REX 6000
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The Rex 6000 is an ultra-thin PDA produced by Xircom, then Intel, from about 2000 to 2001. Its primary claim to fame is as "The world's smallest full-function PDA": due to its unusual physical configuration as a PCMCIA Type-II card (8.57 x 5.40 x .5 cm; 40 g), it may be synchronized by inserting it in a host PC's PCMCIA/PC-card slot.
The Rex 6000 is the successor to the Franklin REX 5000, with the primary difference being the addition of a touch screen. It appears to have been initially developed by the Citizen Watch Company of Japan, marketed as the "DataSlim-2."
The Rex 6000 is available with up to 2 MB of flash memory. It uses a 4.3 MHz Z80 microprocessor, has a 240 by 120 pixel monochrome LCD, and is powered by two button-type lithium cells.
As of 2003, the Rex 6000 retains a devoted group of users and developers.
External Links:
- Rex 6000 links (http://dmoz.org/Computers/Systems/Handhelds/Rex_6000/)
- The Rex 6000 users' website (http://www.rex6000.org/)
- Rex 6000 website with addins and other useful info. (http://www.rexstuff.com/)
- Intel's official Rex 6000 page (http://www.intel.com/support/peripherals/xc/pda/rex6000/)
- Category at ODP (http://dmoz.org/Computers/Systems/Handhelds/Rex_6000/)sv:REX 6000