Pocketop Portable Keyboard Now Available
Since it was announced several months ago, many handheld users have been eagerly waiting for the release of the Pocketop Portable Keyboard, which works with almost any handheld with an infrared port. A company spokesperson says the product is now shipping to retail stores and users have confirmed finding them on shelves. The manufacturer's suggested price is $120. It will be available from Pocketop's webstore on July 1.
According to the spokesperson, it should be available at many, though not all, CompUSA and Radio Shack stores.
It consists of a folding keyboard and a universal stand that has a small adjustable reflector. This reflects the infrared signals coming from the keyboard into the handheld's IR port and vice versa.
The stand is .25 inches think, is the same size as the standard black Palm flipcover, and can be carried attached to the keyboard or to the handheld.
Folded, the keyboard is slightly more than half an inch thick and weighs 4.2 ounces.
The Pocketop Portable Keyboard also comes with a hinge that allows a Palm m500 series or V series user to connect their handheld directly to the keyboard. The Pocketop Portable Keyboard comes with software that lets the user rotate the handheld's screen 90 degrees and the handheld connects to the keyboard lengthwise. This hinge is strong enough that the two can be carried around connected together.
For those who would prefer to not use the stand or hinge, the user can rotate the handheld's screen 180 degrees then put the handheld upside down in front of the keyboard. This allows their IR ports to connect directly.
Visor owners can rotate the screen 90 degrees and and position the handheld sideways, which will line up the IR ports.
Sony T series owners have shown a special interest in this keyboard as there won't be a version of the Stowaway folding keyboard for their handhelds until sometime in the third quarter of this year.
Thanks to Matthew C. Durkee and Scott Sowa for the tips. -Ed
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3/4 keyboard
A Mini-review from a T615C user
Overall, the construction seems pretty solid. I was not very pleased with the plastic feel of the PDA stand/reflector. It feels like it could break pretty easily, and my PDA gets a lot of hard use.
I took it home and installed the driver on my T615C. Right after hotsyncing, it asked to reboot the Clie. It came back up and displayed a Fatal Exception with the screen flickering over and over. Oh oh. Something conflicted. The only way I could get it to come back was to hold the Up Arrow button and press the reset button on the back. It came back up, but the whole Palm felt sluggish.
I checked my software. X-Master was still there but everything was disabled. Under Preferences, the HiRes Assist was turned off. It refused to enable. This means that I couldn't use high res fonts with Avant Go and most of my other programs. Unacceptable!
I was able to get the keyboard working. When I held the IR Port right up against the keyboard, I could get letters to appear every time. But when I actually put the Clie on the stand, I could almost never get anything through. I had to place the keyboard about a foot away from the Clie, and even then it was intermitent.
The overall feel of the kyboard isn't bad, if I coudl get it to work. The rubber feet need to be upgraded. If I put something sticky on the spine, maybe it wouldn't slide around on the table so much. As is, the sliding makes it almost unusable.
I have somewhat big hands. I must say that something isn't right with my ergonimics because my right thumb hits the spacebar right at the spine where it folds, missing both keys. I have to force my thumb to the left or right. It's just in the wrong spot.
Conclusion:
The software problems with the T615C make it disable the HiRes Assist, removing the main reason for having a Clie. There is some serious conflict going on. I will try a hard reset to wipe all the software off my Clie and see if I can get it to work right.
The IR link is very bad. Even if the software was working right, I don't know how useful it would be. I'd spend more time trying to keep it aligned than getting useful work done. Hopefully this is only a driver issue.
Mechanically, it isn't too bad. It takes some getting used to and the keyboard needs much better grip on the spine.
It is certainly a compromise compared to the Targus series of keyboards. The Targus for my old Palm IIIxe was a beautiful piece of engineering what worked wonderfully. If a Targus was available for the T series today, I would definately take that instead.
Final Question:
Has anyone else had better luck with the keyboard driver on the T615C?
-- Anthony
RE: A Mini-review from a Samsung I300 user
Here is my initial evaluation, it seems to be working fine. The part that does not work is the rotation function. This might be why the I300 is not listed on the compatible list. But the infared portion is working, and the phone fits nicel on the PDA stand. You have to tilt the stand slightly to make sure the port interfaces, but on the whole this isn't a problem. The keyboard does move slightly if you're not an experienced typer, so you may have the sucker slide a little bit here and there...
The buttons are smaller than normal keyboards, but not by much. In fact, I'd saythe keys are nearly the same size as my old Go-Type keyboard. I prefer this layout much better than a thumboard. I don't like the spacebar (split down the middle b/c of the folding nature of the k/b) but I'll get used to it. Punctuation also requires a different key since the shift key works numbers.
I signed a number of command keys to open up my most used applications (i.e Quickword, Quicksheet, HanDBase, Blazer, and Eudora). I also surfed, and typed an entry using the keyboard successfully on Palmvenue
The first couple of times I tried to type after activating the driver, it hard reset the Palm. I figured it was probably a hack, and sure enough it turns out FontHack does not like the Wireless Link. No big deal, just need to deactivate it when using the keyboard. I went ahead and deactivated Afterburner just to be safe, but all of Jake's hacks seem to be functioning properly.
Overall it's a keeper since I don't know what I'm missing with the rotation feature, everything else seems to work fine. In fact, I wrote this entire mini-review in Quickword via the keyboard, then exported into memo and pasted it onto the website.
(Now I'm adding via the PC). Just have to make sure you don't tilt the k/b the wrong way or you'll lose the connection (and slide it back to regain, there's nothing to it). But there wasn't any real delay when the port was lined up correctly, quite surprising how fast it was. Looks like I finally have me a keyboard!!!!!
