Posts Tagged ‘palm pre’

#10 The DogHouse – Post Pre Perspective | The DogHouse Podcast

Rather than take on the iPhone directly, Pre may defeat Apple via the Blackberry.

Rather than take on the iPhone directly, Pre may defeat Apple via the Blackberry.

I recently joined the guys at Doghouse Systems for their tech podcast. I discussed my experience with the Palm Pre since buying it on release day.

We had a lot of fun and I really enjoyed discussing tech with some fellow geeks.

#10 The DogHouse – Post Pre Perspective | The DogHouse Podcast.

Third impressions of the Palm Pre: Gimme more Palm, less iPhone

Today, I put the Palm Pre through its heaviest use yet. I downloaded more apps, surfed the web, added a few contacts, sent some texts, did some twitter, took some pictures, and played with the interface. I had several clients with computers that needed Norton Antivirus removed, so there was a lot of sitting and waiting.

Palm has done a wonderful job at offering some the the best aspects of the iPhone. A wonderful GPS, easy to install apps, and exciting user experience. It is simply fun to use and play with.

That said, there are a variety of practical aspects that I miss. I have been a heavy Palm user for nearly 10 years. I shortcuts and menu options to get around more than I use the actually icons and stylus. I am happy to say that the Pre keeps a lot of these aspects intact. There are shortcuts, for example, if you want to go to the web app, you just type “web” and the web app icon shows up on the screen. Press the return key and you are taken to the web app. That is very nice. It enables you to use the device with one hand and you don’t have to hunt through menu screens to find what you want.

That said, there are several traditional Palm features I would have liked to see.

Themed launcher screens –

The Palm Pre is modeled after the iPhone launcher, you can arrange the order of the icons, but you may have to gesture through several screens before you find the icon that you want. Searching for the app is easy, as long as you remember what it’s called.

It would have been nice, if Palm would have kept the old interface concept here. Rather than having page after page of apps in that must be dragged to a screen or location on the screen, it would have been nice, if Palm created screens with names such as games, entertainment, utilities, etc. In my opinion, Palm has taken a step backward with its launcher app. It works, but it is too much like the iPhone and ignores one of the slicker features of the Palm OS.

Keyboard shortcuts –

The traditional Palm OS supported them all, copy (C), paste (V), cut (X), undo (Z), all (A). Now WebOS only offers cut, copy and paste. The selection feature is so horrible. Selecting text on the Palm was easier than selecting text with a mouse on the computer, this is a giant step backwards for Palm as the OS goes.

Not enough customization –

The old Palm OS allowed you to customize almost everything. Fonts, colors, themes, keyboard shortcuts, default programs, etc. And that was just the OS. Nearly every program offered many customization options as well. The more time I spend with the Pre, the more I realize how amazing the original Palm OS was. It may have been simple and plain, but it really offered some amazing customization options. The pre much of that. There are certain theme elements and features that can be changed, such as the wallpaper, but Palm has gone to great lengths to make sure you don’t mess up the Pre look and feel. Palm is at least as protective of the Pre aesthetic as Apple is about the iPhone’s.

Get anywhere in 3 taps or less – Palm OS was simple. I could get nearly anywhere with less that three taps of the stylus. the Pre is a little more complex than that. While it isnot difficult to use by any stretch of the imagination, I do miss the uniform nature of the Palm OS. Compare the simplicity of Windows 3.1 (if you remember it) with the complexity of Windows 7. One is very pretty and powerful on features, but the other does what it needs to do quickly and efficiently.

In many ways, Windows 98 was my favorite version of Windows. The most recent version of the Palm OS (non-webOS) had this feel to it. It may hot have supported multimedia, pretty web pages, multi-touch or accelerometer and GPS, but it did a wonderful job at getting work done as a PDA/phone.

I have mentioned in almost all of the previous reviews that my complaints are almost all about the software. Not that WebOS isn’t amazing – it is. I am in love with the Pre, but I also am keenly aware of its faults as I have been a heavy smartphone user since 2001 I know what I expect in a smartphone. I hope that Palm will release at least a couple major OS updates over the next year that will add some of these features.

In the end, I still believe that the Pre leaps and bounds better than iPhone was at its launch. Its advertised features are also more ready for primetime than any version of the iPhone has been at its launch. Remember MobileMe? Remember that iPhone 1.0 didn’t even support third party apps? Remember how bad the GPS was? Considering that Apple had very little negative press between the original iPod launch and the release of the iPhone, some may consider the iPhone to not only be one of Apples greatest successes, but also one of its biggest black marks.

The Pre is not an iPhone killer, I am glad it’s not because I don’t want an iPhone. I want a Palm that will work in the modern age of cloud computing, multimedia, social networking, GPS, digital photography and Google. I am hoping that the Pre will be the Blackberry killer or the Windows Mobile killer. Keep the iPhone out there and doing all the things it does best. Competition is healthy.

