Yesterday
wardlejew understandably mistook the shiny, illuminated device atop my right speaker for an iPod. But prior to Apple's success with little "i" capitol "P" devices, Compaq released the iPAQ.
I paid $400 for my Compaq iPAQ 3650 (claims its a 3700 in the onboard asset info) in 2002. Today Amazon is selling these wonderous little machines for $522.
The iPAQ's 240x320 screen size predates most current popular handheld device, has a 206MHz Intel StrongARM processor with 64MB of RAM which is shared between system memory and system storage, 32MB ROM and 6MB of user storage. It is expandable, and wireless capable (with expansion pack engaged). The battery is dead but sells for a mere $10. Internet Explorer is built right in Microsoft's PocketPC but it will also run linux.
It has a built-in voice recorder, speaker (which also acts as a touch-pad mouse) and syncs with things like Outlook. My wife used it to play Solitaire in bed when she was pregnant.
So own a piece of history, and save $500.
Who wants it?

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I paid $400 for my Compaq iPAQ 3650 (claims its a 3700 in the onboard asset info) in 2002. Today Amazon is selling these wonderous little machines for $522.
The iPAQ's 240x320 screen size predates most current popular handheld device, has a 206MHz Intel StrongARM processor with 64MB of RAM which is shared between system memory and system storage, 32MB ROM and 6MB of user storage. It is expandable, and wireless capable (with expansion pack engaged). The battery is dead but sells for a mere $10. Internet Explorer is built right in Microsoft's PocketPC but it will also run linux.
It has a built-in voice recorder, speaker (which also acts as a touch-pad mouse) and syncs with things like Outlook. My wife used it to play Solitaire in bed when she was pregnant.
So own a piece of history, and save $500.
Who wants it?

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Prior to that, he asked me if he could load some PC-based software onto the device. I told him no, he couldn't do that because the PC-based software wasn't written for the iPAQ. Curiously enough, the PC-based software retailed for close to $400 and they did make a cartridge that would pop into the iPAQ. Trouble was, they were asking the same price for the mobile version.
I should add that the PC-based software that he wanted to run was so old that it shipped on 16 floppies(!) but yet it was written in VB.
Years after that, I came home from college one day. He had purchased the "new and improved" version of the software that had all the bells and whistles. (Deluxe package) Turns out, he paid ~$400 for that iteration of the package.
It still had the same kludgy, ugly, VB driven interface. Yuk!
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