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6/10/2004 - Archive

•  Ancestry Daily News, 10 June 2004
•  Rootsworks PDA 2005: Accessories

Ancestry Daily News, 10 June 2004
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In This Issue: June 10, 2004

New Records for Ancestry.com Subscribers

Databases Updated Today
Jay, Franklin County, Maine History
(Images online)
Bristol, Plainville, and Terryville, Connecticut City Directory, 1951 (Images online)

Historical Newspapers Collection
Herald Despatch (Decatur, Ill.)
1890-92 and 1896-98

U.K. and Ireland Records Collection
Pembrokeshire, Wales Families (Images online)

 

Today's Map: War of 1812 Campaigns

 

RootsWorks: "PDA 2005: Accessories"
by Beau Sharbrough

  Ancestry Quick Tip
  Fast Fact
Headlines from the Upcoming Ancestry Magazine
  Clipping of the Day
 

Ancestry Product Pick
Ancestry Magazine One-Year Subscription Genealogical Computing One-Year Subscription

Pallot's Marriage Index



Searchable images of London area marriage records, spanning 1780 to 1837.

Thought for Today

How easy is it for one benevolent being to diffuse pleasure around him, and how truly is a kind heart a fountain of gladness, making everything in its vicinity to freshen into smiles.

— Washington Irving 1783–1859

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RootsWorks

PDA 2005: Accessories
by Beau Sharbrough

"The only thing that separates us from the animals is our ability to accessorize."

— Clairee Belcher
(Steel Magnolias, 1989)

Imagine buying a product for one price, and then paying four times as much for add-on products so that you could use it. Then stop imagining and look at the eye-popping accessories for handheld computers, or Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs). Warning: This article includes prices and they are only estimates.

Category: Connectivity
You can get a nice GPS for your PDA for about $200, and go Bluetooth (a very short range radio connection) for between $300 and $350. Why would a person want to use a GPS with a PDA? GPS stands for Global Positioning Satellite, and it is used for navigation. A PDA with a GPS can make a great city map. You can mount the PDA on the dash and use it to help you drive to the bank to borrow money to pay for your PDA accessories.

Once in a great while, I still have a use for my old analog modem. It still works to dial up my ISP while I'm out of town, and download e-mail. Those modems are disappearing, being replaced by Wireless Internet and WiFi. Gartner Dataquest estimates that by 2006, 60% of PDAs and 5% of cell phones will have WiFi connections. WiFi connections are wireless connection to Local Area Networks (LANs). Many people have wireless in their homes and offices, and there is a hot spot in just about every airport and coffeehouse in the U.S. You might have to pay for access to airport and coffeehouse networks, but the price of the service is reasonable compared to the price of being out of touch.

Bluetooth is a wireless protocol for connecting computers, phones, and peripherals. Its use is growing rapidly. It was named for an old Viking king, and that's as close as it comes to having anything to do with blue or teeth. My cell phone has a Bluetooth feature, and I was able to find an inexpensive Bluetooth adapter that connects to my laptop's USB port. I can sync my Outlook contacts and appointments from my laptop with my cell phone. You can use the same adapter to perform the same functions with a PDA. But there is more to this Bluetooth thing than syncing calendars and address books.

Bluetooth is quickly becoming the preferred method of connection for every peripheral device. It's faster than infrared (IR), and it's almost as easy to use. Manufacturers don't have to include wires and plugs and jacks in their equipment, and customers don't have to look at a medusa-like nest of wires for their peripheral devices.

On the opposite side of the technology fence from Bluetooth are the cables. USB cables, sync cables, and power cables are not only useful, but many PDA users need extras. I don't like to carry a charger to work and set it up--I keep a second one there. I carry a charger for traveling. They also make chargers that plug into your car's cigarette lighter.

The last item in the connectivity category is the Printboy ($99)--an IR printing connection that attaches to the parallel port on any printer (as long as that printer has a parallel port).

Category: Input Devices
The most-used input device is either the stylus or the thumbpad. You can buy both as add-on devices. PDAs come with a plastic stylus, but the metal add-ons feel better in the hand. Some of them also double as a pen, so if you have your PDA in your pocket, you always have a pen, too. Who knows, your kids might decide to tell you their phone number.

