Sony Clie Officially For Sale (In English) 78
Red Mercury writes: "Sony has just announced their much anticipated high resolution (320x320) Palm OS-based PEG-N710 Clie Handheld. You can read their press release, and check out Red Mercury's experience with a pre-production unit here." And if you'd like to do more than look, lazylion says: "While everyone was busy yesterday oggling Apple's new low cost sub-notebook, Sony quietly began accepting pre-orders for the US English version of their fabulous Palm-alike, the Clie PEG-N700c. This is the one with the jog dial, MP3 player, memory stick & 320 x 320 px display. Cool! They even match. I'll take one of each!"
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
You obviously haven't hung out with the rich university set very much. Those are the ones who are always receiving cell phone calls in class, have the latest PDA or "cool" digital device, and drive expensive cars their parents bought them.
Hell, I'm not rich, but I would love to have a combination PDA/MP3 player/cell phone with wireless email, web browsing, SSH, X, and GPS, (and a storage technology that doesn't have bullsh*t MagicGate copyright protection at extra cost--the last thing I need is for my $900 mega-PDA to stop playing all my MP3s because I accidentally installed the SDMI II update). If I had all that, and the airtime/data fees were reasonable, I don't know if I'd even use my computer any more. I'd probably be willing to trade a kidney for such a contraption...
20 years ago he would have been right (Score:2)
Yow... (Score:2)
- A.P.
--
Forget Napster. Why not really break the law?
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
If I want floor polish I'll buy floor polish. If I want a dessert topping...
Re:Slobber, lust, slobber (Score:1)
Silly, I know, but a man can dream :-)
Slobber, lust, slobber (Score:2)
I'm still going to resist. If they are this good now, I can't be more than a year from having a PDA I can actually code on. Then I'll just need a teeny little keyboard that I type on with pins to go with it ;-)
Re:The screen and video details are quite impressi (Score:2)
For starters, it has a reflective screen so (unlike my palm)
What the hell are you talking about? The palm screen is transflective* which means that the backlight transmits through the back (sides) of the screen but daylight reflects off the back reflector just like your watch or calculator.
I don't know about you but my Palm screen looks best in bright sunlight.
* - Unless you're using a IIIc, in which case all bets are off. I'm not sure of the IIIc screen technology but hey're fugly, even with the backlight in a dark room. Reminds me of the old colour CGA screens, all "sparkly" and stuff.
Re:What does this mean for Agenda (Score:2)
Currently, PDAs don't do advanced things like multimedia very well, so there are some that advocate buying specialised devices and using PDAs solely for taking notes, keeping contacts and the like.
Fine, but just like with regular computers, I don't think we'll ever think of them as completely satisfactory. At least not until they do things like understand what we say to them, project and record graphics and sound with holodeck quality around us and allow instant communications with anyone, while becoming much much less intrusive to wear.
I'm just glad that there are companies other than Palm Inc developing these things too. Their current M?? machines don't offer much that'd make me want to get rid of my IIIx, but the screen on this Clie looks like it could enhance real tasks that we use Palm sized machines for these days, like Internet access, data entry, games, simple multimedia tasks etc. With 320x320 it's even better than the quite cool PocketPCs.. but why 8-bit color only?
Re:Slobber, lust, slobber (Score:1)
Re:No Apple Support? (Score:1)
Hope it's better than the last color Clie (Score:1)
It is interesting to note that Sony wasn't showing this off at their booth. It was another booth where another company was showing their software on the device.
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
Most PDAs are used by executives, who for the most part have no intrest in Mp3s, and thus aren't willing to pay the extrea $$$.
...which neglects that there are a lot of execs that aren't stodgy 50-somethings. Most young execs (and, well, anyone with a well-paying job) will probably go for the elegant look of the device and the "ooh-ahh" factor of any good geek toy.
Then again, for that price, you could just by an iPAQ.
OS Version (Score:4)
What is with that? The main reason for V4.0(If I have heard correctly,) is to support removable memory in a standard way.
Does anyone know if they are going to upgrade?
