Drop-In PDA Support
Hardin Library Offers Drop-In PDA Support
NOTE: Fall 2009 hours will be 8am-3pm Thursdays or by appointment.
This semester, the Hardin Library for the Health Sciences will begin offering drop-in help sessions for wireless devices such as PDAs, Smartphones, iPhones, and iTouches. The Hardin Library will help patrons set up their devices for wireless, as well as help them access library subscriptions to PDA resources.
Drop in every Thursday from 8am-3pm in the Information Commons East of HLHS.
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Current News
From Gizmodo: What makes the five smartphone platforms different? 03/18/2009
Smartphones have all advanced over the past few years, and mostly do the same things. But if you look at the details, you'll find that—depending on your needs—one may be way better than another.
Most smartphone platforms support touchscreens and/or keyboards, and let you browse the internet, run apps, view photos and play games/music/movies. And while they may act the same on a fundamental level, not all smartphones are created equal. Here's where they match up, and where they don't:


iPhone
Apple is so fixated on maintaining a high level of user satisfaction
and reduced frustration on the iPhone, they will bluntly admit to
leaving out key smartphone features—particularly features that are
either hard to implement in the UI, or require too much battery juice.
The result is a pretty slick interface (with occasional glitches, yes,
but fewer than others) that nevertheless leaves you wanting more. iPhone OS 3.0 (covered in full detail here)
addressed most of the user gripes—such as lack of push notifications,
copy and paste and search, but we're still left without video
recording, Flash browser support and true background-app multitasking.
Windows Mobile
Windows Mobile is brilliant for the business crowd because of its
ability to support secure emails, work with corporate computer
infrastructures and run proprietary business apps created entirely
within Microsoft's device ecosystem. You can pretty much run and do
anything you want on a Windows Mobile phone, which is great. But
because the phones are made by many different competing companies—with
no consistent quality assurance—UI and user experience don't compare to
the other platforms, so the OS is not as good for people who want a fun
smartphone for their own personal use.
One major gripe especially revolves around the screen and its systemic lack of both finger-friendly capacitive-touchscreen support and multitouch interaction. WinMo feels really clunky when you use a finger, and you otherwise have to use an annoying (and easily lost) stylus.
Android
Android is the code monkey's dream. Because the OS is fully open source, you can do anything
you'd like to the phone. This means pretty much any feature you'd like
on a cellphone is possible on Android—even the officially unsupported
multitouch interaction—provided someone can write an app or extension
for it. The downside? Even the official Google/HTC/T-Mobile release of
the G1 had a UI design that felt incoherent, like you're using four
different OSes instead of one. Also, despite all this free love,
there's only one currently available phone, and it's ugly as all sin. Note: For more information, you should read this detailed Android vs. iPhone piece by Gina at Lifehacker.
BlackBerry
Like Windows Mobile, RIM's BlackBerry is also a business-oriented
phone, but with a much more coherent consumer initiative under way.
Relatively intuitive and well-structured to use, it feeds off of an
email server that is second to none in getting messages to you as
they're sent. And since the phone only runs on BlackBerry hardware, you
can mostly be assured the OS will run smoothly (mostly). But despite
their best efforts to liven things up with the admirable 4.6 OS and the
not-so-admirable
BlackBerry Storm touchscreen edition, this remains a fairly utilitarian
phone that serves one main purpose: superior messaging. Note: Blackberry was deemed to not have Universal Search because it doesn't search files or Applications.
WebOS and the Palm Pre
Palm's Pre with its all-new WebOS has the potential to be the closest
competitor to the iPhone, merging the zen simplicity and beauty of the
iPhone OS with some of the background processing power of an Android or
WinMo phone. You can run as many apps as you like concurrently, and
manage them using a system that lets you quickly flick through apps
like it was a photo system, great for staying on top of many things at
once. But it also integrates the internet into so many facets of its UI
(search, contacts, UI, etc.), that you might not even realize you're
using the internet sometimes. If the iPhone is for the common man,
WinMo for the executive, Android for the programmer and BlackBerry for
the information junkie, WebOS could very much be for the savvy kids
trying to stay on top of social media and Web 2.0. Let's see what
happens when the thing actually ships.
PDA Resources
Browse PDA resources by platform or cost:
By Platform:
By Cost:
For more information on PDA platforms, visit the pdaMD.com Resource Center.
Hardin Library |
Hardin Library for the Health Sciences![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Contact Info:
600 Newton Rd.
Iowa City, IA 52242-1098
lib-hardin@uiowa.edu
319-335-9151
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