Sunday, July 12, 2009

Palm Of Their Hands


Although Pre isn’t trying to compete with Apple’s iPhone, it’s the handset’s applications that will make it a major player

By all accounts, Palm’s new Pre smart phone is elegant and powerful. On sale for just a few weeks, it has a crisp touch screen, a pull-out keyboard aimed at e-mail devotees and a new operating system that can manage multiple applications at the same time.

But in a world crowded with iPhones, BlackBerrys and others , success for the Pre — and possibly the survival of Palm itself — is going to take a lot more than a well designed device.

These days, it is all about the apps.

Industry experts and programmers say that the company needs to cultivate a system of developers eager to write and publish small, useful programs, or applications, for the Pre and its core software, WebOS. Palm also needs to provide an easy way for Pre users to download, pay for and install those apps, similar to Apple’s App Store.

So far, Palm is off to a slow start. Palm’s App Catalog has just a few dozen apps, even as Apple boasts that iPhone users can download 50000 that do everything from receiving baseball videocasts to unlocking a rental car.

The payment system for the Palm app store — important if the company wants to charge for certain programs — is still under construction. And most crucially, Palm has yet to open its software development kit, the main set of tools needed to write apps, to most of the thousands of developers who have expressed an interest in creating products for the Pre.

As a result, some developers are wary of the new platform, said Ben Gottlieb, the president of Stand Alone, which has been creating fitness, game and calendar applications for Palm devices since 1995, but is focusing its new development efforts on the iPhone.

“The WebOS looks like a great comeback, but there’s a little bit of trepidation there,” Gottlieb said. “Most Palm OS developers I know have moved over to the iPhone. A lot of us feel abandoned as the platform was neglected for so many years.”

The competition is not standing still. Apple recently upgraded the iPhone’s software and began selling a new, faster model. Research in Motion is supposed to unveil several new BlackBerrys this year, including an update to Storm, its touch-screen device.

HTC and Motorola are also expected to introduce phones that use Google’s Android operating system.

The stakes are high for Palm, which once dominated the market with its now-ageing Treo handsets and even had a vast constellation of developers who wrote apps for the Treo’s Palm OS operating system. Since 2007, the company has been steadily losing in the US to Apple, RIM and HTC, according to data from Nielsen Mobile, a research firm that tracks the wireless industry.

If consumers become enchanted with the Pre, Palm could regain a significant share of the smart phone market, said Paul Coster, an analyst with JPMorgan who follows the company.

On the flip side, “if the Pre and WebOS fail, then the company is in trouble,” said Jonathan Goldberg, from Deutsche Bank.

Coster estimates that Palm has shipped close to 180000 devices in the two weeks since the product first went on sale and could reach as many as 2.5 million in the fiscal year ending in May 2010. But that would not be enough to make the company profitable, he said.

Palm is urging customers and developers to be patient.

“We’ve never really said that we’re in a race with Apple,” said Derick Mains, a spokesperson for the company. Rather than compete with Apple on the volume of applications, “we’re building a catalogue of quality apps in the store,” Mains said.

It is not unusual for software programs to lag behind the release of a new piece of hardware. Apple, for example, did not have an app store or allow third-party developers to write for its platform until nearly a year after the original iPhone went on sale in June 2007.

The concern for Palm is that competition for developers’ attention is much more intense now.

For Palm to thrive, the company will have to convince developers that writing WebOS applications will be lucrative, said Ken Dulaney, a mobile industry number cruncher with the research firm, Gartner.

Palm is still working on the Pre’s software development kit, which is used to build applications. The company said the tools would not be widely available until the end of the (US) summer. While they have granted hundreds of developers access to an early version of the kit, there are thousands of other eager programmers who cannot even begin writing products for Pre.

Some developers who were granted early access to Palm’s new operating system said it was worth the wait. “We find it’s the easiest one to develop for,” said Christian Sepulveda of Pivotal Labs. “It allows for a richer experience, like having a pop-up menu and background processing, which is helpful.”

Sepulveda’s company developed four of the first programs available for download through Palm’s app store, including an item for Twitter called Tweed.

Greg Stevenson, a long-term Treo user who plans to write programs on WebOS, sees the nascent platform as an advantage. “I’d rather be a big fish in a smaller pond than one app in a catalog of 50000,” said Stevenson, who is helping organise a gathering of Pre enthusiasts called PreDevCamp in August.

