HACKER Q&A
📣 fuzztester

Anyone using a PDA nowadays, for tasks, light note taking, etc.?


I'm thinking of getting one, either new or used. Used to have a Palm V and then a Palm Zire earlier. They got damaged after some years of use. Users, please give recommendations, and pros and cons you found, also what all you use it for. I will be googling, but wanted personal recommendations. Thanks in advance.


  👤 dredmorbius Accepted Answer ✓
For myself:

- Bullet journal. It's not an artistic statement, it's a tool for productivity. No battery-life issues, works in full daylight, no software UI/UX issues, and is automatically archived annually.

- Index cards. I keep a small stash in the inside pocket of the BuJo, as well as elsewhere (home, office, tucked into my book bag). When inspiration strikes or information needs annotating, that gets recorded. Cards are filed in boxes (roughly 3,000 cards per box). Not as searchable as digital records, but the process of trawling through the archive itself is a powerful mnemonic.

- Tickler file / 43 folders. One for each day of the month (31 folders) 12 for the year (43). Works well with the index-card method given a dedicated card file box and 43 tabbed dividers. Manages recurring / planned future events. Can be fed by / to the two systems above.

- E-ink tablet. Used for reading books & articles and listening to podcasts. This is the natural digital successor to the PDA in my view, though it shares numerous failings of the latter: software-mediated, battery-life issues (though e-ink can provide far longer life than emissive displays, in practice when used for tasks other than strictly book-reading, it requires a daily charge, perhaps more). Though there are many apps for various tasks, these tend to be silos, are end-of-lifed with alarming frequency, and the entire platform is one huge privacy tarpit. That said, handwritten note-taking systems can be useful. They have worse search characteristics than index cards however.

- Note-taking / personal wiki such as emacs org-mode, vimwiki, ikiwiki, Mediawiki, etc. These offer powerful capabilities beyond pen-and-paper systems, though typically require at a minimum a laptop (or notebook) computer, preferably a desktop and/or server. Keep complex notes and concepts, synced amongst multiple systems. Inherent cross-referencing which is amazingly useful.


👤 navjack27
I've thought about getting an old palm but still haven't yet but I have messed with emulators on my PC and phone. I have fond memories of using them as a teen. I'd love to have a cheap but good Dragonball based Palm and an ARM Palm to mess with and see if I could end up using them in my day to day somehow usefully.

👤 cc101
I've used an Apple iPod Touch since they came out. Unfortunately, Apple has stopped producing them. I'll use mine as long as I can. I like it a lot.

👤 jschveibinz
Aside: check out the “hipster PDA” concept using index cards. It’s actually useful and more engaging. Cheers.