Zaurus on Internet ================== I still have the SHARP Zaurus SL-C3200. A cute tiny clamshell PDA - actually a tiny Linux laptop. I have got it when it was already obsolete and used it little. It's the most expensive model with the biggest RAM (128 MB, I think), the bigges storage space (the 6GB HDD) and - of course - the biggest power consumption. It runs the "Cacko ROM" which is a Linux with the QTOPIA-based environment (so an old QT stuff). Runs well and it's reasonably fast. The swap space on the HDD can be configured and used. On the cost of battery life, of course. The GUI is thus not X11-based and the terminal emulator (with reasonable font size) is of non-standard size. And the CPU is an old ARM (from times when the ARM was not very common). That made porting of software a bit problematic. Thus some things exes, some not. For example, I never managed to get the GNU Octave to run here. And I have never found (nor sucessuffly compiled) the Lynx WWW browser. On Saturday I decided to undust the device and try how (if) it can connect to the Interned today. I do have an CF-sized Ethernet adapter which is supported on the Cacko so I inserted it, connected the cable and... got connected! The software is the main problem. I can use the old Links here. And there are the NetFront and the Opera. It seems no one of the supports gopher protocol and the http-only WWW pages are rare these days (Logout has one [1] but it is Czech Language only). So the Gopher is what I need. Fortunately the Floodgap [2] (the Cameron Kaiser's site) has the gopher proxy and it work well on the old NetFront. So... the Zaurus can connect to The internet (easily) and can access anything available on the Gopher. Now the problem: the battery life. Batteries used in early 2000s devices weren't nor the biggest nor the greatest. Some hours of battery life were posssible and the machines were often able to survive weeks in suspend. Now with the old battery I can get 2 hours of surfing at max. That's might be OK as my Nokia 770 (marketed once as the "Interned tabled") was able to stay charged for months in off mode (a some form of deep sleep as alarms worked in this mode), a week in suspend, up to 6 hours in offline use and up to 2 hours on the WiFi (there was no ethernet option). So up to 2 hour of web browsing, too. Of course, if you have a wired ethernet you probably have a power outlet, too. So the battery is not so big issue in this type of use. But I hope that after a few ful cycles the battery will became more cooperative... References: [1] http://tecxhnomorous.eu [2] http://floodgap.com