Palm Pre first impressions…

Well I was the first person in all  of Grand Junction, CO to own a Palm Pre. I have had a crazy day and very little time to actually work with the Pre, but I didn’t want the day to go by without a summary of my first day’s impressions.

Keep in mind that I have not discovered all of the Palm Pre settings and features, so some of these things may already be addressed, I just haven’t discovered them yet.

As the day has gone by I have felt more and more like this is an iCentro. A very nice combination of iPhone and Palm Centro. Most of the advantages of each device are incorporated. It may pretend to be an iPhone, but it has the soul of a Palm.

It feels very first gen both in hardware and software. That doesn’t in any way mean that it is a poor device. As you use it, you just keep thinking, “I wonder what they will add with the next update or the next model.”

Let’s go down the line and I will discuss a few of the feelings I had about it today.

Unboxing: I was dead tired from only sleeping about 2 hours in 15 minute increments most of the night. When I got home, I was ready to just put the box on the desk and go to bed for a few hours. However, my wife and kids all met me at the door and begged to see it. So, we unboxed it as a family bonding experience.

Two words describe the unboxing… orange, Apple. It is so obvious that Palm wanted the unboxing to be as Apple-like as possible. Clear plastic dividers, instructions that were dogeared and wrapped with orange paper bands, corrugated inserts that separated all of the pieces. Layer after layer of packing, plastic trays, weird pieces of clear styrene… It felt just like I was opening a next-gen iPhone with orange and white packaging. I was impressed and felt as good as Palm wanted me to as I unboxed it.

Charging: I have heard that the battery life is pretty poor, I am anxious for Palm to release replacement batteries. I did not buy the touchstone or other accessories yet as I really want to spend some time with the phone. I got a little flustered and actually had to pull out the instructions to figure out how to charge the phone.

As it turns out, the USB port is concealed under a little door that will break off at some point. You can’t open the door without sliding out the keyboard. Not a big deal, but a little weird. It seemed pretty obvious that Palm is tired of dirt getting up inside the charging port of the Centro and Treos and this must be to address that issue.

Keyboard: I will talk more about the interface, gesturing, OS, etc. once I get to know it more. For now, I will address the keyboard. Most reviews have reported that the keyboard is a little jammed. I am used to the Centro keyboard and, to me, the spacing of the keys actually made the keyboard feel larger than the Centro. Many reviews have pointed out that your thumbs hit the bottom of the screen as you type. That is a good observation, but it is still much faster than typing on an iPhone keyboard.

Pros: I love the screen. I really love it. Sometimes the transition hangs between opening apps, but nothing worse than any other phone out there. The hangs last only about a second at most and I don’t complain about one second hangs when my Centro and iPod Touch often take longer than that when they hang between apps.

The camera is really good. Some people will pick on me for saying this. Perhaps I should say, the camera is not as good as that of most point and shoots, but this is a phone – with a flash! I think that the complaints about the phone come from a simple formula that Apple lovers use when they review devices… If it is a feature not offered by the iPhone, find something negative to point out about it. 3MP and flash, beautiful colors, better than average low light exposure, I can’t complain.

I love the calendar and notification system. It will take some getting used to, but I really like it so far. I use two separate Google calendars and two Gmail addresses. No problem, they are all managed in a way that keeps them separate, yet easy to manage in one email home screen. It even brings across my Gmail filters and settings.

SMS, alarms, IM and other notifications are all done in a very small sliver at the bottom of the screen. Tap on the area that tells you that you have messages and it opens up to a cool area dividing all of the forms of alerts where you can tap on the alerts you want to give attention to first.

Cons: The contact system is weird. There are three ways that the Pre is setup to sync contacts, Outlook Exchange, Gmail contacts, or Facebook. If you just want to sync contacts off your standard outlook or old Palm desktop, you must first import them into your Gmail address book if you want them to sync. Rumor has it that there are apps in the works that will fix this, but they may not be free.

If you do sync with your Gmail contacts, make sure that Gmail isn’t adding every person you reply or send an email to into your contacts automatically.

I am disappointed that Palm went to so much work to integrate with Facebook, but there is no Facebook app available. I communicate heavily via Facebook. I make comments, upload pictures and video and send direct messages. Currently the Pre is setup so that I can recieve notifications from my Facebook contacts, but I have to interact with them from within the Pre. I would prefer a standalone Facebook app.

The Twitter app is good, but far more limited than most of the offerings for the iPhone. The app store is pretty disappointing by all accounts but that is a problem that the Pre is designed to address. It may be frustrating to think that there are only a handful of apps available for the Pre at launch, but the fact that it supports any apps makes it superior to the first generation iPhone at launch.

So far, I think that the Pre is a major win for Palm. I think that it ensures their presence in the smartphone market for at least another five years, even if iPhone comes to all major carriers within that time. It feels like a Palm with iPhone features and, as a 10-year Palm user, that is a very good thing. I think this phone will be less than impressive to most iPhone users, but Blackberry users may wet their pants when they see the Pre in action.