[From Mark Rosengarten, Wallkill, NY] OK, now the verdict is in. The Treo 650 kicks solid butt as a geocaching device, when paired with a Bluetooth GPSr. I drove up to Albany today and programmed TomTom Navigator 5 to find one particular cache called "Roadside Rest" in a parking area just off the New York State Thruway, northbound. It took me there flawlessly. I parked the car and opened Cachemate. I selected Roadside Rest, and then pushed the "Nav" button. It took me right to the cache. Since it doesn't have a built-in compass, I don't pay too much attention to the direction needle once I get within 30 feet or so, but I track the distance instead. It took me right to the cache. I will not tell you the nature of the cache, lest you find it easier because of it, but suffice to say it was a clever little hide. I signed the log (it was a microcache, so the log was a tiny strip of paper rolled up inside of it) and took the only other content of the cache...a geocoin. This is a trackable coin with a serial number on it, and the point is to move it to place to place. I will place it in a cache nearby where I live in Newburgh, NY, maybe even tomorrow. I went to Albany, had my meeting, then on the way home, I stopped off in New Paltz and found two virtual caches. These are places of interest where a physical cache is not allowed to be hidden, so to claim credit for finding it, you have to answer some questions based on information to be found at the cache. My Cachemate descriptions were missing, though, so to find out what questions had to be answered, I logged onto geocaching.com right from the Treo and found the info I needed. Both caches down! I came home, even more convinced that the Treo 650 is the best device ever made on the face of Planet Earth. Since I had to use multiple programs in tandem, though, it would be nice if you could have more than one program open simultaneously and be able to switch between them!