Posts Tagged ‘palm pre’

First impressions of the UK Palm Pre: We like it!

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Yesterday was the day of the pickup.

I’d been instructed to meet a PR called Greg at a secret location in London’s Soho. Once there I’d receive a short briefing and handover of Palm’s much anticipated smartphone, the Palm Pre. The device goes on sale in the UK today exclusive to O2 and priced to match the original iPhone 3G. It wasn’t enough to send a review loan by courier or recorded post as is the norm with these things. No, on Palm’s insistence, this had to be done in person to talk me through the Pre’s setup.

Paranoid I thought.

I wasn’t really all that surprised, however, remembering that back at January’s CES where the Pre was first unveiled, none of the invited journalists were allowed to hold the device. And perhaps even more bizarrely, at a London press event where I got my first brief hands-on with the Pre, we were told not to film or take any photos. This was nine months after the Pre had been announced and three months since the CDMA version had gone on sale in the US.

All of which did add to the mystery of Palm’s comeback smartphone, a device that, along with webOS, may well represent the beleaguered company’s second coming.

In other words, this seemingly paranoid press strategy was either that. Paranoid.

Or pure marketing GENIUS.

Either way, I was more than willing to jump through the necessary hoops. You see Palm and I have previous form. I grew up using the Palm Treo line of PalmOS smartphones (Treo 180, 600 and 650). And through nostalgia tinted glasses, I’ve openly declared that I’m rooting for the company’s renewed success. I also get the impression that I’m not alone in the wider tech press. Hell, the smartphone world needs a viable competitor on the UX front to keep Cupertino in check.

The handover was swift and painless. It was later explained that the reason for insisting on a face-to-face was so that I experienced something similar to customers who purchase a Pre in an O2 store, which is interesting in itself and mirrors the point of sale program that Palm and Sprint have designed for the US.

I setup a webOS profile, a registration process that undoubtedly enables Palm to own a large part of the customer relationship (a la Apple) and gives the user a place in the cloud to store their crucial data and settings, making life easier if they lose their Pre or upgrade to another webOS phone in the future (regardless of carrier). It’s a win-win proposition for both Palm and the customer, although where it leaves carrier O2 in the value chain, in the long term anyway, I’m not so sure. As phones get smarter, the pipes seemed destined to get dumber.

Next I was presented with a short interactive demo video that auto plays explaining crucial elements of the Pre’s UI, from basics like the multi-touch screen to the more subtle gesture area. All very nice, all very Palm. In fact the Pre’s setup and initial use felt so intuitive, the presence of an overlooking PR was a little awkward.

Finally, Greg suggested that I launch the contacts app and start entering in my Gmail and Facebook credentials so that Palm’s Synergy feature could start its work converging my various contacts into one unified and cloud-savvy address book. However, alert to the fact that the battery indicator was in the red – that’s how it was given to me – I declined and would get to that bit as soon as I was back home. Besides I didn’t want a dead battery otherwise I couldn’t continue playing with the Pre during my commute from Soho to north London (the Pre’s battery life is a potential sticking point based on most reviews).

And that was it. With a certain sense of satisfaction and excitement knowing that, finally, I have a Palm Pre, at least for the next ten days anyway, and after a brief conversation about the virtues of twitter (follow me @sohear) I bid farewell to the helpful PR and I was on my way…

Once back home, setting up Synergy was equally straight forward. After entering my Google credentials into the Pre, the phone’s email client sprang to life, as did calendar and contacts. In some ways the webOS-powered Pre is the Google phone I was always hoped Android would be. Google integration is more or less on a par with stock Android but has a far superior UI. The Pre’s calendar is one example, with multi-calendar support and a nifty accordion metaphor to utilise screen real estate when part of the day is empty.

Importing Facebook contacts, avatars included, also worked as expected, and merging any duplicate contacts between Google and Facebook, for the most part, happened automatically. Manually linking contacts that Synergy had missed was also trivial.

Anyway, you get the picture. I’m impressed so far.

Besides, I’ve already more than exceeded my self imposed word count for this debut MIR column and frankly I better get my skates on for a press event I’m attending tonight. Think gadgets and canapés, you know the deal. Talking of which, I’m really looking forward to goading all of my journo rivals with this shiny new Palm Pre in hand. Although perhaps not. Knowing my luck I’ll lose it.

Who’s paranoid now.

And just before I go, here is the device in all it’s glory:

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Steve O’Hear is a tech journalist and consultant based in London. Steve writes the blog last100 and has written for numerous publications, including The Guardian, ZDNet, ReadWriteWeb and Macworld. He also wrote and directed the Silicon Valley documentary, In Search of the Valley. You can follow Steve on Twitter here.

Mr Operator: Palm Pre – destined for European failure

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

Mr Operator is back.

If you’re new to the series, you can read his entire back catalogue here. And a quick overview of Mr Operator’s identity? Well, I could tell you, but then I’d have to silence you in some manner. Mr Operator’s identity is a closely guarded secret. That’s because he’s in an influential position at an international mobile operator. And because he tells like he sees it. No sugar coating here. In his last column, he revealed that Google blindsided most of the mobile operators with their Latitude / Google Maps offering. In today’s column, he’s going to tell you why Palm Pre is 6 months too late to the party.

Over to Mr Operator…

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Palmistry is the art of telling a person’s future by reading the lines on their hand. It’s not an exact science – in fact, it’s not really a science at all. Much like forecasting how well a new mobile handset will do, 6 months before public availability.

