"Visor" from the Creators of the Palm 94
Bearpaw writes "ZDNet reports that
that Handspring -- founded by original Palmers Jeff Hawkins and Donna Dubinsky -- will release the first of their PalmOS-based devices on Tuesday. " They have some sketchy details (Same OS, faster hardware, optimized applications, prices) but not much real meat.
I'm looking forward to more data.
Warrenty turn-around? (Score:1)
Silence is hype? (Score:1)
I mean, really, is there no way to win with you people?
Why is this a bad thing??? (Score:1)
I'm betting these will be good little devices, and one of the bonuses is that they won't have a clumsy windows CE operating system, and they will have a sweet batery life because they are not in color. Color screens are never as crisp as a B/W with a good backlight.
I can think of tons of applications that you could use for the expansion slot. Voice Recorders, modems/airport, business card scaners, printers, barcode readers, maybe even a GPS map system (never buy a city map again!).
I'll buy one if the price is right. Maybe I'm adding too mych hype. I have high hopes for this little PDA.
Loren
Re:Silence is hype? (Score:1)
Re:The word Visor made me think (Score:1)
I'd actually really like to have a Palm V (I like the smaller form-factor), but $350 is just WAY too much money for what it does.
Perhaps my next palmtop purchase will be the rumored Apple Palmtop, with the AirPort wireless network. THAT would be, Way Cool (TM).
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
Re:Quantum, not revolutionary (Score:1)
I don't really want to have to carry (and possibly lose) a bunch of these plug-in modules to switch between several desired functions.
I think that the #1 great thing here is price. 3Com finally has competition that's going to bring prices back down out of the ionosphere. (WinCE doesn't count).
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
Re:Can't wait. (Score:1)
USB - I think would be similarly useless.
Build in the AirPort wireless functionality (same as the iBook), and THEN we'll have some hot peice of Palm action.
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
Re:ucLinux??? (Score:1)
Come on. We're not that stupid :-) The people who would do the port actually run palms, and of course we know it would only make sense with some kind of GUI.
In other words, you'd probably be using "HandGNOME". (And that's not "PalmGNOME" because "Palm" is a registered trademark and all that.)
> Why must you insist on departing from an established OS (PalmOS) designed specifically for this device, with over a thousand applications written for it?
Because Linux is an stablished OS, with over many thousands of applications, and those applications are free. Don't you get tired of shareware? Of "nag screens", and paying 20 dollars for silly apps? If I don't live in US (and I don't) I will have to pay some extra bucks just because it's an international transation.
Sorry, I don't like non-free software. I don't think it's right to be unable to share, modify, etc, etc.
Still, if you want to do a specific task, it's a lot more likely that there is a linux app to do that (free) than a PalmOS (TM) app - and if there is one, it will likely be shareware (ugh).
Re:Can't wait. (Score:1)
Still, I'd have to agree that it seems odd.
Re:Palm OS question (Score:1)
3Com isn't Apple. They aren't going to sit by and let WinCE unseat them, so it benefits them to have PalmOS running on as many devices as they can.
Re:Palm OS question (Score:1)
The pdQ (PalmOS cellphone) is here [qualcomm.com] if you want to see it. It's way overpriced but still cool as hell.
What does it do? (Score:1)
Re:What hype? (Score:1)
Silence or "silence," which is it? Were they really allowing the media to run unchecked, as you say first, or were they not entirely silent, as you suggest immediately afterwards? I'm just wondering if I'm missing something here...
So? This kind of gossip happens with just about every upcoming hardware platform. What's so wrong about letting people speculate?
Re:Hmmm... maybe I do want a Palm(but not a palm) (Score:1)
Re:So, start with my PalmIIIx... (Score:1)
hamish
It's all about the frequency (Score:1)
Just downsample the MP3's to 56 or 32 Kbps. You'll get tape or at least FM-quality sound. How good do you think the sound circuitry would be anyway. A 32 Kbps clip would be 1/4 the size and you could fit several "normal" songs on one of those disks.
