Palm Pre hits eBay prior to official launch: just $900 and a fistful of shame

Look, if this were one of those elusive GSM Pres, we might be able to understand this. But seriously — $899.99 for a Palm Pre that you won’t get until launch day anyway? ‘Course, there are those certain folks that are born everyday, but we couldn’t caution you enough to steer clear here. After all, lines won’t even be a problem come tomorrow, right guys? On another note, how did some chap from Encino end up with five of these gems? White panel van delivery or something?

[Via GadgetVenue]

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Palm Pre hits eBay prior to official launch: just $900 and a fistful of shame originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Jun 2009 10:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Pre designers sit down to talk, reminisce and revel

By now, you know precisely what the Palm Pre is capable of. You know the ins and outs of the user experience, and you’ve probably got a solid idea of whether or not you’ll be lined up come June 6th to claim one as your own. But here’s a side you probably haven’t heard: the voice of the design team. At long last, the masterminds behind Palm’s comeback phone have finally sat down to talk about the build process and what drove them to create both the Pre and webOS. Not surprisingly, most of it came from the desire to truly revolutionize the mobile experience, one that’s been generally poor for far too long. In separate (but equally awesome) interviews, Michelle Koh and a gaggle of design engineers (including Matias Duarte, Mike Bell, Peter Skillman and Michael Abbott) have opened up to spill their soul on rejuvenating the company with a single product. We won’t issue any spoilers here, but we’d argue that the read links below are required reading if you’re even remotely interested in this handset.

Read – Michelle Koh interview
Read – Design team interview

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Palm Pre designers sit down to talk, reminisce and revel originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Jun 2009 09:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Confirmed: Palm Pre’s iTunes support is very, very hacky

Careful analysis of a Pre’s identity to its host system when connected via USB has now confirmed what’s been suspected for a few days now — the way it hooks to iTunes is very shady indeed. Turns out that the Pre identifies itself as an iPod when it’s in Media Sync mode, but only on the system’s mass storage interface; the root USB node still comes through as a Palm Pre, which Apple could easily tease out and block if it so chose. We’re still up in the air on whether Cupertino would actively move to do that, but regardless, you’ve got to give a tip of the ol’ hacker hat to Palm for its wild ways on this one.

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Confirmed: Palm Pre’s iTunes support is very, very hacky originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 16:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint and Palm admit that they don’t expect wild lines for Pre

It’s hard to say what changed between May 20th and today (any ideas, Verizon / AT&T?), but it seems that Sprint’s tone on the impending Pre launch has shifted just a bit. In a new report over at Bits, we’re told that both Sprint and Palm are informing the public to not expect lengthy lines on launch day. Naturally, both firms are spinning this like it’s a good thing, with Palm’s Lynn Fox proclaiming that “[Palm’s] not like Apple.” Mark Elliott, a spokesman for Sprint, even went so far as to say that it was actually attempting to “manage the exact opposite” of long lines, noting that Sprint wanted “each customer to get the experience” rather than being rushed in and out. Honestly, the spin factor was most obvious when he outed this line: “[Success] is not about having a line out the door; it’s about being able to treat each customer and make sure they’re happy with their decision.” Alrighty then.

[Image courtesy of IDR]

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Sprint and Palm admit that they don’t expect wild lines for Pre originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 12:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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In case you missed our Palm Pre review…

We wouldn’t want you to feel left out of the biggest blockbuster phone launch of the year (or at least this week), so be sure to hit up our behemoth Palm Pre review before all your friends do and start spouting off the spoilers. We heard that Shia LaBeouf totally dies at the end.

Continue on to read the full Palm Pre review

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In case you missed our Palm Pre review… originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 11:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why Apple Can Afford to Phone It In With the Next iPhone

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Apple could sleepwalk through its next iPhone release and competitors still couldn’t catch up, analysts say.

In fact, that’s what Apple seems poised to do, with only minor hardware updates likely for the third-generation iPhone, which Apple may detail at its Worldwide Developers Conference next week. But even with a lackluster upgrade, Apple has little to fear from upstart smartphones like the Palm Pre, which launches on Saturday, June 6.

Apple’s dominance in the smartphone market, combined with the iPhone’s already innovative feature set, put the company in a strong position to stave off competitors, including the upcoming Palm Pre, said Roger Entner, an analyst at Nielsen Mobile.

“I think the Pre holds up very well compared to the current second-generation iPhone 3G,” Entner said. “But the third-gen iPhone will most likely up the ante again…. If you only follow Apple, you will never catch up.”

Apple’s original iPhone launched in June 2007 with a $400 price tag for its low-end model. It wasn’t until Apple released its second iPhone, the iPhone 3G, with a $200 price tag that the smartphone exploded into the mainstream. Within the calendar year of 2008, Apple sold over 10 million units of the iPhone 3G, according to CEO Steve Jobs.

