Palm Pre coming to the UK and Ireland October 16, Germany October 13, all O2 exclusives

It might be about four months late, but the UK is finally getting its slice of the tasty new Palm pie. There’ll be no shortage of outlets to buy this from, with the Carphone Warehouse, Phones4U and O2’s online shop all stocked up, but the carrier options are limited to just one. You’ll find tables of UK and Ireland pricing after the break, and you’ll be happy to know that the Pre can be had for free on two-year contracts charging £34.26 per month, which come with “unlimited” mobile data and free access to the BT OpenZone WiFi service.

[Thanks, Andrew]

Update: Good news for our Teutonic brethren, as O2 Germany has also let slip news of the Pre hitting Deutschland Continue reading Palm Pre coming to the UK and Ireland October 16, Germany October 13, all O2 exclusives

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Palm Pre coming to the UK and Ireland October 16, Germany October 13, all O2 exclusives originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Sep 2009 03:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm’s App Catalog is swamped with submissions, bursting with flavor

Palm's App Catalog is swamped with submissions, bursting with flavor

Palm’s App Catalog for the Pre properly launches tomorrow, and right now the question on most peoples’ minds is just how many paid apps will be in there when the doors open. Based on the latest word from the development team, the answer could be quite a lot. Apps submitted late to the party are apparently being added to approval queues so long Palm is having a hard time keeping track of them all. Developer Community Manager Chuq Von Rospach has indicated the approval group has “more applications than we could handle well,” apologizing because they have “dropped some things on the floor.” We’re hoping they’ll be picked up and dusted off quickly, because the five-second rule is not something to be messed with.

[Via PreCentral]

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Palm’s App Catalog is swamped with submissions, bursting with flavor originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Sep 2009 09:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple, Palm hear privately from USB-IF on iTunes spat, involvement unlikely (update: the Forum’s not pleased)

The very public fight between Palm and Apple to allow the Pre to sync directly to iTunes (without just… you know, doing it the same way as everyone else) is showing no signs of slowing down, with Palm continuing to pursue every angle it can to rile up Cupertino — most recently taking the battle up to the USB Implementers’ Forum in an effort to stop Apple from restricting iTunes usage by the hardware’s Vendor ID. Hard to say what ended up going down behind closed doors, but on an official level, the USB-IF is issuing a terse statement that it “communicated its position on the matter to both companies” and won’t be speaking further on the issue “at this time.” We’ll see if anything ends up changing on the software side from the conversation, but separately, the Forum has mentioned to us that it considers this a member-to-member concern — so in all likelihood, they’re taking a hands-off approach.

Update: Digital Daily has come away with a very, very different story from the actual leaked communication, and it turns out that the USB-IF has actually sided against Palm on two different fronts. First, the Forum has told Palm that it doesn’t see how blocking Palm’s Vendor ID from accessing iTunes violates its policies; and second — this might be the big one — Palm’s actually riled up the Forum by saying that it’ll be using Apple’s Vendor ID on the Pre going forward. It wants a clarification of Palm’s “intent” within a week, saying such a move would be contrary to the rules and regs set out for the proper use of USB. At this point the question becomes, how many companies and industry bodies is Palm willing to piss off to keep iTunes working exactly the way it wants?

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Apple, Palm hear privately from USB-IF on iTunes spat, involvement unlikely (update: the Forum’s not pleased) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 21:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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GSM Palm Pre now looking at ‘autumn’ launch in Germany

You know, we admire Palm’s patience. We knew a GSM Pre was in the works about 8.43 minutes after its CES presser ended in January, and we’ve been waiting all this time for some carrier in some part of the New World to grab hold of a GSM version of the world’s first webOS handset. If you’ll recall, we last heard that O2 Germany would be giving its loyal users the chance to get that very handset before the holiday season, but now an updated image on the site clearly indicates that it’s coming this fall. As in, before winter. As in, within the next few months. As in, not nearly soon enough.

