Treo, Combination Cellphone and PDA 178
-homb- writes: "Finally, Handspring has done it before everyone else: The Treo, a combination cellphone, wireless POP3 email, and PalmOS PDA. Plus, the first version comes with or without a keyboard. I love my Blackberry, and it looks like the keyboard is the way to go for email. And the next version coming later on next year will have color." We mentioned these earlier.
powder puff.. (Score:1)
Re:powder puff.. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:powder puff.. (Score:1)
Re:powder puff.. (Score:2)
Mitsubishi (Score:5, Informative)
As a side note - I recently picked up a Sony CMD-J5 to find it also does SMTP/POP3 in addition to the normal WAP services - and the WAP browser (Microsoft Mobile Explorer) can cope with 'simple HTML' - it's good enough to browse Slashdot in 'light' mode, at least
Re:Mitsubishi (Score:1)
Springboard? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Springboard? (Score:2, Interesting)
Funny that they should abandon what has basically been their chief selling point over the Palms.
Anyhow, if you wait till mid '02, they're releasing a colour version ( Treo 270, $599 ).
Handspring first? (Score:5, Informative)
Ericsson R320 (Symbian)
Nokia 9210 (Symbian)
Mitsubishi Trium Mondon (PocketPC)
Sagem WA 3050 (PocketPC)
Kyocera QCP 6035 (Palm)
Qualcomm PDQ phones (Palm)
I'm probably leaving some out. So, great idea yes, first, no.
Re:Handspring first? (Score:1)
Re:Handspring first? (Score:1)
Re:Handspring first? (Score:3, Interesting)
The R380 is btw released as 380e, an updated (much faster) version with USB as well now.
(and of these, the 9210 will appear in the us as 9290)
Links:
Symbian [symbian.com]
Ericsson [ericsson.com]
Nokia [nokia.com]
bluetooth (Score:5, Funny)
Re:bluetooth (Score:2)
How about generalizing that to "where is bluetooth connectivity?".
Seriously, who cares? Nothing else seems to play with bluetooth, so what good will it do you to bundle in the hardware for it? Now I know there are a lot of pieces of hardware out there that claim bluetooth stuff, but does any of it actually work in a *gasp* usable manner?
Re:bluetooth (Score:2)
Hang on... (Score:1)
Re:Hang on... (Score:1)
GSM cards only work OS if you pay extra (Score:2)
The benefit is that when abroad you can buy a pre-paid GSM SIM card account so you are contactable to people you choose to give that pre-paid account's number out to.
I live in a GSM country & the facts are otherw (Score:2)
If you go abroad with getting 'roaming' as you call it activated & accept the surcharges/fees that involves, the phone won't log onto the networks overseas, when its turned on.
BTW, even though carrier locked GSM phones exist, they are as rare as hens. Everyone I know in Oz who owns mobile phones have changed carriers at least a couple of times, & most quite a few times. None have had any trouble putting SIM cards from other carriers in their phones.
kyocera Beat them to it. (Score:5, Informative)
No, Qualcomm beat Kyocera to it. (Score:1)
They don't make 'em anymore, though.
Re:No, Qualcomm beat Kyocera to it. (Score:1)
Well, if you want to pick nits, this [palmpower.com] has been around much, much longer. They don't make 'em anymore, though.
Well, actually they look very similar, don't they. That's because the Kyocera phone is the Qualcomm phone.
The company changed their name, or was bought out or something. The Kyocera phone is just the new model from the one with "Qualcomm" emblazened across it.
Re:kyocera Beat them to it. (Score:1)
Pretty cool, but you can't use the jog dial to browse the contacts list without screwing up the Chapura conduit for lookOut2000, requiring a soft reset. Yeah, I know, using M$ products is like admitting you vote Socialist, but...
It'll be cool when they come out with a version that also does GSM, should you ever be travelling abroad again.
And, in case their executives read this, how about supporting USB and lowering the price of accessories? I'd buy an extra stand, charger, and data cable, (and the RS-232 to USB converter required for use with my laptop), the combined sticker price weren't half what I paid for the phone, for crying out loud.