First models without backlight... (Score:1)
It's for people without computers? (Score:1)
Being USB, I can imagine that the hotsync process is a lot quicker than it was with serial ports, so I can imagine the situation where an employee just pops it in a cradle near the door for a couple of seconds when going in and out of the building.
The word Visor made me think (Score:1)
Anyway, sounds pretty good tho. $180 for the mid range model seems reasonable to me. I wouldn't mind picking one of them up.
Re:Looks interesting (Score:1)
Re:ucLinux??? (Score:1)
Not to mention the fact that there is no input method for ucLinux. I suppose you could leave it on its cradle and rlogin...
Re:Hmmm... maybe I do want a Palm(but not a palm) (Score:1)
$300 more, that's not much... I suppose... Oh, and did I mention the 8 hour battery life...
Those who have never used/owned a handy little machine have no idea just how important battery life is. I used to own a Newton MP130, and as beautiful as the bright back light was, I'd have to put 4 new AA's in that thing every week and a half. That sucked. And, it weighed a lot. And, it was huge. And, it was expensive. The MP costed me about what a color CE handheld costs. Palm is the way to go. Hopefully they'll get smaller and smaller and smaller...
What's important to consider is not the price/features ratio, it's the price/utility ratio. In that category, Palm wastes the competition (in my learned and world weary opinion).
Re:Palm=Mac (Score:1)
Re:ucLinux??? (Score:1)
The source code to the OS is available to developers (for the most part, not all of it is available) to make your programs more stable.
I just don't see the point of having a bloated desktop OS on a palmtop other than for the sheer intellectual exercise.
The Free Software movement could never support the full time development of a hardware platform. The Software model is fine: it requires brains and something to write with. Hardware needs fabrication plants. You can't buy fabs with honorable intentions or unselfish motives.
Re:Connectivity (Score:1)
Re:Palm OS question (Score:1)
Handspring was founded by Palm's founders with the intent of licencsing PalmOS and making other products with it.
Re:Not revolutionary (Score:1)
Uh, you don't consider the Springboard module slot at least potentially revolutionary? (3Com thinks it is -- rumor has it that they're working on their own device to have this.) Or the fact that Handspring's high-end version is only a little pricier than 3Com's low-end version?
Whaddya want, egg in your beer?
Granted, it's not the color-display, less-than-$100US, built-in digital wireless dream device Hawkins&Dubinsky have speculated about, but who really thought that'd be their first release?
Re:Quantum, not revolutionary (Score:1)
Ha! Name one.
You can also get a Palm III for as little as $164 online (2MB, IR, etc.) or a Palm Professional for as little as $132 (1MB) which makes Palm clone's price even less attractive.
You're comparing apples (current Palm street-prices) with oranges (Visor suggested prices).
Also, what value is proprietary modularization in an open world?
An "open world"? In your dreams. If it works, there's value in it.
Re:What does it do? (Score:1)
Re:Palm OS question (Score:1)
3Com has also licensed PalmOS to IBM (for the Workpad) and Qualcomm (for the pdQ Smartphone). Rumour has it that other lisencing deals are in the works. There was some noise that Apple has considered licensing PalmOS for it's own handheld device, but I dunno the current status of that.
Re:So, start with my PalmIIIx... (Score:1)
Someday, though
Re:Quantum, not revolutionary (Score:1)
*grin* Ok. Is your opinion based on anything? Based on my experience with my Palm and 2 of the 4 devices you mentioned, my opinion is that saying they're are "as good or better than a Palm" is absurd.
(re: comparing prices:)
And what should I compare them to since there has been ZERO details about availability or resellers for the Visor.
Compare MSP with MSP, or don't compare at all, given that you admit that there's insufficient data.
Re:Umm...MP3 Clarification (Score:1)
I think that was the point. Sarcasm, doncha know.
As suggested elsewhere, a MP3 module for Visors will probably have its own storage capability.
