Alexander Gratz

MetaView, the developer who also ported XPDF to Palm OS, took the code of the unfinished PalmDOSBox and continued developing it. The new version which is availible in his blog also supports the keyboard of Palm Treo smartphones and has an on-screen keyboard for devices without keyboard.

Unfortunately, the new version doesn’t work on my Tungsten C yet. It crahes after starting the emulation mode. This could be a problem because the newer smartphones and PDAs have a new operating system (Palm OS 5.4) and a new memory management, but it could also be a general incompatibility. As soon as it works, I will try to run some applications and games on it.

Please write a comment if it works (or not) on your machine.

This topic is interesting for many Palm owners. They either wanted to run some of their old applications or games or just to play around with another kind of software. In 2006, we could write about the first x86 emulator for Palm OS. It was a port of the well-known DOS emulator DosBox, made by a developer who is a member of the Emuboard forums. The version he released was a very early beta version, and there was no way to enter text. The only way to start programs were to insert commands into a file similar to autoexec.bat; the touchscreen could hardly be used as a mouse. Unfortunately, the developer did not release any newer versions.

A lot of people wrote responses to our article where they wrote what they want to run: some people mentioned old Windows versions like 3.1 or 3.11 – which are compatible to DosBox – others mentioned productivity applications like WordStar, or games. In other cases, they asked us for help how to get the emulator running. But we couldn’t help anyone as the developer stopped working on it. At this point, I must also repeat that we cannot you help if you have problems with this program. We are no programmers, we also can only try how it runs and we also now that this version is almost unusable and that there are no new versions.

Today I talked to someone who told me that he was able to get the sourcecode and re-compile it. If he is lucky, he will soon present a new version of PalmDosBox which supports text input. At the moment, I have no further information. But as soon as the new version is availible, you can read it here.

img_4471.JPGA calibration is important for all devices which have a touchscreen. Because of calibration, the device can recognize where exactly you are tapping. In the most cases, the standard calibration program is sufficient for Palm PDAs. But if your Palm is older than 2 years, you often have problems with digitizers, sometimes even earlier. In my case, I calibrated my screen again and again, but the recognition of my touchscreen was very inaccurate. Especially the lower parts of the touchscreen were my main problem. I had almost no chance to tap onto the buttons in the lowest line (for example “Done”, “New” and “Delete” in the Note Pad). And sometimes, I couldn’t even finish the calibration.

So I had a look at PowerDigi, a calibration tool by Dmitry Grinberg (Palmpowerups.com). It uses special technologies and algorithms in order to make the recogntion of touches more accurate. Dmitry told me that even owners of Palms with cracked touchscreens may have a chance to use their device again.

There are three versions of PowerDigi (PowerDigi320, PowerDigi440 and PowerDigi480). The first version is for devices without Graffiti area (Tungsten C, Treo smartphones, …). The second one is for devices with a Graffiti area (Tungsten E2, Zire 72). The third will run on PDAs with a 320×480 screen (Palm TX, LifeDrive, …). The user interface of PowerDigi is very easy to use. There is one button for calibrating the screen and one to test the digitizer. Using the checkbox “Enabled”, you can enable PowerDigi’s calibration.

powerdigi1.jpg powerdigi2.jpg

When you start it for the first time, you have to calibrate your screen before PowerDigi can be activated. There are three calibration modes. The first one (“fast”) needs 12 taps, the second one (“medium”) 35 taps and the third one (“accurate”) 70 taps. The more taps you make the more prober is the calibration. This is the first reason why PowerDigi can help you: Palm’s calibration tool only needs three tabs.

According to the developer, the “fast” or “medium” mode should be enough in the most cases. Only if your digitizer is almost completely broken or even cracked, you may need the “accurate” calibration.

img_4474.JPG Tapping the screen 30 times and more at special positions can be very annoying. But the developer had a good idea: if you tap at a wrong position, you can repeat this tap by pressing the down button. By pressing the up button, you can cancel the calibration. I also see the second pro of PowerDigi: Palm’s calibration tool will not save your calibration if it “thinks” that the position you tapped at is too far away from the target. But this may happen if your screen is old or broken. Then you even cannot exit the calibration. In my case, I either had to do a softreset or to tap 3 mms to the left of the target so that Palm’s tool accepted the calibration (which was, of course, very decalibrated). In contrast to that, PowerDigi accepts every tap you make, no matter where you tap and where the target is.

This may help owners of broken screens, but can also be dangerous. I tried this feature and made a completely wrong calibration (e. g. when the target was in the upper part of the screen, I tapped into the lower, ..) and in this case, you cannot use your screen because PowerDigi takes your wrong calibration. Even Palm’s calibration tool could not help. So I did a warm reset and deleted PowerDigi’s calibration data (PowerDiGi2 DB.pdb). After that, I could do a soft reset again and record a new calibration.

