CHICAGO, Aug. 19 (UPI) -- Phil Hammond carries a
PalmOne Treo personal digital
assistant with him almost all the time. "It's like carrying my office in
my pocket -- I can get my e-mail, my contact list, my notes, even my
combination to my locker at the Y," Hammond, marketing director for the
Boston-based interior design firm of Margulies & Associates, told UPI's
Wireless World.
"Before that, I had a Palm Pilot. That one was good, but this one is even
more advanced. The only problem is that it is a little cumbersome -- my
fingers are too big for the tiny keyboard."
According to a new survey by eAccess
Solutions Inc., based in suburban Chicago, businesses like Hammond's
firm are increasingly realizing a return on the investments they have made
in PDAs. They first were enticed by wireless e-mail, and now, the survey
says, they want to see what other applications can be pushed out to the
PDA.
"Customers continue to demand mobile devices that are high in
functionality, low in front-end cost, easy to install, administer and,
most importantly, low in support costs," said David Bean, president and
chief executive officer at eAccess, a
provider of wireless devices to the corporate market.
The survey of 1 million online visitors to eAccess.com shows that the most
popular PDA is the Research in Motion Blackberry Handheld, used by 68
percent of the survey's respondents. The second-most popular device was
the PalmOne Treo, used by 12 percent of respondents. Smart phones were the
third-most popular PDA, followed by the Pocket PCs.
Some business professionals claim their office mates are addicted to using
PDAs. "Blackberry is known as 'crackberry'
because of its addiction," said Stephanie D. Miller, a marketing
professional at Vercuity Solutions Inc. "We even have to develop policies,
telling employees not to take their Blackberries to the 'john' as IT folks
want to prevent employees from accidentally dropping them in the toilet."
Soon, experts said, business professionals will continue to be wireless
even when on vacation or at a conference.
Starting in September, Rosewood Hotels & Resorts will provide each of its
guests with the new iQue M3 GPS navigator, spokeswoman Sonia G. Weymuller
said. "The device also contains e-mail, Microsoft Word, Excel, Internet
Explorer, etc., and enables guests to search restaurants and addresses
and, thanks to an integrated speaker, gives voice-prompted turn-by-turn
directions," Weymuller added.
Even teenagers are now starting to carry PDAs -- albeit modified for their
demographic. Zipit Wireless Messenger has developed a portable
instant-messaging device that allows teenagers to connect via "802.11
wireless home networks or free hotspots," said Mike Crisp, a spokesman for
Zipit. This enables teens, and even some pre-teens, to "chat away with no
service fee."
The future should be full of new PDA innovations, experts tell Wireless
World.
Next year wireless carriers plan to introduce a number of new technologies
including bandwidth-on-demand, instant replay, and real-time updating of
pre-paid accounts. Bandwidth-on-demand will enable users to purchase
high-speed downloads such as movies and load them onto a PDA before they
board a plane for a cross-country flight. The instant-replay technology
will allow consumers, watching a live sporting event at a stadium, to use
their handhelds to connect to a stadium's wireless system and watch an
instant replay of the spectacular play they witnessed. Those with pre-paid
minutes will be able to update their services live without having to
interrupt whatever they are doing on the PDA at that time.
Usage of the devices may grow exponentially with the new services. Right
now, users are limited to e-mail and phone calls and still consume a lot
of time. "I am a two-year user of Blackberry, and I average about 1,000
e-mail messages per month and about 4,000 cell-phone minutes," said Robert
Cooper, vice president of sales at Haley Systems, based in suburban
Virginia near Washington, D.C.
--
Gene Koprowski is a 2005 Lilly Endowment Award Winner for his columns for
United Press International. He covers networking and telecommunications
for UPI Science News. E-mail:sciencemail@upi.com