
"Newton" is what most users affectionately refer to their Newton PDA as.
"PDA" stands for Personal Digital Assistant. The term was coined by John Sculley when he was the president of Apple Computers.
Newton is a personal digital assistant:
PERSONAL ASSISTANT: it follows you wherever you go (or wherever you carry it), it's like having a person always beside you, that helps you do all those things a secretary would do.
BUT, it's better than a real person: if you're traveling by plane, you don't have to buy two tickets; if you're in your car, it doesn't eat crumbling donuts on your seat and it doesn't ask you to stop to go to the toilet; you can be sure that it won't kill you with an onion-garlic flavored breath; besides, it doesn't sweat in summer, and doesn't get colds in winter; in your office, it doesn't use the phone for private calls and you can be sure to find it whenever you need it without having to call it at home and wait for it at work. Personal also means that it's your OWN assistant, it is just yours and nobody else's: you use it, you decide what to do with it and it won't leave you for another person! In addition, if you're married, your wife will be much happier, knowing that your secretary is a high-tech, purely artificial, electronic device, and that she doesn't risk anything!
DIGITAL: digital compact discs brought high-quality pure music to your ears; digital video discs brought high-definition images and videos to your eyes; digital connections brought high-speed communication to your computer and cheaper local and transoceanic phone-calls; digital microwave ovens know when your chicken is ready and cook it just as you like it; digital assistants never make you miss an appointment, they never forget a telephone number or address, they file every information you input and they keep everything in order so that you can find what you want when you want it. Unlike paper-based organizers, you don't have to buy new pages at the end of the year, or when your address-book is full, and you can put 10, 100, 1000 times more data in a digital organizer, even smaller than a paper one.
NEWTON is all this.
The Newton is a small hand-held device about the size of a paperback book which represents a totally new way of computing! Using a small stylus-pen, you can write on it (it can read handwriting and turn it into editable text), draw on it (it can turn crooked lines into straight ones) and tap buttons to activate programs.
Masen Yaffee
When you need to send or receive information from the Newton, you can
hook it up to a Mac or PC, connect it to virtually any type of
printer, fax, email or even BEAM information via its built-in infrared
port!
It's not limited to the built in applications, however. There are tons
of incredibly useful programs which can be added such as PocketMoney,
a personal finance program, Fodor's Guide to Cities, an excellent
travel reference, and even a GPS card which can communicate with
satellites to tell you your exact location on the planet! These are
only a few of the thousands of applications, utilites, books and games
that are available for the Newton.
This little device is so useful and fun that many people report that
they don't know how they got along without it!
Description Of A Newton
Before the existence of PC's, computers were centralized. Typically
there was one computer (very expensive) with many access ports. These
machines were called mainframes. Because of their price and size,
they were fundamentally used for large business and governmental
applications. These machines were built in a world in which the
organization had one computer only, and therefore that one machine
had to perform all of the computer applications for that organization.
This was so obvious that at the time no one even thought about it.
Then with the advent of PC's, the stranglehold of centralization was
broken. Thus started a movement away from the "one machine does
it all" philosophy, and a previously unimaginable flourishing of
high quality new applications sprang fourth.
Highly efficient word processing programs, for example, became the
fundamental use for PC's. Graphical word processing of this
sophistication had not existed on mainframes. And of course numerous
other applications were also transferred or invented.
The mainframes were left mostly as transaction processors; i.e., a
device that could easily keep track of three hundred thousand
customers (say for an electric utility). Hence, the two types of
machines started a march down separate paths, filling needs the other
could not.
But over the last ten years, within their own world, PC's began to
model their predecessor's behavior. There was much talk of creating
LAN's connecting all of the PC's together. There was much talk of
moving to one, and only one, operating system (i.e., Windows95); that
all PC's should be the same. PC's began to be marketed as "one
platform to do it all" for the home user.
Yet if history meant anything, with the continual advancement of
technology is a movement away from centralization, and towards
distributed processing; a world in which small processors perform
specialized functions, and then are able to share much of their data
on a network of common protocol.
One such device is the Newton. A sophisticated low cost handheld
computer created for use by one user only. This computer is a general
aid to that single individual. It performs the functions of an
extremely smart dayplanner, address book, note keeper, emailer, fax
machine, and much more. Because of its size and accessibility, it is
able to do this far more conveniently than the best of laptops.
The Newton is another step in the march towards diversity in common
technological society.
Newton is an electronic swiss army knife. everything that the newton does can
be done better by something else. but the newton fits in my pocket.
Simple... the Newton is like having a second brain attached to the end
of your arm.
Send comments to: info@catamount.com
(last modified : June 24, 1996)