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Brando
"In a world of watered-down, politically correct, pasteurised and homogenised, lifeless and flavourless news and comment, PDA247 is a relief, and for this reason I make a point of checking back every day." Howard Tomlinson CEO- Astraware

 

Recent articles: The iPhone Cometh, Toshiba PR Fiasco, Multi-Tasking, Bling Phones


Garmin Discontinues All Remaining iQue Models 

From PIC- "In case anyone has not had their fill of depressing Palm OS-related news this week, we have just received word that Garmin has officially discontinued their final two Palm OS-based handhelds with integrated GPS functionality. In actuality, Garmin's PDA line has been dying a long, protracted death for several years as the company shifted its focus to standalone GPS navigators and add-on mapping software partnered with a Bluetooth GPS receiver such as the Mobile 10, 20 and XT packages.

Garmin’s iQue 3600a, the specialized aviation version of the original iQue 3600, has finally been put out to pasture, juding by the product’s "discontinued" status on its web page.

The iQue 3000, Garmin's final Palm OS-based standalone product, has also been discontinued. The iQue 3000 was a smaller, sleeker and restyled version of the older iQue 3200. The 3000 was quietly released in early 2006 to very little fanfare after suffering several launch delays. It holds the dubious distinction of being the very first Palm OS-based device to use microSD cards." Read on.



Posted 23:48 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()
Nokia Retains Lead as Mobile-Phone Sales Soar 

Worldwide sales of mobile phones skyrocketed to 1.5 billion in 2007, according to research firm Gartner, a 16 percent increase from 2006 sales of 990.9 million. Sales at the end of the year matched a trend that has demand spiking in the fourth quarter. Fourth-quarter sales reached 330 million.

"Emerging markets, especially China and India, provided much of the growth as many people bought their first phone," said Carolina Milanesi, research director for mobile devices at Gartner. "In mature markets, such as Japan and Western Europe, consumers' appetite for feature-laden phones was met with new models packed with TV tuners, global positioning satellite functions, touch screens and high-resolution cameras."

...The market saw three new players in the top 10 for the fourth quarter -- Research In Motion, ZTE and Apple. Analyst Avi Greengart said along with the new entrants, HTC, Kyocera and Sanyo are the ones to watch. Sanyo and Kyocera are vying for market share as a joint company and are expected to make a push, while HTC is pushing its own brand rather than manufacturing strictly for OEMs.

"HTC is branching out away from just being a Windows Mobile company and is taking on the mantle of Google Android as well. In some ways it's actually a dangerous move for them," Greengart said. "Right now there's a lot of interest in Google Android, but if it doesn't prove to be very popular, it could end up being a distraction for them. They are doing well in the Windows Mobile market and diversifying away from that has its pros and cons." More at Yahoo.



Posted 23:20 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()
QOTD: What's the shortest time you've ever had a device? 
What's the shortest time you've ever had a device? Have you ever immediately known a device was wrong? I liked my T3 for a couple of weeks but quickly got frustrated with the battery life. Thanks to Philippa for the question.

Posted 7:00 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()
Palm Centro Review (part two) 

Yesterday I enthused about the Centro design and the way the hardware has been put together, and today I am going to delve a little deeper into how it performs under normal usage and when it is pushed a little harder than the average user would contemplate.

Email- I use MS Exchange and so far have had a few problems with the Centro in this area. It is still slow and often times freezes for a second or two whilst it recovers from the terribly tiresome tack of actually receiving an email. Like the Treo 680, it does not seem powerful enough to cope with this task adequately.

GPS- TomTom Navigator 6 runs provided you have installed the updated patch from www.palm.com, but I have yet to pair a GPS receiver with the Centro. I have tried two different receivers and neither of them are recognized at all. It may be a fault, but I don’t appear to be the only one. Navigator 6 is also quite slow in general use on the Centro which at times can make the experience frustrating.

I decided to ask Palm for help, so here follows the conversation I had-

Gary(Tue Feb 26 09:55:53 UTC 2008)>Hello Shaun_McGill, Thank you for contacting Palm Technical Support. My name is Gary. How may I help you?
Gary(Tue Feb 26 09:55:56 UTC 2008)>Hello.

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 17:56:10 UTC 2008)>Hi there. I have a Palm Centro and cannot get it to pair with any GPS receiver- am trying two receivers.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 09:57:47 UTC 2008)>I understand that you are facing an issue pairing the GPS Navigator with Centro.