[Via PreCentral]

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GSM Palm Pre now looking at ‘autumn’ launch in Germany originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 20 Sep 2009 10:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm announces first quarter results: $164.5m net loss, 823k phones sold

Palm just announced its first quarter results — the first to really include numbers from the Pre — and they’re positive (well, depending on how you look at things), with a $2.8m gross profit on $68m in revenue. Actually, that’s a little low, since Palm uses the same sort of subscription accounting for the Pre as Apple does for the iPhone, so the unofficial numbers are higher: $100.6m gross profit on $360.7m in revenue. Still, we should point out that according to GAAP (you know, the rules that matter), the outfit had a net loss in fiscal Q1 2010 of $164.5 million, while the non-GAAP net loss was pegged at $13.6 million. Although Palm wouldn’t include break out specific sales data, they did say that the “vast majority” of the 823,000 phones they sold in Q1 were Pres, so take that as you will. Oh, and if you were still holding out hope for more Palm WinMo phones, it’s all over — Palm is doing 100 percent webOS development from now on. (Shocker!).

Update 1: Rubinstein deftly sidestepped the question of why Pixi was launched on Sprint as opposed to another carrier, saying “They’re a great partner and we’re looking forward to a great holiday season.”

Update 2: Asked about MOTOBLUR, Jon said “I don’t know much about MOTOBLUR, but I think to build really great products, you have to control the entire experience — you have to own the OS and the services around it.”

Update 3: Jon just said “We’re on a web schedule with updates — you’ll see a steady stream of updates and features.”

Update 4: Revenue on accessories and anciliary products were “really very small, immaterial to overall trends.” When pressed if it was in the low, single-digit millions, CFO Doug Jeffries emphasized, “very, very small.”

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Palm announces first quarter results: $164.5m net loss, 823k phones sold originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Sep 2009 16:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Is this Palm’s revamped App Catalog?

We know that Palm’s hard at work implementing desperately needed payment infrastructure for its App Catalog, and we might now be getting some of the first glances of what it — and the non-beta App Catalog as a whole — will look like. Major new features include the aforementioned support for credit card payments, some sort of tag cloud that appears to show up when searching, and integrated app management, while many other screens have been gently tweaked from the early release Pre owners are using today. Last we’d heard, Palm had been targeting mid-September for e-commerce to make its grand debut, which is like… now, so we’re thinking we won’t be waiting long to see this out and about.

[Thanks, Mitchell R.]


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Is this Palm’s revamped App Catalog? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 01:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint’s Dan Hesse talks Android, Pre, iPhone, 4G on Charlie Rose

Sprint CEO Dan Hesse recently sat down for an interview with the master of one-on-ones and black backdrops, Charlie Rose, and while much of the talk was spent traveling down memory lane and revisiting Hesse’s two-decade rise through the ranks at AT&T before fleeing in 2000, there were some great quotes that came out of it:

