Palm OS + Bluetooth Keyboard ============================ I have the Aceeca PDA32 portable computer, you know. It has its advantages. For example, it has Bluetooth, a miniUSB connector and it has Palm OS 5.4.0. But it has also some problems: it was built to order so many common features may be unavailable. My particular device has no sound, no infrared and no WiFi. It only has the Bluetooth chip. The device has huge RAM (32MB) and fairly fast ARM CPU (much slower that the CPU in T|X anyway - and it sometimes felt SLOWER than my T|W with its m68k CPU!) so I decided to try to develop some stuff here. I Have bought a PockeC license, also downloaded the OnBoardC, the SmallBASIC and the Tcl interpreter. But I hate the default input method: it uses the Graffiti2 and it has thin, uncomfortable stylus on relatively small screen (the screen is physically smaller that that of the T|X) and screen surface is also far from ideal. So I do not want to write C codes with stylus. But what to do? There is none of "standard" Palm connectors so I cannot use keyboard designed for, say, Palm m50x/m70x. There is no infrared sensor so I cannot use the Palm Univarsal Wireless Keyboard. So the only way is to use Bluetooth. But the Palm OS have and no build-in Bluetooth drivers. There was a Bluetooth keyboard driver (and it WAS freely available at PALM.com) but it is gone and it is not archived at Archive.org... I tried to find it elsewhere but failed. So I asked on Mastodon: @jynx and @logout tried to find the driver but also find nothing. Fortunately I have remembered that at some point I have got a "brand new" Stowaway ThinkOutside Sierra keyboard. As the company name suggest it was probably designed for Palm. And it was. My keyboard came in an original packaging, if I am not mistaken. So, I thought, there should be a driver CD. SO I searched for it at home, at office, just elsewhere... and I found nothing. Today I needed to find some documents. I didn't found them (of course) but I found the Stowaway CD instead! And yes, the CD includes a *.prc file named Stwy40Plm.prc [1]. So I connected my Aceeca, installed the file and tried to connect my Nokia SU-4W Keyboard. I thought that there is zero chance to mke it work, Well, ic connected and worked. Except the "Fn" key. If you know how the SU-4W work then you know that the Fn is necessary to use numbers among others.. So I have found my poor Stowaway Sierra keyboard. It is mechanically damaged (didn't I told you that it was declared as "brand new" and unused?). Except its issues it work as expected. I wrote this text on this keyboard. References: [1] http://jirka.sdf.org/Stwy40Plm.prc So I thing that it is a success, finally...