Screen Grabs: Palm Pre isn’t helping things be any less miserable on ‘Heroes’

Screen Grabs chronicles the uses (and misuses) of real-world gadgets in today’s movies and TV. Send in your sightings (with screen grab!) to screengrabs at engadget dt com.

Hey — it’s the Palm Pre hanging tough in the morally ambiguous hands of Nathan Petrelli! Does it help him decide who to crush or love when he gets up in the morning? Does it get reception when he flies into the upper atmosphere to change world events so dramatically that half the characters are confused and the other half have disappeared by the time he’s back in NYC? What’s going on, Nathan? You seem depressed. You want to go with a different carrier, don’t you? Got a hankering for the GSM?

[Thanks, Dylan]

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Screen Grabs: Palm Pre isn’t helping things be any less miserable on ‘Heroes’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Oct 2009 11:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Pre coming to Spain on Telefonica on October 14

The European operators are really liking mid-October for their Pre launches, and that trend continues now that Spain’s Telefonica has unveiled an October 14 availability date for Spain’s very first webOS device. The phone’s being offered on plans that will bring the cost of the handset itself down to anywhere between €0 and €219 (about $322) — and if you’re wondering exactly what you have to do to get it for absolutely free, well, you’ll be shelling out €60 or more a month in voice plus €15 in data. You’ll be able to pick it up both online and in your friendly local Telefonica shop, so it’ll be interesting to see if any lines start forming — just how many Palm fanatics are their in Spain, anyway?

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Palm Pre coming to Spain on Telefonica on October 14 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Oct 2009 10:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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GSM Palm Pre for O2 Germany pictured in the wild

The Palm Pre is scheduled to make its big GSM debut on O2 in Europe in just a few weeks, and it looks like final production units are making their way into the wild — these shots of a German Pre complete with final box art and a localized keyboard just hit the wires. Nothing here you’re not familiar with already, but man — the GSM and the Pre, gettin’ down. We’d only dared to dream, you know? Now all we need is a version with some North American 3G bands and we’ll be all set.

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GSM Palm Pre for O2 Germany pictured in the wild originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Oct 2009 17:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Pixi stares GSM in the face, lives to brag about it (update: video!)

Though nothing’s been announced, betting against a GSM version of the Palm Pixi would be a foolish move. There’s certainly no mistaking that “E” for Edge logo and SIM slot beneath the battery in these leaked images from Vietnam (yes, again). Oddly, this particular GSM variant pictured only contains 4GB of internal storage vs. the 8GB model announced for Sprint. Perhaps a prototype limitation only? Let’s hope.

Update: Video now available after the break.

Continue reading Palm Pixi stares GSM in the face, lives to brag about it (update: video!)

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Palm Pixi stares GSM in the face, lives to brag about it (update: video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Oct 2009 01:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm pulls paid apps due to major bug allowing free app downloads

After mere hours of App Catalog-stravaganza, the paid apps have been removed for the time being by Palm due to a major flaw in purchase verification. From what we’ve gathered from the seedy underbelly of the internet, an exploit involving building your own dummy application with the same name as a paid application allowed folks to download a free “update” to these falsified shells and score for-purchase apps galore without dropping a cent. Whether or not this was the only exploit afoot we’re not sure, but it sounds like plenty of folks found ways to nab apps for free because Palm has clamped down hard on distribution for the time being. Optimistically, the company claims it should have the Catalog back up by tomorrow morning, but if the failure is really as severe as it sounds, we won’t be holding our breath.

Update: And… they’re back.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in; picture courtesy of glamajamma]

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Palm pulls paid apps due to major bug allowing free app downloads originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Oct 2009 00:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm throws the doors open: review-free app distribution over the web, open source developers can hop in for free

Well, things just got interesting. The very evening of the App Catalog’s launch of paid apps, Palm has made a very different kind of announcement: it’s going to let developers skip out on the App Catalog if they so choose. Devs will be able to submit an app to Palm, who will turn around and give them a URL for open distribution of the app over the web — without a review process getting in the way! The App Catalog will still exist for those who want to use it of course, with a $50 entrance fee to get an app inside — and we’re guessing it’ll remain the only way to distribute paid apps — but the new URL distribution should decentralize things just a little bit. In other good news, Palm will be dropping the $99 annual developer fee for folks building open source apps, and hopefully that free ride applies to App Catalog entry as well, though now there’s web distribution to make it less of a sticking point. Palm’s also going to open up its analytic data to developers, and even is giving away Pres and Touchstones to the audience members of the little shindig privy to this announcement — clearly the company is making a strong play for developers, and who doesn’t like to be loved?