The company quickly established itself as a market-share heavyweight. And recent statistics suggest the iPhone shows no signs of flagging. A research report from NPD Group shows that in terms of consumer smartphone sales, Apple sold 24 percent of the U.S. market, claiming the title for No. 2 best-selling smartphone that quarter. That’s an improvement from the first quarter of 2008, when Apple sold 17 percent of smartphones in the market and held the No. 3 spot, according to NPD.

Also, research company Gartner recently released global smartphone numbers indicating Apple’s iPhone doubled its worldwide marketshare. Apple’s share of worldwide smartphone sales increased from 5.3 percent in the first quarter of 2008 to 10.8 percent in the first quarter of 2009, according to Gartner. And in terms of iPhones sold, Apple grew from 1.7 million units in the first quarter of 2008 to 3.9 million units during the same period in 2009.

The major difference this year is the emergence of additional iPhone competitors, including Palm’s Pre. Palm in January announced the Pre at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, and many tech enthusiasts have been eagerly anticipating the Pre not only because of its iPhone-like touchscreen and form factor, but also because the phone was made under the direction of Palm CEO Jon Rubinstein, a former Apple engineer who was instrumental in the creation of Apple’s iPod.
The announcement of the Pre heated up tension between Apple and Palm. In a January earnings call, Apple chief operating officer Tim Cook gave a loaded response to a reporter’s question about the Pre, suggesting Apple might sue the company for copying the iPhone.

“We are ready to suit up and go against anyone,” Cook said during the conference. “However, we will not stand for having our [intellectual property] ripped off and will use whatever weapons we have at our disposal.”

Even if Palm’s Pre proves to be a compelling device, that doesn’t mean it’s going to threaten the iPhone, said tech strategist Michael Gartenberg.

“For Palm to succeed does not mean that Apple has to do badly,” Gartenberg said. “And likewise for Apple to succeed doesn’t mean that Palm is going to go out of business. There’s going to be a lot of room in the smartphone market for several players here.”

What do we know about the next iPhone? Nothing, officially. But mounting evidence suggests the third-generation iPhone’s main improvements include a digital compass, an improved digital camera with video-recording capabilities and auto-focus, and a speedier processor.

Sound exciting? Probably not. Either way, it doesn’t matter for Apple.

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Photo: Yutaka Tsutano/Flickr


Palm Pre filtering into Sprint stores, indocile employee sizes it up

With only days to go before at least four or five Sprint stores begin selling Palm’s Pre, we’re already seeing at least one employee with some time on his hands give the smartphone a go. Moral of the story? Right about now would be an awesome time to know somebody who can get behind a Sprint counter without using an unlawful amount of force.

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Palm Pre filtering into Sprint stores, indocile employee sizes it up originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 30 May 2009 18:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint affirms Palm Pre exclusivity “through 2009”

Ready for your daily dose of obvious? Good. After Verizon Wireless CEO Lowell McAdam proudly proclaimed that America’s largest mobile operator would be painting the Palm Pre red “in about six months,” Sprint has come forward to make sure we know that said statement is probably right on the money. According to Sprint spokesman James Fisher: “We have the Pre through 2009.” Short, sweet and chock full of pent-up rage. ‘Course, six months after the Pre’s launch on Sprint lands us in December, giving VZW just enough time to cripple the phone’s hottest features and push it out before Valentine’s Day. Sounds pretty reasonable, no?

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Sprint affirms Palm Pre exclusivity “through 2009” originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 May 2009 10:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Pre camera used, results shared at long last

Palm’s official Twitter account just tweeted about testing out yfrog, the image / video sharing site — and as you might expect from a manufacturer, it wants to share pictures snapped with its own equipment. Thanks to some helpful EXIF data parsed out by the site, we know the image you’re looking at here was taken using a Pre, apparently smack in the middle of enjoying a few 5-cent horsey rides. As far as we can tell this is the first shot we’ve seen posted from the Pre’s camera, and we’re cautiously optimistic about what the 3 megapixel sensor has managed to do here. Sure, blowing the image up to full size reveals some nasty artifacting and muddy details, but when you get right down to it, that’s what cameraphone shots are all about, right?

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Palm Pre camera used, results shared at long last originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 May 2009 18:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T expects to sell Palm Pre when Sprint’s exclusivity ends

We’ve heard in the past that the Palm Pre would be available at other carriers “next year” sometime after Sprint’s exclusivity period is up, and now we have a vague verbal confirmation from AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson that he “sees” AT&T grabbing hold of the Pre once it’s available. The remarks were made today at the D7 conference. If this pans out, it fits with rumblings we’ve heard of the Eos being AT&T’s low-end, Centro-style webOS device, with the Pre snapping up the higher end.

[Via Phone Scoop; image courtesy of PreCentral.net]

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AT&T expects to sell Palm Pre when Sprint’s exclusivity ends originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 May 2009 15:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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