So many competing forces converge and collude to knock a supposed sure-fire winner off its trajectory to the stars. Coming out so early with very detailed demonstrations of your new device’s capabilities is either a very brave or very stupid move, in this age of quick-fire knock-off OS tweaks. While Apple stole a march with the iPhone, the 2nd (and now 1st) tier vendors have fallen over themselves to get touch devices out there. Yup, the first efforts were pretty dire, but remember in an industry of 12 month development cycles, those dire efforts are last year’s chip paper. The engineers and UI teams have moved on. You just know there’s a lot more where that came from. And where the innovation is in the OS, some changes can be made pretty quickly. No retooling required.

The Pre has (quite rightly) generated a fair old bit of good press for Palm. Like the mad uncle being welcomed home from the wilderness, the mobile industry press outside of the US have embraced Palm once more. No more Windows Mobile, all is forgiven. With some inductively-charged geek fruit and gestures in funny places to liven things up, 3MP + flash, plus some sqeezebox-calendar eye-candy and a removable battery, the Pre is everything to your inner geek the iPhone 3G should have been. But will it be enough?

European consumers just don’t know Palm. Even road warriors only have vague recollections of a monochrome device their IT department gave them to log sales notes on the fly, with a tiny stylus that got lost quicker than you can say Ford Mondeo. So can Palm hope to come to Europe and get a warm welcome? The devil is in the detail.

It will require a substantial MNO investment in marketing, which means exclusivity for at least 3-4 months, possibly more. Palm just won’t get the iPhone’s glorious free coverage in the general press.

At a possible RRP of $250 for a 2-year contract, we can guess that the Pre has a BOM [Bill of Materials] similar to the iPhone. All that goodness doesn’t come cheap – the inductive charging block is essentially a gimmick, as they have included a micro-USB port that is probably able to charge as well. If they plan to sell in China it will have to. If the block also did data transfer with a PC a la iPhone dock, now that would be nice. (Sorry, the geek in me getting carried away). Back to reality.

In the current market it’s all about margin, not ARPU (actually it was ever thus, but try getting away with old reporting tricks these days). The Emperor’s clothes are off, with no-one wanting to subsidise functionality that can’t be monetised well inside the churn timeframe. A device like the Pre is going to be a hard sell to consumers with no cash who still haven’t purchased / will never purchase an iPhone, and to MNO’s with even less cash to splash. O2 have reportedly sold a million iPhones, most locked into contracts with another year to run. Will iPhone owners abandon their ‘preciouses’ to take up with a Pre? Made by who? Not_flippin’_likely.

An LED flash, multiple calendars and inductive charger do not a sex/status symbol make.

To The Kids a Palm is something your dad had ages ago (maybe still does). To mums with prams most of the Palm’s business-oriented integration is pointless. To dads on work accounts it will be a bloody hard squeeze to justify in the current climate. Maybe Palm want to be what the Sidekick was 2 years ago. Times change. US kids got SMS religion. QWERTY email just isn’t the killer it used to be, and with 140 characters still annoyingly popular, don’t expect your ma to be clamouring for a mobile email device any time soon.

But the biggest challenge for Palm is in the form of Nokia. Having the glamourpuss E71 loose out in Barcelona to an upstart knocked up in a shed somewhere [the INQ1] has got to have galvanised them onward and upward. The first disappointing touch devices are, again, 12 months R&D delayed. The N86 is a very promising start. Add touch done well, plus the E71’s keyboard somewhere, and you’d have a million-a-week seller. Even if the Pre is twice the device on paper or in the hand, put it on a shop floor next to a QWERTY/Touch Nokia and weep.

I’d love to think I’m wrong here, but I can’t escape the nagging feeling that Palm Pre will arrive at the ball 6 months late, to find others with much bigger names in Europe are already waltzing away with the touch/QWERTY cash.

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If you’d like Mr Operator to give an opinion on your company, your product offering or comment on news, drop me a note and we’ll see if we can arrange it.

Palm Pre reactions from the team

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Having seen the Palm Pre in the flesh, what did the MIR Show think? Here’s some immediate opinion from Dan Lane, Ben Smith and James Whatley:


Palm Pre reactions from the MIR Show team from Mobile Industry Review on Vimeo.

Palm Pre hands-on overview (2 of 2)

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Here’s the second in the series of the Palm Pre hands-on overview:


Palm Pre hands-on overview (2 of 2) from Mobile Industry Review on Vimeo.

Palm Pre hands-on overview (1 of 2)

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

Here’s the first video of the Palm Pre hands-on video. We had the chap take us through a basic overview of the device capabilities and demonstrate it close-up. Standby for the second video.

Meantime… enjoy:


Palm Pre hands-on overview (1 of 2) from Mobile Industry Review on Vimeo.

Palm Pre Software Product Manager interviewed

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

Ben sat down with the Palm Pre Software Product Manager to find out more about the device before we got the hands-on demonstration. This is 9:16 minutes of pure relevance if you’re anywhere near excited about the Palm Pre device.

Here’s the video:


Palm Pre overview from their Software Product Manager from Mobile Industry Review on Vimeo.

MIR Show – Palm Pre preview thoughts #meetpre

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

I sat down Ben and Dan before the Palm Pre briefing and asked them to tell us what they THINK they’re going to like and dislike about the Palm Pre…

Here’s the video:


Palm Pre – Our thoughts before seeing the Palm from Mobile Industry Review on Vimeo.

The Pre demo begins

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

The device is just phenomenal.


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