Wednesday, December 12, 2007
When naked pictures of the internal Palm
Many are the ones who have fascination with electronic devices, and we know how facts are on the inside. The downside of wanting to see the guts of the aircraft which is perhaps mounted on the back pieces ... or rather that the device does not return to work.
Fortunately other palmeros have done more skilled work for us, and we can find photographs of the circuitry and components of our aircraft. Es el caso de la page Peter's Pilot Pages, where we will find reviews of Palm PDAs seasoning with many photographs of the internal components. An analysis of them is very thorough and detailed, so it represents a highly recommended reading to learn more about our small toys. The models are classics but nevertheless be very interesting.
The models are analyzed:
- Palm IIIx, with an analysis of power consumption and processor, very advanced in his time.

Disposition of memory chips in the Palm IIIx
- Palm V and Palm Vx, with its brand new and novel Lithium Ion battery.

The Palm Vx with the circuitry in sight
- Palm IIIc, the first Palm with color display. Peter even analyzes the signal with an oscilloscope control the display backlight, and compares the speed refresh the IIIc compared with the IIIx, proving to be much faster the monochrome screen.
- The expansion card TRGPro, an expansion memory very popular in these first PDA, which also included an amplifier for improved audio quality.
- The rounded Palm m100.

Views on the motherboard of the Palm m100
- Palm m500 and m505 (with the first expansion for SD cards).
- Cassiopea E-10, a team from the dark side, anyway not too pleased with Peter, and also ended with a cruel and rugged end (careful, strong image at the end).
- The pretty Sony Clié 760, the first PDA Sony.


The Clié 760 without casing
- The spectacular Clie NR70V, curiously running the emulator calculator HP 48G Power48, one of the first programs that benefited the big screen this PDA (with the first resolution HiRes 480x320) displays support, and also among the first programs which have appeared in The Tungsten PDA.
- The following model Clié was the Clie NX70V.


The CLI N70 before and after open
- Palm Tungsten T as a representative of the "new" batch of Palm PDAs. With a good joke referring to Palmer 6.0, watch the last paragraph and the button.
- And, finally, the BT3021, a Bluetooth access point that will make us think about how these devices have been reduced to the current size of nearly naked USB connector.
On this page you can also find useful tutorials for more hands, as the converter to serial port USB cradle for a Sony Clie, or a Palm m500, and even some quite interesting information regarding the hardware of some teams. But as states in this notice, only make these changes if we already have some skill with the welder.
In short, a page with a lot of interesting information to better understand how the hardware of our Palm.
By: Mark Gonzalez Troyas General
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The T | T1 was the first palm that I had, that those times (5 years ago)
Very good bromita of Palm0S 6.0,
jeje