China Telecom talking to Palm for the Pre?

Nabbing a contract with a carrier pushing into nine-figure subscriber count territory would go a long way toward helping any manufacturer’s woes, so it’s reasonable to believe that Palm would be shopping its latest wares around the streets of Hong Kong and Beijng where China’s big three carriers are headquartered. Intriguingly, the Financial Times has just casually mentioned in a somewhat-unrelated piece that “China Telecom is planning to offer the Palm to its subscribers,” a perfect fit considering that rival Unicom is poised to launch the iPhone and Telecom runs CDMA with nascent EV-DO coverage in the works. The Pre already knows a thing or two about CDMA networks from its Sprint and Bell launches, of course, so they’ve already got that base covered — beyond that brief FT mention, though, we’ve got nothing, so it’s hard to say when this might be hitting retail.

Filed under: ,

China Telecom talking to Palm for the Pre? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Aug 2009 02:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Bell’s Palm Pre commercial couldn’t be more Apple if it had an Orba Squara soundtrack

Far from being creepy this time around, the latest Palm Pre ad — this one specifically for Bell’s Canadian customer base — is familiar. Very familiar. Plain white backdrop? Check. Peppy male narrator? Check. Hip, upbeat music? Check. Mysterious hands showing off mobile apps and other smartphone capabilities? Check. Side-by-side comparison videos after the break. Hey, at least this one isn’t gonna creep you out.

Update: Looks like someone read our minds and spliced the commercial with Orba Squara’s infamous “Perfect Timing” found in the iPhone ads. Video’s after the break.

[Via Pre Thinking]

Continue reading Bell’s Palm Pre commercial couldn’t be more Apple if it had an Orba Squara soundtrack

Filed under:

Bell’s Palm Pre commercial couldn’t be more Apple if it had an Orba Squara soundtrack originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Aug 2009 00:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Palm launches e-commerce beta for the App Catalog

Love the Pre? Love code? Love money? Well it’s your lucky day. Palm has just announced that it will begin accepting applications for developers interested in producing for-pay apps for the webOS App Catalog. The company says that requests taken now will make devs eligible for inclusion in the mid-September launch of its e-commerce program. Just like Apple and Google, Palm will be splitting profits of paid apps with developers 70 / 30 (the devs get 70 percent, don’t worry), and go figure — credit cards will be accepted. Of course we’re pumped about paying $.99 for a to-do app someday soon, but we’re hoping this will also herald in a new age of steady releases for the Catalog, which is still looking frighteningly bare to us. Hey, that’s what homebrew is for, right? Full PR after the break.

Continue reading Palm launches e-commerce beta for the App Catalog

Filed under: ,

Palm launches e-commerce beta for the App Catalog originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Aug 2009 09:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Palm Pre, iPhone 3GS owners’ satisfaction polled, compared in new study

Studies just released by RBC Capital and ChangeWave Research polled iPhone 3GS and Palm Pre owners on their respective levels of satisfaction with their devices — then compared them. In the studies, 200 iPhone 3GS users and 40 Palm Pre owners were polled. Overall, 99 percent of owners of Apple’s phone proclaimed themselves to be “satisfied,” while 82 percent of that number declared they were “very satisfied.” The poll of Pre owners showed that 87 percent are “satisfied,” and 45 percent of those owners describe themselves as “very satisfied.” Interestingly, the 42 percent of “very satisfied” customers are the highest score ever attained by a Palm device, and it’s a number that’s only ever been bested by RIM and Apple. When asked about their respective reasons for buying their devices, Palm Pre owners listed the touchscreen interface, ability to multitask, and ease of use in the top three, while iPhone users cite its touchscreen, ease of use and faster web browsing as its biggest draws. So what about drawbacks? iPhone users (a whopping 55 percent of them, in fact) say that AT&T’s network is their main gripe with the device, while Pre owners list short battery life and lack of third party apps as the devices biggest drawbacks. All in all, a pretty good showing for both — though the microscopic sample size (especially for the Palm Pre) makes us wonder about the validity of the findings a bit.

