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Wireless Liftoff Benton AR

TV commercials for wireless products seem a lot like campaign ads: They paint in broad strokes, make outlandish promises, and leave us feeling more confused than enlightened.

Fuller and Son Hardware
(501) 562-2345
7311 Baseline Road
Little Rock, AR
Central Copiers Inc
(501) 565-6604
3520 W 69th Street # 103
Little Rock, AR
Fuller and Son Hardware
(501) 227-4440
9815 W Markham Street
Little Rock, AR
Berry Information Systems CO
(501) 907-1840
1912 S Gaines Street
Little Rock, AR
Compupro
(870) 269-6840
367 Dogwood Hollow Road
Mountain View, AR
Cassady and CO Inc
(501) 565-5511
4615 W 61st Street
Little Rock, AR
Telecom Management Inc
(501) 223-8100
900 S Shackleford Road # 414
Little Rock, AR
Nascent Computing
(501) 626-4783
Little Rock, AR
Grace Manufacturing
(479) 968-5455
614 State Road 247
Russellville, AR
Internet Computer Outlet
(479) 967-7872
118 North Commerce Avenue
Russellville, AR
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Wireless Liftoff

Posted by : Sara Aase TV commercials for wireless products seem a lot like campaign ads: They paint in broad strokes, make outlandish promises, and leave us feeling more confused than enlightened. Take that Nortel commercial showing a woman prompting her colleague with speech lines over a handheld screen: She appears as a flawless live-video image, but that's a reality several years in the future.

Right now, only 2 percent of the U.S. population--a veritable secret society--uses any kind of wireless device, be it a cell phone, pager, or Palm. The rest of us hear and see only glimpses of what it must be like to be in that club. Has your average person on the street heard of Handspring, AvantGo, or Yada Yada? As I was reading news on a Palm IIIc during the bus ride home from work one day, the woman sitting next to me finally leaned over and said, "Excuse me, but what is that?"

Anybody who has a personal digital assistant (PDA) has heard of Palm and AvantGo. Palm first introduced its Palm Pilot digital organizers in 1996, providing a small, lightweight way to take your day planner, to-do lists, and contacts with you. Many early adopters of these devices quickly became converts. Put the device in its cradle (hooked up to a desktop computer), press the Sync button, and all of your data is updated and ready to go. You can even read and send e-mail this way, although the device depends on syncing with a desktop computer for updates.

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