GSM networks are cellular (Score:2, Flamebait)
GSM just happens to be the world standard, when will the Yanks understand this?
Re:GSM networks are cellular (Score:2)
Too bad Handspring built this thing around a GSM CancerPhone, since it looks like decent execution otherwise. Looks like I'll be staying with the Kyocera 6035 SmartPhone for a while...
Re:GSM networks are cellular (Score:2)
The waveform difference (between GSM and analog, but the CDMA waveform looks much more like analog) has been postulated as a factor in adverse RF effects of cellphones since at least the Adelaide study. Recent research has confirmed that this may indeed be a factor, but I have yet to see a good sturdy that is aimed at really isolating modulation method as a factor in RF damage. There is really no longer any doubt amongst RF/bio researchers that damage is occuring, though - here are two recent quotes from prominent and respected researchers in the field: "One can no longer go around saying there is no link (between cellphone use and health effects.)" -Dr. Alan Preece, head of Biophysics at Bristol Oncology Center. "Without question there is a biological threat," agreed James Lin, Professor of Bioengineering and Electrical Engineering at the U.S. University of Illinois. "The question is how hazardous mobile phone use is." (Source, Reuters report from last month, available on Yahoo!. [yahoo.com] (Is it proper to ignore the embedded punctuation in Yahoo!'s name? If not, it should be, just to spite them for doing such a thing...)
BTW: There's not necessarily a difference in frequency: GSM operates at 1900 MHz, CDMA may operate at *either* 800 or 1900 MHz, depending on the carrier. (Generally, Cingular/GTE uses 800 MHz CDMA overlays on part of thier analog channels, Sprint PCS and most of Verizon use the 1900 MHz PCS band. Most of the CDMA in the US today is already at 1900 MHz. TDMA in this country is pretty much exclusively in the 1900 MHz band, since it can't reasonably coexist with other methods.)
In Canada (Score:1)
Re:In Canada (Score:1)
Oops (Score:1)
I think that would make it sufficient as a worldphone (where GSM is concerned) as most countries either support 900/1800 (Europe/Asia) or 1900 (America)
Re:In Canada (Score:2, Informative)
Microcell's GPRS service has been up and running for a couple of months now. It costs the earth though - 5 cents per Kilobyte or in bulk lots starting at $25 for 2 Meg.
Rogers/AT&T is in the midst of rolling out a GSM network in Canada. It's not up yet, but some time next year when it goes live, they may start supporting this phone. They'll have GPRS too, once they're up.
Techie Stuff or Corporate Usage (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Techie Stuff or Corporate Usage (Score:1)
Rubbish! I use a Sony Vaio Picturebook every day.
Ok, so I have spine which resembles the curves of the Mississippi...
Re:Techie Stuff or Corporate Usage (Score:1)
Is true that truly "writing" mails in the Treo wouldn't be very feasible unless is possible to attach a real keyboard to it (I use Targus keyboard, and it's great).
I don't know in USA, but here on UK SMS messaging is quite important. And being able to write with something slightly better that the numeric keypad would be beyond praise.
imagine ..... (Score:2, Funny)
you get the picture
PDA+Cellphone from about 1993? (Score:2)
I'll have to dig thru my old PopSci issues if noone else can think of it. I remember being wowed by that little gizmo.
Re:PDA+Cellphone from about 1993? (Score:1)
The article in Byte about it doesn't seem to be available online, though I still have a hardcopy....God, I miss the old Byte....
Re:PDA+Cellphone from about 1993? (Score:1)
Lots Of Love
Bill
Reminds me of an old joke (Score:2)
guy2: Excuse me sir, do you have the time
And so they haggle for quite some time until they finally agree on a price of 25'000$. Guy2 hands over the money, wears the watch, has a proud smile on his face and walks away.
The seller with obvious effort lifts the two suitcases and yells:
Hey man, don't forget the batteries...
Handwriting Recognition (Score:1)
What Palm need is a cheap faster processor (XScale?) which can run proper cursive (joined up) handwriting recognition. I know the PocketPCs have this but >$300 for one is a bit steep for a student. Here's hoping Palm can cram this into something for roughly $150.
