So far, VoIP and Palm devices were two things which didn’t go too well – even though there still is no official Skype client, Pre heads can now get their hands onto a homebrew Google Voice tool:

Unofficial Google Voice client for the Palm Pre. This app lets you choose contacts from your device or dial a number and call or text them using your Google Voice number. This app is currently under development, and it has a lot of bugs. See the screen shots and my blog (in signature) for more information.

EDIT 7/31 (v0.2.0):
- hopefully fixed SMS sending
- choose number from multiple contacts
- longer voicemail dial-out pause length
- optional PIN entry
- fixed SMS character counter
- formatted phone numbers for better usability
- improved dialer screen

License: this application is NOT open source. Do not distribute!

Further information can be had here:
http://forums.precentral.net/homebrew-apps/195112-dkgooglevoice-google-voice-client-7-31-v0-2-0-a.html

O’Reilly’s webOS book seems to be the first on the market – the early access team has just sent out the following:

This is a notification that Palm webOS, 1st Edition has just been published to print.

As part of the terms of the Rough Cuts service, you may continue to access the completed book online for a period of 45 days. During this period, you will be able to the PDF version. However, if you plan to read Palm webOS, 1st Edition online after this 45 day period, you will need to access it as part of a standard Safari Books Online subscription.

For users who purchased the Rough Cuts Bundle, you will receive a separate email shortly with the shipping and billing information for the print version of your Rough Cuts title.

Once again: download the ebook ASAP and store it somewhere safe. In 45 days, O’Reilly will charge you a second time if you want to read your already-paid book….

microsd to usb USB sticks for Palm handheldsPalm originally promised that its LifeDrive handheld would be able to access USB storage one day – unfortunately, the hardware for this never materialized (class-action lawsuit, anyone?).

The picture on the left shows a device by Elan Digisystems, which plugs into MicroSD slots and lets you access USB sticks and other storage mediums.

The folks at AllAboutSymbian’s have cooked up a little review – further info can be found at the URL below!

Image by AllAboutSymbian

city hall Palm stores   reloadedPalm’s attempts at retail have not gone too well in the past – but it looks like they still stick to the concept.

Ryan Kairer’s PalmInfoCenter reports that Palm is planning to open so-called “Pre experience centers” in Los Angeles:

Palm will staff the location with Palm ambassadors who will give visitors a chance to get hands-on with the Pre and follow along with various demo’s of the Palm Pre smartphone. Palm will also offer one on one tutorials and presentations on a large screen displays.

Image: Wikimedia Commons / k.lee, lightboxing by Tam Hanna

Palm has finally added a whooping two new applications to the Pre’s store – the two apps in question are a bookmark manager from our friends at Mark/Space and a table reservation tool from an unknown manufacturer.

As of now, Mark/Space have not updated the relevant page…but I have some more information on OpenTable.

The manufacturer describes his offering as follows:

There’s so much hype about all of the different iPhone apps, but this is something fun for the Pre that WSJ readers will surely be interested in. While OpenTable has an iPhone app, the new Pre app goes above and beyond with a few new features, allowing diners to:

x)View restaurant reviews
x)Add reservations to their calendars
x)Modify reservations without losing their original while they search

Of course, like the iPhone app, it uses the phone’s GPS technology to show diners available tables that are nearby, allowing them to book, get directions and even email invitations to friends.

….

We were furthermore provided with the screenshots below:
new webos app Two new apps for webOS  Two new apps for webOS  Two new apps for webOS

palm pre 99 dollars 99$ Pres   for new customers onlyThe picture on the left hits us via PreCentral, and has caused quite a stir on the internet.

The nitty-gritty is as follows:

  • 99$ for new customers only
  • Contract-free price dropped

Further questions?

Image via PreCentral

mobile world congress Mobile World Congress 2010   start booking NOWDear Readers,
in case you feel like going to the Mobile World Congress next year: book trip and hotel ASAP!

I have just gone through the hassles of trying to get a room, and failed miserably at various hotels due to lack of free space. Yes, the event is still more than 6 months away – but the vacancies are all used up.

Keep in mind that this event is huge and can easily fill up the entire city…and get booking ASAP.

P.S: If anyone of you has a hint for a hotel, I’d be thankful for a comment for the rest of the gang…

mcdonalds pre Tamoggemon McFind for Pre   find that pesky McDonaldsSo far, we have been suspiciously silent on all things regarding Tamoggemon’s webOS products – but the recent market development has forced us to look for a Pre head who feels like helping us out.

Tamoggemon’s webOS head, Simon Pfundstein, has created a little Pre app which is a godsend for all these of you who love to eat out at McDonalds stores. It can find the nearest store, and even guides you there automatically via GPS…which is where our problem lies.

