17
The Pre is one of the Best Products says Consumer Reports
No comments · Posted by admin in Palm Pre
Consumer Reports recently released their annual top products list, which had 398 items. The Palm Pre is on the smartphone section. The Pre was given a score of 67, while the first place had a 73.
The low score was taken by the BlackBerry Pearl 8130 on Sprint, with a 59. That puts the Palm Pre right in the middle, which by the way, has the old sticker price of $200. If they had use the newer price, the Pre could have gained some extra points.

[Source: My Pre]
Blackberry · BlackBerry Pearl · Handhelds · Palm OS · PalmPre · Smartphone · Sprint · Video Games
Saul Hansell’s blog post for the NY Times talks about Palm’s chances, here are some highlights:
In a land of cellphone giants, Palm is a mouse. Palm is tiny compared with Apple, Research in Motion, Samsung, Google, Microsoft and Nokia, which are battling to control the future of smartphones.
…
While no one expected Palm’s sales would rival the sales of iPhones or BlackBerrys — and they have not — developers have not rushed to write applications for the phone as they have for the iPhone and Android phones.
…
Jon Rubinstein, Palm’s chief executive who was the top Apple engineer and the first head of its iPod division, said in an interview that Palm does not need to be as big as its rivals to thrive. His former employer, after all, was long able to carve out a lucrative niche in the computer business.
“One of the key things we need to do as a company is to get to scale,” he said. “We need to bring on more carriers and more regions.”
Analysts expect that Palm will sell an upgraded version of the Pre with Verizon early next year and add AT&T later in the year. It sells phones in six countries and is steadily expanding to others in Europe and North America.
…
Mr. Rubinstein said Palm would never need as many applications as the iPhone. “We are focused on quality over quantity,” he said.
Palm is still testing its app store, called the App Catalog, with a small group of developers. It will open to anyone who wants to write an app next month — six months after the Pre was introduced.
Mr. Rubinstein says he expects developers will write for Palm devices, in part because Palm’s operating system, called webOS, is based largely on the same languages used to design Web sites. Android, by contrast, is based on Sun’s Java language, and Apple uses a variation of the C computer programming language.
He discounts Android’s chances because, he says, it does not yet have mass appeal. “Android, and the Droid in particular, are designed for the techie audience,” Mr. Rubinstein said. “We are doing a more general product that helps people live their lives seamlessly.”
While Android is getting a lot of attention because it has attracted so many phone makers, those companies, Mr. Rubinstein, argues “have to depend on the kindness of strangers” — meaning Google — for their software.
“The companies that will deliver the best products are the ones that integrate the whole experience — the hardware, the software and the services — and aren’t getting one piece from here and one piece from there and trying to bolt it all together,” he said.
…
“The Palm Pixi is the only low-end smartphone with a new operating system,” said Mr. Kuittinen. “That is fairly impressive.”
He estimates Palm may be able to sell 10 million handsets next year, about 5 percent of the smartphone market. That assumes the company can get more carriers in the United States and Europe to sell Palm phones.
Apple · Google · iPhone · Microsoft · Nokia · Palm · Research in Motion · WebOS
CrunchGear revealed Radio Shack Black Friday ad and they will have the:
Palm Pixi Cell Phone (w/2-Year Agreement) – $99.99
Palm Pre Cell Phone (w/2-Year Agreement) – $99.99
Cell Phones · Cell Phones and Driving · CrunchGear · Palm Pixi Cell Phone · Palm Pre Cell Phone · Radio Shack Black Friday · RadioShack · Science and Technology
MobileCrunch has a review of the Palm Pixi, here are the highlights:
What we like:
The build quality is outstanding. It’s one of very few candybar phones I enjoy holding.
Generally, webOS as an operating system is the pinnacle example of user experience. It is (usually) functional and gorgeous without sacrifice, and we’ve got hope Palm can de-suck the Pixi by fixing the lag issues.
The keyboard blows the Pre’s out of the water
Multi-touch in the browser
Sprint Navigation is included in the price of data, and it’s pretty solid. It’s essentially the same powered-by-Telenav navigation app you’ll find on other phones.
The design of the webOS IM/messaging system is fantastic
What we don’t:
No Wifi
Lag. Lots and lots of lag, throughout the entire OS. Hopefully they can fix this with an update, because it’s incredibly distracting.
The new Facebook application is lacking, as is the Youtube client.
The App Catalog is far too limited
The battery cover is way too difficult to pull off, and the cover over the microUSB data/charging port makes me want to smash.
No video recording
Who should buy it: Anyone coming from an LG Envy, Samsung Alias, or other such messaging-oriented feature phone who wants a bit more functionality without diving into a more expensive and more complex smartphone. Sprint’s got some of the cheapest pricing when it comes to plans – this $99 smartphone is $500-$1100 cheaper than a $99 smartphone on AT&T or Verizon in the 24-month long run. If I had a early/mid-teenage sibling or kid, I could give them this without feeling like I was giving them junk that they’ll hate in 6 months.
Who shouldn’t buy it: Anyone looking for a fully capable smartphone. I love this operating system to pieces, but the lag, the lack of applications, and the absence of WiFi keeps me from ever recommending this phone to anyone who needs it for much more than texting, casual browsing, and growing into a full-fledged smartphone.