Read – Apple’s iPhone 3GS has 99 percent satisfaction rate
Read – iPhone vs. Palm Pre: Satisfaction bakeoff

Filed under:

Palm Pre, iPhone 3GS owners’ satisfaction polled, compared in new study originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Aug 2009 20:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Palm prepping Pre with North American GSM, but for whom?

Palm seems to be making an active, conscientious effort to say as little as it can about the GSM version of the Pre, possibly in an effort to give Sprint as much spotlight as possible before its exclusivity expires — but as we all know, it’s real and it’s coming. Thing is, Palm has always implied that it’s being limited to European duty with a 3G radio that fails to cover bands that are of any interest to North Americans, so what the heck is this noise all about? Multiple certification bodies are now reporting the existence of a Pre model number P100UNA, as opposed to the P100UEU that’s launching in Europe — and it doesn’t take a lot of detective work to gather that those codes on the end stand for “North America” and “European Union,” respectively (for the record, the CDMA version on Sprint is P100EWW, so it ain’t that). One distinct possibility is that Palm’s preparing a version to cover Bell’s new HSPA network since the carrier is Palm’s exclusive Pre launch partner in Canada and they’re smack in the middle of a transition from CDMA — and needless to say, if that’s the case, there’ll be an unprecedented effort to get that sucker unlocked on the double.

[Via PreCentral]

Read – WiFi certification [Warning: PDF link]
Read – Bluetooth SIG

Filed under: ,

Palm prepping Pre with North American GSM, but for whom? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Aug 2009 17:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Pre gets the on-screen keyboard it’s been missing, yet has always had

Pre gets the on-screen keyboard it's been missing, yet has always had
When we asked how you’d change Palm’s Pre, one group of respondents requested a virtual keyboard, a group that should really quit its bellyaching because the phone already has one… it just doesn’t offer any particularly useful keys. That’s changing thanks to the modders at WebOS Internals, who are taking the control that pops up when you hit the “sym” key and expanding it to actually contain some symbols you might use more than once a week — like, you know, letters and jazz. They have a functional keyboard operational at this point that works in both phone orientations, but it’s still decidedly pre alpha, meaning only those whose delicate thumbs are blistering on the Pre’s soft, smooth, physical keys should even think about this modification right now. The team has made huge strides in just the past few days, though, so perhaps before the end of the month everyone can be soft-typing pain-free.

[Via PreCentral.net]

Filed under:

Pre gets the on-screen keyboard it’s been missing, yet has always had originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Aug 2009 08:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Pre phones home with your location, which explains the black helicopters all around you

Wondering why you keep getting followed by shadowy figures in trenchcoats and fake moustaches? Worried that those snipers on the rooftops always seem to know exactly where you are? We think we know what’s going on: it’s the Pre in your pocket. Turns out that Palm has code tucked away in webOS that’s uploading your location periodically — once a day or so — along with a list of applications you’ve used and how long they’ve been open. Here’s our take on the situation:

  • One of the very first screens you see when you power on the Pre for the first time is a disclaimer asking you to allow Google to collect, aggregate, and anonymize your location data in order to improve the performance of location-based services. Furthermore — and this is important — “collection will occur regardless of whether any applications are active.” We don’t know whether Palm acts as a conduit for that data to get to Google, but we’d be surprised if Palm had built services to pipe location data straight to Google within webOS itself; in all likelihood, Palm’s getting the data first, which is why it’s being uploaded there. Bear in mind that you’re seeing this warning outside the context of any Google app on the Pre — it’s right in the operating system. Palm has its own terms and conditions that you agree to above and beyond Google’s, too, and they flat-out say they “may collect, store, access, disclose, transmit, process, and otherwise use your location data.” There you have it.
  • App usage is a pretty benign stat — equate it to TiVo anonymizing and selling your viewing habits, except even less interesting, because we have no evidence to suggest Palm’s trying to sell this. We can totally understand why Palm would want insight into app popularity, and when you think about it, this could actually lead to some pretty clever ranking systems in the App Catalog; the iPhone has starkly demonstrated that download volume doesn’t equate to replay value, and Palm might be able to do something about that. Oh, and seriously, you need to cut it out with the Jon & Kate Plus 8.
  • When an app crashes, Palm gets some more in-depth information about the crash, most notably a list of installed apps. You know what else collects and sends a crapload of information when an app crashes? Mac OS. Windows, too. If they really wanted to go into CYA mode, they could ask before sending the way those desktop OSes do, but we’re not sweating bullets here — we just want stability, and this kind of data helps them get there.