Palm said building the app store and writing the developer tools is a huge undertaking, and the company would rather do things right than too quickly.

“We’re busy working on scaling the infrastructure. As we have the capacity to ramp up access, that’s exactly what we’re doing,” said Pam Deziel, vice president for developer relations at Palm. “The focus for us is putting our heads down and delivering.”

Thursday, July 9, 2009

NFL Mobile Live Coming to Palm Pre August 1st

A Sprint support page indicates that NFL Mobile Live will be coming to the Palm Pre on August 1st. We just heard that we should be able to expect webOS 1.1 within a month, but we didn't know if it would come with more apps. We can't say for sure that NFL Mobile Live will come with 1.1, but it seems like a solid guess to us. In the comments on that 1.1 post, DSulls points us to a Sprint Support site about NFL Mobile live for the Palm Pre, indicating some excellent news:

NFL Mobile Live will be delivered via an OTA Update

It will be pre-loaded on all Palm Pre phones on August 1st

Similar to Sprint's NASCAR app, NFL mobile live allows you to get live audio of every regular season game, Live video of certain NFL Network games, and live NFL Network video 24/7. Not to mention "Red Zone Alerts" to let you know when a team is likely to score. Since Sprint requires an Everything Data plan, there won't be any additional charge for the app.

article source: http://www.precentral.net/nfl-mobile-live-coming-palm-pre-august-1st

Palm Pre information Sources

How can we help you?

Looking for information about the Pre? Here are some suggestions to help you get the best and speediest responses.

Have a question about -- or a problem with -- your Pre? The answer may already be on our support forums. If it isn’t, our moderators can often help you find a resolution. (There are specific forums for hardware, software, and webOS, as well as specific topics like Palm Synergy.)
Got an idea for a feature you’d like to see? We’re all ears -- drop us a note in our virtual suggestion box.

Looking to develop applications for the Pre? The Palm Developer Network is the place to go with questions about the Mojo SDK or other under-the-webOS-hood topics.

Curious about Pre? Catch a guided tour and get even more details here.

Wondering what other people are thinking about? Start a discussion board on Palm’s Facebook page. (You’ll also find links to many independent Palm community sites on the blog roll on your right.)

Here are some suggestions from Sprint: Need help with questions about your device or rate plan? Visit www.sprint.com/support for support with questions about your account, technical questions or information about Sprint's rate plans and services. You can also find tutorials, user guides and videos specific to the Pre at www.sprint.com/learn. Sprint also offers an online community of wireless users at http://www.buzzaboutwireless.com/ who can provide support for questions about Palm Pre.

Just want to tell us how much you love us? Awwww ….

(And of course, if you’re already a Pre owner, the Help app is as close as your Launcher.)

article source: http://blog.palm.com/palm/2009/06/how-can-we-help-you-.html

Palm Pre to Launch in Europe with O2 and Movistar

Palm Pre will arrive in the UK, Ireland, Germany and Spain on local Telefónica networks in those countries. Scheduled to be available in time for the holidays, Pre will be offered in the UK, Ireland and Germany on Telefónica's O2 network, and in Spain on Telefónica's Movistar network. You can read more about the announcement here.
Customers who would like to register to receive additional information about Palm Pre and be notified when it's available can register at:
UK and Ireland: http://www.palm.com/uk-pre-notify
Germany: http://www.palm.com/de-pre-notify
Spain: http://www.palm.com/es-pre-notify

source: http://blog.palm.com/palm/2009/07/palm-pre-to-launch-in-europe-with-o2-and-movistar.html

Palm Pre users complain about lack of virtual keyboard

The recent Strategy Analytics Wireless Device Lab benchmark report, "Mobile Device User Evaluation: Palm Pre," evaluates the recently launched Palm Pre across a number of features.

The Palm Pre performed well for most tasks, while users were impressed by the ‘activity card’ style user interface. Palm Synergy, which allows users to integrate multiple calendar and contact accounts, was seen to be useful, as long as users could choose which accounts they add.

"The lack of an on-screen virtual keyboard was a concern for many participants," according to Paul Brown, Senior Analyst in the Strategy Analytics User Experience Practice. "Although users liked having a physical QWERTY keyboard, they did not want to have to slide it out every time they wanted to type something".