AppCatalog · Facebook · Handhelds · Operating system · Palm App Catalog · Palm OS · Smartphone · WebOS
Online phone retailer Wirefly is launching the Palm Pixi at a price lower than you’ll find anywhere else: $24.95 for new contract customers. Current Sprint customers won’t left out in the cold either – they’ll be able to pick up the Pixi from Wirefly for a mere $99.99 with a renewed contract. Both new customers and current Sprint subscribers will be treated to a rebate-free experience.
[Source: Pre Central]
Handhelds · Palm · Palm OS · palm pixi · Sprint · Sprint Nextel · Unix and Linux · Verizon
While we are still waiting for the Pre and the Pixi to come to Verizon, here is the Pixi ad:
Advertising · cellphones · Content Filtering · iPhone · Proxying and Filtering · Servers · Verizon · Verizon Communications
14
Palm Pixi to debut this Sunday, Wal-Mart offering it for $30
No comments · Posted by admin in palm pixi
The Palm Pre’s little brother, the Palm Pixi, is due to hit the market this Sunday, November 15th, and retailers are already offering the phone at discounted prices.
The Palm Pixi will be Sprint’s second webOS-powered smartphone. It features the same touchscreen and gesture-support that came with the Palm Pre. However, screen size is smaller at 2.6 inches as it has a slate-style QWERTY keyboard, compared to the Palm Pre’s slide out keyboard.
Other features include a; 2-megapixel camera, GPS, 3G data, 3.5mm headphone jack, and 8GB of onboard storage. The Pixi does not come with WiFi, but as long as you’re within reach of Sprint’s network, you’ll get 3G data speeds.
If you get the phone on Sprint, it will cost $99.99 on a two-year contract with a $100 mail-in rebate, but there are already better deals out there.
Walmart’s partner LetsTalk.com is offering the phone for $30 for a two-year contract without the mail-in rebate Sprint asks for. The only catch is that this needs to be a new contract, not an upgrade.

[Source: ibtimes]
Handhelds · Palm OS · PalmPixi · PalmPre · Smartphone · Sprint · Touchscreen · WebOS
webOS 1.3.1 is now available on the Palm Pre and will be available on the Palm Pixi.
- Yahoo! now appears as a Calendar/Contacts/instant messaging synchronization account.
- You can forward a text or multimedia message by tapping the message > Forward.
- A new option is available for restarting the phone: press and hold power > Power > Restart. The prior restart method (Device Info > Reset Options > Restart) is still available.
- Widescreen videos (including YouTube) now display in widescreen mode on the phone by default, instead of being cropped.
- If you tap to play a YouTube video embedded on a web page, the YouTube application launches and the video plays in the app.
- You can select a unique ringtone for new message alerts: Open Messaging > application menu > Preferences & Accounts > Sound > Ringtone.
- While listening to a song with album art displayed, you can tap the screen below the art to display a playback slider. Dragging the slider jumps forward or backward in the song.
[Source: Engadget]

