Another Pre 3 at the FCC, coming to Verizon for you and me?

Last month, a device (model number HSTNH-F30CN) that we surmised to be a Pre 3 hit the FCC rocking AT&T band GSM radios. Now, its brother HSTNH-F30CV is seeking federal approval to ride CDMA (850 / 1900 MHz), UMTS (900 / 2100 MHz), and GSM (850 / 900 / 1800 / 2100 MHz) wireless waves. With that “V” tagged on the end of the model moniker and its Verizon-friendly innards, it sure looks like the Pre 3 will be the next handset to wear a checkmark on its front. Additionally, those world wide bands tell us that a webOS device will soon be joining the Androids and Blackberrys in Big Red’s rather limited lineup of global handsets. Skeptical about our smartphone Spidey Sense? Hit the source link and see for yourself, Sherlock.

Another Pre 3 at the FCC, coming to Verizon for you and me? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 May 2011 23:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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webOS 2.1 for the Pre Plus now available to download for O2 Germany users

In spite of HP’s strong assurances to the contrary, the Palm Pre Plus is actually going to give users the option to ride into webOS 2.x territory. As we speculated yesterday, O2 Germany Pre Plus owners can now download a new firmware package for their slider handsets, which will work its magic and update them to version 2.1 of HP’s magnificent software. The company has been actively discouraging users and programmers from pairing the older hardware with the latest software, so we can’t promise it’ll be a bump-free ride for all upgraders, but having the option is all people have been asking for and now it’s there — and by “there” we mean the source link below.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

webOS 2.1 for the Pre Plus now available to download for O2 Germany users originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Feb 2011 06:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Pre Plus to get webOS 2 after all?

We won’t lie: we did feel a little put out when our pal Jon Rubinstein told us that webOS 2.0 wouldn’t be coming to the Palm Pre Plus — something about the older hardware not having the necessary “oomph” to handle the new OS. But perhaps all hope is not lost! According to a rep from O2 Germany (as espied on the company’s support forums) HP will make with the new operating system at some point in the near future — just not as an over-the-air update. When the time comes (indeed, if the time comes) you’ll need to download it from HP’s website not your computer and install it via USB. And maybe that will be the point when we discover the joys of running a new OS on an underpowered handset for ourselves!

Update: Okay, maybe not. Mitchell wrote in to let us know that HP pulled the webOS 2.0 SDKs and are “actively encouraging” devs to stick with 1.4.5 for the Pre Plus. So, yeah, bummer.

Palm Pre Plus to get webOS 2 after all? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Feb 2011 10:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pre 2 available for $150 through Verizon on February 17th

Call it The Curious Case of the Pre 2: If you check the handset out on HP’s site, it will cost you $100 after rebate (under contract of course). But if you wander over to Verizon’s little piece of the Interwebs, the same phone has just been announced for $150 (new contract price) after rebate. So, let’s suppose for a moment that you had a choice between the two — which would you pick? That’s what we thought. Available on February 17, check out the mind-bending PR after the break for more details.

Continue reading Pre 2 available for $150 through Verizon on February 17th

Pre 2 available for $150 through Verizon on February 17th originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Feb 2011 12:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP Pre 2 available to pre-order for $100 on Verizon, shipping out February 17th

If you just can’t think beyond next week and need to get your new Pre fix as soon as possible, HP’s got you covered. As promised by Jon Rubinstein yesterday, the Pre 2 (sans the lovely Palm branding) is today available to pre-order at $100 on a two-year Verizon contract. Unsubsidized and contractually liberated pricing is $450. webOS 2.0, a “Vivid” touchscreen and, of course, that familiar portrait slider keyboard await those brave enough to own a HP smartphone.

HP Pre 2 available to pre-order for $100 on Verizon, shipping out February 17th originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 15:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Original Pre, Pre Plus, Pixi and Pixi Plus won’t get updated to webOS 2.0

We had a chance to sit down with Jon Rubinstein after HP’s webOS event today, and he confirmed some unfortunate news for us: older Palm devices like the original Pre, the Pre Plus, the Pixi, and the Pixi Plus won’t receive that previously promised update to webOS 2.0. Jon was pretty candid with us, saying that Palm had “missed a product cycle” in the midst of its financial troubles and subsequent acquisition by HP last year, and that the older products simply don’t have the horsepower to properly run webOS 2.0 and beyond. That said, it’s clear that he wants to do right by customers — he told us that HP would do “something special” for owners of older hardware when the Pre 3, the Veer, and the TouchPad hit the market. We’ll see what that entails — and whether or not anyone actually sticks it out on webOS 1.4.5 until the new gear ships sometime this summer.

P.S.- We have lots more from our talk with Jon coming up — including some actually good news — so keep an eye on this space.

Original Pre, Pre Plus, Pixi and Pixi Plus won’t get updated to webOS 2.0 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Feb 2011 20:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP posts complete ‘Think Beyond’ event video

It may not have provided a live stream, but HP has at least quickly turned around a complete video of today’s nearly two hour-long “Think Beyond” event in San Francisco. Head on past the break to see the announcements of the TouchPad, Pre 3 and Veer as they happened, along with few other surprises. Unfortunately for those watching at home, it seems HP wasn’t able to think beyond 360p.

Continue reading HP posts complete ‘Think Beyond’ event video

HP posts complete ‘Think Beyond’ event video originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Feb 2011 19:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP Pre 3 first hands-on! (updated with video)

The HP Pre 3 is here! We just got our hands on one and snapped a whole bunch of pictures — see the gallery below. Stay tuned for our first impressions soon. We’re also still working on our shots of the Veer and the TouchPad, but sharp eyes can find both devices in the gallery below — there might even be some iPhone and Nexus S comparison shots, but we don’t want to give too much away.

