

How to Sync PocketPC to Linux? 35
Giggles Of Doom asks: "I am a long time Windows user who is getting ready to make the plunge and move to Linux. Microsoft is just getting on my nerves. Anyway, I have made a little list of things I do in Windows that I will still need to be able to do in Linux. A BIG one of those is syncing the data from my PDA with my main computer's mail program. The mail program will probably be KMail, unless others can suggest a better one and give reasons why, and my PDA is a Audiovox Maestro, which is really a rebranded Toshiba 'PDA-1032' running Pocket PC 2002. It has a USB cradle. What Linux solutions are there for this task? I would hate to have everything else work great, but have to boot to Windows or load VMware just to sync my contact info. Remember, I am a Windows user trying to convert, but any solution would have to be pretty user friendly."
LDAP? (Score:2, Funny)
Switch to Palm (Score:1)
Re:Switch to Palm (Score:2)
Battery life? (Score:2)
A more reliable OS?
http://www.med.unc.edu/~greena/back2palm/ has some good information.
I wouldn't necessarily reccommend going to a Palm proper, but a PalmOS device will be far more useful than an obscenely expensive, oversized, battery-gulping PocketPC device.
Compare and contrast:
Audiovox Thera PocketPC-based smartphone - 24 hours standby
Kyocera 6035 Smartphone - Over 6 days battery life including moderate talk time
The average PPC device is rated at less than a day or two of battery life with moderate usage, compared to a PalmOS device that can last well over a month with moderate usage on a pair of AAs.
For a non-phone solution, a Clie NR70 would be the way to go.
Re:Switch to Palm (Score:1)
why would anyone do that?
besides, my palm m505 doesn't sync to linux yet either through usb, so whats he gonna gain?
Re:Switch to Palm (Score:1)
LDAP? (Score:5, Interesting)
I was wondering the same question myself recently, although I don't mind booting into Windows periodically to do the actual syncing. I have an iPAQ, also running Pocket PC 2002.
What I had in mind was this:
Sync iPAQ to Outlook under Windows, using USB cradle
Sync Outlook to an LDAP server
Sync Evolution to LDAP server (or KMail if you prefer, and LDAP is supported)
What I haven't fully explored yet is Outlook's ability to sync to an LDAP server. I'm thinking of running one of my personal linux fileserver, not just to keep my iPAQ and Evolution in sync, but to simply have a cetralized place to keep all of my contact information (calendaring would be great too though).
Is anyone aware of a better solution than just rolling my own LDAP server to be compatible with Outlook?
--Cycon
Maybe you should wait... (Score:5, Insightful)
If your HD is big enough, repartition it out so you can dual boot into RH8 or Mandrake 9 for a while and get comfortable enough to do everything you want to do with it. Then, when the next big Windows OS release comes out, instead of getting that and throwing more money in the MS coffer, you can just jump ship to Linux full on. By then, there will even be better support for your handheld too.
Cheers,
m13b
Homebrew it! (Score:5, Interesting)
I wonder why no one else has done it yet. I have iPAQ hardware, but I don't use PocketPC for anything but a platform for running my own PDA environment, Dynapad [swiki.net].
I'm confident that I could hack something together using PocketC on the PDA and Perl on the desktop within a weekend. If anyone wants to sponsor me in this, I could do this. By sponsor, I mean for a price. Not a very high price. The person fronting the money can choose the license under which it lives - LGPL, closed-source commercial product or whatever. If there are any serious takers, email me and we can discuss what email app to support and cost, and so on.
Re:Homebrew it! (Score:2)
I imagine that no one has done it yet because most Linux users with PDAs either a) don't bother syncing or b) don't have something with WinCE. I have the knowledge to create such a beastie, but as one who doesn't need the functionality of it, I think it's fair to recieve compensation for the benefit of others.
Re:Homebrew it! (Score:3, Insightful)
Duh.
Re:Homebrew it! (Score:2)
Re:Homebrew it! (Score:1)
"but"? (Score:2)
You meant and, right?
(It's OK
Re:"but"? (Score:3, Insightful)
2) I believe he is implying that he's trying to convert to a hard core fifty parameters on the command line and at least three or four pipes per line, but he's not there yet so he needs it user friendly still.
Re:"but"? (Score:1)
Cat got your tongue? (something important seems to (Score:1)
So, encapsulated in a question about a PDA, you manage to work in a bit of flamewar fodder. Classy! But now you should probably not expect to get anything but "MAIL CLIENT X IS THE B3ST EVER!"-esque responses.
Good luck!
Re:Cat got your tongue? (something important seems (Score:2)
What is the value in having email in two places? Where do you answer it? Where do you file it? If the answer is "the desktop PC" then why sync up your PDA? If you just want to have some email on the PDA for reference, why not transfer it over as text files?
How I use double mail storage (Score:1)
I have the mailing program set to sort stuff into folders (one folder for each mailing list, and one for newsletters). And ActiveSync is set to sync those folders.
Then when I sit at my desk, I read and answer all mail that needs my immediate attention (IOW that which is meant for me specifically).
At times when I don't sit at the desktop, but rather on the bus, on a café, or in the bed at night (yes my wife thinks me a dork, but she loves me anyway) - I read the mailing lists and newsletters etc.
All I miss is a decent offline newsreader for PocketPC.
Ibn
My suggestion... (Score:3, Funny)
First, drivers (Score:4, Informative)
I never got that part working. You might have better luck with a serial cradle. I had to use VMware to sync with Outlook. This is why I sold my PDA and bought a Zaurus, which has it's on synching problems under Linux. I know, this is definately not the ideal solution.
Other than that, there is SyncCE [sourceforge.net] which has some tools for the connection.
Linux on the hand-held (Score:2)
This site explains how..this is what I do.... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Win4Lin (Score:1)
Too damned painfull... (Score:1)
Coolness (Score:1)