I'm partial to the folding keyboards. They were $99 for the longest time, but Amazon (www.amazon.com) was selling them for under $20 over Memorial Day weekend. Palm makes an infrared wireless keyboard, too, but I can't get one for my old Palm Vx.

Thumb pads are tiny keyboards that have all of the letters like a typewriter. Some people can type so fast with both thumbs that it looks like they are playing a pocket video game. The words just spill out.

If you don't have a scanner for your PDA, they might not let you into the men's grill at the country club. If that happens to you, think about adding a bar code reader ($425) or a business card scanner ($200).

Category: Other
The accessorizing ladies in Steel Magnolias would not think of going out without a leather case. Their husbands would prefer the metal cases. But don't stop there. You can buy a portfolio for your PDA that holds notebook paper and pens and other cool stuff. I have seen people use DayTimer forms in those things--as if the planner in the PDA was not reliable enough. Most of those people were wearing a belt and suspenders.

No discussion of PDA accessories would be complete without discussing screen protectors. They are an adhesive-backed clear or matte film that you put on your PDA screen to keep from scratching it--or accidentally marking it. Think about using it on your camera phone screen, too. These things only cost a few cents each and are worth every penny.

Memory expansion cards such as secure digital, compact flash, and memory sticks are so necessary that they don't seem like accessories. You never have enough memory, and you'll buy one--or two.

All seriousness aside, here are some accessories I have never seen anyone use, but I plan to try them all. If you do slide presentations using PowerPoint, you'll want to think about the iGo Pitch ($250). It is a connector that goes between the PDA and the projector that is not included. I might not buy the MP3 upgrade kit--it's just a memory card and a set of headphones ($99). I definitely won't buy the super earplugs for music ($300). My parents would get hours of PDA pleasure from the clip-on screen magnifier ($40), which is a magnifying glass about the size of the PDA, and a clip-on attachment that holds it about four inches in front of the screen. Be the first one on your block to get one.

If you're enjoying a lot of MP3 music on your PDA and you want to listen to it on your car or home stereo, think about getting the FM Transmitter. It's not a radio. It sends your music to your radio! ($40).

Let's see, I bought a hypothetical PDA for $300, and then I spent ... carry the one ... about $1500 on accessories. But I'm drawing the line at the DayTimer calendar, there's no way I'm spending money on that.

What Else?
Sony announced that they will not make any new Clie models for the U.S., while they "reassess the direction" of the PDA market. They will continue to support existing products, and will continue to make new products for Japan. They expect current stock to sell for several months. The announcement states that it's simply a regrouping through the end of the year.

No matter how long they are out of the market, Sony's time-out means that Palm is suddenly Apple--the only people who make machines that run their program. Microsoft is going to benefit the most. Palm is going to look like the maker of an incompatible product, since all of the other PDA makers use Windows Mobile.

The real trend is that the PDA as we know it--for Microsoft or Palm or anyone else--is nearing the end of the line. There is a growing need for a mobile office device that communicates with home office devices--phone, GPS, and camera. No one makes such a device today. Sub notebooks are colliding with big PDAs and with wireless game machines. Something's gotta change and Sony will be involved.

At the end of the summer, look for some great back-to-school specials on Sony PDAs.

More Information
For links and more information about PDA Accessories, please see the RootsWorks site at www.rootsworks.com/pda2005.

If you want to discuss your PDA challenges, please drop by the RootsWorks Forums at www.rootsworks.com/forums. Registration is free, and I'd be interested to know what kinds of issues you are facing.


Beau Sharbrough is a product manager at Ancestry.com. His articles contain his own views and opinions and do not reflect any corporate policy or statement by the company. The RootsWorks series of articles focuses on genealogical applications for generic technologies. Stop by www.rootsworks.com/forums and discuss this or any topic related to the use of technology in family history. Tell us about your experiences. Please note that Beau cannot assist you with your individual computer and genealogy problems. Visit the RootsWorks website www.rootsworks.com for links to previous articles and Beau's lecture schedule (next stop: Boulder, Colorado, in July).

Copyright 2004, MyFamily.com

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Footnote Stays on Copies
When I send out family information, I do something similar to what DJ wrote in the May 6th Quick Tip. I make a footnote on every page that includes my name, address, e-mail address, phone number, and the date. Then when the pages are duplicated by the receiver, my information will always be on any copies.