The image below shows some grids I made in Note Pad using a ruler and my stylus, the first one using Palm’s calibration, the three other ones using PowerDigi (and its three calibration modes):

calib PowerDigi   a calibration tool for OS5 devices

As you can see, not a single line is exactly straight. This may be because of little inexactnesses during the calibration. But this is not a problem. I have used my Palm with enabled PowerDigi for some days now, and all my screen problems are gone. I can tap all buttons, even the small ones which appear in some programs. And also drawing detailed sketches is no problem anymore. When I draw a line and (later) want to continue it, I just need draw a new line starting on the old line’s end. Without PowerDigi, I couldn’t exactly reach the end of the old line – my Palm started drawing 2 mms above it.

In my opinion, PowerDigi is a must-have for all Palms with a screen that has calibration problems. Working with a decalibrated screen can be very annoying (I did it for more than one year now). According to the developer, it supports almost all Palms with OS5.x. The included install instruction manual mentions 25 different devices, but there may be support for other ones. So I recommend testing the program before buying. If it works on your device and you buy it, your screen problems should be solved. The $16.95 may sound a little bit expensive – but I think they are cheaper than buying a new digitizer. PowerDigi at Palmpowerups.

I must also praise the support for the program. Dmitry Grinberg was immediately availible on Google’s chat and could answer my questions about PowerDigi. He told me that he also offers support via e-mail, Yahoo, MSN and via phone.

Opera wrote in its Opera Mini blog that they have installed an upgrade on their proxy servers that leads to “significant performance improvements in many areas”. This means, that – according to their blog – the loading time of pages has fallen by 70%.

Please leave a comment and write if you notice a speed boost!

Palm has published a new update for their e-mail software VersaMail. Using this new version, people can access their GMail account via IMAP. This feature made problems in older VersaMail versions. It also fixes a bug when you use Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync.

If you want to install this update, you can download it over-the-air or onto your computer and then install it via HotSync.

Two people in the German Palm forum Nexave confirm that the Treo 680 smartphone supports 16 GB SDHC cards. They couldn’t find any problems – both the Palm OS card drivers and third-party software can read and write onto the card – more details will come soon. Other Treo smartphones may also be able to work with this card if they have an SDHC driver. Palm’s PDAs still have to wait for such a driver.

On January 1st 2006 we wrote that a Palm TX accepts 8 GB SD (not -HC). And even 32 GB SDHC cards are announced, which is – according to the German Wikipedia – also the upper limit of SDHC cards, whereas the English one specifies a maximum capacity of 2 TB (2048 GB).

Google’s product search shows several shops where you can buy the new card. In the most cases, the price is about 100 EUR.

safari_tp.JPGAt a store of the German phone provider “Telekom” I could test the iPhone’s Safari browser today and was surprised about it . So I shoot a photo of it displaying TamsPalm.

I already knew that the iPhone’s browser must be very good. Safari is Apple’s standard desktop web browser (and based on WebKit/KHTML/Konqueror). Palm users still have no similar browsers for their PDAs and phones (although PicselBrowser displays this site in a similar way). But this could change in 2008 as Donald Kirker announces the next version of Universe, his Palm browser. Even his old beta versions, which use his own engine, were popular. The new version will have a new UI and also use the WebKit engine.

MetaView, the maker of PalmPDF, has some small web applications on his homepage that can be run in a mobile web browser. He recommends both Blazer and the iPhone’s browser; I used NetFront.

Consumption Calculator

snap-c390413a.jpg

Use this to calculate the consumption of your car. You need to know the distance (km or miles) and the fuel your car used. Additionaly, it can also calculate the fuel cost. Possible currencies are € or $, but unfortunately NetFront can’t display the Euro symbol.

Blazometer – calculates your speed

snap-c3904178.jpg This tool calculates your current speed. You have to define a distance (kilometers, meters, miles or yards). As soon as you tap on “Start”, the timer in the timer field starts running. Another field shows the current quotient of your distance and time. After you have covered your distance, just tap on “Stop”.

There are also three web applications written by others which also work in Blazer (and NetFront): a world-wide Wireless LAN directory, a weather forecast and a dictionary lookup (which supports many dictionaries with, for example, medical, legal or financial terms).

This small tools are useful if you have a smartphone with a data plan and don’t want too much programs installed on your device. But I have to say that I prefer “real” applications (my Tungsten C is not always connected to the internet and has enough memory).

Do you know other good web-based tools (for Palm browsers)?

