palm

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Over the weekend some information came out on some location-based features of the newly announced Palm Pre:

When you’re late it — remember, this thing has GPS; it has a clock; and it has your calendar. So it not only knows where you are, it knows where you’re supposed to be and when….so when it realizes you’re going to be late, it says, ‘Hey, not only are you going to be late, but I can take care of it for you. I’ll send an email to your assistant or to the people in the meeting, which would you prefer? And oh, by the way, here’s the map.’

To me this sounds like a classic example of a company essentially showing off by finding problems for technology to solve that a) aren’t actually the big problems users in this space need a solution for and b) will never work as fluidly as described during this pre-release media courting phase.

In this case, they seem to be attacking what they perceive as the big problem by stringing together solutions to a bunch of little problems rather than addressing it as a holistic experience. I mean, it’s been how many years and it’s still tough to find a syncing solution that works across multiple devices? Shouldn’t we feel like we’ve solved that before jumping to phone as automated personal assistant?

Of course it all comes down to the execution and most importantly (as John from Boing Boing points out) user control but my point is that not everything that can be automated, should be automated (even if it’s a technical hurdle developers drool over) and I’m not yet convinced this particular scenario is something I see improving people’s lives in the near future.

Read more here (BoingBoing)

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Though everyone knows you can’t trust a CES Demo to be the real thing, what I’ve seen of the Palm UI looks great. Boing Boing has a great breakdown of Seven Features that make the Palm Pre better than the iPhone. Palms were great smartphones when they were just starting out and it looks like they might be able to be relevant again. For me personally, I’m more interested in checking this out than I was the G1, N97, Garmin, etc. phones.

Unfortunately, the challenge for Palm lies in treading water until June to sell them (in the meantime, do we think a lot of people are running out the buy the Palm Centros that creepy Claus is selling?) and then delivering on the buzz they created yesterday. Not to mention that it will probably be another 6 months until you can get one and not be forced to go with Sprint. Can the company hold out that long? Om Malik has a good counter argument as to why the Pre might not be the savior for Palm.

As an aside, I love the nod to their roots by evolving the graffiti area from old Palms to be the “gesture” area.

Scoble’s got an interesting take. He also points out something that drives me bananas about most of the players – no attention to lower level menus (I’m looking at you, Blackberries!)

Palm just did what Nokia and Microsoft and RIM couldn’t do: deliver a better experience than Steve Jobs did.

“Give me a break Scoble, you are drinking the shiny new object Koolaid,” I can hear you saying.

This is why I didn’t post a blog about it all day, even though everyone else did. I wanted to let the Koolaid wear off. I went back to the Palm booth again tonight just to make sure what I saw this morning was real.

I learned even more stuff that just blew me away.

From Palm? Give me a break!

Nokia’s devices that I saw last month just suddenly seem so lame.

Why? Well, when you look at the Nokia N97, which will be out at about the same time as the Palm Pre, you see that they also have a nice UI, but it falls apart when you click down into apps and try to do things. Palm doesn’t fall apart. Click down and you keep getting shocked.

Palm’s bet on social networking integration is a game changer. Click into a contact and you see people’s Facebook info and other info from their social networks. That is huge and not many people will get it.

Read the rest here.

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Who doesn’t these days?

In the too little and about 5 years too late department, they’re also expected to launch a new OS at CES where you might get to hear what it sounds like when the entire blogosphere yawns at the same time.

The company apparently wants to create devices that “make smarter use of data about you,” but until we have a Nova-powered phone in our soft, supple hands, that little gem of marketing doublespeak really doesn’t mean squat to us.

While I share Engadget’s passion for the promise in the first part of that sentence and would love to see a manufacturer make good on that, Palm’s inability to deliver over the past few years has earned them the harsh skepticism in the second part of the sentence. I guess we’ll know in a few weeks. Here’s hoping they can turn it around in a smartphone market that has gotten exponentially more competitive since they last dipped their toes in the water.