It's the *keyboard*... (Score:3, Insightful)
Everyone's pointers to prior art seem to be missing the same thing - keyboard! People who have used the RIM find the keyboard faster and more accurate for short email messages.
So that's the combo - Palm, cell, keyboard.
Being GSM is not a problem - that's the direction that AT&T is headed, so that coverage is coming. And GPRS instead of cellular means that the mailer can step out occasionally to look for mail, without the network having to push it all the way down to the handset.
Re:It's the *keyboard*... (Score:5, Informative)
here [nokia.com]
Been out for a while, quite popular. Yes, it will appear in the US too, called Nokia 9290.
It would be better with a Psion5+ keyboard (Score:2)
The best PDA keyboard ever
Re:It's the *keyboard*... (Score:2)
Re:It's the *keyboard*... (Score:2)
Re:It's the *keyboard*... (Score:2, Interesting)
You know... (Score:2, Funny)
That would immediately become the new killer app. They would kill their brother for one! They would become mass market items, the price would plummet!
Then 'we' wouldn't be forced to pay stupid amounts of money for this kind of kit, on expensive tarriffs.
They'd be Xmas present territory!
How good would that be? We should start a campaign!
Re:You know... (Score:2)
Can Someone Tell Me... (Score:1)
What kind of "service activation" in mentioned there?
$399 with service activation
$549 without service
Phone activation on which company? Am I missed something here? Thanks
Re:Can Someone Tell Me... (Score:2)
Re:Can Someone Tell Me... (Score:1)
The providers for the VisorPhone module [handspring.com] are Cingular Wireless [cingular.com] and VoiceStream [voicestream.com].
It's missing 1800Mhz band (Score:5, Insightful)
IMO 900MHz + 1800MHz + 1900MHz = world phone.
Re:It's missing 1800Mhz band (Score:1)
> IMO 900MHz + 1800MHz + 1900MHz = world phone.
IANARF, but 1800 is (usually) available only when 900 is. There is "localnets" that are only 1800 (innner city areas), but even in US they're not that common because of long distances involved.
Re:It's missing 1800Mhz band (Score:2)
Re:It's missing 1800Mhz band (Score:2)
Re:It's missing 1800Mhz band (Score:2)
I Am Not A Radio Frequency? What?
Re:It's missing 1800Mhz band (Score:1)
So where the spec says it's a 'world' phone, it aint.
IMO 900MHz + 1800MHz + 1900MHz = world phone.
Yep, I agree. Sounds like they think it's a world phone because they've combined the frequency only the US uses (1900) with another one (900) of the two which the world uses.
Without 1800, it's not quite worldly enough for any non-Americans to buy. Only Americans who occasionally travel overseas would be happy with the worldliness.
As an Aussie who often travels to the US, it's not good enough for me.
Re:It's missing 1800Mhz band (Score:1)
I'd assume that's what you'd want.
Re:It's missing 1800Mhz band (Score:1)
Exactly my point. The 'Europe' version, sure enough uses the two frequency ranges which we in Europe use. Yes I am based in Europe, and I use a network which is predominantly 1800 (Orange). So if I go to the US, I can't use the 'Europe' one.. The 'World' phone should have all three. This isnt a first by any means, there are tri-band phones out there.. Bosch do one, funnily enough, called a 'World phone'..
re: It's missing 1800Mhz band (Score:1)
OTOH, the 900/1900 version (which is sold in the US only, AFAIK) works in Europe, Asia _and_ the US. Therefore the 900/1900 US version of Treo is a world phone. Only a few people in Europe and Asia with existing 1800MHz-only plans will be affected (ie. they have to change their plan or carrier, not a major issue).
This leads to the conclusion that I want the US version since it works pretty much everywhere (1800 would be a nice addition, but just that). According to the US FAQ I can only buy the US version if I get a friend to send it overseas. Ok, fair enough.
