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Handhelds Software Hardware

Mobile Phones that Sync w/ PIM Software? 60

Burianski11 asks: "After searching for a phone that syncs with my PIM for a few months now, I'm stumped. I've seen phones that sync with Exchange Server and others whose web-based phone book will sync with a web-based PIM (Sprint has this). Are there any phones out there that will sync easily with PIM software, be it Outlook, Evolution, or something else?"
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Mobile Phones that Sync w/ PIM Software?

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  • Re:Handspring Treo (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Rick the Red ( 307103 ) <Rick DOT The DOT Red AT gmail DOT com> on Saturday February 07, 2004 @05:32AM (#8210630) Journal
    Of course, the Pocket PC Phone Edition [microsoft.com] also syncs with Outlook. My wife has one [microsoft.com] and she loves it. When you hold it up to your head it's a clunky phone and you can't take notes or look something up, but with the hands-free earbuds it becomes a PDA that also does phonecalls; you click on a phone number in Contacts and it dials it. Pretty slick.
  • BitPim (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 07, 2004 @06:24AM (#8210741)

    Since you mentioned Sprint I assume you are in the USA. You can also get BitPim [sourceforge.net] which works with LG CDMA phones (Verizon) and Sanyo CDMA phones (Sprint) as well as the embedded filesystems of other CDMA phones. It is available for Windows, Linux and Mac and is open source (Artistic License).

    The version number is currently 0.7 for the "test" version which about accurately reflects its functionality (as with many open source projects, various things are incomplete :-)

    It is also often in the top 100 projects on SourceForge and hence is somewhat lively.

  • Re:iSync (Score:2, Interesting)

    by AKnightCowboy ( 608632 ) on Saturday February 07, 2004 @09:58AM (#8211183)
    And Apple very kindly provide an up-to-date list of all supported phones.

    Which lists hardly any phones really. They only support a handful of phones from a handful of companies like Nokia, Ericsson, and Motorola. What about Samsung, Sanyo, etc.? My Sanyo 4900 SprintPCS phone can connect just fine via USB and I can use it to connect to the Internet, but I can't sink my stupid address book via iSync?? Sanyos are probably the most popular Sprint phones for good reception and yet Apple ignores them. Weird. Granted, Sprint doesn't have any bluetooth phones, but I don't mind plugging in a usb cable to sync my phone.

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