Currently I'm using it as a kind of PDA. Plug it to my Mac at home,
ssh into it and use taskwarrior and hnb when needed (adding a task or
exploring an idea). Come to my office, plug it to my netbook and ssh
into it. Repeat. And when I'm away from the computer or in a commute,
I have my tasks at hand. I've also done some gp/pari programming on it
(while I was without any other computing mean in Switzerland a few
weeks ago) and play an occasional game of Dungeon Crawl on it. I think
it can be pretty useful someday, right now it is just a shiny tool
that appeals my inner geek more than my iPad or iPod Touch, for this
kind of tasks.

Cheers,

Ruben

-- 
========================================
* Rubén Berenguel
* Homepage: http://www.mostlymaths.net
* RSS feed:   http://feeds.feedburner.com/MostlyMaths
* Twitter:       http://twitter.com/#!/berenguel
========================================




On Fri, Mar 4, 2011 at 22:50, Mark Tuson <[email protected]> wrote:
> I've always been under the impression that the NanoNote was nothing more
> than a toy. I use mine for a bit of programming (yeah, I've even done some
> serious stuff on it), but I mainly use it for taking notes and impressing
> people with the smallest Debian laptop.
>
> Yeah, getting more stuff to work on it would be cool, and it'll doubtlessly
> happen, but let's not start trying to make it useful just yet, because I
> fear that if we do, we'll end up with another palmtop like any other. All I
> want, right now, is a bigger screen and a touchpad (or similar device), so
> that I can run TWM on it without having to use my VAIO as a terminal.
>
> Mark.
>
>
> On 04/03/11 19:41, Jane Andreas wrote:
>
> Just thought I would offer some reflections and comments on what I hope the
> next Nano is. First of all, my approach since 2007 when I searched for the
> HP Jornada has been to migrate almost completely to a mobile platform. The
> more the next nanonote lets me not use my laptop, the better. The 2 main
> things that would do this on the hardware side are USB Host and wifi. with a
> good browser, I would seriously almost abandon my laptop. On the software
> side, I need things that let me be creative without being heavy. The main
> things we are lacking now are (as I see it and for my particular needs):
>
> image/photo editor (cropping, resizing, adding text, other basic functions)
> my thinking is, that if on-board camera interfaces can do it, why not the
> Nano?
>
> music tuner (preferably one that displays exact frequency of input)
>
> graphics creation program for something other than ascii art
>
> some way of writing and synthesizing midi files
>
> So basically as odd as it sounds, I strive for a laptop-replacement media
> studio in my pocket type of device. It does take compromise, but nowhere
> could it work more than with Free hardware AND software. I think it is
> almost feasible on the Ben, so for sure on the Ya
>
> one thing I could not abide is if the cpu on Ya were to gererate any heat
> making unit warm. I would say it is always easy to want more and if we jump
> to a 700 mhz cpu, we will not have optimized efficiently our MIPS one. Also,
> if we add parts that take more cpu, the potential of higher clock speed is
> spent on just controlling those things.
>
> I will stop rambling now and leave you with food for thought. Thanks for
> listening
>
> _______________________________________________
> Qi Hardware Discussion List
> Mail to list (members only): [email protected]
> Subscribe or Unsubscribe:
> http://lists.en.qi-hardware.com/mailman/listinfo/discussion
>
> _______________________________________________
> Qi Hardware Discussion List
> Mail to list (members only): [email protected]
> Subscribe or Unsubscribe:
> http://lists.en.qi-hardware.com/mailman/listinfo/discussion
>

_______________________________________________
Qi Hardware Discussion List
Mail to list (members only): [email protected]
Subscribe or Unsubscribe: 
http://lists.en.qi-hardware.com/mailman/listinfo/discussion

Reply via email to