The Palm Pre simulator does not support GPS – but we need a volunteer to test.

Anybody who feels like it? leave a comment here!

Both Sprint and Palm have not been too talkative about the Pre – things like sales figures, returns on reports or just about anything numerical (except for an MSRP) are missing in action. Don’t ask me why Dan Hesse, Sprint’s CEO broke the silence at an US conference…Beyond Binary quotes him as follows:

“There have been shortages of the device,” Hesse said. Realistically, he said, Sprint won’t know if it is a hit for three or four months. “It’s too early to tell.”

Hesse also said that Palm Pre returns aren’t as high as people think.

“There’s things all over people are speculating,” Hesse said. “Most of the speculation I read is wrong.”

As of now, no further official information is available – let’s see how it all plays out for the 300k Pre’s which are currently on the market!

i0 Palm vs Apple   or   the neverending gameThe shot on the left shows an iPod which wants to connect to its iTunes desktop service – Palm’s Pre is one of the few handsets which can pull the same trick. Apple has blocked the critter out of iTunes in the past; but Palm has swiftly released an update which solved the eeker.

AllThingsD now quotes a Palm spokesperson as follows:

Palm believes that openness and interoperability offer better experiences for users by allowing them the freedom to use the content they own without interference across devices and services, so on behalf of consumers, we have notified the USB Implementers Forum of what we believe is improper use of the Vendor ID number by another member.”

First of all: I personally don’t think that the USB implementers Forum will do too much about the problem, as it has nothing to do with the USB standard or protocol. But – I feel that the real issue is somewhere else.

Whenever a Pre head buys something off iTunes, Apple gets richer. I personally think that this is not beneficent to Palm – and Apple knows this perfectly well. For them, it’s not about locking out other devices for good: all they IMHO want to achieve is the creation of FUD around the issue. For them, users should think that a Pre is a “second-class iTunes citizen”…if they then still want a Pre, so be it.

What do you think?

P.S: If Apple really wants to lock Palm out: change protocol, release update for all iPods, add hardware encryption, sayonara.

My industry experience tells me that the Roteo had more in common with the Pre than we all think – and it looks like the hardware feels like admitting it:
pre roteo Revisiting the Roteo

More seriously: it’s hardware quality again. But: PreThinking reports that the customer got the box exchanged after some hassling though…

mexico Mexico: calling and flying is no problemAirlines have used GSM-based credit card billing systems for quite some time – don’t ask me why the FCC had no issues with that after that infamous CrossAir crash which brought us the lovely anti-cellphone legislation we currently enjoy in most countries.

Mexico was very slow to adopt these regulations, and is one of the first to remove them – Engadget reports the following:


Soon, travelers there will no longer have to keep their handsets safely stowed or in airplane mode, with the Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes, or SCT (the Mexican FCC equivalent), approving cellphones en-masse for flights anywhere in the nation. This cancels an earlier edict made in 2001 banning their use, and while Mexico’s federal government still has to approve things, that’s not expected to take long.

At Tamoggemon’s, we celebrate – now all we need is to motivate Hutchison to get into Mexico…

Image: Wikimedia Commons / Fcb981, lightboxing by Tam Hanna

webos 11 WebOS 1.1 fixes iTunes sync for Palm PreRumors about an upcoming update to webOS have been around for quite some time – Palm has just made version 1.1 available to the public.

The most urgent fix obviously is the one for iTunes sync – Palm’s full change log is as follows:

Calendar
* For Calendar accounts you create on your phone, the default reminder intervals are 15 minutes for timed events and one day for all-day events. A few notes:
o This change applies only if software version 1.1 was on your phone when you bought it, or if you did a partial or full erase on your phone and signed in to your Palm profile again after updating to version 1.1. If you simply update your phone to software version 1.1, the default reminder intervals in Calendar do not change.
o This change applies only to Calendar events you create on your phone, not to events that are synchronized to your phone from an online account.

Camera
* The Photos application opens more quickly when launched from the camera.

Clock
* Enhanced support for time zones in Clock.
* When you set an alarm in Clock, an alarm icon appears in the notification area at the bottom of the screen. Tap the icon to display alarm details. Alarm details include the following:
o If the alarm is set for the current day, the alarm time appears.
o If the alarm is set for tomorrow, the alarm time and “Tomorrow” appear.
o If the alarm is set for any day other than today or tomorrow, the day of the alarm appears.

Contacts
* Friends added and deleted in Facebook on the web are now correctly added and deleted in the Facebook account in Contacts on the phone.
* As soon as you create or makes changes to a Google contact on the phone, the phone begins a sync to reflect those changes in Google on the web.

