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- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!decwrl!sgi!llustig!david
- From: david@llustig.palo-alto.ca.us (David Schachter)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.pen
- Subject: More on the EO press conference (4-Nov-92)
- Message-ID: <VXesTB1w165w@llustig.palo-alto.ca.us>
- Date: Thu, 05 Nov 92 14:28:18 PST
- Organization: Greenwire Consulting, Palo Alto, CA, USA
- Lines: 126
-
- A few more notes on the EO announcement are in order, to answer questions I've
- received and to correct an error of omission.
-
- First, the correction:
-
- In my note from last night, I may have left the impression that EO wrote all
- the software. Actually, as a kind EO-ite pointed out, GO wrote PenPoint, the
- fax and mail software, and MiniNote; Pensoft wrote Personal Perspective
- (address book, calendar, to-do list, notetaker); Sitka wrote PenTops/PenCen-
- tral (the file transfer and networking software); and EO wrote EO Phone,
- EO Sound, EO Calc, and EO Lock (security software.) The EO person (whose name
- I'll omit for reasons of email courtesy) concludes:
-
- "Our partners deserve their share of the credit for our achieve-
- ment -- without them the package wouldn't be so compelling."
-
- My apologies for the error.
-
-
- Now some additional info:
-
- EO 440 w/ 4 MB RAM: $2000
- EO 440 w/ 4 MB + modem: $2500
- EO 440 w/ 8 MB + modem: $2800
-
- EO 880 w/ 4 MB + modem: $3000
- EO 880 w/ 8 MB + modem: $3300
-
- EO Cellular phone: $ 800
- (the innards of an OKI 910)
-
- EO 440 20 MB disk: $ 500
- EO 880 64 MB disk: $ 700
-
- Floppy drive: $ ???
- 4 MB RAM expansion: $ ???
- (Total maximum of 12 MB)
-
- Extra batteries: $ ???
- Extra chargers: $ ???
- EO 440 seven-hour
- battery pack: $ ???
-
- Batteries: NiCad @ 6 volts (five cells)
- EO 440: 2.3 AH good for four or seven hours-- conflicting information
- EO 880: 2.6 AH good for four hours (because of the backlighting). The
- batteries will also power the cellular phone in standby (listening for
- incoming calls) for 30 hours. Of course, battery life is reduced if the
- cellphone is used heavily. Batteries recharge in 90 minutes.
-
- Screens: 640x480
- EO 440: 110 dpi reflective; 5.9 x 4.3 inches
- EO 880: 85 dpi backlit; 7.6 x 5.7 inches
-
- Weight and size:
- EO 440: 2.2 lbs (1.0 kg), roughly 11" x 7" x 1"
- EO 880: 4.0 lbs (1.8 kg), roughly 13" x 9" x 1"
-
- (If someone locally has a scanner and an FTP-able
- filesystem, I've got photos from the press kit.)
-
- Ports:
- Serial port w/cable for EO <-> PC transfer
- Parallel port for printers and optional floppy drive
- PS/2 keyboard port
- Type-2 PCMCIA slot: one in the EO 440, two in the EO 880, with a cute
- "doggy-door" for networking cables and stuff.
- VGA and SCSI-II ports on the EO 880
- Datacomm port for the cellular phone and other similar devices; includes
- connection for power management circuitry so the datacomm device can
- wake up the EO CPU.
- Built-in microphone and tiny speaker for voice annotation.
- Unfortunately, the microphone and speaker aren't connected to the
- phone circuitry, so there is no "speakerphone" capability. I'm told
- this would require more space for the audio chambering needed to
- eliminate boominess and feedback and stuff. I don't know if there is
- a port for an external microphone and speaker. Nor do I know what
- happens if you have the cellular phone attached; does it's handset
- take over the speaker/microphone function?
- Phone line connection for the built-in modem; no loop-through RJ-11.
- No monthly fee AT&T Mail -- usage charges only -- counts as an additional
- port, I think. Gateways to the Internet, CompuServe, GE, MCI Mail,
- SprintMail, Novell MHS (huh? That's a protocol, not a network.), and
- cc:Mail (ditto).
-
- Beta availability in December '92; sales to vertical accounts and more
- extensive beta testing in Q1 '93; general availability through, for example,
- CompUSA and Office Depot in early Q2 '93.
-
- Drawbacks:
-
- 1. The EO 440 screen has a narrow field of view; only one person can see it
- at a time. This will make the CIA happy, but not users. EO will be making
- changes in the screen between the machines we saw yesterday and production
- units, but the changes will be to reduce pressure-induced blooming and to
- provide a more pen-on-paper feel to the screen.
-
- 2. The lack of a SCSI port on the EO 440 means the low-end machine is
- expandable only through the PCMCIA slot. I wonder if some clever company
- will introduce a PCMCIA SCSI port? The industrial designers (Frog Design, I
- think) were smart enough to include fixturing on the back for add-ons;
- perhaps someone will create a PCMCIA bus expander, to give the EO 440 more
- slots. Alternatively, a parallel-to-SCSI adapter could be connected. (Both
- solutions will require software along with the hardware.)
-
- 3. The press conference ran out of fruit juice. Horrors.
-
- One requirement to make these machines reliable will be automated, reliable
- backup. I suspect there is money to made offering a service to automat-
- ically backup an EO machine at night, with all the usual safeguards. Then,
- if my machine is lost or stolen or broken, I can easily replace it and its
- data. Try THAT with a DayTimer.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- An administrative note: If you are coming to next Thursday's WPDO meeting and
- have a camcorder you would be willing to let us use, please contact me. Of
- course, if we break it, we'll nibble on it for a bit, laugh hysterically, and
- then run for the hills. Thank you.
-
-
-
- ______________________________________-______________________________________
- David Schachter david@llustig.palo-alto.ca.us
- 801 Middlefield Road, #8 ...!{mips,decwrl,sgi}!llustig!david
- Palo Alto, CA 94301-2916 After 10 am, voice: +1 415 328 7425
-