  • “We’re getting ready to launch a couple of new Android devices.” We know one’s the Hero, and the other — if we were the betting types — is the Samsung InstinctQ.
  • Rose: “The merger with Nextel was a bad idea?” Hesse: “In 20 / 20 hindsight, it was, yes… the premium that Sprint paid for Nextel was too much.” Sprint’s gone back and forth on the idea of spinning off Nextel over the past couple years, so it’s not a surprising thing for him to think — but to hear Sprint’s CEO actually say out loud that he thinks a very active part of its network shouldn’t have become part of the company is a little bombastic.
  • “Our prepaid brand is Boost.” Nothing wild and crazy about that statement, though it does reaffirm that Virgin Mobile is destined for assimilation. The whole thing’s kinda funny considering that Boost dabbled in CDMA before reversing course, and once again, Sprint will be dealing with large installed bases of both iDEN and CDMA prepaid customers.
  • On touchscreen smartphones: “Those are the most expensive phones for us to sell, and those are the ones where we need to make sure that the customer stays with us [and] doesn’t churn, because we’re out a lot of money… those are expensive devices.” Theoretically, an aggressively-priced subsidized smartphone could still end up leaving a carrier in the red if you broke your contract early on and paid the ETF, but we doubt that’s a huge problem — especially for a CDMA carrier like Sprint. He goes on to say “I’m already looking at 4G versions of smartphones,” so that’s really encouraging to hear, particularly if you’re into WiMAX.
  • “Customers will pay premium for simplicity. Simplicity is everything… Digital One Rate which we launched back at AT&T, that was all about simplicity… people paid more. It wasn’t a price cut.” Translation: “Unlimited makes you feel like you’re getting a deal, but rest assured, we’re banking.”
  • In response to Rose asking how Sprint uses the Palm Pre to take on Apple and RIM: “It was really kind of Palm’s decision to take on Apple. And Palm has had [a] long standing relationship with Sprint.” It’s interesting to hear Hesse seemingly back away from a fight with Apple and chalk up the situation to happenstance — RIM not as much, considering that Sprint carries a number of BlackBerrys in its lineup and will certainly continue to do so. Talking more about pitting the Pre against the iPhone, he goes on to say that Palm’s handset is “doing well. But you’ve got to almost put the iPhone, to be fair, in a separate category. The Apple brand and that device has done so well. It’s like comparing someone to Michael Jordan.” If that’s not a tactful acknowledgment that the iPhone is a bona fide wireless superstar, we don’t know what is. Hesse’s giving the iPhone the respect it’s rightfully earned — as any strategically-minded executive would.
  • “The biggest impediment to mobile growth is you got processors are getting a lot faster, screens are getting sharper, they use more and more power, and battery technology is not moving very fast… That’s the one breakthrough that the industry needs. It needs battery breakthroughs.” It’s good to hear that Hesse understands as well as everyone else that the wireless industry needs to be focused on making power draw a non-issue, but he sounds less convinced of the solution: “I don’t know. Solar we hope, and renewable energy sources.” When Sprint gets some cash socked away, it might consider throwing some R&D money at the problem — it’ll be first to market with something resembling a “national” 4G network, after all, and the situation’s only going to get worse.

Who knew you’d find out so much about the inner workings of the States’ third-largest carrier from watching PBS? [Via Gizmodo]

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Sprint’s Dan Hesse talks Android, Pre, iPhone, 4G on Charlie Rose originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Sep 2009 20:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Third-party Google Voice client hits the webOS App Catalog

It looks like it isn’t just bluster from Palm when it comes to thinking differently about its app approval policy. Besides taking a pretty healthy stance on applications that deviate from its current standards, today 10 new titles have shown up for download… a Google Voice app being one of them. gDial Pro, a piece of software which started its life as a homebrew application, is now an official part of the beta store. The program lets you access Google Voice’s full feature set (including a dialer), and no one seems very bothered by it. Here’s hoping Palm keeps up the flow of new software to the Catalog (they’re eating for two now) and they keep a healthy distance from rejection letters.

[Via PreThinking]

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Third-party Google Voice client hits the webOS App Catalog originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 21:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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First Palm App Catalog rejection: NaNplayer

Palm’s App Catalog isn’t exactly bursting with titles yet, but that isn’t stopping the company from rejecting apps — and the dubious honor of First App Rejected goes to NaNplayer, a music player app. Apparently NaNPlayer made use of an undocumented webOS API call, so it makes sense that Palm wouldn’t approve it, but there’s a somewhat less-sensible flipside: it was using the same API the built-in music player uses to index files so it could make playlists. That’s pretty basic functionality, so we’re hoping this all gets resolved with a future webOS update — and in the meantime, NaNplayer will be released to the burgeoning Pre homebrew community when it’s complete.

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First Palm App Catalog rejection: NaNplayer originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 11:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iTunes 9 breaks Pre media sync… what did you expect?

Here we go again: round umpteen of the fight to break and re-enable Pre syncing with iTunes is now underway thanks to the release of iTunes 9, and we’re sure there’s plenty more where this came from. Endlessly amusing to casual observers, yes, but Pre customers are the ones losing out — sure, Palm might be able fix this in a jiffy (especially since they continue to tout compatibility with the Pixi), but meanwhile, media sync’s out of the picture once more. Stay tuned for more on this as it develops.

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iTunes 9 breaks Pre media sync… what did you expect? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Sep 2009 15:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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