Sequa wrote:So would you recommend buying an electronic dictionary or a PDA to use PADict on it?
Tough call.
If you already owned a PDA I'd say try that first.
A PDA will be cheaper. I reckon you could pick up a Clie for around €100 or less. (PDA's seem to have gone out of favour and Sony have stopped making thier excellent little PDA's) and PAdict can handle wadoku dictionary in German which you might find useful. I've never seen anything other than Chinese and English on Electronic Dictionaries.
the link
http://www.wadoku.de/
I don't understand a word myself!
Startup time isn't an issue with PDAs they are on all the time in effect. The search is slower than my Wordtank but still fairly instant. (The wordtank does a live search that refines as you type more letters or kana)
The handwriting input is reasonable. But still more convienient than a radical lookup method. It might depend on your writing ability. My Japanese teacher when playing with handwriting recognition gets instant results I find I need to rewrite! But any recognition I feel is training me to be more accurate in my writing.
I only used PAdict, the alarm clock, and an electronic book reader on it. maybe the notes feature and address book too.
Since I got the G55 I've stopped using PDAdict though I must say. I've made myself learn and use the G55. The ability to write a kanji I miss. Also the simpler kanji information and kana readings for everything. But I think the G55 is forcing me to improve my reading slightly. Ironically I've slowed down in searching because I have to jump to get the reading of kanji.
Ultimatly an Electronic dictionary is better. Better input. Better navigation. More detail. Example sentences. Bigger screen. But not as simple and can be expensive. It's more use if you are beyond the basics and are getting comfortable with kanji.
Ideally I'd say play with them before you buy if that's possible.
Also ask yourself if it *has* to be portable.
There are excellent online dictionaries.
ALC
http://www.alc.co.jp/
and denshi jisho
http://www.jisho.org/
as well as good standalone solutions for computers
--The beauty being cut and paste abilities and a lot of my Japanese seems to happen online or on the computer in some way. Even when writing or reading my MacBook is beside me usually.
Eijiro from ALC again
JEDict
http://www.jedict.com/
a reader for the Mac that accepts and searches a lot of formats (don't know PCs sorry)
Overall My preferences are JEdict with edict, kanjidict and Eijiro on my MacBook. Then the G55, then paper dictionaries, (Oxford Starter and Kodansha Kanji Learners Dictionary) I usually have my MacBook with me and sometimes use it in class. My books at home. My G55 for class and I just carry it with me (日本語オタク!). I had it with me when I was travelling in Japan, although I rarely had cause to use it. A phrasebook was more helpful or just trusting my wits. I was on holiday after all. Time to do and not let things like looking up dictionaries get in my way!