9

(Elliott) #1

Gemini PDA 4G


REVIEW


he era of the personal
digital assistant (PDA)
was brief but glorious:
from the pocketable
pen-driven products
of Palm to the
robust clamshell creations
of Psion, the PDA was the
must-have accessory for the
nineties road warrior. The
promise of a hackable, hand-held
computer has been tantalising geeks since then.
The birth of the smartphone, though, put paid to
the PDA – until it was dragged back from the dead
by Planet Computers, courtesy of a highly successful
crowdfunding campaign.
The Gemini PDA is inspired by the warmly
remembered Psion Series 5 family of PDAs, supplied
to us for direct comparison by The National Museum
of Computing (tnmoc.org). The Gemini is a sleek
clamshell which opens up to reveal a touch-sensitive
display on the top and a compact, yet surprisingly
usable keyboard on the bottom.

Its internals, though, couldn’t be more different.
The Gemini is, to all intents and purposes, an Android
7.0 ‘Nougat’ smartphone, with an added keyboard.
A MediaTek Helio X27 processor packs ten cores of
varying power and performance ratios, there’s 4GB of
RAM, and 64GB of storage with microSD expansion


  • though this comes at the cost of losing the second
    SIM card slot in the 4G model, which can be used as
    a somewhat bulky phone.


A MODERN APPROACH
The screen, too, is an unsurprising demonstration of
the improvements made in the state of the mobile
computing art over the last few decades. While its
FHD+ resolution and impressive brightness are a
great improvement over the monochrome LCD of
its spiritual predecessor, there is visible masking
at the corners which gives it a pleasingly rounded
appearance at the cost of a handful of lost pixels.
While sold with Android, the Gemini isn’t restricted
to Google’s mobile OS: Planet Computers has, in a
twist on the traditional locked-down format of most
commercial Android devices, released images for
running a customised Debian Linux distribution or the
mobile-centric Sailfish OS – or, if you’re willing to split
the 64GB storage three ways, the ability to choose
one of the three at boot time.

T


Gemini PDA 4G


By Gareth Halfacree @ghalfacree

A modern take on an old form factor


GEMINI £599 (£499 WiFi only) planetcom.co.uk

Below
The metal hinge
starts out somewhat
flexible, and appears
too loose

Right
Installing Linux turns
the Gemini PDA
into a fully-fledged
portable computer
Free download pdf