I had this shower thought earlier and I actually wanted to post it in that community. The name I came up with was SmartWalkman, but later I realized that Walkman is Sony specific, so I doubt other companies would’ve gone for that name, but I didn’t want to let this shower thought slip so here I am now asking you guys.

  • LucasWaffyWaf@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Definitely PDA. Before we had modern smartphones folks would carry a cell phone and separate PDA which had computer functionalities. I’ve always said they were smartphones with half the smart and none of the phone.

    Common apps included calculators, calendars, to do lists, notepads, clocks with alarms, task lists with reminders, PDF readers, word processors, later ones could even double as mp3 players and portable video players. There were even games made for them, both official and homebrew. My Windows PDAs have a bootleg port of XCOM: UFO Defense on them, which works brilliantly! There’s also ports of Space Trader, if you want to take Elite with ya in your pocket.

    PDAs evolved into smartphones as companies started including cellular tech inside PalmOS and Windows Mobile PDAs with devices like the Palm Treo and HTC Apache running PDA OSes with cellular connectivity. Once the iPhone came out though basically everything changed. They weren’t the first, but they released a slick, buttery smooth device using a much better type of touch screen, with heaps of built in flash memory, a vibrant high res screen, and of course, iTunes. I own a PDA from the same year, not lower end but kinda middle of the road. 128 mb of usable flash memory, 64 mbs of RAM, a 240x320 resolution 16 bit color resistive touch screen (pressure sensitive, like the DS), a full sized SD card slot which can take up to 2 gigs of additional storage, wifi, Bluetooth, and IRDa. Required a stylus for usage. Versus the iPhone, which had anywhere from 4 gigs to 16 gigs of built in storage, 128 mb of RAM, a 480x320 resolution 18 bit color capacitive touch screen, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and multi-touch functionality on the screen. No stylus needed, either.

  • Gravitywell@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    PDA was probably the most common during the 90s and I think until iPhones and android, black berry phones were considered PDAs.

    A lot of stuff in the 80s/90s used the suffix “dex” (after rolodex) so I could also picture something like “mobidex” or “pocket dex”. Or there was netbooks so we might just call them netdex…

  • mipadaitu@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    PDA - Personal Digital Assistant.

    That’s what they were called in the before times (Palm Pilot) before they got merged with the cell phone. Lots of old timers called a smartphone a PDA until they got really popular.

    • neidu2@feddit.nl
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      8 months ago

      Every time I’ve gotten a handy, it has been by some dude in a store. That’s why I keep coming back once every year or two; he knows how to provide a good handy.

  • oxjox@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    For a brief period of time, they (mostly journalists) tried calling them App Phones to differentiate from other phones with touch screens. There was also the rumor leading up to the iPhone that it would be called the iWalk.

  • weeeeum@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    PITA from the article “Is that a PITA in your pocket?”. It was written in 1999 and was a literally perfect prediction of what smartphones would be. Even down to PITA being an acronym for both “Personal Information Telecommunication Agent” and “Pain in the Ass” since the overwhelming connectivity would destroy our privacy.

    You could legitimately make a conspiracy theory from how accurate his prediction and article was.

  • rmuk@feddit.uk
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    8 months ago

    It’s my Microsoft® Windows® PocketPC™ 2024 for Home™ PremiumPlus™ for Palm Computing™ Touch Edition (non-commercial) with Bing™ -powered device.

  • NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone
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    8 months ago

    And here I was wondering why podcasts are still called podcasts when they barely had anything to do with iPods in the first place.

    • Ross_audio@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      iPods had an 82% share of the US market at the time the term was first used.

      https://www.theregister.com/2004/10/12/ipod_us_share/

      At the time a “broadcast” to you iPod made the name podcast pretty understandable.

      And there’s not much else I could think of to call it given technology at the time.

      MP3 player was the generic term. But MP3 cast feels clunky.

      I did hear audioblog used. But they weren’t all blogs.

      It really comes down to the fact that at the time everyone knew “pod” meant “iPod” and that’s it.