Jacquie Schattner
Palatine, Illinois


Thanks to Jacquie for today's Quick Tip! If you have a tip you would like to share with researchers, you can send it to ADNeditor@ancestry.com.

Quick Tips may be reprinted, with credit to the submitter, in other Ancestry publications, so if you do not want your tip included in a publication other than the Ancestry Daily News and Ancestry Weekly Digest, please state so clearly in your message.

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Fast Fact

Headlines from
the Upcoming
Ancestry
Magazine

Here's what you'll find in the July/August 2004 issue of Ancestry Magazine:

Features
- "Your Creative Family Tree," by Connie Myers.
You've worked hard to build your family tree. Now you can show it off with pride, creativity, and elegance.

- "England and Wales: Getting More from Online Censuses," by Sherry Irvine, CGRS, FSA Scot. Online censuses from the United Kingdom allow family historians to access invaluable information about their ancestors in less time than ever before.

- "The Many Faces of Family History," by Curt B. Witcher, MLS, FUGA.
Teachers, adoptees, medical professionals, even prison inmates are using genealogical research methods to fulfill their ambitions and dreams.

- "Historic Maps: The World at Your Fingertips,"
by Michael L. Strauss, AG.
These unique historic maps are sure to enrich your journey through the roadways and byways of personal history.

- "The New OneWorldTree at Ancestry.com," by Beau Sharbrough. This new offering at Ancestry.com promises to revolutionize the way we work with online family trees.

Columns
Back to Basics: "The Art of a Successful Research Trip," by Paula Stuart Warren, CGRS. Prepare for a productive research experience on the road with these great tips from a professional genealogist.

Research Cornerstones: "What Was in Your Ancestor's Estate?"
by Roseann Reinemuth Hogan, Ph.D. Open a window into the daily life of your more prominent ancestors with the help of estate inventories.

Digging Deeper: "The Evolution of Published Genealogies," by Laura G. Prescott. A bountiful harvest of relationships and background material await the careful researcher who investigates published family histories.

Technology: "Age-Friendly Computing," by Mark Howells. As sight, hearing, and hand coordination decrease with age, computer users will find an assortment of computer "fixes" to compensate.

Case Study: "From Ski Slopes to Local Cemetery," by Marcy Carter-Lovick.
By chance, this family's favorite vacation spot turned into a research mecca for the family's history.

Bare Bones: "Leave No Stone Unturned," by Glennis Wasmer

Editor's Notes

Readers Voices

What's New

Community

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Clipping of the Day

From the Ohio Repository (Canton, Ohio), 10 June 1831, page 5:

Rail Ways.--The Baltimore Gazette, in publishing the fifth annual report of the directors of the Liverpool & Manchester rail way, remarks: "If there be found one individual upon whose mind any doubt yet lingers, as to the superior advantages of this system of intercommunication, those doubts upon reading this document must forever be extinguished."

After subjecting the road to the trial of experiments, both for heavy and light transportation for six months, the following deeply interesting facts are ascertained and fully established.

1. The superior advantages afforded by this means of communication had, within six weeks from the opening of the Rail Way, increased the number of passengers on this road alone to 1200 per day--whereas all the means of travelling heretofore open by stage coaches and mails between the two towns, and which were ample for the public convenience were incapable of conveying above 700 daily.

2. The time in travelling the route had been reduced from four hours to less than 1 1-2 hours.

3. It had been ascertained by experience, that of all modes of travelling yet attempted this has proved the least subject to danger; out of one hundred and thirty thousand passengers booked at the office of the company, besides vast numbers taken up along the line, but two accidents had occurred.

4. The superior adaption of rail ways to heavy as well as light transportation, is fully demonstrated--the road having already reduced the carriage from 15s. per ton, the price heretofore changed on the canal, to 10s., and the charge of conveying passengers from 10 to 5s.

5. The capabilities of the road for general transportation is almost unlimited. By all the various modes of conveyance between Liverpool and Manchester heretofore open 4,090 tons were conveyed daily; whereas, by the single channel of the Railroad this immense tonnage, it is ascertained, may be conveyed so as to occupy any particular part of the road not more than 15 minutes, that is 1-96 part of the 24 hours.


Subscribers with access to the Historical Newspapers Collection can view this clipping.

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Ancestry Magazine
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Genealogical Computing One-Year Subscription

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