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 17:57:49 UTC 2008)>correct

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 17:58:27 UTC 2008)>I am using TomTom Navigator as my GPS software, but the Centro does not even see the receivers in the standard Bluetooth application

Gary(Tue Feb 26 09:58:46 UTC 2008)>I will be glad to assist you with it.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 09:59:34 UTC 2008)>Please give me a minute while I look for the compatibility.

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 17:59:29 UTC 2008)>ok

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:03:41 UTC 2008)>Sorry for the delay.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:03:54 UTC 2008)>Thank you for staying online.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:04:17 UTC 2008)>Did you purchase GPS for Palm?

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:04:41 UTC 2008)>I have two- a freedom GPS keyring receiver and a TomTom GPS receiver. Both work with my Treo 680 and other PDAs.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:05:40 UTC 2008)>I am sorry, Tom Tom Navigator is not compatible with Centro, but it is compatible with Treo 680.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:06:37 UTC 2008)>You can use the TeleNav Naigator which is available with Sprint Carrier.

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:06:28 UTC 2008)>Well, it works fine with the Centro using your TomTom 6 update, but the receivers were are not discovered even before I installed TomTom, using the Bluetooth application.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:09:41 UTC 2008)>Are you access the application using the SD card or installed it on device?

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:10:08 UTC 2008)>It has to be on microSD because of it's size, but the actual 'start' file is in RAM.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:13:41 UTC 2008)>Centro is only compatible with TeleNav that is the reason it is not pairing with any other receivers,

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:15:25 UTC 2008)>most resellers are selling TomTom for the Centro- "The new Freedom Keychain GPS 2000 is now FULLY COMPATIBLE with both TomTom 5 and TomTom 6 Navigator Software with your Centro, Treo 755p, Treo 750, Treo 700p, Treo 700wx, Treo 700w, Treo 680, or Treo 650."  http://shop.treonauts.com/content/accessories/9-57--2869.htm

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:16:06 UTC 2008)>Are you saying that the Centro would not be able to see a bluetooth receiver unless it is the one sold by Palm?

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:17:56 UTC 2008)>I am sorry, the above is a third party it is not published by Palm.

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:18:13 UTC 2008)>OK fair enough. So to check- I cannot use any other gps receiver with the Centro apart from the one you sell?

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:18:53 UTC 2008)>I suggest you to contact TomTom support for more assistance on this issue,

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:18:54 UTC 2008)>They said it is compatible with the Centro

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:24:19 UTC 2008)>I am sorry sorry for the delay.

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:24:47 UTC 2008)>ok

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:26:02 UTC 2008)>Did you install Software on SD card using CD?

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:26:37 UTC 2008)>No- it is the original microSD from TomTom- I then added the 680 patch to get TomTom working. Before I did any of this the Centro could not see the GPS receivers in the Bluetooth application

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:27:56 UTC 2008)>Did you try paring receiver manually?

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:27:53 UTC 2008)>yes

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:28:28 UTC 2008)>Okay, let us try it once again.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:28:43 UTC 2008)>Tap on Bluetooth application on Centro.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:28:49 UTC 2008)>Tap on Setup Devices,

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:28:38 UTC 2008)>ok

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:31:09 UTC 2008)>Is it searching for nearby devices?

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:31:05 UTC 2008)>yes

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:31:22 UTC 2008)>have clicked find more but it sees nothing

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:32:10 UTC 2008)>Is Bluetooth On on receiver?

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:32:17 UTC 2008)>yes

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:33:19 UTC 2008)>Okay, perform a Soft Reset on Centro and try again.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:33:26 UTC 2008)>To perform Soft Reset remove battery and replace it back.

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:33:54 UTC 2008)>ok

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:35:47 UTC 2008)>same problem after the soft reset. I did a hard reset earlier today as well and have no third party applications installed currently

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:37:04 UTC 2008)>I am sorry, as it is not pairing it could be a Bluetooth compatibility with Centro.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:37:19 UTC 2008)>Are you able to pair it with Treo 680?

Shaun_McGill(Tue Feb 26 18:37:54 UTC 2008)>yes and many people can pair the freedom and TomTom GPS receivers with the Centro, but mine won't see them.

Gary(Tue Feb 26 10:43:42 UTC 2008)>Since this is the case I suggest you to contact Voice Support for advance troubleshooting on this issue.

And that was it. To be fair he tried, but there seems to be no answer to this one currently.