But Treo costs $549 without a service plan, $399 with a service plan. Again, according to FAQ, I can buy the phone in the US online, and then it is up to me to activate the plan. So, I'd like to know if I can buy the "with plan" version for $399, "forget" to activate the plan, ship it to the fatherland and use it happily with my existing SIM-card. This way I would have Treo with worldwide capability for $399 plus shipping. I'd like to know if the $150 difference is via a rebate, or if Handspring trusts its online clients to activate the plan (not likely). Anyone know how they do these things in the US?
I can't believe Handspring Europe doesn't offer the 900/1900 version in Europe (AFAIK). I have to go through all this trouble to get a Treo with worldwide capability. Typical, a company cripples a good product (perfect for me) with crappy distribution (see DVD players).
Of course, if I can get it for $399 from US, it'll be cheaper than what they would sell it over here even if it was available. As most Europeans know, shipping products over the pond raises the price of electronic products 50-100%. Amazing, isn't it?
I guess I'll write a letter to Handspring Europe...
Re: It's missing 1800Mhz band (Score:1)
I had to commit to 1 year service, if I drop the service within that year, I pay full price for the VisorPhone...
So far, it's been great!
The first thie I thought of was... (Score:1)
I'll be sold when... (Score:1)
Then you'd have a PDA/cellphone/MP3 player.
Give it a 200dpi screen, and you'd have a book too.
Re:I'll be sold when... (Score:1)
Re:I'll be sold when... (Score:1)
Re:I'll be sold when... (Score:1)
Re:I'll be sold when... (Score:1)
Wireless Valhalla: Why the Treo will be a hit... (Score:5, Interesting)
1) Size. Have there been other smartphones? Yes. Like this [handspring.com]? No. This is neither a clunky phone-grafted-onto-an-organizer [kyocera-wireless.com] nor a strange organizer-grafted-onto-a-phone [nokia.com]. This is a truly integrated product. It is small enough that I will finally be able to ditch my Palm/OmniSky and Nokia for one pocketable device.
2) Keyboard. Even though I've used Graffiti for several years, I have to admit that it is still a pain. Some may disagree, but the fact is that the vast majority of users will be able to enter text faster and more accurately with a QWERTY keyboard--even a thumb keyboard. If you think such keyboards are too small, just look at the success of the RIM Blackberry to see how much people love them.
3) Software. Handspring has done a great job integrating the Palm OS with the phone. They didn't just include a "Dial" app, they've included Blazer (their wonderful browser), Messaging (SMS), Phone Book (a Palm Address Book upgrade that has dialing capabilities), a POP3 client, etc. Out of the box, this will be a true Internet phone.
4) GSM. My fellow Americans may question this (since GSM has relatively limited coverage in the U.S.), but GSM was the right choice for Handspring. When GPRS rolls out (in the U.S. Voicestream has already started), you will be able to upgrade your Treo to support an "always on" wireless connection. Always on is much better than dial-up, even Sprint's "Quick Network Connect" dial-up (which basically just means that Sprint PCS is your ISP). Other, more popular U.S. mobile standards (CDMA, TDMA) are not moving to always on as quickly as GSM (although I've heard reports AT&T is upgrading to GPRS), and a true smart phone needs an always on connection. The other (obvious) advantage of GSM is that Handspring can sell the Treo in Europe and Asia.
Anyway, I will certainly buy a Treo when it comes out, and I think many others will too. The real question is how the Treo will stack up to competitors like the Danger Hiptop [danger.com].
No GPRS, limited Graffiti support (Score:3, Insightful)
- no GPRS at launch time - this is amazing given the early 2002 launch, surely this device is meant for GPRS? There are already several Pocket PC devices with GPRS that can be bought today (in Europe anyway), but I'm still waiting just for an *announcement* of a Palm OS device with built in GPRS support. The device is meant to be software-upgradeable, but it's unclear when that upgrade will be available.
- can't use Graffiti with keyboard version - there is no built in Graffiti *at all* with this version, not even a pop-up Graffiti window. You have to download a third party tool to do this. What are Handspring thinking?
And Handspring are still using Palm OS 3.5 for no very good reason, and still not using flash for the OS (unlike virtually every mobile phone). The openness, software and integration looks nice, but until they fix these issues I'll just have to carry on waiting.