[Thanks, Lawrence]

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Palm throws the doors open: review-free app distribution over the web, open source developers can hop in for free originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Oct 2009 23:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Paid apps now live in webOS App Catalog, Air Hockey comes first

The first paid apps are finally starting to filter into Palm’s App Catalog, giving us all another great reason (after our daily caffeine fix has been properly handled, of course) to blow a buck or two every day of our lives. First up is none other than Air Hockey, an app genre that seems to be taking every platform by storm — we never really thought that the true Dynamo experience could translate well to a couple of fingers on a phone’s display, but we’re just $1.99 away from finding out for sure.

[Thanks, Joe]

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Paid apps now live in webOS App Catalog, Air Hockey comes first originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Oct 2009 16:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola Sholes to launch by holidays, along with the BlackBerry Storm 2 and Nokia Booklet 3G

Well well, it looks like the Android-powered Motorola Sholes will be out on Verizon by the holidays. That’s at least the impression we’re getting from a bunch of leaked Verizon retailer documents posted up by Boy Genius Report, which also indicate the BlackBerry Storm 2, Curve 2 and LG Chocolate Touch will hit Big Red in time for eggnog, along with an unspecified netbook — we’re guessing this Gateway number. Speaking of netbooks, a similar document from Best Buy Mobile also leaked over the weekend, and it looks like the Nokia Booklet 3G will be exclusive to Best Buy and compatible with AT&T 3G. Oh, and the Pixi is coming, but you already knew that. Here’s the real mystery, though: “There are multiple Android launches across multiple carriers, along with some new technology that doesn’t exist today.” That’s certainly open for interpretation, so we leave it to you — is Best Buy Mobile about to start selling teleporters, or what?

Read – Sam’s Club and Target Verizon docs
Read – Best Buy Mobile docs

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Motorola Sholes to launch by holidays, along with the BlackBerry Storm 2 and Nokia Booklet 3G originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Oct 2009 12:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Doesn’t Know When to Stop, Adds iTunes Syncing for Pre Yet Again

It’s hard to see Palm as anything but a masochist. The catch-phrase for the Pre smartphone might as well be “Thank you sir. May I have another?” spoken as Palm bends over and Apple raises a heavy wooden paddle yet again.

Arriving quickly behind last week’s 1.2 software update for the Pre comes 1.2.1, which — along with a few maintenance fixes — restores support for syncing the phone with iTunes. It’s hard to fathom just what Palm is thinking here, as you know for sure that Apple will just update iTunes to lock the Pre out once again.

Palm could, as we mentioned before, sync to iTunes’ library by simply reading an xml file. This is what all other applications do, and it is an official, Apple supported method for doing so. But Palm, for reasons unknown, continues to try to fool the iTunes application itself into thinking that the Pre is an iPod.

IPhone and Mac developer Craig Hunter sums it up very nicely:

I seriously question the strategy and brains of any company that ties critical product capabilities to the unsupported use of their competitor’s software. I mean, really? Can it get any more ridiculous? Can you possibly send a more mixed, less confidence-inspiring, “we’re a bunch of hacks who can’t provide our own sync software for our products” message to customers?

Still, the cat-fight is undoubtedly entertaining, although the ultimate winner can only be Apple. Every time Palm bends over and begs for another whack, it suffers a loss of credibility. Apple, on the other hand, is doing nothing more than working out its spanking muscles.

On Palm, Competition, and iTunes Sync [Craig Hunter via]

Palm webOS 1.2.1 now available [Palm]

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How To: Install Homebrew On Palm Pre 1.2.1

WebOS 1.2(.1) is here, and yes: It broke homebrew. Amazingly, it only took devs about two days to bounce back. Here’s how to bring hundreds of free apps, tweaks and themes to your Pre, without flashing your firmware.

Why Homebrew?

Paid apps are due in the official App Catalog any day now—actually they’re running a little late—meaning that the app selection is probably about to get a lot wider, and basically better. But webOS development is limited in scope, and App Catalog applications will never be able to theme your device, access 3D APIs that aren’t in the MojoSDK, change your homescreen layout, or add an onscreen keyboard.

Pre homebrew is as much about adding apps that Palm has been so slow to approve as it is tweaking your handset. Think of it like jailbreaking an iPhone, except that it’s easier to do, and the benefits are much, much greater.