Headquartered in Boston, MA, with offices in the UK, France, Germany, Japan, S. Korea and China, Strategy Analytics, Inc. provides timely and actionable market intelligence focused on opportunities and disruptive forces in the areas of Automotive Electronics and Entertainment, Broadband Connected Home, Mobile & Wireless Intelligent Systems and Virtual Worlds.

Owners of wannabe iPhones have worse problems than ill-conceived, poorly-implemented, perpetually-stuck-in-portrait-mode, antique mechanical keyboards on devices that supposedly offer landscape viewing. For one not-so-minor example: WTF are the apps?

Pre sufferers, don't hold your breath for critical mass. It isn't coming.

As for keyboards, Daring Fireball's John Gruber said it best:A hardware keyboard is a significant selling point for only one group of customers: those who already own a phone with a hardware keyboard, and that group is a niche. A nice niche, but a niche nonetheless.

Here’s why. Most normal people have yet to buy their first smartphone. That’s why the stakes are so high — it’s a wide open market frontier, but it won’t remain that way for long. Normal people aren’t planning to do much typing on their new smartphones, and they’re probably right. Any smartphone QWERTY keyboard, software or hardware, is going to be better than what most people are used to, which is pecking things out on a phone with a 0-9 numeric keypad.

I type far better on my iPhone than I expected I’d be able to, and that seems to be true for everyone I know who owns one. The only people who struggle with the iPhone keyboard are those who are already accustomed to a hardware smartphone keyboard.

article source: http://macdailynews.com/index.php/weblog/comments/21746/

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Palm Pre Battery Offers 20% More Juice Without Increasing Size

Earlier today when pitting push notifications against background apps on handsets, I mentioned that battery life is one disadvantages of a multitasking operating system. With the original 1150mAh battery in the Palm Pre, many folks find they can’t get through a full day on a single charge. You can replace the battery in the Pre, but I personally find it difficult to remove the back case. It’s not something I’d want to do on a daily basis, although I appreciate the option.
Another option would be an extended battery, but I don’t want the Pre to be any thicker than it is. Luckily, Palm Infocenter noticed that Seidio is now shipping a higher-capacity power pack for the Pre, and it’s the same size as the original battery. At $44.95, the Innocell battery is rated for 1350mAh, or just shy of 20 percent more capacity than the 1150mAh battery that comes with the Pre. If you’re finding a low battery six or eight hours in your day, this replacement ought to last you between 7.25 and 9.5 hours on a single charge, all things being equal.

article source: http://jkontherun.com/2009/07/06/palm-pre-extended-battery/

Monday, July 6, 2009

Palm Pre - Giving iPhone A Run For Its Money

It’s now been one month since Palm released its much-hyped Pre. Two weeks have passed since Apple came out with the latest version of the iPhone, the 3G S. So now that the dust has settled a bit, how do the two stack up?
The gang over at InfoWorld pitted the two against each other in a number of categories, including e-mail, contacts and calendars; applications; Web and Internet; user interface; location support; and security management.
The writers consider the Pre an obvious winner in multitasking. They say the iPhone badly needs to improve its ability to run multiple applications at one time. The iPhone gets the edge for business use, however. Management and security is also an area where Apple’s product is the leader, and of course, the sheer number of apps available is an advantage for the iPhone.
Overall, InfoWorld gives the iPhone the edge, but considers the Pre to be a “serious contender” in the smartphone space. BlackBerry’s efforts, they say, have been “uninspiring.”

article source: http://www.phoneplusmag.com/hotnews/palm-pre-called-serious-contender-vs-iphone.html

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Palm Pre Used As Agricutural Aid

As he rolls across the wheat fields of his Nebraska farm, Steve Tucker often has his hands not on the wheel of his tractor, but on a smartphone.

He sometimes posts a dozen messages per day on Twitter, commenting on everything from the weather to the state of his crops to his son's first tractor ride and even last night's cheeseburger.

"Got rained out trying to finish up planting corn. Only 90 acres left. Maybe it will dry up today and I can finish Lord willin'," he wrote in one recent post."

Just sold some more wheat, now, I wait for God to provide the harvest so I can fill the contracts," the 39-year-old said in another. "Eat more bread!"

Tucker is proof that smartphones are starting to put down roots in rural America.

He lives in a 150-person town near Brandon, Nebraska -- a place even he calls "the middle of nowhere." The nearest neighbor to his 4,000-acre farm is about 2 miles away.