Re:So, start with my PalmIIIx... (Score:1)
WinCE Reliability (Score:1)
WinCE makes me sick, not because it's Microsoft, not because it's Windows, and not because it isn't PalmOS. It's because it's a bloated, buggy, non-fault-tolerant OS that has no place in the embedded OS market. If it did it's job without as many crashes, I could reccomend it, but as it is right now I really can't.
---Snip---
WinCE (pronounced wince at my job
The 'best feature' of WinCE was that development time was supposed to be reduced because it uses the Win32 API. Unfortunately, every manufacturer uses different hardware, and programs for one WinCE device are not guaranteed to run on different model, let alone manufacturer. You get all of the overhead of windows, and none of the benefits.
The main attraction of Palm OS is that the hardware has not changed much over the past few years. Palm OS 3.02 has some extra features, but I can easily run programs written for Palm OS 1.0 or 2.0 on my SPT1500. Granted, 3Com is stalling with upgrading the Palm's hardware, but it's not really neccesary to do so.
For the record, I do think that the Palms are overpriced.
-----------------------------------------------
"We are but packets in the internet of life."
Re:Umm...MP3 Clarification (Score:1)
Text
Text
Text
Text
Nah.
-AS
Re:Palm OS question (Score:1)
They also know that WinCE (in pain) is gaining momentum and they need to get other devices supporting their OS.
Re:Can't wait. (Score:1)
Re:keybord (Score:1)
nope, the keybord is built into the visor much like a WinCE device, and its pretty sturdy, dont worry
Re:Umm...MP3 Clarification (Score:1)
Pete
I can see through time - Lisa Simpson
Re:First models without backlight... (Score:1)
But back on topic, yep 3Com/USR hasn't done too much with the thing since it came out. Here's everything that I can think of:
-backlight
-more memory
-IRDA port
-different form factors (2)
-improved screen
Considering how long it's been around, that's really not alot of innovation. I welcom the Visor and the competition thatit will bring.
Maybe I'll list it as *RARE* on eBay and replace it with a Visor.
Pete
I can see through time - Lisa Simpson
Umm...MP3 Clarification (Score:1)
I assume that you are thinking of the Rio type devices that only have 32mb of memory. But then again they're not running windows.
Pete
I can see through time - Lisa Simpson
The perfect accessory for the Visor- eBook display (Score:1)
The Visor sounds perfect, just slide the book display over the Visor and you can read books with a nice crisp display (that carries its own power source!! What a great idea!). That way you keep the great form factor and battery life of a Palm, get to easily transfer books to it via a cradle, and still get a good display if you like.
You could even have a range a range of different kinds of displays (some perhaps touch sensitive, helpgul Palm based UML diagrammer anyone?) that can be as nice (and as expensive) as you want and only attached when needed (like reading on a plane or reading disagrammed articles in a more technical work).
Please someone, steal this idea! If you make a lot of money, just send me a display for free as a show of gratitude.
Downside of color (Score:1)
You don't notice it so much on a WinCE device - the overpowered processors in that court already drain your batteries out fast unless you have a bulky heavy beefy battery - but if the only other battery drain were a measly Dragonball 68328 or '328EZ (PalmOS's power), you'd really notice your battery life in the toilet.
The reason the original palm was so good was Jeff Hawkins's ability to say an emphatic "no" to user wish-list checkboxes like this, and hold fast to the essentials - form factor, usability, battery life. Don't expect Handspring to embrace color until it's way more mature.
Palm OS question (Score:1)
Re:So, start with my PalmIIIx... (Score:1)
A seriously high quality lcd display would be really sweet.
