Palm/Motorola to Develop Combo handheld/phone
dannyp writes "The
New York Times
reports that Palm and Motorola are going to jointly develop a phone with embedded Palm functionality. The
story
requires free registration, as always." I've seen a PalmPilot III/combo phone before - just looked clunky and heavy. And some of the non-US phones do a better job, but I'd still like the ultimate combo phone.
...Then lets just start blending existing products together. PDA's and phones serve 2 very different purposes, and thus have 2 very different sets of design guidelines. A phone should be small(ish) and a PDA should have a large, hi-rez, readable screen. Furthermore, you should be able to take notes on your PDA while talking on your phone, and I _don't_ want yet another wire/cable/dongle to carry around, or lose, or break, or forget, etc, so don't recommend the "hands-free" solution :)
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http://partners.nytim es.com/2000/09/25/technology/25PALM.html
but as some of the other posters pointed out, it's going to be a hard sell for some people. However, the integration possibilities are really kind of cool.
:-))
Instead of looking up a phone number on your PDA and dialing it by hand, you hit a button.
Instead of having your PDA beep (and too damned softly!) at you when you have an appointment, your phone can vibrate, ring, or glow. (The LCD.
I admit it might not be for everyone; but for those who use the Palm as a simple address book, phone book, and appointment calendar, it might be extremely handy. I'd personally like it, just because it's one less gadget to carry. Right now the laptop, cell phone, pager, and Palm KILL me when I'm in an airport.
What'd be extremely cool would be if the phone/Palm combo could sync up with a PC or other Palm, and transfer data back and forth.
-- Talonius
My reality check bounced.
Info can be found here
Features:
Smart Phone Digital phone and electronic organizer in one package.
- 3COM-based (Palm III platform) Personal digital assistant (PDA) is built-in.
- Address book keeps track of names, addresses, phone numbers, e-mail and website addresses, as well as other information about your personal and business contacts.
- You can make a call, send an e-mail or open Internet sites directly from your address book. - Date book records appointments quickly and easily.
- To-Do list allows you to make a list of things to do and assign a priority level and due date for each task.
- Calculator lets you perform basic operations.
- HotSync Technology: Synchronize data between your phone and your PC.
Wireless Web Message Capable
This phone is MiniBrowser ready, includes all necessary items (software and cable) for wireless connectivity and can receive wireless web messages. Access the Internet to browse text-only versions of popular web sites. Check weather reports, sports scores, stock reports and more.
Stylus Navigation
Large Display offers touch-screen capabilities and stylus-based navigation. Hold the stylus like a pen, and you can write directly on the screen.
Funny thing is that this phone doesn't sell well. When will people learn that taking two things they like, like ice cream and tuna fish, and combining them simply does not always work. This is a perfect example.
People, especially americans, want smaller phones. Hell, people that WANT a Palm will get a Palm. The majority just want a cell phone and don't need that additional functionality. Plus, putting a huge block of a phone against your ear simply is not "new yorker-ish" (ie stylish)
Personally, I would prefer a separate PDA and phone, but they should be tightly integrated (using Bluetooth or similar). The possibilities are essentially the same as with a combined device (browse the web, caller ID, call from PDA, etc.), but to me having two separate devices with specific functions seems a lot more convenient.
--
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