Yet, farmers like Tucker are using Internet-enabled phones to gain a foothold on online social networks -- both for business and personal reasons.
____________________________________________________________

Tucker's tractor tweets
Man, it's so HOT outside, had a zit on my nose that just shriveled up and died.

I'm beginning to think I root up the desert plants I planted and plant bananas and pineapple since we are having Hawaii type weather.

This is not good, the fan on my tractor AC just stopped. It gets hot in a hurry.

This is the day the Lord has made. And he made hail which has struck about every field tonight. But I'm not bitter...not very happy either.

Another night of rain, I think we are beginning to become a tropical area. Crops in the west are way behind.

Just sold some more wheat, now, I wait for God to provide the harvest so I can fill the contracts.

Eat more bread!

Trying to fertilize and it is trying to sprinkle while I am doing it. Just give me two hours and then it can rain all it wants.

Got rained out trying to finish up planting corn. Only 90 acres left. Maybe it will dry up today and I can finish Lord willin'. ___________________________________________________________

"I can be in the most remote place and just with the power of having a BlackBerry ... I can communicate with anybody at anytime about anything," he said. "It is just amazing."

The growth of smartphones on farms is important because many people don't think about where their food comes from, much less associate a specific farmer with that process, said Andy Kleinschmidt, a farmer and agricultural extension educator at Ohio State University.

"When you can put a name or personality with someone who's actually raising corn and soybeans or actually milking cows, that's the most important thing that's come about in my opinion," he said.

A host of blogs and Twitter feeds have popped up around the subjects of technology and life on the farm. On Tuesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. ET, farmers meet on Twitter for a live chat about all things agricultural. You can watch that conversation by searching for agchat on the site.

Kleinschmidt said he uses a smartphone to check live weather reports, which can make or break a year's crop. Other farmers send him pictures of ailing plants, hoping to identify crop diseases early.

Some farmers use their phones as notepads, tracking their applications of pesticides, he said.
Developers of phone applications apparently have taken notice of the farm-tech trend, too. An iPhone application called PureSense helps techie farmers in drought-stricken places monitor how much water is in their soil at various locations and in real time.

Historically, farms have lagged behind the rest of country in Internet and computer usage. But a 2007 census by the U.S. Department of Agriculture says Web use on farms is increasing.

High-speed Internet access doubled on U.S. farms between 2005 and 2007, for instance, jumping from 13 percent to 27 percent.

That's still less than the general population, however. Fifty-five percent of farms had Internet access in 2007 compared with 62 percent of homes in the United States overall, according to government statistics. The census does not measure smartphone penetration.

Internet-enabled phones are making their way into rural America slowly because it's difficult to send Internet data over cellular networks in some sparsely populated areas where wireless service is spotty, some advocates have claimed.

Still, some farmers are adopting the technology despite the odds.

The biggest draw of smartphones and online social networks is that they provide human connections to people for whom farm life can be lonely, said Chuck Zimmerman, publisher of an agriculture news blog called agwired.com.

"Most farmers are going to be in their [tractor] cab," he said. "You're going all day long, night and day -- it can get a little bit boring, you know? So, a lot of them have satellite radio, smartphones, iPhones, BlackBerries. I can't tell you how many farmers are following me who are tweeting form the cab."

It's a misconception that farmers are behind the curve technologically, Zimmerman said."In large part, farmers tend to be very early adopters of technology. We have the stereotypical image of a hayseed farmer that still persists -- out on a tractor with a straw hat on," he said. "The reality is that most of them are very highly trained from a technological standpoint."

Tucker said his job on the farm in Nebraska includes more than harvesting wheat, corn, sunflowers and millet.

He wants to bring urban Internet users along for the ride. And in doing so, he's become a sort of text-happy evangelist for rural America.

"People out in the cities aren't familiar with agriculture like it used to be 100 years ago. They may not have an appreciation or an understanding of what goes on out in the rural side of things," he said. "I just try to be an information source for whoever may be listening."

So that's what he does from his tractor -- one tweet at a time.

article source: http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/07/02/twitter.farmer/index.html#cnnSTCText

Friday, July 3, 2009

Palm Pre customer satisfaction poll

It's been nearly a month since the launch of Palm's newest handset, the Pre. Since then, we here at Engadget have heard some vague and hard to substantiate claims of hardware failures -- cracked screens, a little broken plastic here and there -- but nothing on a large scale, so far as we can tell. We thought it was about time to turn it over to you the readers (the ones lucky enough to have a Pre, anyway), to tell us how the phone is holding up physically. Is it tough as nails or is it falling apart?

