radioman
状元
Mike, et al.,
Thinking back to a few years back, I remember using a palm pilot to play games, and after a short period, the keys were beat to heck and then just broke. I am now running hardware keys for the flashcards on my Palm E2. There are a lot of cards I am reviewing on a daily basis and I can tell the keys are already starting to get a bit beat up.
Using the touch screen with the the stylus reduces the beating on the device, and I know I can use my finger on the touch screen to select the Flashcard response. The issue is that the button design for the touchscreen is not really designed to do that (or maybe it is and my hands are dysfunctional... bigger virtual buttons, easily accessible on left part of screen if I was using my left hand only, etc. ).
I would be curious to if anyone else has had such problems?
Ed.
Thinking back to a few years back, I remember using a palm pilot to play games, and after a short period, the keys were beat to heck and then just broke. I am now running hardware keys for the flashcards on my Palm E2. There are a lot of cards I am reviewing on a daily basis and I can tell the keys are already starting to get a bit beat up.
Using the touch screen with the the stylus reduces the beating on the device, and I know I can use my finger on the touch screen to select the Flashcard response. The issue is that the button design for the touchscreen is not really designed to do that (or maybe it is and my hands are dysfunctional... bigger virtual buttons, easily accessible on left part of screen if I was using my left hand only, etc. ).
I would be curious to if anyone else has had such problems?
Ed.