And it might even make up for having to carry around a car-battery to power the thing...
dave
Really looking forward to the Visor... (Score:1)
Re:What about Gameboy? (Score:1)
The only thing about the springboard module slot that would make it attractive would be the accessories available like an MP3 player. But given the existing price structure of the Visor, you'll be paying $100+ for that plug in module and how many MP3's can a 2MB unit hold
Re:Quantum, not revolutionary (Score:1)
Also, what value is proprietary modularization in an open world? There is already a modular "standard" of sorts
Re:Quantum, not revolutionary (Score:1)
Casio PV-200, Royal DaVinci, TI Avigo (discontinued but I have one), Sharp SE-300. There's four that, in my opinion, are as good or better than a Palm in the same price range give or take $50. (notice the opinion part *grin*)
You're comparing apples (current Palm street-prices) with oranges (Visor suggested prices).
And what should I compare them to since there has been ZERO details about availability or resellers for the Visor. As far as we know, it'll be a direct sales only deal right from Handspring and those ARE the street prices.
While I agree that their "street" price may be lower, I don't really have much more than what was given in the article.
Re:What hype? (Score:1)
Your point is taken that the price is ground-breaking for a Palm OS device but since it's the first non-phone unit to license the PalmOS
Re:Not revolutionary (Score:1)
mp3 (Score:1)
right you are, about it sucking, if it really only has 2 megs... what kind of mp3s do they think we're listening to? apparently no mp3 I've got.. (well, I have a few clips... which are ~500 KB, but that's all..)
fold out keyboard sounds neat, but, with all of these peripherals, especially the fold out keyboard, isn't this thing going to get bigger/bulkier.. perhaps easier to damage? I can imagine me cracking the keyboard, or something like that.
ah........thank you (Score:1)
Smart you are... I didn't think of that. Geez, I feel kinda dorky now. But still, several songs isn't much. Then again, I shouldn't be complaining, so nevermind.
I'm also guessing that they'd eventually get those penny sized disks more compressed, allowing for larger storage volumes/more mp3s, etc... which would be worth waiting for. Heck, by the time I ever get around to considering buying a PDA, I'll get all kinds of cool stuff, for less $ (sounds pretty darned cool to me..)
Quantum, not revolutionary (Score:1)
Of course it's not as groundbreaking as the Palm - but its exciting to many of us who haven't yet found a reason to get into the PDA thing. A lot of people (like me!) haven't jumped on the Palm wagon because of price - and also because recent versions haven't shown clear goals for the product line; new features are over-integrated and minor improvements at best.
Improving modularity is a quantum improvement, albeit not revolutionary.
Re:Release Date? IR? (Score:1)
Here's that one [pdabuzz.com]
Re:Sometimes more is just more... (Score:1)
Or am I missing something?
Re:ucLinux??? (Score:1)
Either that or a flexible control platform for a robot.
ucLinux??? (Score:1)
Would a variant of the pcmcia handler work for the springboard modules?
I wonder if a click drive (or bigger) will be available as a springboard module.
I think I might wanna get on of these.
Re:Can't wait. (Score:1)
Re:Palm OS question (Score:1)
PalmOS cellphone? nice.
Re:Sometimes more is just more... (Score:1)
Point of order: there are currently all sorts of expansions for the Palm using the memory slot and serial connector. These range from wireless modems to a VERY cool magnetic compass device (It's true, i've got one! It really works... even tho it doesn't do much more than what your $5 compass can do, it's really really cool
Visor is going in the right direction by adding something for expansion purposes _only_. That way you can use both something intended for Springboard, and also have something designed to work with whatever cradle connector Visor will have (which WILL happen, trust me - there will definitely be a market for having mutiple expansions on your Palm, we've been waiting for it for a long long long time
Imagine - a keyboard thru the connection port, a modem in the Springboard slot, some PalmOS software which already exists, and you got yerself a highly portable, reliable Internet terminal...
ooohhhh..... *drools* vixie WANT! vixie WANT NOW!
erm. 'scuse me
"I don't believe that there is one, single, perfect spiritual way and, in realizing that, obviously you become a lot more open."
Re:Palm=Mac (Score:1)
And in any case I've never programmed for an old 68k Mac, so I wouldn't know anyways
"I don't believe that there is one, single, perfect spiritual way and, in realizing that, obviously you become a lot more open."