The TamsPalm management has some ideas what we could do here apart from writing news and reviews. We once had both a forum and a wiki running which had many visitors. But we had to move to another web hosting service and soon we realized that our backups were not good enough – both sites were damaged. After that, nothing else happened to this sites. Now we have new ideas which we are going to realize (probably in this order):

  • Forum — one sub-forum was a place for TamsPalm readers to talk about articles, problems or what they want to read. A similar forum covered our PalmWiki. For users of Tamoggemon products, we had a support forum. Additionaly, we had internal forums for authors.

    The new forum will probably have the same sub-forums AND forums for TamsPPC, TamsS60 and a forum for developers.

  • TamsPalm.de – the German issue of TamsPalm is currently placed on a free German webhoster called Pytal. While it maybe a great service for private users (unlimited space, PHP, MySQL etc.), we will need something different. TamsPalm.de was more than one time offline and now the webhoster has set forced ads for all sites.

    TamsPalm.de was already here for some weeks, on tamspalm-de.tamoggemon.com, but then our webhoster deleted this subdomain by accident. It will move to the same domain again where we will also cover Pocket PC articles – and maybe some other platforms in the future.

    Unfortunately I have to say that some authors will probably leave our team, but I am sure that new ones will come!

  • PalmWiki was an information database for all Palm-related topics. Everyone could help and edit the contents. The database was damaged during our move to the new web hoster, but I have good news for everyone: I could save many of the pages, so we will not have to start from scratch again.
  • The first of all our blogs was TamsPalm, then TamsPPC and TamsS60 came – what will be next? — there are many other mobile operating systems. So we will inform you about all new projects as soon as they are ready.

MetaViewSoft, who has also ported PalmPDF to Palm OS, has published another new application for Palm OS: 2Cool4U is an address book browser with a behaviour similar to the TouchFLO technology of some new HTC (T-Mobile MDA etc.) phones: you can use your fingers to scroll through the address list.

Some Pocket PC users know this technology already: some new HTC mobile phones have not only a launcher using it, you can also scroll in (almost) all applications using your finger. And Palm OS users may also know it from PicselBrowser (this video shows it on a Pocket PC, the Palm version is similar).

2Cool4U is “only” an address book, but it works very well on my Tungsten C. After tapping on a name, your phone (or PDA) can dial this number or send a short message to it. A second column in the list shows “…” for each name. When you tap there, you can choose another phone number or send a mail, fax, visit the homepage or open it in your Contacts application.

MetaView’s blog entry has more details and a download for you…

banner kubuntu Kubuntu and Palm supportCurrently, the developers of the Linux distribution Kubuntu are asking their users which additional applications could be integrated into the next version of the distribution. People which have created an account on the Wiki page can write new propositions or add checkmarks to existing ones.

As I am looking for a solution which enables me to sync my Palm (and Pocket PC) with my Linux computer, I added “a good and reliable solution to synchronize data with Palm PDAs and Pocket PCs“. There are a few programs (KPilot, for instance, or SynCE for Pocket PCs), but none of them really worked here. One didn’t find my PDA, another one cleared all databases (!). Syncing my Pocket PC was even more difficult, I had to do much on a console (which I hate) and it never worked stable. And after a reboot, I could do the whole procedure again.

What I want is a synchronization solution which needs one little and easy configuration. After that, it should work stable and reliable. The next version of Kubuntu will be released next year. If there will be a better PDA support then, I will probably install it on my computer.

Do you want this, too? Or how do you sync your Palm with Linux? If you are also interested in this feature, you can write that onto the Wiki page, or, if you don’t want to register there, you can write a comment here.

Megasoft2000 has released a new version of its wireless file manager WLink. WLink allows you to browse folders and files in a Windows network environment, on a Bluetooth device and on FTP servers.

In addition to many bugfixes, the new version has both a scanner for Bluetooth and Wireless LAN devices and a traffic meter for its internet connections.

http://www.megasoft2000.com/product.php?product=WLink&division=palm

Sony wrote this PIM management app for one of his latest Palm PDAs: the TH55. The program has singularly features, for example you can write handwritten notes or put photos into the calendar. You can find some good screenshots here.

Of course, a lot of people tried to get it working on other PDAs. There are some discussions on 1src where you can find manuals how to get it working on older Sony Clie PDAs, but nobody managed it to get it completely working on Palm PDAs (only very small parts of it – unusable).

Some days ago Dmitry Grinberg, “software engineer and hacker”, found a way to use the application on his T|X. According to him, he had to patch some files and write new libraries.

I have started a thread on 1src about CLIE Organizer. If you also want to get it for your Palm, please write a message into this thread:

http://www.1src.com/forums/showthread.php?t=136912

The Palm Blog has just announced that Palm’s newest smartphone, the Centro, is now also availible in Ruby Red.

 Palm Centro availible in red

It is sold for $99 with a two-year Sprint contract.

Palm Blog; Palm Centro

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