Rick, you made me laugh a bit...
...as you reminded me of last winter when a friend invited me for a walk down the dock. We were both cruising on U.S. boats, both wintering over in London, and the purpose of the walk was for him to show us walking down the dock...using his clever PDA, GPS attached, and with London map software installed. And he 'only' had about $600+ wrapped up in it. Golly.Of course, the Tube map I carry folded up in my wallet and the £5 map my wife & I carry is totally lacking in the Gee, Whiz department...but so far we haven't been too lost.My son has been using a PDA since the mid-90's when the first stable Apple PDA was intro'd. He relentlessly points out the advantages of it: all his contact info handy (when the batteries aren't dead), his calendar, the 'tickler' that reminds him of this or that. It's simply Vunderbar. Of course, each time we have this discussion I pull out the same 5"x7" spiral notebook which I use each & every day, until one fills up and is replaced by a new one. His latest PDA (his 3rd, I believe) ran him about $400; my notebook lasts about a year and cost me $1.98.I think you positioned the question perfectly, Rick. You've found yourself with a PDA, so now what do you do with it? Lordy, they can consume a lot of time (the real 'cost' of such devices) and they have numerous entertainment benefits when loaded up with the right software products. Of course, they aren't really *needed*...but that doesn't mean we don't covet them, buy them, load them up, and use them.I guess this is parable of sorts on sailing, isn't it. We just love to load up our boats with Geedunk. And most of it does interesting, helpful and entertaining things. But are these things needed? With a few exceptions, not really - altho' I'd hate to give up the GPS, our real-time wx downloads and our email capability when offshore. But often today, it seems, the sailboat is a means towards an end - entertainment, fostered by consumption - rather than the end in itself that it used to be.Gee, I started out with a funny memory and here I am, ending on a sad note...Jack