___________________________________________ title: Supporting Palm Devices in the Early Aughts date: 2024-10-28 ___________________________________________ Educational Computing at UCSD =========================================== When I first had the inkling to get a Palm Pilot in 2024, it brought back memories of my first experiences with Palm in the early aughts. After moving to San Diego from the Midwest in 2004, one of my first jobs was working for the University of California San Diego as a systems administrator for Educational Computing at the School of Medicine. The job was great from an experience perspective as I was able to work on a variety of Linux, Sun, SGI, Netware, Windows and Macintosh systems while supporting a variety of departments. HTML UCSD Educational Computing A highlight was the SGI workstations that students could use to dissect things using "virtual reality". Having seeing these systems movies like Jurassic Park made supporting them a lot of fun and gave me my first experience with Irix. HTML UCSD Atomic VisualizeR The Professional Development Center (PDC) was one of these departments, and the head of it (a woman named Peggy) insisted on using Macs and completely relied on Palm Tungsten (I think it was an E2). I would frequently go to her office and help her with any issues she had, usually related to hotsyncing her calendar and email to her device. This was more of a challenge since the insistence of using Macs meant using Palm Desktop for Mac which had it's own set of quirks. Eventually I had my own hotsync cradle at my own desk, so I could troubleshoot her device without having to go to her office, but because my system was Windows XP it wasn't 100% the same as using her Mac. I don't recall specifics, but I do remember being frustrated with the inconsistencies of hotsyncing and the frequent ways it would break. Around the same time cell phones were improving to the point where everything could be done OTA (over-the-air) and hotsyncing became obsolete as "push" technology of keeping a device always in-sync with a server started taking over. I remember setting up some Windows CE based device (maybe an iPaq?) and connecting it directly to our Exchange server over the newly deployed campus wifi. It was amazing to me at the time how it all just "worked" and signaled the future of mobile devices. While at the time supporting Peggy and her Tungsten wasn't exactly exciting, I'm glad I had the experience of working with the device at a time when it really was revolutionary and before it was completely obsoleted by our modern smartphone paradigm. It also gives a good contrast of using a Palm device today compared to back then. Even though the original Palm Desktop and devices are woefully out-of-date, there is an impressive amount of information and people still using these devices. The fact that people are still making Palm apps and tools in 2024 is a testament to the original promises of these devices and shows that even though they are old they still have a lot of life still left in them. Links =========================================== DIR Back