Update: We just had a chance to play around with the Pre 3 at some length… and we have to say it feels good. The body of the device is sleek and solid, and the weight feels substantial in your hand. The screen is a relatively spacious 3.6-inches, and webOS looks absolutely stunning on it. The extra resolution is a big help on readability and clarity. The slider mechanism feels fairly solid, though there’s a little give just at the end of it’s movement that made us slightly concerned. Compared to previous devices, however, it seems far tighter. We’re still messing around with the phone and will report back on what we find, but in terms of hardware quality, HP has taken a big step up here. As for the keyboard, it feels really fantastic. We realize this is very much a matter of personal preference, but we had zero problems typing quickly and accurately on the Pre 3 right from the get go.

Update 2: Hardware hands-on video after the break!

Update 3: More pics, including the Touchstone 2 dock.

Continue reading HP Pre 3 first hands-on! (updated with video)

HP Pre 3 first hands-on! (updated with video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Feb 2011 15:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP Launches WebOS-Powered Tablet, Phones

SAN FRANCISCO — Hewlett-Packard on Wednesday launched a touchscreen tablet and two new smartphones powered by Palm’s mobile operating system, webOS.

Dubbed the TouchPad, the HP tablet has a 9.7-inch screen with 1024 x 768 resolution, a front-facing camera for videoconferencing and a dual-core 1.2-GHz processor.

Due for a summer release, the TouchPad also includes stereo speakers, gyroscope and accelerometer sensors, Bluetooth compatibility and support for Adobe Flash. HP did not announce a price tag.

“For the first time webOS is available on a form factor that lets the intuitive elegance of the platform really shine through,” said Jon Rubinstein, HP’s senior vice president.

The TouchPad tablet is HP’s entry into the touchscreen tablet market created by Apple’s 9.7-inch iPad in 2010. That market is rapidly growing more crowded with the advent of tablets such as Samsung’s Galaxy Tab and the upcoming Motorola Xoom, both running Google’s Android operating system. By contrast, HP is betting on webOS, which powers its current Pre and Pixi smartphones, but which lags behind both Android and Apple’s iOS in developer support.

In the past, HP has sold stylus-controlled tablet PCs running the Windows OS, but that product category never grew beyond a tiny business niche. The webOS-powered TouchPad is HP’s first consumer-oriented tablet device.

HP acquired Palm last year to develop a mobile operating system in-house. Wednesday’s offerings are the first products resulting from the new acquisition.

HP highlighted the TouchPad’s web-connected syncing experience called Synergy, which also works with HP’s webOS phones. Enter a calendar entry on the TouchPad, for example, and if you enter your user name and password on a webOS phone, the calendar automatically synchronizes the entries.

HP added that the TouchPad would include its own built-in phone service for handling calls on the TouchPad. However, the company did not have full details about carrier support.

The TouchPad’s user interface features a dock at the bottom with core apps for e-mail, browsing and others. An arrow button on the right brings up a launcher that shows a window of the most frequently used apps.

Third-party apps for the TouchPad will be developed with WebKit, the same development tools used to make apps for the earlier webOS phones such as the Palm Pre.

HP also showed off notification features that it claims are less obtrusive than competitors’. An instant message could pop up a mini notification in the upper corner of the screen, for example, and you could select the notification to switch to the IM app.

“The TouchPad is nothing short of a breakthrough,” Rubinstein said.

HP earlier in the press conference launched two smartphones, the HP Veer (above) and the Pre 3 (below). Both phones include a 5-megapixel camera and slide-out qwerty keyboards, and both include support for Flash. The smaller Veer has a 2.6-inch touchscreen, and the bigger Pre 3 has a 3.6-inch display.

Both smartphones can be turned into wireless hotspots to share their data connection with up to five different devices (similar to the Verizon iPhone). HP is marketing the Pre 3 as a “professional workhorse” for power users.

The Veer will be available early spring, and the Pre 3 will be shipping in summer.

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


HP Touchstone Touch-to-share lets devices swap URLs, ‘Exhibition’ mode added for phones

So, HP is extending “Touchstone” to mean more than “that heavy, slanted magnet thing that my Pre always slips off of.” For starters, the TouchPad has a Touchstone charging dock — it’s not magnetic, but at least you don’t have to worry about plugging the thing in, and it’s particularly suited to working with a keyboard. But that’s not the real magic. HP has enabled its three new webOS devices (The TouchPad, Veer, and Pre 3) to communicate over Touchstone using “Touch-to-share” tech. You simply place your phone on top of the TouchPad, as illustrated, and whatever you’re viewing on the phone pops up in the tablet’s browser. We’re not sure how this works bi-directionally, but HP mentions both scenarios, so hopefully it shouldn’t be that difficult to configure the URL to come from the tablet and land on the phone. The two devices have to be on the same webOS account, however, so don’t get any crazy ideas about sharing URLs with friends. Naturally, there should be a lot more “Continuous Client“-style uses for this tech in the future, but we’d say URL pushing is a good start. Finally, the old-fashioned Touchstone is going to work with the Veer and Pre 3, which will now be sent into an “Exhibition” mode when docked. The mode allows the phone to display photos or upcoming appointments, depending on the user’s particular level of sentimentality.

For more on all of HP’s webOS announcements today, click here!

HP Touchstone Touch-to-share lets devices swap URLs, ‘Exhibition’ mode added for phones originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Feb 2011 14:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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