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Sony Announces Excellent New Handhelds

PalmAddict writes "Sony Japan has announced what was only supposed to be a non-working mockup at Palm Source just a few short weeks ago, as reality. Palminfocenter has the scoop on the PEG-NR70, a thin, folding, half VGA, built-in digital camera picture taking, MP3 playing powerhouse." Nothing I can say except wow.

11 of 223 comments (clear)

  1. more pics by Thng · · Score: 5, Informative

    pictures from sony's japanese language site: http://www.jp.sonystyle.com/peg/Store/Clie/index.h tml

  2. Kaboom! Goes the site. Read it here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sony Introduces Two Models with Keyboards, MP3 Players

    Posted by: Ed on Monday, March 11, 200212:06:43 AM

    Sony Japan has just introduced two new cutting-edge handhelds. The PEG-NR70 and PEG-NR70V both have built-in keyboards and 320 by 480 color screens. They also have built-in MP3 and ATRAC3 audio players. In addition, the PEG-NR70V has a built-in camera.

    These have a clamshell design, with the keyboard on one side and the screen on the other. However, the screen can pivot around and then close again, this time with the screen facing out, allowing these to be used like a traditional handheld, with text entry done through a virtual Graffiti area.
    The screen doesn not flip all the way around like a note pad does. It opens, the screen rotates on an axis located just above the hinge, then closes back over the keypad. When the screen rotates, it's image automatically flips over so it is still upright to the user.

    Frequent readers will recognize the NR70V as the one a Sony executive briefly showed off at PalmSource last month.

    The 16-bit color Backlit TFT screen is 3.8 inches tall. When closed, both of these models are 5.4 by 2.8 by .65 inches. They weigh 7 ounces, including the stylus.

    They are the first Palm OS models to use Motorola's 66 MHz Dragonball SuperVZ processor. They run Palm OS 4.1 and have 16 MB of RAM and 10 MB of Flash ROM.

    Of course they have a built-in Memory Stick slot. They also have a Jog Dial and a Back button.

    These have a built-in Lithium Polymer battery, which Sony estimates will last for 10 days, based on 30 minutes of use a day. They have an additional DSP chip for handling audio and this drains significant power. The company says these will last for 7 hours of music playback with the display off.

    The PNR70V's camera is also on the hinge. It can take images with 100,000 pixels. It has a 1/6 inch CMOS Image Sensor and it can take pictures between 0.3 meters from the lens all the way to infinity. it saves images in PG Pocket format in sizes of 320x240, 160x120, or 88x88.

    These models have the enhanced IR port from the T-series. They have other things in common with the T-series, sharing the same styli and HotSync port. This means the NR series should be able to use many of the same peripherals designed for the T series.

    They also comes with ear-bud speakers and an audio control wand similar to previous Clié models with built-in audio players. Also like previous Sony models, the screen can be turned off while playing music. Because they use a separate DSP, the user can listen to music while using other applications.

    In addition to software necessary to use the audio player and camera, they come with Documents To Go 4.0 Standard Edition to allow the user to access Microsoft Office files and Intellisync Lite for the Clié to synchronize with Outlook.

    These handhelds have been introduced only in Japan. The NR70 will be available on March 23. The NR70V will be out April 13. There is no word yet on when they will be available in other countries.

    The NR70V will sell for 59,800 Yen, or about $465. The NR70 will sell for 49,800 Yen, or $385. Again, these are the prices in Japan. They may or may not indicate what these will sell for in other countries.

    Sony has also introduced the PEG-MSB1 Memory Stick Bluetooth module.

    Thanks to SaxonMan for the tip and Eugene for his translations. -Ed

    Related Information:

    * ClieClub: Lots of Pictures of the new models
    * PIC: Sony to Announce New Handheld in Japan Next Week
    * PIC: Sony Prototype Pics
    * PIC: Bluetooth Memory Stick Gets SIG Approval
    * PIC: Sony Forum

  3. LINK by dhamsaic · · Score: 5, Informative

    for those too lazy to copy & paste :)

    here's a link

    --
    Every once in a while I like to masturbate a new word into my vocabulary, even if I don't know what it means.
  4. Focus by crumbz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It seems that Sony has a hard time focusing on consumer products in the IT sphere. They tend to hit or miss. The VAIO line was a pretty tepid offering up until the previous iteration. The Playstation I & II were tremendously successful in their markets. The CLIEs were good(great?). Their MP3 players and MD players had terrible connectivity to PCs or Macs.