Re:No GPRS, limited Graffiti support (Score:1)
The Treo is definately intended for a GPRS upgrade, and that upgrade looks to arrive roughly around when GPRS actually starts being available.
As for graffiti, after using this thing for a few weeks, I became a keyboard convert. You can run it off just the jog rocker for many things, and typing an email on a keyboard (which is very usable) takes a heck of a lot less time than graffiti.
Re:No GPRS, limited Graffiti support (Score:2)
Re:No GPRS, limited Graffiti support (Score:2)
Re:No GPRS, limited Graffiti support (Score:2)
Note that my post said 'No Graffiti *with the keyboard version*' - the point is that the *keyboard version* of this product does not have *any* built-in Graffiti support.
Re:No GPRS, limited Graffiti support (Score:1)
It looks like a nice unit, a combination of my VisorPhone (alas long departed) with the keyboard of my Motorola text pager with my Visor Platinum. The only big flaw to me is the loss of the Springboard slot - Handspring's FAQ [handspring.com] indicates that they intend not to engineer this in to the Treo in the future either.
can't use Graffiti with keyboard version - there is no built in Graffiti *at all* with this version, not even a pop-up Graffiti window. You have to download a third party tool to do this. What are Handspring thinking?I think they are thinking that people jonesing for graffiti will use a third party application/hack [visorvillage.com] to use the full screen for handwriting recognition. Or maybe voice recognition [infoworld.com] will really take off now.
Right... (Score:5, Insightful)
From the website: Coming early 2002
Sounds to me they haven't done anything yet.
Talk about being first: I bought my Nokia Communicator many _many_ years back. (mainly for the l33t telnet client hehe)
i wish i could convince myself to buy one. (Score:2)
Well this is a dilemma, i already have too many damn palms laying around (a VII, IIIc and a Handspring Visor Deluxe I got as a gift) and i had intended to pick up an ipaq, but i'll be damned if it doesn't look like this is a much better solution.
except for:
why so damn tiny? who asked for something that is only slightly larger then a WAP enabled cell phone display.
the iPaq [compaq.com] (which my spellchecker wants to call Iraq) has a cell phone module pending [cnet.com], and it will also do GPS. And if you are married to the PalmOS and want color today you can get the color Handspring Visor Prism [handspring.com] and add the Cell Phone module [handspring.com]for free (with activation) only with neither of these you don't get the spiffy keyboard... (heh) also the prism isn't as quick as the the Treo, though it does have a bigger 16-bit color display today .
oh hell i just talked myself out of the Treo, and another palm... because well... even though i have heard that the cell phone springboard module actually rocks, the PalmOS development seems to be stagnating while the iPaq not only does every goddamn thing in the world and with a better diplay, you can also jack linux [handhelds.org] into it when you get sick of WinCE.
man... as a long time Apple guy (easy angry kiddys, i have been building x86 boxes since before you were born and EISA was a hot new bus archetecture) i really hate to see what was once the innovator and hands down best hand held solution (PalmOS) get trumped by another microsoft branded product... i'd help them if i can but i already have three...
3 things (Score:4, Insightful)
1: Good hardware. Handspring doesn't have it. They've got a 33Mhz 16-bit Motorola Dragonball processor. It can (slowly) serve the most basic mobile data needs (email, instant messaging), play a couple of neat little games, and be a pretty effective organizer, but that's about it. Palm OS devices are stuck at 8 or 16MB's of total capacity, which sure as hell means you won't be storing any large files (movies, MP3s, etc) on it. They need modern hardware, like an ARM-derived platform, to overcome these inherent limitations. (I know, I know, Palm says it's working on it, but that was supposed to materialize how long ago now??)
2: Good software. The Palm OS is an old, creaky 16-bit rag that maxxed-out its potential back in '98. Memory isn't protected, there is no support for multi-tasking, and just getting color on that thing was a chore and a half (you still find it only on the most expensive devices). You need a modern 32-bit OS like Symbian's EPOC [symbian.com] (or even Pocket PC 2002) to do these things natively. Along with a modern OS comes support for faster, better hardware (both Symbian EPOC and Pocket PC run on ARM-derived RISC processors), and more storage space (like IBM microdrives).