Re:ucLinux??? (Score:1)
Arguably, it would probably run on the Visor, but one never really truly knows until one tries...
As for a PCMCIA handler variant, well, I doubt anyone has a clue about that at the moment 'cause no details about Springboard have been released yet, so we don't know how "genetically similar" it is to PCMCIA.
And a clik drive would be really cool
Problem is, we still don't have much concrete information. Wait 'till Tuesday.
"I don't believe that there is one, single, perfect spiritual way and, in realizing that, obviously you become a lot more open."
Well at least there is a low-end PDA now (Score:1)
You could blame Handspring for inferring that the Visor was going to be revolutionary, but the bottom line is that the Visor will be good for the Palm community as a whole. It is a good product and it has a price which simply can't be beat. As a student I have always wanted a Palm PDA, and now I can afford the next best thing.
Hmmm... maybe I do want a Palm(but not a palm) (Score:1)
... but look at those prices initially estimated prices! I'm going to have to run out and buy the high end model (as soon as I see someone else buy one, and it works great).
Looks interesting (Score:1)
I want to see a full set of specs, but I have to admit I'm tempted to break down and go for the 8mb/$249 model.
Release Date? IR? (Score:1)
It was part of their deal (Score:2)
YAZDNPR: Yet another ZDNet Press Release (Score:2)
I enjoy my press releases as much as the next guy, but lets not pretend that they are news and lets not give this Spooner character too much credit for rewording it.
Can we have some real news now. Thank you Rob, for slashdot discussion forums and the real information they contain.
-Carl C-M
Re:Not revolutionary (Score:2)
Re:Palm=Mac (Score:2)
Um, PalmOS isn't really fault tolerant either. There's no MMU, so there's only minimal memory protection. It's also cooperative (as opposed to preemptive), so if my app gets stuck in a loop nothing else has a chance to run.
The only similarity between Palm and Mac is their popularity - fans of the Palm, much like the Mac, tend to stick to their machines because those machines work _beautifully_, _for them_.
You've never programmed for PalmOS, have you? It's very similar to the old 68k Macs. They're running the same processor, neither has a proper loader-linker, the 'file' format for apps is similar, the memory model is very similar, and I think that the Macs used the same trap interface for APIs that PalmOS uses.
Can't wait. (Score:2)
With the springboard slot and a usb options they're can fix one of the palms biggest shortcomings, it's lack of hardware expandability.
I'm a little concerned about the lack of a cradle on the low end model. Easy hotsync was one of the great things about the orignal palm.
Palm Variants (Score:2)
The SPT1500 is a OEM Palm III with an integrated barcode laser scanner. It is used for warehouse management, shipping, and receiving applications. It looks like a standard Palm III with an added inch at the top for the scan engine. The expansion port holds the scanner card.
The SPT1 700 and SPT1740 [symbol.com] are brand new ruggedized Palms that are designed to be used in an industrial environment. They are rated to survive a 4-foot drop onto solid concrete.
And yes, you can use standard function calls to enable and use the scanner. Someone wrote code that stops the scan mirror from oscillating and turns the SPT1500 into a ad-hoc laser pointer.
---------------------------------------
"We are but packets in the internet of life."
Ugh. (Score:2)
That's silly(though I grant people and companies have done silly things before.)
Look at an 'average' PC. It's system with, say, 32mb of memory. It plays mp3s. You can only store like half an hours worth of music on a PC then, at 128kbps quality. And that's not even taking into account that Windows will take up a good hefty chunk of operating space. Yet this is the device that mp3s were born for/from!
The secret? Removeable/fixed drives!
Why would not the Visor's mp3 cartridge either use something like IBM's 340mb MicroDrive(compactflash form factor I believe) or Iomega's 40mb Clik disk(for an unlimited amount of storage and swapping)
I mean granted that Winamp takes like 4mb of memory, I'm sure a much slimmed down mp3 player with a DSP on the cartridge could easily live on a 2mb system.