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My friend Lian recently posted this photo on Flickr:

What did it do, grandpa? on Flickr - Photo Sharing!.jpg

Seeing this phone brought back memories of some of the first mobile phones I ever owned. I started to dig up a couple of photos to post in the comments. In the time since then, I felt compelled to try to pull together a list of all of the phones I’ve ever owned. Finding good photos was something I thought the internet would be better at so I apologize for any that aren’t ideal.

I’m pretty sure this list covers them all (but if you know me and remember that I had another device, please let me know and I’ll add it here):

Nokia 2110

This was my first phone. I got it in May 1998 immediately after graduating college and moving back to NYC. I justified the purchase because I felt I had to always be reachable in order to more efficiently a) find an apartment and b) find a job.

Nokia 5110

My second phone, complete with interchangeable faceplate – Nokia was on the customization train way back then – well done. I feel like everyone had one of these at some point. My friend Micah this weekend reminded me about how awesome it was that, with this phone, came an excellent game of Snake.

(ps: Great archive of old Nokia’s here)

Modo

[ Dotcom Bust Special! ]
My friends chipped in and got me one of these for my birthday and I only got to enjoy it for a few weeks before the company went under in one of the most famous Internet flameouts in history (they tore though $40 mil in 2 months!). This was a device that, content-wise, was ahead of its time. Now we know that content can and should live on a mobile phone.

I still keep mine on my desk now as a constant reminder of a) how quickly things can change so never get complacent and b) how proprietary devices are more often than not, a stupid way to go about launching a new product (and now more than ever).

For a walk down memory lane, hop over to Dennis’s Modo tribute page to get all the gory details on the ill-fated company.

Motorola StarTac

The ubiquitous StarTac. Simply a solid phone.

Motorola Timeport

Better and sleeker than the StarTac. I also always loved how this phone felt in my hand.

Siemens S40

The phone was tiny, which was great, but the UI drove me bananas. It was also my first foray into the world of SIM cards and unlocked phones.

Sanyo 6100

This crappy Sanyo phone just plain sucked (but it had a speakerphone!) What was I thinking?! This was the equivalent of a rebound phone after my subpar Siemens experience.

Samsung SGH-500

This was the phone I was rocking when I got to ITP, ready to get my mobile + social on. Sadly I lost this one to an unexpected rain storm.

LG VX6000

[ Halll of Famer ]
This is hands down one of the best phones I’ve ever owned. It wasn’t “smart” but it did the stuff that mattered most – talking + texting + taking sending photos – flawlessly. It also had the super cool disco LEDs on the front screen.

There was a time where I’d say no less than 8 of my friends carried this device. It is also the device I most associate with our whole dodgeball experience – the phone Dennis and I both carried, tested new features on, demoed for the press, and used in all our presentations + collateral. Dennis has been through at least three of them: one broke in half, one “fell” into a pint of beer and the last one was simply crushed.

In fact, this week Karen gave our friend Gabe her old one since he just lost his phone and didn’t want to buy a new one 2 weeks before iPhone v2 is released.

If there were a cellphone Hall of Fame, this guy would be a first ballot entrant.

Palm Treo 650

My entry into the word of smartphones, the Treo 650. Great texting/emailing device. A little clunky in the ol’ pocket though.

Blackberry Pearl

My smartphone gets smaller with the Blackberry Pearl. I really liked this phone. The trackball was a gamechanger for me in regards to navigational tool.

Apple iPhone

My current mobile telephony device, the iPhone. I loved this phone when I got it and that love has only gotten stronger.

Like many, I got my first taste of mobile on a Nokia and after that I hopped around trying as many different manufacturers as I could. Odds are, my phone in the next few weeks will be different yet again. Here are some hints about what it might look like or what it might do.

Whatever it ends up being, it’s amazing to think about how far we’ve come – 3G speeds, real-time GPS, rich media, etc. All in 10 short years.

June 9th can’t come soon enough.


In the meantime, check out this neat video on the history of mobile phones. I’m sure you’ll see some that bring you back a bit:

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