Palm programs: Plucker, KeyZ, Metro, CSpotRun, EasyCalc. The SmallBasic works, too. So far, no problems. I will probably try to install some games. I tried some but I noticed the problem with HW keys. My opinion: =========== It's not a bad device. In it's time it was probably useful also for Internet browsing and for e-mails (it has an integrated WiFi and Bluetooth). For a clamshell thing it's pretty small (it's smaller than the Palm III in any direction), it can run most of PalmOS software. If you able to live with Palm-compatible desktop software (a calendar/TODO app) then it is still an excellent pocket PIM device, also useful for note taking and for music playback. There are also specialized Palm-based applications which some people use. Also some BASIC programming is quite easy there. Actually, It's smaller than a comparable Sharp Zaurus but more limited (being a Palm OS device while contemporary Zauri ran Linux-based OS). For people who prefer Palm applications it is probably a good choice. References: [1] http://freeware.palmclub.nl/52/12-dioplayer.html