James
Re:HandEra is a less expensive alternative... (Score:3)
Such a critter for Sony is starting to show up in beta (and handspring has flirted with the idea), but HandEra (formerly TRG) is the only one that has really delivered. Plus I would much rather have compact flash expansion then some sort of mickey mouse memory stick that offers far less for much more.
The HandEra 330 also manages to pack either 4 AAA (think NiMh rechargables or Duracell Ultras) or a lithium ion battery pack internal to the normal Palm III form factor, as well as an integrated voice recorder application (that can go to either compact flash or MMC). It has a souped up dragonball CPU as well, for one of the fastest palms around.
What is really interesting to me is that a small group of hackers from Des Moines can consistently kick the butt of huge conglemerates such as the likes of Palm and Sony in terms of real world device functionality. I thought that era of computing technology had ended... it's nice to see it can still be done.
Bill
compatability issues (Score:2)
Hundreds? (Score:4)
Is it just me who worries about that statement? Considering that there are many thousands of applications for the Palm OS (most of which should work on the newer OSs), something's strange. Sony should have a reason to write a much lower figure (you don't do that willingly unless you have a good reason). Might it have something to do with the fact that it's a hi-res display?
Re:Oh Look... (Score:1)
Look, the memory requirements for PalmOS and PocketPC are different enough that 8 MB is very much comparable to 32 MB in terms of basic functionality.
I also hate the stupid memory stick nonsense, but the screen on the device is supposed to be one of the best in the industry- driven by a dedicated video chip.
If you want that, you gotta pay!
Re:The screen and video details are quite impressi (Score:1)
This one, however uses a reflective (or transflective as you called it) display, similar to the Game Boy Color, which will be wonderful for use anywhere.
-Julius X
Re:Hundreds? (Score:1)
That was my first though when the Handera came out; how would they handle the old apps that are only designed for 160x160?
Re:Hundreds? (Score:2)
Anti-aliasing (Score:2)
some kind of drug dispenser? (Score:1)
Does this thing dispence heroin or some other kind of addictive substance? Look at the expression on that guy's face!
great resolution, but... (Score:1)
Where's the Sony Style? (Score:1)
The color one just doesn't have that oomph. I think Handera actually looks cooler.
Lest you dis' my aesthetic bent, let's not forget these things become an accessory. You wouldn't buy a watch that looked like shit would you? Oh yeah, some of us on
Ever see one of those olive green timexes? Supposed to be some kind of "military" watch. Ewww!
Re:What does this mean for Agenda (Score:1)
My point is that Linux may be a bit much for a Palm-clone right now, but in the NEAR future when the computer that sits in your hand has a lot more power and is doing a lot more things, it'll need a robust OS to deal with it all and Unix is it.
Furthermore, I don't think Palm has what it takes to upgrade the PalmOS to do what Linux or WindowsCE can do. Even though I prefer a Palm right now, they've already lost the race to the future in my (humble) opinion.
Re:What does this mean for Agenda (Score:1)
Ask Dennis Ritchie: his first UNIX ran in like 16K ?
Or how somebody at Bell Labs wrote a spell checker that ran in 32K?
What has UNIX became nowadays...
Re:No Apple Support? (Score:2)
--
The Clie has custom MPEG decoding hw (Score:2)
And if we extrapolate from there, it seems obvious that Sony has included a dedicated MPEG audio decoder chip on the Clie. Your odds of hacking that to play Ogg audio are, as they say, slim to none.
Praying for Europeans (Score:4)
word [antioffline.com]
Re:alternate music formats and Memory Stick (Score:1)
Am I the only one that read this post and wondered what programs OOG THE CAVEMAN has designed for the palm platform???
OK, that's a sign that I need to cut down on my /. reading for a while.
Re:compatability issues (Score:1)
It looks like you didn't read the articles linked...
Go ahead and look, ye shall find answers.
A little dig... (Score:1)
Is this a dig at Microsoft and the limits they may impose in XP?
Re:Anti-aliasing (Score:1)
Re:Hundreds? (Score:2)
Re:Hundreds? (Score:2)
http://www.red-mercury.com/N710Ctech.html [red-mercury.com]
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
Also, the markets for the two don't really converge. Most PDAs are used by executives, who for the most part have no intrest in Mp3s, and thus aren't willing to pay the extrea $$$.
