Take a look at this Norgus: http://www.peterrivard.com/Pages/SuperDictionary.html
I used to have a 8M Palm IIIv a couple of years ago, but I only ran Dokusya on that. The battery life was amazing, but in the end the battery stopped working. Now I've got a 16M Tungsten T with a 512M SDCard and I've got basically the same setup as Ricardo - I generally only use PADict though but I've got Dokusya for looking at Japanese text files. I haven't quite got the hang of the in-build flashcard ("hotlist") thing yet though, I still make cardboard flashcards.
Most of my classmates have Wordtanks and the like, but I think our Palm rigs are much better (and possibly cheaper.) When we have translation classes everything is written in Kanji regardless of weather we've learnt them or not, so we've gotta use dictionaries alot, and with this setup you can look them up very fast if you don't know the radical or pronunciation or stroke count or anything - I find it gets the kanji I draw correct at least 95% of the time. Then there's the Stroke Order Diagrams. And of course there's tons of other uses for handhelds... like playing Dopewars during exams ;)
I used to have a 8M Palm IIIv a couple of years ago, but I only ran Dokusya on that. The battery life was amazing, but in the end the battery stopped working. Now I've got a 16M Tungsten T with a 512M SDCard and I've got basically the same setup as Ricardo - I generally only use PADict though but I've got Dokusya for looking at Japanese text files. I haven't quite got the hang of the in-build flashcard ("hotlist") thing yet though, I still make cardboard flashcards.
Most of my classmates have Wordtanks and the like, but I think our Palm rigs are much better (and possibly cheaper.) When we have translation classes everything is written in Kanji regardless of weather we've learnt them or not, so we've gotta use dictionaries alot, and with this setup you can look them up very fast if you don't know the radical or pronunciation or stroke count or anything - I find it gets the kanji I draw correct at least 95% of the time. Then there's the Stroke Order Diagrams. And of course there's tons of other uses for handhelds... like playing Dopewars during exams ;)