Email
* When you set up an Exchange ActiveSync (EAS) email account, you can enter the mail server name as an IP address.
* Support for self-signed certificates with multiple common names has been added.
* When you reply to an email in HTML format using an EAS account, the formatting of the sender’s original message is now retained in the reply.
* Palm’s EAS implementation now supports several Exchange ActiveSync Policies, including the following:
o PIN/Password Required. IT administrators can ensure a password is assigned to the phone. Administrators can also specify the minimum length of the password.
o Inactivity timeout. IT administrators can ensure that an inactive phone goes into a locked state after a certain time period. You cannot set a higher timeout interval for your phone, but you can set a shorter interval.
o Remote Wipe. IT Administrators can remotely erase all data on a phone from their Exchange console. IT administrators can also have the device wipe itself if an incorrect password is entered more than a specified number of times.

Messaging
* You can enter emoticons in new text, multimedia, and instant messages. Emoticons also display in incoming messages.
* If you set the phone to use a 24-hour time format, the message times shown in a conversation appear in 24-hour time.
* If you go into an IM account’s preferences, all the options are available even if you are signed in to the account. You can tap Remove Account to delete the account, enter a new password to update the password, or tap Sign In to sign in with your updated password. Previously, you needed to sign out of the account before you could use these preferences.
* When you delete an IM account, a message now appears asking you to confirm that you want to delete the account.

Phone
* When multiple missed call notifications are displayed on the dashboard, the time of the most recent missed call is shown.
* When you slide the ringer switch off, a bell icon with a slash is displayed. Previously, the icon was a speaker with a slash.
* In Phone Preferences, the Show Contact Matches preference is now turned on by default. When typing on the keyboard in the phone app, the phone automatically displays both the numbers being entered and any contact matches for the characters entered.

System
* Improved functionality of person reminders. A person reminder is a notification that you create in a contact entry. The notification appears when you have a call or exchange an email, text, multimedia, or IM message with a contact.
* Resolves an issue preventing media sync from working with latest version of iTunes (8.2.1).
* When you enter a search term in Card view or the Launcher to perform a universal search, if you select the Wikipedia web search option, results are shown in the Wikipedia Mobile site instead of the Desktop site.

Web
* You can now use symbols from the symbols table (Sym Sym key icon + key) when you enter text into a web page dialog box.
* If you have a page open at a certain zoom level, leave the page, and use the onscreen Back Web Back button button or the back gesture to return to the page, the zoom level is restored right away.
* A new gesture is now available that works the same as the onscreen Forward Web Forward button button. To move forward through open web pages, make a short swipe left to right in the gesture area.
* When using the Wikipedia drop-down search feature in the address bar, results are shown in the Wikipedia Mobile site instead of the Desktop site.
* When you tap a link, the link appears highlighted to indicate it has been activated, even if it takes a moment for the linked page to open.

YouTube
* After you enter search text, you can tap the Search Search icon icon to perform a search. You still have the option of pressing Enter Enter key to perform the search.

Palm itself is not particularly talkative when it comes to Pre market share – and the reason seems to be that the market share is by far not as good as expected by some bloggers. Figures from mobile advertising provider AdMob have just been released – here is a little breakdown of the PDF:

First of all, a look at Palm’s total marketshare (of all handsets, whether dumb or smart):
top us handsets Palm Pre market share   real US figures

Unfortunately, most of that still is due to the Centro. It gobbles up 1% of all requests, leaving a rather measly 0.3% for the Pre and all other existing Palm OS handsets combined:
top us manufacturers Palm Pre market share   real US figures

When looking at the marketshares on a per-carrier method, we see that Palm is now one of the largest smartphone providers for Sprint. This has been a traditional partnership which has kept Palm alive for some time…and seems to continue with the Pre:
sprint topsellers Palm Pre market share   real US figures
(netbook users – right-click the image and hit View Image)

These numbers are nice – but what dopes it tell us. First of all, lets assume that of the two million Centros once sold about 1.5 million are still in active use (with a data plan). This means that the Pre can – at best – make up 1/3 of that, which puts their sales number into a range around 300kpcs – significantly below 500kpcs, and far off one million (which would send Palm’s marketing team all bonkers anyways). Looking around the world unfortunately doesn’t do much for Palm either: the Pre has not popped up on Krusell’s bestseller list, and can not be used outside of the USA due to its CDMA transmitter.

Some Palm heads hoped that the Pre could become a success similar to the iPhone: this definitely hasn’t happened (and probably won’t happen in the near future). The real question we have to ask each other is if Palm can live off the Pre sales on the long run…and I am not sure if 300kpcs/quarter is enough to keep them afloat on the long run (especially without a constant revenue stream from apps)…

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