Speed- no complaints in the area. The mix of Palm OS and the specifications included do a good job of powering the Centro along during normal use.

Battery- sadly the Centro is no improvement on the Treo 680 where the battery is concerned. I have read comments on other sites saying that the battery on the Centro is good, but that is simply not my experience. Heavy use will easily take you to 0% in under a day and that is no good for the majority of people. Hardened smartphone users will use power hungry applications and new smartphone users will be expecting much more than a day from any phone, be it smart or not.

UPDATE: I am continuing to look at this particular issue, because there are many conflicting reports concerning battery performance on the Centro. I have found that using a T-Mobile SIM improves battery life a lot, which is quite bizarre. To add to the confusion I managed a few calls today with GPRS on all day and only went down to 60%- it's hard to tell if the battery is a problem or if there is a consistency issue.

Extras- there is an application called ‘My Centro’ built in and with it you can download free copies of Astraware Solitaire, Astraware Sudoku, Palm Files and Vox Mobile. A nice addition in my view.

Voice- voice quality is actually very good and even the speaker phone is crisp. In general the voice experience beats my TyTN II easily.

Internet- Blazer is showing its age a little now, but the overall experience is good for quick look ups and general browsing. A few web pages came up with error messages even though I could view them on my PC and TyTN, which is a bit of a drawback.

Screen- I mentioned the problems with the edges of the screen yesterday but they are not a huge issue. The clarity of the screen outdoors is slightly more disconcerting because in bright sunlight it is very difficult to see information. It is no worse than many other smartphones, but an anti-glare screen protector is recommended.

The Centro consists of brilliant styling married with some great software and some small issues that I am trying to address. I’m still undecided about the Centro but it could be the perfect device for new smartphone users and some will love it. I will sum up my thoughts on Monday.



Posted 6:59 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()
Is the business of Making Native Apps for Mobile Devices Dying? 
Thoughts

Is the business of Making Native Apps for Mobile Devices Dying? is a must read over at PIC- "Michael Mace has published a new editorial on his Mobile Opportunity blog. The fascinating piece is less editorial and more of an up-to-the-minute analysis of the ailing mobile software industry from the perspective of a seasoned mobile tech executive. Long-time Palm watchers will recognize Mr. Mace as the former CCO and VP of Product Planning at Palm, Inc. as well as VP of Strategic Marketing at PalmSource and director of Mac Platform Marketing at Apple.

While I highly recommend anyone with even a passing interest to not only the Palm-conomy but the wireless industry in general read the full piece, Mr. Mace’s summary analysis is that he feels the influence of the carriers is choking what little momentum native mobile apps possessed in the halcyon days of the late 1990s and early 2000s. In short, Mr. Mace advocates any remaining mobile developer to move to web-based services due to the myriad of competing carriers, numerous semi-interoperable standards, and a glut of feuding OSes.

A major portion of the article contains a compelling summary by Elia Freedman, CEO of Infinity Softworks (giving consent to Michael Mace to present this information) of the difficulties facing mobile software developer in today’s market. Infinity Softworks will most likely be familiar to long-term Palm OS users via their superb PowerOne calculator app that was regularly bundled with nearly all new devices from Palm in the earlier part of this decade. Mr. Freedman has now decided to exit the mobile software business based on the overwhelming obstacles facing developers in the carrier-dominated age of today..."



Posted 6:36 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()
TealPoint Updates (TealMovie, TealScript and TealTools) 
Software TealPoint has released a series of updates for three of it's most popular applications. TealMovie now has the ability to play unprotected movies after entering password to play protected movies. TealScript has an added option to turn on/off filtering of initial pen bounces and TealTools has a fix for the divide function in TealCalc to properly handle negative numbers.

Posted 6:34 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()
BoxWave Palm Accessories: Multiple Release  
BoxWave releases the Holster Clip for the Palm Centro!

BoxWave’s Palm Centro Holster Clip is a stylish, easy-to-use holster that allows you to quickly secure and release your handheld with one hand. Designed with a rotating swivel clip that locks in place at seven angles, the BoxWave Palm Centro Holster Clip is the most secure and versatile holder for your Palm Centro.

Compatible with:

Palm Centro
Palm Treo 500v
Sprint Palm Centro

See more Palm Centro Accessories by BoxWave.

BoxWave is pleased to announce the Armor Case for the Palm Treo 500v!