    The new PDA looks good though. Maybe this will be a hit.

  5. Oh by TheGreenLantern · · Score: 5, Informative

    So that's why I can't get onto PalmInfoCenter today. Anyone looking for more info on this might want to try PDABuzz, another pretty good Palm site.

    --

    It hurts when I pee.
  6. Wow. by cascino · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nothing I can say except wow.
    Yeah, that's about the same thing palminfocenter.com is saying right now...
    "...eleven-thousand hits in HOW LONG??!!"

  7. Subscription by MhzJnky · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd pay for the new Slashdot subscription service if I got posts say 30 minutes before non-subscribers. That way I would half a chance to see the site befor it's slashdot-ed.

    --


    "Failure is not an option, it's part of the standard package"
  8. Re:Jeez... by darkov · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's a link to a story with heaps of (threaded) comments attached. I'd say that the database is getting spanked.

    No. That's not a technical term. I just made it up then.

  9. Sure this isn't from-the-marketing-dept ? by sinserve · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Excellent"? says who?

    I see it was a comment of the submiter, but isn't
    it a bad-thing to slip-in product endorsement into
    article submissions?

    I am afraid of covert ad tactics. You can never
    notice them, for they disguise as a personal opinion.

    Most of you will probably dismiss me as a troll or
    flame bait, or even mod me as such, but some of you
    will notice the subliminal impact of a header like
    that.

    First impression counts, and hidden presuppositions influence our choices later.
    It is called "nesting" if you are not familiar with
    propaganda.

    --

  10. More details from Japanese site by huntdwumpus · · Score: 5, Informative

    What it looks like open and closed (from the Japanese site)

    It looks like they have a Bluetooth card accessory coming out and a GPS card. There is also what looks like a wireless modem and another type of wireless adapter, but I'm not sure if it's 802.11b, or not.

    a couple more views

    It can also be used to transfer map/location data back and forth with your Sony Car Navigator (in Japan). And it can function as a programmable remote control for your home theater gear (TV, DVD, VCR, etc). It looks like the camera uses Picture Gear Pocket edition, so the photos are probably compatible with most of Sony's DV and digital still cams (and transferrable by Memory Stick).

    It's surprising they didn't put a phone in, but I guess Japanese hipsters wouldn't be caught dead talking into a giant PDA when they have such amazing "keitai" cell phones.

  11. Re:A few additional comments by ntillery · · Score: 5, Insightful

    10 days with 30 minutes a day = 5 hours. 7 days, if used with music and screen off = 3.5 hours. Ok, do the maths. This thing will less than 2 continuous hours with music and screen on.

    I happen to own a PEG-760C and I routinely use it to listen to MP3s at work all day. I used up ~20% of the battery a day, and this was before I figured out how to turn the screen off. Now I hardly use 5% of the battery/day. This also includes time spent using its more traditional PDA functions.

    MP3: I've given before. DRM means special app on windows to convert your MP3 to Sony homebrew format with copy protection. So it's not really MP3. First you need another OS to do the conversion with their crappy app (Jukebox if I remember correctly), next you can't transfer more than once and in one direction

    Bullshit. I can mount the memory stick as a USB device, and copy MP3 directly to it. No DRM, no extra software. Have you even used a Clie before?

    - Memory Stick: Ok: Sony still doesn't get it. The most expensive format per MB. I still refuse to go this route. What is the point of adopting this format over other proven and more economic ones?

    I'll partially agree with you on this. We don't need one more memory standard, but it's only marginally more expensive. There still is no standard for memory expansion in the electronics market anyway, so there is no dominate solution as far as portability goes. Each standard has its set of supported products.

    Special keyboard rotation and cool design: Here too, I've given in this trap already. If I need a keyboad, I get a laptop. Graffiti doesn't cut it for me. Cool factor: I already have an iBook and an iPaq. I'll still with that.

    Good for you. I'm glad your happy with your laptop, but some of us would still like the basic features of a PalmOS plus a little extra in a smaller foot print. I personally can write in Graffiti much faster then I can type on those keyboards, but I don't assume everyone can. Sony is try to appeal to a larger market then just you and I.

    --
    Too lazy to come up with a clever sig.