"""
Funny, practically everybody in my graduate program has a PDA, as do a huge number of the technogeeks I know.
You're right though, the market of students and technogeeks and the market of people interested in MP3s don't converge at all.
Oh, wait...
-DA
Re:This proves Palm Computing's business model (Score:1)
Doesn't claiming that you want to be the leader in a market, by 'becoming' one of your competitors in that same market imply that you have already lost?
HandEra is a less expensive alternative... (Score:4)
perl -le '$_="6110>374086;2064208213:90<307;55";tr[0- >][ LEOR!AUBGNSTY];print'
Re:Hmm... (Score:3)
I find your argument somewaht weakened by using 20 years as a comparison. I was using a typewriter 10 years ago and really don't think is was affordable to switch to computers/printers until the mid 90s. They already had Ataris 20 years ago. People still use calculators al the time (I do). 5-10 years is an eternity in computing technologies. You'll have plenty of time (as a consumer) to see these coming and adjust to them. It's not something you have to get ready for.
The jog dial is only useful for right handers. (Score:1)
Doctored photos (Score:4)
Check it for yourself:
http://www.sonystyle.com/vaio/clie/
The 700c uses the same type of passive color display technology that the color gameboy uses. It's not active matrix, it's not self illuminating, it's very different from what they show on the website.
When you have an advertisement, simulated pictures are almost expected. But on the Sony website, they have a whole gallery where you can check out the 700c from each angle, and each one has the same type of manipulated photo.
This is just bad chess.
Re:What does this mean for Agenda (Score:2)
The downside, I am afraid, for Handspring (not so much Sony...if the Clie flops no big deal to them) is that they have to PAY Palm to use the OS. Linux doesn't have the problem. Every other handheld OS has this problem, but Linux (well, maybe NetBSD too but let's not get into that battle again...). While the Agenda may not be very good now (at least they delayed it so they can debug it some more), with the devlopers who already have one writing stuff, it can only get better. And, so, the Agenda folks may not have everything figured out, at least someone out their can look at their code and see what's up with it. How may of you can do this with Palm? Yeah I thought so!
I know I am preaching to the chior but I really hate people knocking on what I consider is an unfinished product. To the whiners who bought one and are bitching.....they say right on the web page to not expect to do any important work on the things just yet and I agree. It's a developer handheld that may be able to do interesting things a lot sooner then Palm ever did. Once a better version of the handheld comes out, then you can lay into them (and yourself if your a programmer on the project). Besides, as we all know, people will go through some pretty serious hoops to get something for nothing (how many of us clog our cable modems downloading 650 meg iso's??). As Microsoft proved, it's pretty hard to compete with something available for free.
I imagine that with a Agenda and a wireless ethernet card, you could, theoretically, use one as a remote for your Linux based MP3 Jukebox, you can have the wireless do all of the updating for you (cron jobs run every 5 minutes when in range, and definitely at night). The Agenda is a platform that still developing. It will be quite exciting when these things are given more power.
After looking at the pages referring to the new Sony, I think it's a good looking handheld. I don't like that goofy stick thing hanging on the headphones. Looks like it just might pull the head phones off as you are running for a bus when downtown. I am afraid the bar has been raised a bit higher for Agenda, but eventually someone will bring out a Linux based PDA that will kill the proprietary ones...it's just a matter of time.
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
I don't think the new Clie shows a intention to evolve PalmOS in to Pocket PC, but rather shows how flexible it can be, and appeal to more people. Now PalmOS can offer PDA for anyone, from the low end "organizer-only" PDA like the Palm m100, to the executive m505 or Visor Edge, to (now) the multimedia rich Clie. This is something that Pocket PC simply cannot offer.