As of July 4 at 1:00 am 33,127 people have responded to the poll that was originally posted on the Engadget website. The results are below

Mine's looking good, no problems! 4223 (12.7%)

I've had one minor issue... 864 (2.6%)

I've had more than one minor issue, but I'm keeping it. 585 (1.8%)

Major problems! I'm taking it back (or already have). 2044 (6.2%)

Pre? I don't have one of those. 25411 (76.7%)
article source:http://www.engadget.com/2009/07/03/poll-hows-your-palm-pre-holding-up/

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Palm Pre Exceeds Sales Expectations

Palm has sold nearly twice the number of Pre smartphones as previously estimated, according to Ed Snyder, co-founder and wireless industry analyst at Charter Equity Research.

Synder says Palm sold 300,000 of the new smartphones in June, and another 75,000 in late May. Neither Palm nor sole-carrier Sprint have yet disclosed numbers, and some analysts put the June sales figure at 150,000. Snyder based his estimates on talks with unnamed sources in retail and manufacturing channels.

His research and conclusions are cited in an InformationWeek story, which cites his claim that Palm is now cranking ouit 15,000 units per day, and still has not caught up the strong demand for the Pre. Snyder estimates thatPalm and will deliver about 1 million units during the first full quarter of manufacturing.

Apple's new iPhone 3GS, with the 3.0 operating system, sold that many in its opening weekend.
Still, the TechTraderDaily blog at Barrons.com noted that Snyder says the 1 million units are "well above consensus." And Snyder expects Palm to reach about 1 million units per month by early 2010 or before, as it rolls out a WCDMA/GSM version of the Pre with Spain's Telefonica in September, and the announced roll-out with Bell Mobility in Canada. (Engadget this week posted a video from Vietnam, of all places, which purports to show a Palm Pre with a GSM radio; the voice-over is presumably Vietnamese but in any case it's not English.)

AT&T has expressed interest in the Palm product, and speculation has been rife that Sprint would have exclusive U.S. sale of the Pre for barely six months. But it's possible that Palm could introduce for the 3G GSM camp in the U.S. an entirely separate webOS-based device, such as the rumored Eos, something of a BlackBerry lookalike: a "candy bar" style with the keyboard set openly below the screen.
article source: http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/43200

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

To Pre or to iPhone That Is The Question

Q-I’m trying to decide between a Palm Pre and an Apple iPhone 3GS. I now use an antiquated Treo 650, which contains all of my life. Will all my contacts, calendar info and memos in the Treo transfer to either phone?

A-Getting the data from the Treo 650 to either a Palm Pre or an Apple iPhone is possible, but it may take a little more effort (and software) for an iPhone. It all depends on what program you’re using to synchronize your Treo’s data with the computer.
On a Windows system, the iPhone can sync up contacts, calendars, notes and bookmarks from Microsoft Outlook 2003 or 2007 using Apple’s iTunes program. On the Mac, the iPhone can sync up the information with Microsoft Entourage–or with Apple’s own Mac OS X Address Book, iCal calendar program, and Safari Web browser. (It’s also possible to sync up Yahoo and Google contacts.)
If you’ve been synching the Treo to Outlook regularly, set the iPhone preferences in iTunes to sync with Outlook. If you’ve been using Palm Desktop for Windows, a third-party program like Chapura’s $25 PocketCopy is one of the easier ways to catapult Palm Desktop data into Outlook so it can sync up.
The Mac version of Palm Desktop lets you export contact and calendar information as vCard and vCal files, which can then be respectively imported into Mac OS X Address Book and iCal. Palm which prepares the data for use with a Palm Pre.
Palm’s new Pre smartphone uses a program called the Data Transfer Agent to harvest your contacts, calendars and other information from Palm Desktop or Outlook for Window, or Mac OS X Address Book and iCal for the Mac. According to Palm, this is a one-way transfer to move the data off the computer and onto the Pre–where it will actually be syncing with an online service compatible with Palm Synergy software like Google or Microsoft Exchange.
If you want to continue two-way data synchronization with a desktop program, the PalmInfoCenter site has a roundup of third-party software. The Treonauts blog also has a lengthy rundown of solutions.
article source: http://gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/30/q-a-to-pre-or-iphone/

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