It depends on the complexity of your sheets, size of screen etc. A pocket pc
can edit basic excel sheets and there are more fully featured third party
programs (like Planmaker) that support most excel features available too.
Most of what you are needing to do is in PlanMaker as Alan has suggested. I
would recommend you going to the Softmaker website at
http://www.softmaker.com and downloading the demo version of PlanMaker. It
is fully functional and would prove for sure if the application will do the
job for you.
Regards,
--
Clinton Fitch
Senior Editor / Owner
Clinton Fitch (Dot) Com!
http://www.clintonfitch.com
A Pocket PC Magazine "Best Site" for Pocket PC Reviews!
"Dmitry Kopnichev" <ko...@bk.ruDelete> wrote in message
news:%239WR$w$wFHA...@TK2MSFTNGP11.phx.gbl...
Would also recommend spending some time getting a compact keyboard for
your journey.
When you get closer to a decision point for which pc, come back and ask
for input... for example, if your needs require a lot of input, there
are devices with built in "thumb" keyboards, currently a new crop has
small regular keyboards and bluetooth capabilities would make a large
difference if you went the folding keyboard route.
See http://BevHoward.com/TravLite.htm for some other thoughts on
traveling light.
Beverly Howard [MS MVP-Mobile Devices]
> "Alan Smith" <al...@hidden.email> сообщил/сообщила в новостях следующее:
> news:dhddeu$93a$1...@news7.svr.pol.co.uk...
>>
>> "Dmitry Kopnichev" <ko...@bk.ruDelete> wrote in message
>> news:uPkd%23T$wFHA...@tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl...
>> > Hello
>> > How to audit and edit Excell files on the journey? Notebook is too
>> > heavy
>> > and
>> > large. What OS and programs and PC or smartphone to use?
>> >
>> >
>>
>> It depends on the complexity of your sheets, size of screen etc. A pocket
> pc
>> can edit basic excel sheets and there are more fully featured third party
>> programs (like Planmaker) that support most excel features available too.
>>
>>
>
>
"Dmitry Kopnichev" <ko...@bk.ruDelete> wrote in message
news:%239WR$w$wFHA...@TK2MSFTNGP11.phx.gbl...
> Thanks for your reply.
> Does the Planmaker have the auditing toolbar? How basic should excel
> sheets
> be for a pocket pc edit? My sheets have INDEX, HLOOLUP, LOOLUP, FORECAST
> and
> ARRAY FORMULAS AND constants.
> Can a pocket pc work with Outlook 2003 data?
http://www.softmaker.com has the manual for you to study to see if it will
fulfill your needs. There are also fairly active forums available via the
site so you could ask specific questions but it seems that it is the best
option for a portable machine without going to a subnotebook running Windows
with desktop Excel.
Pocket Outlook is included with ppc's- look at microsofts site for
information.
news:%23nxoMHN...@TK2MSFTNGP11.phx.gbl...
> There is a notebook Asus s200 or 300, which weights just 900 grams. Is it
> a
> better choice?
Only you can say what will be best for yourself- it depends on what you will
do, how much battery life, how much money, what your eyes are like, how much
portability, etc etc you want/need. Work out your requirements, desirable,
nice to have but not essentials. Then work out how each format meets your
needs, or more importantly which needs aren't met. Then decide suitability
for your own needs.
I think Captain Kirk had one that allowed him to maintain his captain's
logs in addition to processing complex computer needs using voice only ;-)
Seriously, time to look at what's available, justify the price and see
what it's capable of rather than requiring your specs to be met in
advance.... you have gotten a lot of good suggestions, so it's up to you
to decide yes or no and either reap or refuse the benefits that are
currently there for the taking.
Thumb keyboards are available, but no current built in or snapon
keyboard is going to offer you onehanded operation.
A number of pocketpc's have the same "thumb keyboard" but I would
challenge the idea that any can really be considered "one handed"
operational with much more funcionality than a ppc with no keyboard,
especially with your posted priority of using excel.
I have had four devices with thumb keyboards and can attest that they
were all challenging even when used with two hands (thumbs)
First, I am not an "excel" person, so my info is incomplete.
If you use advanced features of excel (graphs, advanced functions, etc)
they will be editied out on sync.
That said, I have opened many excel files and have never encountered
this... i.e. if you use basic spreadsheets, you will have enough power
to do what you need.
If you have advanced needs, there are third party excel apps that give
you a complete solution.
note... when complex spreadsheets are synced from the pc and edited,
their sync back to the pc overwrites the advanced feature copy, so,
never sync the originals of word and excel files if they use advanced
desktop features.
It supports most features of Excel. You can copy excel files to and from
your pc without conversion- this means you don't lose things in the file.
But rather than talking about what can/can't be done just download, install
and try. Don't forget the pdf manual which is also a free download- read it
to see the programs capabilities.
"Dmitry Kopnichev" <ko...@bk.ruDelete> wrote in message
news:eXulGfj...@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...