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
I'd have to disagree with this for several reasons. First, handheld devices are quite popular with techno-geeks like sysadmins and programmers. I'm a sysadmin in a team of about 20, 12 of us have Pocket PC devices, and 3 other have Palm OS devices. I decided on Pocket PC over Palm OS because of it's color capabilities, MP3 playback, and mulitmedia functions. I think that Sony is trying to appeal to these consumers with this new Clie, not the executives. Which is exactly what Palm OS needed, something to attract the younger audience away from Pocket PC. I would have loved to buy a Palm OS handheld over a Pocket PC, but none of them offered, at the time, what I wanted. I'm getting one of these as soon as I can, and I would bet that many more existing Pocket PC people will start jumping ship as well.
And as far as executives not willing to shell out cash for PDAs, I seem to recall iPaqs selling for upwards of a grand on eBay only a few months ago.
Re:What does this mean for Agenda (Score:2)
Re:the iBook is NOT a sub-notebook. (Score:1)
Re:oggling? (Score:1)
Re:No Apple Support? (Score:2)
No Apple Support? (Score:3)
Here's what their website lists for system requirements:
No mention of Macs at all.
Don't Underestimate Resolution (Score:4)
Many people cited the fact that all programs and the OS itself wewre hard-wred for the 160x160 resolution. It seemed intuitively obvious to me that you could just double the resolution and use 2x2 pseudo-pixels for backwards compatability.
Now that I've seen comparative screenshots [spug.org], I'm glad I stood where I stood. The difference *IS* dramatic! My hat is off to Sony and I hope others follow.
Now, if only they can do something about that price tag...
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
You have a point, however, 20 years ago I was using a PC for those functions - an Apple ][+ with an Epson MX-80 printer. Beyond those functions, I was able to find further use beyond the sum of the parts. And I had a technical edge over many of my peers just because of my familiarity with the converged items. Yes, I was an early adopter, but being such gave me advantages I enjoy today. That's why I referred to forward thinking in my initial response.
Re:Hmm... (Score:5)
Re:What does this mean for Agenda (Score:1)
What does this mean for Agenda (Score:4)
But even Sony was smart enough to license PalmOS from Palm. Palm obviously has something very good. Writing Palm Apps is easy. They have the software, they have the fanbase. Best to tap into that no? Add your new whiz bang features, pay palm your royalties, get a lil piece of the market. Palm is still king. Prolly will be for a good while.
Agenda is a good idea, but I just think that for once Unix, even if you strip out all the shit and use cramfs and just shove and shove and shove strip this, use a compact standard C library etc, is just not going to be competitive here. They would need to release a really awesome SDK for this thing to compete with Palm. They need some really killer apps and more than just 18 MB of ram (16 of that being flash) to compete. FLTK is sweet and very nice GUI kit especially if you like C++, but it just cant compete. I find PalmApps just as easy to write as FLTK if not a little easier.
Anyhow this really isnt off topic since Its real relevant to how the market is going and the fact that Sony is playing Palm's game shows a lot.
Jeremy
Re:Don't Underestimate Resolution (Score:2)
This message was encrypted with rot-26 cryptography.
alternate music formats and Memory Stick (Score:2)
From the Sony website, they explicitly say that the Clie will *play* both MP3 and ATRAC, but the Memory Stick will only support ATRAC. However, later they say that the Memory Stick will allow users to pile on more games, applications, and data. This makes me wonder if OGG [vorbis.com] files (which ar technically just data) could be played on a Clie? could a OGG payer app be written which takes advantage of the player hardware (including the headphone-based remote) ? What are teh hacking opportunities here?
it would be irony indeed if we could play OGGs on a Sony product :)
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
I listen to mostly house/trance, so it would be sweet to have all that in one package. Not to mention that there are 128 meg memory sticks now... ;)
Re:Really MP3? (Score:1)
Second, I think that everyone has to begin to realize that free formats such as mp3 are NOT going to survive in hardware players indefinitely. MDs used ATRAC, and I've been using mine for 6+ years... and it's been great. You just have to weigh the trade-off between cool gear and a little format conversion -- in the end, most people will take the cool gear. It's just a fact of life..........