(This guide owes a huge debt to the PreCentral forums, where the developer of WebOS Quick Install, with others, have collected most of the necessary resources. Recognition is nice, but donations are better. If you find WebOS Quick Install useful, send Jason a few bucks.)

What You Need

Some downloads! The only app you’ll need to run on your computer is a Java app, so it’s completely cross-platform. This guide should work for Windows, Mac or Linux.

1. WebOS Quick Install:
This is the desktop program that effectively opens up your Pre for business. It’s got quite a bit of power on its own, but one of its greatest talents is the ability to install package managers like Preware, which make installing homebrew apps to your Pre, from your Pre super-easy.

2. WebOSDoctor ROM (Sprint, Bell): This is just a restoration ROM for webOS, which WebOS Quick Install needs to work. It should be saved into the same directory as WebOS Quick Install, then left alone.

3. Java SE 6: Make sure you’ve got Java 1.6, or SE 6, so you can run these apps properly.

And one trick:

4. Dev Mode: Switching your Pre to dev mode is either sort of fun or sort of tedious, depending on your capacity for nostalgia.

All you have to do is type “upupdowndownleftrightleftrightbastart” on the keypad. That’ll open a search query that’ll uncover a new app on your Pre called “DeveloperMode.” Run it, and it’ll switch your phone into, you guessed it, developer mode.

Running WebOS Quick Install

5. Plug your Pre into your computer. When prompted for connection type, select “Just Charge”

6. Open WebOS Quick Install, making sure that the WebOSDoctor ROM is in the same directory as the Quick Install JAR.

You’ll get this message:

Heed it.

7. When you reopen WebOS Quick Install, you’ll be prompted to choose which kind of device you want to access. Choose “USB Device,” which’ll install the drivers necessary to crack into a physical Pre, not just an emulator.

8. Follow the driver installation prompts through to completion.

9. Open WebOS Quick Install again. You should see the app’s home screen. Click on the bottom button in the right panel, as indicated here:

10. Select “WebOS-Internals Feed (all)” from the download list. Select both “Package Manager Service” and “Preware” from the resulting list. These will enable you to download and apply the tweaks and apps you want.

11. After download, they will be added to the previously empty list in the app’s homescreen, where you should highlight both, then click “Install”

There you go!

Getting the Most Out Of Homebrew

Now that you’re set up and ready to go, it’s time to do stuff. Launch the Preware app on your Pre—at first load, it takes a while to sync up with all the repositories, so be patient—and explore the 200+ apps included by default. (You can add other repositories on your own, but most of the good stuff is already here.)

The “Package Manager Service” installation doesn’t just enable downloads through Preware—it enables a whole range of WebOS Quick Install tweaks, which you can access through the Tools ->Tweaks menu. WebOS Quick Install may prompt you to install a few patches; just go along with it, it’ll only take a second.

Once you’re in the panel, you’ll see a wealth of useful tweaks, from a 4-icon-wide app launcher, to a browser ad-blocker, to a user agent string changer, so your Pre asks for snazzier iPhone mobile pages instead of standard mobile fare. Generally, each tweak will restart your Pre.

Themes are managed either through Preware, which has a selection of over 200 that you can install with a single button press, or through the WebOS Quick Install menu, at Tools -> Themer. To install a new theme from WebOS Quick Install, you’ll have to manually download from an external site, which you’ll be directed to automatically. Once you’ve downloaded the theme, it’s just a matter of loading it into the app. Preware is probably your best bet for this, though there isn’t really a way to find out if a theme is any good without actually trying it.

As for that onscreen keyboard? You can install that through WebOS Quick Install: It’s in the same place you found Preware, in the “WebOS-Internals Feed (all)” section of the package downloader. A word of warning: It’s only officially supported up to WebOS 1.2.0, so you might be best advised to wait a few days until the developers have worked out any bugs with 1.2.1.

Anyway, the Pre Homebrew community is rich and fast-moving, so I’ll let you all take it from here. Some great resources to get you started:

PreCentral
WebOS-Internals
PimpMyPre
PreYourMind

And again, a gajillion thanks to WebOS Quick Install Developer Jason Robitaille and the users over at the PreCentral forums.

If you have more tips and tools to share, please drop some links in the comments-your feedback is hugely important to our Saturday How To guides. And if you have any topics you’d like to see covered here, please let me know. Happy homebrewing, folks!