Dumbstart's Daily Apple Newton

Serving up Newton news and software for 12 months and counting, thanks for your support to every one of the 7000 visitors.

Monday, August 08, 2005

Number 10!

An article at cnet.com takes a look back at the "Top 10 tech we miss" (as interpreted by the writers of course). What's so astonishing about it is how dead on I agree with a few of the items they listed. Were talking items as majestic as manned space exploration and . . . the Apple Newton.
The first popular pen-based PDA, the Apple Newton, was big, expensive, and too smart for its britches.
Those two world events; landing on the moon and the release of the Newton - go hand in hand. Continue reading the article Top 10 Tech We Miss at cnet.com.

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

a color newton.


Ever wanted to see what the NewtonOS merged with Mac 9 would look like, while at the same time reading someone's hopes soon after the death of the Newton? Well at Walletware.com you can sate both your cravings and read what the future could have held.

I'm guessing since Apple just switched to Intel that the Newton rebirth is around the corner.

Friday, June 03, 2005

simple history.

Thursday, May 26, 2005


I want this.

Tuesday, May 24, 2005

the OQO effect.

You owe it to yourself as a lover of the large format PDA the Apple Newton to read about the hands-on experience of a person using the OQO at http://www.pdahandyman.com.
The images on the web do it not one iota of justice. This machine is small and then some. Think of it as a large-ish Pocket PC, or maybe you have memories of Apple's landmark Newton MessagePad series.
For some incredible pictures of a device that could possibly be one of those items people talk alot about but never buy, check out oqo.com

Sunday, May 22, 2005

Here are just a few of the articles that attempt to compare any recently released PDA to the father of what the PDA will eventually become. First up is the latest entry from PalmOne, the LifeDrive. You can read a review of the Life Drive (the so-called next step of the PDA) over at USA Today

The original Pilot wasn't the first personal digital assistant. (Quick show of hands: Who among you bought an Apple Newton?) But it was the first to breathe fire into the category.

Next up is the Tablet PC, which may gain a huge boost by the "soon" to be released Windows Longhorn. Adding a Newton-sized Tablet PC isn't going to make a laptop as easy to use as a PDA. But find out over at Computeractive exactly how they fold the Newton into the Tablet PC world.
Perhaps it has in mind Apple's pioneering pen-driven Newton handheld, which was killed as much by hype-driven expectations as by its poor reading skills.
It just amazes me that even though the first release of the Newton's recognizer for handwritten text wasn't the best ever invented (1993 wasn't the most technological time of our lives) but it steadily grew into something that worked very well. I think it's just easier for anyone wanting to prove that they "knew" the Apple Newton was a failure before anyone else can pick up the same sign and wave it around, creating a viewpoint without ever using a Newton for themselves.

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

i certainly agree with him.


Over at pdahandyman one of their writers went on a tirade about the lack of innovation in the PDA scene. Bringing up the most holy of PDA's, the Apple Newton 2100.
I'm really starting to long for an Apple Newton MessagePad 2100. Its no wonder there's still a significant fan-based development community out there.

That is incredibly true, the lack of innovation is astounding. Is it really an innovation to add hard drive capabilities to a PDA? Isn't that more of an evolution. What's the point anyhow if you have to have multiple cradle's to retreive your information from the PDA's helpful hard drive function. I'm not going to carry my PDA and each assorted cable "just in case" I need to transfer something off.