3: Decent network support.The Treo has network connectivity tacked-on as an afterthought. Again, this is the Palm OS's fault, not Handspring's. Back in the day, the Palm OS just wasn't designed to be doing the job it's doing now. But other mobile operating systems were built around this stuff, and can handle wireless network protocols natively. Microsoft's Smartphone platform [microsoft.com] (code-named Stinger) is set to be deployed in GSM and CDMA networks all over the world next year, and Nokia's 9210 (running on EPOC) will be in both the European/African/Asian and American GSM markets. It'll be pretty simple to add GPRS/EDGE (and then UMTS) support to the device because that's what it was designed to do.
I applaude Handspring for forging ahead, but they've inhereted a real huge (possibly fatal) liability from Palm with that ancient operating system.
Re:3 things (Score:2, Interesting)
The current Palm is too expensive for the tiny display and slow CPU. The OS sucks big time (eg lack of file system/directory). The only saving grace is that the OS rarely rarely crash. This is something Microsoft should learn.
Re:3 things (Score:1)
How many things does the average human do at one time? Okay, walking AND chewing gum, that's two. I can't imagine why PalmOS needs multitasking. On WinCE, each app has to "load" into memory (from where? other memory?). Too many apps "open" and it'll crash. Why? PalmOS runs them from where they are, and each app is left in it's current state when you switch to something else. What's the problem here? I'm not planning to run SETI in the background.
"tacked-on as an afterthought" and "handle wireless network protocols natively". By that logic, memory over 640k is an "afterthought" for Windows. WinCE is forked from Windows, which is descended from DOS, so I don't see how wireless protocols are any more native here.
I hope that Palm and Handspring continue to develop along the lines that made them popular. There are some things that a PDA needs to do well, and all the flashy stuff is, IMO, just for impressing your friends.
yes, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
What's the alternative? Microsoft's handheld platforms are nowhere near as usable, mature, or efficient as PalmOS. But unlike Palm, the Microsoft handheld platforms also really don't want to talk to anything other than Windows, and you can't develop for them on anything other than Windows.
As far as I'm concerned, PalmOS is still the best game in town for handhelds and phones. Maybe some of the Linux-based devices will make it out the door at some point. Maybe Palm will come out with a decent, modern 32bit OS soon. But I doubt Microsoft ever gets a clue and starts untying their different systems from one another or starts using open, well-documented ways of storing data; and until they do, I think it's foolish to put your data on their devices.
Re:3 things (Score:2)
No, I believe they are stuck to 16M per chip select with four chip selects. One CS is used for the ROM, one for main memory, and Handspring uses two for the Springboard. It might be 32M per CS though, and this is a DragonBall limitation, not an OS limit, nor an instruction code limit, if they switched to a different 68000 derivative they could address 4G (or more, painfully). In fact since PalmOS machines are one of the lead uses of DragonBalls (the Blackberry oddly enough being another big user), having a respin with more addressing lines might not be too hard (depending on packaging), if Mot can be convinced Palm won't jump to the ARM before it buys enough of them. After all the instruction set uses a full 32 bits per address, so going from 24 bits to 25 (or 25 to 26) won't be a huge R&D challenge!
The real reason you don't see a ton of RAM on the PalmOS machines is they don't have enough CPU to do the "Find" if you put too much crap on them. It is a fine balance, one that was made well four or so years ago, but does not serve them well anymore.
No, it is an old, creaky 32-bit rag that maxxed-out its potential back in before it was released. Or at least it is a mostly 32-bit OS.
Moving to the ARM does seem to be Palm's published future direction, including an emulator for the old 68000 code (so you can beam 68k apps from an old Palm to a new one), and much talk of fat binaries that can run on both at full speed. I had half expected it to go to the PowerPC because they seem to be running along making all of Apple's old Mac mistakes...
(P.S. I'm pretty sure the PalmOS powered TRG Pro can run the IBM MicroDrive)
You can blame Handspring, after all it was Jef Hawking that ruthlessly trimmed everything from the original Pilot 500 (5000?) to get it to work decently with the almost no resources it had. The same guy that left Palm to found Handspring. Of corse I think if he hadn't crippled the Palm platform long term in order to make the short term work the Pilot would be yet another failed PDA (and there may have been no true success) rather then the rapidly fading leading PDA.