The Palm Treo 500v Armor Case is a form-fitting, trendy aluminum case designed to perfectly fit your Palm Treo 500v! The Armor Case’s exterior is made of anodized aluminum both strong and lightweight. For optimal security, the interior is padded with a layer of foam. While your Armor Case protects your Palm Treo 500v from everyday wear and tear, it also allows you quick access to all your critical inputs.

Better yet, the Armor Case for the Palm Treo 500v includes a high quality, simple-to-use, detachable belt clip!

The Armor Case is on sale for $27.95.

See more Palm Treo 500v Accessories by BoxWave.

BoxWave Palm Centro “Glossy Opaque Black” Active Case Accessories: Active Case

BoxWave is pleased to announce the Active Case for the Palm Centro “Glossy Opaque Black” Active Case!

The Palm Centro “Glossy Opaque Black” Active Case Active Case is designed to meet form and function. The crystal-clear Active Case enables you to view your calendar and contacts conveniently, reducing the hassle of having to open a case. The Active Case works to protect your Palm Centro “Glossy Opaque Black” Active Case from everyday wear and tear by locking your Palm Centro “Glossy Opaque Black” Active Case securely into place. The cases accessible opening provides you with quick access to button functions while providing your Palm Centro “Glossy Opaque Black” Active Case with the protection it needs.

The Active Case is on sale for $24.95.

See more Palm Centro “Glossy Opaque Black” Active Case Accessories by BoxWave.


Posted 6:30 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()
Palm Instant Messaging Complete Guide 

Nick has updated his complete guide to Palm Instant Messaging, and it will certainly help you decide which is the best tool for you. He has looked at the main 6 applications, IM+, Mundu, Toccer, Causerie, QuickIM and Gizmo, and also rated each one for features and given them a final score.

One of the features in Mundu has been corrected.

Links: PDF Guide / HTML Guide



Posted 6:29 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()
PictureID reduced 
PictureID is reduced to $9.95 until the end of today, so be quick if you want it. "Finally a full screen picture caller ID application for the Treo® PalmOS® smart phones. Assign any JPG or GIF picture as caller ID from Internal memory or from the external SD Card. Display the picture in full beautiful color with optional custom color fonts.

With full screen picture caller ID you can easily identify the caller. Assign different picture ID for different contacts. For caller’s that are not in your Contacts database you can assign a different picture. You can also assign a custom picture for caller’s who do not have caller ID information or blocked callers. Caller’s who have caller ID information PictureID can display the caller’s city location using the flexible AreaCode database. The included area code database is for North American. You can easily edit and add your own area codes.

PictureID also supports Contact groups. If you just want to assign a picture for a Group (Category) then it can be done very easily.

You have full control over the caller display information such as Caller’s name, city name and phone number. You can display none, all or anyone of the field in the picture ID screen.
PictureID is compatible with the Treo® phone application and 3rd party ringtone managers."


Posted 6:20 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()
Blockbuster year for mobile phones 

With more than 1 billion phones sold globally for the first time, 2007 was a banner year for mobile phone sales. As sales continue to grow, the big questions this year are whether global market leader Nokia can expand in North America, and whether Motorola can stop its slide.
 
Worldwide sales of mobile phones ended up surpassing 1.15 billion units in 2007, a 16 percent increase from 2006 sales of 990.9 million, according to figures from Gartner.

Emerging markets, especially China and India, are now the driver for growth, with many people in the countries now buying their first phone. More at Yahoo.



Posted 6:01 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()
Free eBook of the day: The Sagan Diary by John Scalzi 
eBooks

Today's free eBook is The Sagan Diary "As per your instruction in your memorandum of 341.10.07, we have begun processing the BrainPal memory stacks of Colonial Special Forces members who have left that service, whether by death or (rather more rarely) by discharge from service. In both cases BrainPal retrieval was initially via method previously established in our CDF BrainPal retrieval protocol, but per the new directive of 341.10.09 we abandoned physical retrieval of CSF BrainPals and instead began processing BrainPal memory transcriptions as provided by the Special Forces’ own IRI office.

Let me reiterate again here in this memorandum what I have expressed to you verbally, which is that processing CSF-provided transcriptions is a massively unsatisfactory solution. The first seven CSF memory stacks we processed were rich in information that we then placed into our analysis matrix, and which were beginning to yield intriguing results before we were ordered to remove the data from the matrix and delete all analyses featuring the data..."



Posted 6:00 on 29/2/2008 by Shaun Comments: ()