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Tim Bray asks whether the mobile / PDA / Crackbery / Palm is the future. Having come from Europe where mobile technology has been better utilized for much longer (reasons available on demand) - the answer is clearly No - it's not the future - it's the now for many people. But I'm a relative laggard, I've been a laptop wielding road-warrior for much of my working life but only very recently do I feel comfortable leaving my laptop at home (it hasn't left my Wifi radius in about six months). If I know I'm only travelling to Sun offices then this is all I need :

That said I'll often lug a laptop around if I know a) I'm going to be on a long flight - I can catch up on some Tivo or do some work; b) I'll be catching up with work at night in my hotel room; c) will have little or no access to a SunRay.
I'm travelling next week - and seriously considering whether to lug my laptop (and associated paraphenalia). If planes and hotels deployed some secure thin client technology with a decent internet connection then I'd be happy.
If you are stuck with your laptop - it's hard to let go - a Treo / Blackberry isn't a complete replacement - but it satisifies a whole different set of use cases. A more interesting question (I often ask myself) is - if I had to take just one gadget with me - which would it be ? - in my case - my Treo is the only possible answer.
Technorati Tags: treo, crackberry, sunray
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Well-said Rich!
A simple (and why not, user-configurable, may be :-) thin client everywhere would work much better for me, too.
Not only do I no longer carry my laptop (due hardware failure that seems to only affect the keyboard interface), I work on the family iMac (partitioned to multiple users) at home and leave for office with nothing but my mobile phone and card key!
I've all my links and useful material already on the SWAN ("Sun Wide Area Network"), and hey, working on open source software only helps things!
Alas! Mileage may differ if we're engaged in building software on particular or local platforms! But even this can be overcome with the right thin clients and server models. It certainly works at Sun and has beeen improving constantly!
Posted by M. Mortazavi on September 21, 2006 at 02:42 PM PDT #
Posted by Rich Sharples on September 22, 2006 at 01:50 PM PDT #
Posted by Suresh on September 28, 2006 at 01:16 AM PDT #