I wonder... (Score:1)
Re:I wonder... (Score:1)
... although I supposed (in theory) somebody might be able to write an emulator for it that runs under Linux
... and it won't be too long before someone has ported Linux to it - afterall you can get Linux for other devices that come with PalmOS.
Re:I wonder... (Score:1)
Re:I wonder... (Score:1, Interesting)
Palm is supposed to have the port done next year... then we get to hijack their hardware;)
FAQs (Score:4, Informative)
Quick sum-up:
Treo 180 = Keyboard, 180g = Graffiti.
No Springboard functionality.
Colour due mid 2002 (extra $200!!).
North America providers = Cingular, VoiceStream, Rogers AT&T, Microcell.
Trade in available for VisorPhone customers.
CDMA version in the works.
ringer scheduling (Score:3, Interesting)
nice... but... (Score:1)
they are ugly as hell Plus you'll need a Magnifying glass to actually READ your mail...
back to the drawing board guys
the first??? (Score:1)
Where's the IMAP mail client? (Score:3, Insightful)
Damn you! (Score:4, Funny)
Must... get... chastitybelt... for... creditcard.
Samsung SPH-I300 (Score:2)
No SpringBoard slot = no differentiation (Score:1)
Without a SpringBoard slot, what compelling reason would I have to purchase Visor if there are equivalent offerings from Palm and other PalmOS licensees?
Not having a SpringBoard slot just insures that a competitor can quickly bundle in equivalent functionality into their offerings.
A SpringBoard slot on this would rock! I'd love being able to take a quick pic using my Eyemodule, and email it to someone!
I sense desperation here.
Re:No SpringBoard slot = no differentiation (Score:2)
Firstly, it's the first time one of these phone/pda combo's has been made by a PDA company. Everything else has been made by a mobile phone company.
Secondly is that they appear to have a clear perception of the seperate phone and PDA market requirements. That's why it's been made smaller - to make it fit your hand more like a phone. The missing springboard slot is probably related - it's size issue. Also I suspect that this is similar internally to the visorphone, so there might have been hardware conflicts if they tried to put a slot in. The keyboard is also a nod to mobile phone users, who expect an un-useable keyboard instead of graffitti.
It's interesting, but will it hold up against the Pocket-pc equivelants like that BT O2 thing (again, made by a mobile phone company, not a PDA company).
Hey I would rather have an IPaq (Score:1)
Finally, Handspring has done it before everyone el (Score:2)
> Finally, Handspring has done it before everyone else
Bill Gates has taught you well, slashdot contributor.
Finally? (Score:2)
Color (c'mon B&W is growing old)
Video (a la casio E115) or mp4 codec support
Microdrive
Camera (for video phone or whatever, camera is cool, need it. heh...)
If they want me to pay 600$ canadian for that thing, ish... not!, having a cell phone and a palm III right now is okay with me and it costed me a fraction of that, but I'd be willing to pay a bit more than 600$ if it would have all the features mentionned above, and I am sure a lot of other people here would just drool over a jam-packed pda like that.
Re:Finally? (Score:2)
Once they manage to do the 'push email' feature a la BlackBerry, of course, everyone has the interesting prospect of spam or other unexpected email actually draining the batteries...
This doesn't sound right... (Score:2)
A coworker of mine currently has (and has had for over a month) a combo cell-phone and Palm III PDA after he got tired of his separate cell-phone and Palm V.
He said he got it from AT&T, I believe - I don't know if it has the whole POP3 email thing, but it is a combo unit.
The Palm forms part of the screen, and the microphone flips down revealing the full thing, and I think a keypad underneath for dialing. It actually isn't a bad integration, though it is a little wide.
I checked on AT&T's website for it though, no dice - maybe it is discontinued?
umm my cell phone does all that? (Score:2)
Re:OH YEAH! (Score:1)
What the hell is this all about? I was not prompting garbage like this. WTF?