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RE: A Mini-review from a T615C user
- hotpaw4
RE: A Mini-review from a T615C user
I previously posted as having all sorts of software problems with the driver. I've had a chance to dig into the problem.
I turned off all the hacks under X-Master and installed the driver on my old Palm IIIxe. It worked great... for a while. After about 2 minutes of typing, the screen went crazy and it crashed. After pushing the reset pin, it came back. Again, I could use the wireless keyboard for another 2 minutes before it crashed hard, turning the screen into a dazzling show of blinkng dots.
Okay, so it didn't work there either. I tried to delete the W-Link keyboard driver, but kept getting exceptions and crashes everytime I tried to list the files on my IIIxe. Filex, the Beam menu, the Delete menu were all the same. The only way I could get it back was to wipe the memory and resync from scratch. Not good.
I played with the T615C some more and deleted files over and over until I could figure out what caused the problem. I think I found it. The IR patch fromt he official Sony website seems to the the culprit. I don't know what the reason is, but when I delete those files (using Filez), the Clie boots up fine and I can even use the driver properly. I can run my hacks without problems. The only one I have to disable is Afterburner, and that's only when I'm using the keyboard itself. No surprise there. I'm still playing with the system. Their driver definately needs some work, though.
-- Anthony
Not NR70 friendly
So it's not compatiable with NR70 actually.
RE: Not NR70 friendly
I set the keyboard up using the supplied stand. With the reflector raised all the way up, the keyboard responds perfectly when it is between 1" and 3" from the stand. I don't know where this 1' away came from.
Yes, I did add some new rubber feet to the bottom of the keyboard to keep it from sliding, but like I said it's not perfect.
Until a bluetooth solution comes along, this will just have to do.
Nice, but I'd still prefer a Bluetooth keyboard...
RE: Nice, but I'd still prefer a Bluetooth keyboard...
I think that this makes a Bluetooth keyboard close to useless. If you use a keyboard, you'll want to do word processing. Word processing files are pretty big. A memory card is the right place to put them.
RE: Nice, but I'd still prefer a Bluetooth keyboard...
www.bluetooth.com/news/news.asp?A=2&PID=127&ARC=1
And for storage how about this Bluetooth hard drive,
www.bluetooth.com/news/news.asp?A=2&PID=132&ARC=1
RE: Nice, but I'd still prefer a Bluetooth keyboard...
RE: Nice, but I'd still prefer a Bluetooth keyboard...
other keyboards...
there are two that i am considering at the moment. there's this one and the halfkeyboard.
this ir keyboard looks great and most importantly is platform and make independent. however, does anyone know how reliable the ir is? does it get affected by the usual things like different lighting situations etc? what about positioning of the keyboard and unit?
and with regards to the halfkeyboard? how practical is it to use everyday? does it actually just get irritating to use as opposed to being intuitive? i downloaded the demo and i can get a reasonable speed on it but nothing compared to touch typing on a full size keyboard. the other thing is, i would have to make my own cable connectors for it - so i can use it with all my different pda's... a prospect i don't relish.
any thoughts would be much appreciated.
andrew.
RE: other keyboards...
Wireless web just got easier!
RE: Wireless web just got easier!
I own a Handspring Visor Pro and a Samsung 8500 (with sprint pcs). I'm looking to this keyboard to allow me to type while simutaneously connected online (using a supplynet cable).
Does anyone know of technical obstacles to this. Does anyone know of other products that would allow this to be possible. My understanding of Stowaway, Go2Type and other keyboards is that they cannot be used at the same time as a supplynet cable.
Thanks for any input/ideas.
daniel.
RE: Wireless web just got easier!
you might want to try a visorphone module. i use visor pro with visorphone and attach stowaway keyboard to bottom. so far its worked great for me. visorphones are available for free(not including tax) with activation.
RE: Wireless web just got easier!
perhaps i'll look into that.
RE: Wireless web just got easier!
Wireless Universal Keyboard
I will confess that this is my first experience with a Palm folding keyboard so I in my naivte' I have nothing to compare it to, so I think it is great!....Good thing since I have no other option.
RE: Anyone?
As they state in the documentation, the driver does not permit the screen orientation to be changed on a Sony so I am stuck with the default screen configuration, but using the stand works fine.
The only problem I have encountered is if you move the keyboard out of range while typing, the device seems to get hung up and you need to disable/reenable the driver to get the keyboard working again. You can stop typing and move/return the keyboard. Just don't move it while pressing any keys. Other than that it works great.
The keyboard takes a bit of getting used to, but so did the GoType, Targus and iBiz keyboards I have previously used, so this was sort of expected. You will need to add some little felt or rubber feet to the bottom of the keyboard as the supplied rubber feet sit higher than the center hinge whey lying flat on a desk which causes the unit to pivot from the center when typing. You can find these little rubber cabinet door sticky buttons at Home Depot or other home center. After applying these, the keyboard does not move at all.
Pocketop with a Palm M515?
Also, the company's site is unclear on this, but does the closed keyboard attach to the Palm's left channel and act as a cover for the Palm screen?
RE: Pocketop with a Palm M515?
I emailed the company but they did not reply.
Jerry Zurek
jzurek@cabrini.edu
Kyocera tips - may help with others
Even though they say it doesn't work with a Kyocera 6035 - I got it to work. I keep a piece of aluminum foil folded between the keyboard and stand. When I want to use the keyboard, I unfold it and curve it around the the phone while it's in the stand (think "beach umbrella").
It reflects from anywhere, amazing reception!
RE: Kyocera tips - may help with others
Pocketop Portable Keyboard Software Compatibility
I then retried using the keyboard with WordSmith (no SilverScreen), same problem. I then retried it using memopad within SilverScreen (no WordSmith), crashed.
Anyone else have the same problem?
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