Wireless networking options? (Score:2)
Re:Hundreds? (Score:1)
http://www.red-mercury.com/N710Ctech.html
The screen and video details are quite impressive (Score:2)
For starters, it has a reflective screen so (unlike my palm) when I take it outside I can actually use it instead of seeing a nice black rectangle.
The review points out how the video play is--quite nice... also the screen refresh rate, etc... because this writes directly to the video memory in order to erase the screen, you will see a MUCH better frame rate than its palm counterpart.
Now if I had only seen this just a tad sooner I wouldnt have to think about taking back a palm..
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
On that note, the very first person to ever demonstrate the mp3 format for me was an executive-- not some 20something dotcom hipster, a parent of teenagers with a corner office in a skyscraper.
Really MP3? (Score:3)
Does anyone have experience using actual, unfucked-up MP3s on this thing? I for one won't touch a Sony unless/until I am convinced that it won't eat my collection.
again the powerlifetime (Score:1)
Re:Don't Underestimate luminous screens (Score:2)
The pictures also point something else out -- just how less reflective to outside sources the screen of the Sony is vs. the screen of the Prism. That's something I noticed right away when I bought the Prism. No glare.
Okay, it's hard to see in sunlight. But that just points out that the Sony will be more difficult to read in darkness. Someone said it uses the same type screen as the Gameboy Color. My son has one of those and I *much* prefer my Prism's screen to the Gameboy screen. In 95% of the places I've seen both, the Prism's screen is *much* easier to read than the Gameboy's.
Maybe Sony has corrected that -- I haven't actually seen the unit yet. But unless they did, I'll stick to the Prism, or maybe buy the Palm 505 when I get a chance to look at it.
Sean.
w0w, +h15 b3a+z th3 5h1+ 0u+ 0f an iPAQ (Score:1)
This proves Palm Computing's business model (Score:4)
IN a press release around the time of their spinn off prom 3Com, Palm said 'We want to become the Mocrosoft oh handheld devices'. Now that may have a vary different meaninf for this audience, than what they intended, however, they seem to be well on their way to achieving their goal of being THE OS vendor for handheld devices. There was some debate when they made this announcement as to weather they could viably continue to build and support the palm line of handheld hardware devices as well as license their OS to 3rd party vendors. So far, the popularity of their os is not in question. Weather they can derive enough revenue from licensing the OS alone, is.
The introduction of this new high quality Sony device, as well as the offerings from other hardware vendors are now driving an increased rate of adoption of the OS. Palm is well on it's way to a successful and profitable future.
--CTH
--
Re:Really MP3? (Score:3)
Er... Well, y'know. You can't make an omelette without um... destroying a forest. Or something.
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
QMS 2001 Knowledge System, an ultimate convergence device, bombed seven years ago.
It was cheaper to buy printer and scanner separately. And if one of them breaks, the other one still works.
Qualcomm PDQ wasn't a hit. Same thing.
PC was not a convergence device - it took off because of new functionality (VisiCalc, Turbo Pascal). Convergence came on-board later, when the price for add-on became lower than the standalone device.
MP3 in Clie is nice, but expansion port and screen resolution are the real thing I would pay my money for.
What are we doing here? (Score:2)
They have a huge stake in preventing DVDs from being copied, and the current music monopoly suites them just fine. Every single non-cd audio device they have come out with incorperates some kind of copy-prevention.
It's quite surprising how short the memory of this group can be.
maskirovka
Shameless (Score:3)
Red Mercury [red-mercury.com] writes: "Sony has just announced their much anticipated high resolution (320x320) Palm OS-based PEG-N710 Clie Handheld. You can read their press release, and check out Red Mercury's [red-mercury.com] experience with a pre-production unit here [red-mercury.com]."
A total of three links to his site in the first three lines. Not bad for a shameless self-promotion :-)
Re:Hundreds? (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Hmm... (Score:2)
Also, the markets for the two don't really converge. Most PDAs are used by executives, who for the most part have no intrest in Mp3s, and thus aren't willing to pay the extrea $$$.
Oh Look... (Score:1)
Memory Sticks == Devil Seed (Score:1)
Stick to devices which use standard interfaces. i.e. PCMCIAII.
Too much $$$ (Score:1)