Engadget · PalmPixi · PalmPre · Video · Web page · WebOS · yahoo · YouTube
Palm shares are on the rise again with renewed speculation that cell phone giant Nokia is interested in acquiring the Sunnyvale company.
Palm’s shares have risen about 9 percent today to about $12.50 a share. It’s unclear that there is anything new to the Nokia rumor, which has surfaced before.
In late September, Palm’s shares hit an almost two-year high when the Nokia talk surfaced. Palm’s stock peaked above $17 a share before subsiding.
There is differing opinion about whether it makes sense for Nokia to buy Palm. Nokia already owns a commanding lead in the global smart phone market with its devices based on the Symbian operating system. It’s also developing a new Linux-based operating system called Maemo that could vault it into the smart phone market in the U.S.
Nokia, however, might see the much lauded Palm webOS as a way to jump ahead, especially in the U.S. where Nokia is a minor presence. The Palm webOS is a very good modern operating system that, with the right support, is a legitimate challenger to the iPhone OS.
So, we’ll see if Palm can hold out any longer. They just released the Palm Pixi, the follow up to the Palm Pre. And Palm is slated to release the Palm Pre on more U.S. carriers early next year including Verizon Wireless. With the iPhone and BlackBerry still strong and Android coming on in a hurry, Palm may need the backing of a bigger company to compete.
[source: SF Gate]
Pre Central has a great review of the Palm Pixi, we can’t wait for the Pixi to come to Verizon:
The $99 Palm Pixi will be unleashed upon the world this Sunday and after using one full-time for two days, I can say it’s a great smartphone for anybody who hasn’t made the jump past feature phones. The Pixi comes in a tiny, almost bite-able form-factor that’s immediately appealing — all the more so because inside that little frame is the elegance and power of webOS.
For current smartphone owners, however, there are a few compromises that, all combined, lead me to suggest that most those interested in webOS should still opt for the more powerful Pre.
The Pixi is Palm’s best attempt yet to broaden their base of smartphone users by picking up former feature-phone users. Its competition isn’t meant to be so much the iPhone 3GS, the Droid, or even the Pre – though in reality, of course, they are a healthy part of the competition. Palm wants to position it more as a killer of the ‘near-smartphones’ out there, your Samsung Instincts and LG Rumors and whatnot. By that metric, the Pixi absolutely wins.
The Pixi is a good phone for anybody looking to step up to a their first smartphone without breaking the bank. As a phone for SMS, IM, some Facebook, and web browsing, it’s great and stands well above any non-smartphone or ‘near-smartphone.’ Centro owners: You are going to love this phone.
Should Pre owners switch to the Pixi?
No.
Conclusion
Now that I’ve worked all of the gripes out of my system, it’s time to come back to the main thing. The Pixi is a marvel of a little smartphone. It’s tiny, fun, and does more than a lot of phones at its price. That price is just very close to the ever-lowering cost of high-end smartphones.
If the Pre didn’t woo Palm Centro owners, the Pixi has a much better shot. The only question is whether or not it will achieve its real goal: winning new users who have never used a smartphone. I think it has a shot.
Pros:
Small
No, seriously, it’s small!
Only $99
webOS 1.3.1
Cons:
No WiFi
Slightly slower than the Pre
Slightly smaller screen than the Pre
Facebook · Handhelds · iPhone · Palm Centro · Palm Pre · PalmPixi · Smartphone · WebOS



![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=3132ee20-00e4-4c32-9b9d-98b373b021d1)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=4b6a68a0-9a6b-443a-953b-daee6cc4288e)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=d2a87f27-f1e6-4d26-af5f-806550fbfe43)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=dae6e71a-080b-4c7c-8903-a0d3fbc12ea2)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=55f2f21b-3eb9-48d2-8d55-baf5d20bc615)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=bde2fc0e-36ca-4861-99a5-8a364a0b2887)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=8f3f6925-f161-47c6-86bc-a239b850bc89)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=9cd97ca8-7c6f-41a5-af60-cc3e9ad32eaa)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=6d3e6cec-ce00-4fa4-9c65-db02b1538c8d)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=2e19e15b-4ed5-4471-af62-6e596840aeaa)
