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To: PCSS who wrote (86678)11/12/2000 12:43:06 PM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
Michael... nice article, thanks for posting it. Looks like DELL was left at the station when the train pulled out. El



To: PCSS who wrote (86678)11/12/2000 1:41:38 PM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Respond to of 97611
 
Shoppers flustered by latest wave of
Internet gizmos

By Daniel Sorid

NEW YORK, Nov 12 (Reuters) - From Scout Electromedia's now
defunct Modo, a wireless gizmo aimed at helping city dwellers find
something to do, to the hyped ``Internet appliances,'' Web-based
consumer devices seem stuck in a rut.

In what was to have been the era of third-generation mobile telephones and next-generation interactive
TV, trying to browse the Web on a handset -- a feat hailed by telephone companies -- can be as
awkward as handling chopsticks with boxing gloves.

So much for the perennially promised ``convergence,'' when everyday appliances would meld
seamlessly with the Net, unleashing amazing powers, such as a refrigerator that will order milk or eggs
over the Internet when it is empty.

At least for this holiday shopping season, the search for the perfect gadget will have to wait another
winter.

``How many times have you bought something 'plug and play' but it really wasn't?'' asked Simon Moore
as he browsed for a low-tech compact disc case at J&R Computer World in New York, a mega-store of
electronics. ``They generally don't meet your expectations.''

And sometimes, even when the gadget does what it is supposed to do inexpensively, the start-up
company goes bust.

What seemed like the perfect hit of the season, the $99 wireless Modo device, turned out otherwise. It
was small, it was shaped like a disk, it was hip. Carried anywhere in the city, it told you the hottest
events and restaurants close by.

Too bad it didn't work. Just a few months after the device was released, hyped up in bus station ads and
written about in the media, the company behind Modo, Scout Electromedia, went belly up.

Now it's just a paperweight.

AUDREY, NOMADS AND WAFFLE IRONS

A few aisles down from Moore, 77-year-old Harvey Seifert was pecking away at the keyboard of an
iPAQ, a small $599 device from Compaq Computer Corp. (NYSE:CPQ - news) that, like several other
Internet appliances available, can surf the Web and send e-mail without any software to load.


All Seifert wanted was something he could use to send e-mail to his granddaughter at college, but he
seemed confused by the variety of products.

``These terms have no meaning to an average person,'' he said, surrounded by signs blaring words like
megabyte and gigahertz.

Then there are some odd ``everything'' devices, such as the Fuji FinePix 40i, which sells for about $600.
As a camera and digital music player in one, it can take pictures and play Britney Spears' latest hit.

``Why do we need this? Why not a digital camera/waffle iron?'' said a recent review of the product on
CNET.com, the technology information site owned by CNET Networks Inc. (NasdaqNM:CNET - news).

``The combination falls short of being a winner,'' the review added, noting less-than-stellar picture quality
and software that slowed a test PC to a crawl.

That's not to say every gadget category is filled with doozies. For music lovers who want all their music
on one device, the $500 Creative Labs Nomad Jukebox holds about 1,000 songs and is the size of a
portable CD player. Though perhaps the priciest, the jukebox has one of the largest capacity.

And 3Com Corp.'s (NasdaqNM:COMS - news) Audrey, a $499 table-top Internet appliance similar to the
iPAQ has been winning praise for its style and ease of use. Audrey will be available by Christmas.

Walking around J&R with a look of skepticism, Hanan Koren may have the right idea. He said he does
not trust gadget makers to tell him why their products are worthwhile, and turns instead to independent
reviews on the Internet.

Koren also said he does not purchase gadgets in stores because the best deals and the newest
devices are on the Net. He prefers a sleek Palm V organizer and connects it with his home PC.

``The things I see in the shops are a little behind the things I know are in the market,'' he said.