Bottom line: we’re all carrying phones that can identify who we are and where we are — and they have the wireless means to ferry that data wherever their makers wish. And let’s not forget that your Palm Profile lives out there in the cloud anyhow, right?

[Via PreCentral]

Update: Palm has issued a statement on the situation, basically confirming what we suspected — it’s collecting information to offer “a great user experience,” which we take to mean that it’s trying to squash bugs and keep location-centric apps functional, among other things. They’ve also mentioned that it’s possible to turn data collecting services off without going into details — ostensibly they’re referring to the checkbox at setup (see above) that lets you stop sending aggregated location results to Google.

Filed under: ,

Pre phones home with your location, which explains the black helicopters all around you originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Aug 2009 18:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Palm quietly improving Pre build quality, tweaking hardware

It’s not the most comprehensive survey, nor is there any official confirmation, but the crew at PreThinking has checked in with a number of new Pre owners and discovered that Palm’s apparently building its webOS handset better lately — and what’s more, it’s even made some minor improvements. The biggest change appears to be a fix for that nasty bug that caused the Pre to reset or turn off when the keyboard was closed — that bit of grey foam pictured was added to the battery compartment to tighten up the battery connection. There’s a also word that the screen cracking and unintended rotation issues have been addressed, although time will tell on those, and the button color has changed from pearl to silver. As for improvements, well, there’s a new battery model, and the Palm logo is now embossed on the carrying case. Yep, just little stuff, but it’s good to see Palm addressing the build issues on the Pre, which are by far the most common complaint about the device. Let us know if you’ve spotted anything else, would you?

Filed under:

Palm quietly improving Pre build quality, tweaking hardware originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Aug 2009 18:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Controversial Palm Pre ads judged to be effective, still creepy

Controvercial Palm Pre ads judged to be effective, still creepy
Palm’s slightly disturbing Pre ads continue to make news, putting to rest any doubts about their effectiveness. Hot on the heels of ad agency Modernista totally loving that you’re “creeped out” by them, analyst MediaCurves has done a little online study –“little” meaning a small sample group of only 305 viewers. Still, the results are interesting, with half of all respondents feeling inspired or happy after viewing the commercial, nine percent feeling disturbed. Sixteen percent were, however, confused, but that didn’t stop 21 percent from saying the commercial was “extremely effective,” and 46 percent indicating “somewhat effective.” At the read link you can watch the ad with a line graph drawn over it rating peoples’ interest realtime, generally going up when the phone is shown (the “bing, bing, bing” segment) and down the rest of the time, perhaps inspiring a new series of Pre adverts with more time for demos and less for dazed-sounding, tight-haired, 60-foot-tall women.

[Via everythingpre]

Filed under:

Controversial Palm Pre ads judged to be effective, still creepy originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Aug 2009 09:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Palm Pre soap brings webOS to the tub

Okay, so we sort of understand molding soap into familiar gadget shapes, but this bar of Pre soap utterly baffles by being scented “bourbon and Coke,” which seems a bit self-defeating. Smell like a hobo with webOS for just $13 — and don’t worry, there’s BlackBerry, iPhone, and Playstation soap on offer as well, presumably scented with Boone’s Farm and OE 800.

[Via Pocket-Lint]

Filed under:

Palm Pre soap brings webOS to the tub originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Aug 2009 01:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments