Yes, it would be pretty handy for that especially back then with few real alternatives at that size. The keyboard is a bit cramped due to size, so typing is certainly slower than usual - though I guess only important if typing speed is the actual limitation for your great work implementation. Sometimes I play with the idea of designing a ultraportable, which will likely never actually happen, but if it does having this is a actually a nice reference for just too small a keyboard. I wrote a lot back in the 90s. I feel I can say with confidence that the world didn't really gain much. I think my mushy brain droppings around this forum proves my point!
My best memory was owning and using the Psion Series 5, a subnotebook PDA according to wikipedia. I got it in 1998, and the same year I got the Ericsson SH888, one of, if not the first dual band phone to be released in Norway.
I did also periodically use the Nokia Communicators.
The small IBM x86 compatible mini/micro laptops were just too expensive for me to buy personally, and wasn't required to do my job, so I never got to own one of the really tiny ones.
I did own a monster of a laptop, that was actually quite compact for what it was. A Canon brand laptop with built in printer.
For someone who spends as much time writing stuff as I do, to this day I still cannot "type" as most people define it. I hunt and peck with at least three fingers on each hand almost fast enough to pass as a professional typist, although I doubt many companies are looking to hire a fifty year old fat man that barely makes the minimum WPM.
For someone who spends as much time writing stuff as I do, to this day I still cannot "type" as most people define it. I hunt and peck with at least three fingers on each hand almost fast enough to pass as a professional typist, although I doubt many companies are looking to hire a fifty year old fat man that barely makes the minimum WPM.The up shot is that I can almost instantly adapt to any keyboard size without issue because my eyes are on the keyboard so I see when my fingers go wrong. Def
Sounds like a weird contraption. Portable printers doesn't seem to be a thing anymore either. Or maybe I just stopped paying attention.