-AS
Evolutionary? (Score:2)
Some noticable improvements:
USB instead of serial for faster up/down loads and quite possibly lots of future expansion capabilities (USB printers, cameras, speakers, etc.
Springboard expansion slot, a lot like the GameBoy's cartridge in a way. Imagine hooking up a tiny camera, a microdrive, flash memory, a flashlight, a barcode scanner, medical sensors, ethernet port, whatever, on there!
I don't know about battery life or screen size/resolution/clarity.
It would be nice if all of these were improved, however!
-AS
Think creatively here =) (Score:2)
Then the Visor would be merely a controller and glue logic. Oh, and I'd imagine the add on would have a speaker/headphone jack if the Visor doesn't already.
I mean, how silly/nonsensical is it for the average PC with only 32mb of memory to play MP3s? You can only store 20 minutes worth at 128kbps, and we're not even taking into account them memory that Windows uses, right?
-AS
news from the 2nd to front line (Score:2)
first off, it has a fold out keybord, so no more grafitti (yay) and the switchbord peripheral thing has already had such things made for it as a pager, cell phone, mp3 player (as said by other people), etc.
dont ask me how the pager or cell phone work (i was more interested in fiddling w/ the mp3 player), but the mp3 player has little penny-size disks that hold about 2 megs of data (bah) so if you ask me, at'l suck.
anyways, i should shutup now before the mangets mad ^_^
Re:ucLinux??? (Score:2)
People say that Windows is not meant for the handheld market, but in my opinion Linux certainly isn't, either. Why must you insist on departing from an established OS (PalmOS) designed specifically for this device, with over a thousand applications written for it? PalmOS is tight, tiny, stable, and you can write code for it with freely available tools like gcc. I give credit to Linux for its server abilities, but it's not going to be running my handheld.
Not revolutionary (Score:2)
Honestly, I don't find any aspect of the Visor revolutionary or ground breaking.
I just hope I'm missing something BIG here (very possible) and the Visor does live up (to an extent) to the hype that Handspring propagated through their self imposed silence.
(Damn I'm ranting a lot today.)
More useless PDA babble @ PDA Buzz [pdabuzz.com]
What hype? (Score:2)
"Hype" isn't silence... The price points seem "ground-breaking" for Palm OS devices, and although the functionality doesn't seem spectacular, it does sound like it's ahead of the regular Palms.
Maintaining silence is not hyping their product; we'd be ripping them even worse if they had been pushing the product constantly. Let's not get into a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" situation.
visorcentral (Score:2)
So, start with my PalmIIIx... (Score:3)
But it doesn't do color man! It sucks! :)!
Re:Palm=Mac (Score:3)
WinCE makes me sick, not because it's Microsoft, not because it's Windows, and not because it isn't PalmOS. It's because it's a bloated, buggy, non-fault-tolerant OS that has no place in the embedded OS market. If it did it's job without as many crashes, I could reccomend it, but as it is right now I really can't.
('Course, if you're very used to Windows, you might still want to consider WinCE. I'm not stopping or flaming you for doing so, I just think you ought to demand better from your PDA.)
Embedded OSes are just that - embedded. You have to be able to _rely_ on them, all the time, 24/7, or else you just purchased a very pretty paperweight. And for the most part you can't change that OS either. (uCLinux kinda shows otherwise, but it's still alpha hackerware)
The only similarity between Palm and Mac is their popularity - fans of the Palm, much like the Mac, tend to stick to their machines because those machines work _beautifully_, _for them_. It doesn't necessicarily mean that those are The Way That All Must Follow, just that those are The Way That That One Individual (And Others Like Him/Her) Probably Should Follow 'Cause It Works.
(Ya know, that seems to be a problem with lots of folks - just because it works for you does not mean it works for everyone, consequently others should not 1) be flamed, 2) be forced into another way of working, or 3) be ignored. )
I'm sticking with PalmOS, to tell ya the truth, 'cause it works for me
"I don't believe that there is one, single, perfect spiritual way and, in realizing that, obviously you become a lot more open."