Pre Hunt: In Search of the Elusive New Palm Device
#2
Posted 06 June 2009 - 06:08 PM
Happy Camper.
#3
Posted 06 June 2009 - 06:29 PM
p.s. Forgot to mention: at about noon today they had 11 phones left. They had one touchstone (the point of which escapes me--what's wrong with a cord?) They had plenty of car chargers (crucial) and case (not so crucial). They expected to completely sell out of their phones by about 3:00 today. I don't know that they did, but I imagine that they have very few, if any, left--there were several people behind me in line.
#5
Posted 06 June 2009 - 07:57 PM
#6
Posted 06 June 2009 - 10:42 PM
So far, I love the phone. Synergy was working great. Brought all of my contact together. Had to drop the Facebook portion because I did not want all those contact to be brought in. Took a bit to get used to the gestures, but not too long.
I have been a Blackberry addict for years and still love my Curve. I am very glad I made the switch. The ability to multi-task is amazing and nobody has it except the Pre. I would never have left Blackberry for an iPhone. The iPhone simply does not have the things I need as a power business user. The Pre does. I can't say if I will be a forever Palm fan at this point. Blackberry could win me back with a Sprint based successor to the Storm, but I do know that as of today, I have the most advanced Smart Phone on the market -- hands down. the iPhone and Storm can't touch the Pre.
#7
Posted 06 June 2009 - 11:00 PM
Bought all 5, since it was the max limit allowed. BTW, I kept all five (5) of my old cell phones accounts w/ existing family plan, and they allowed second 'plan', so I created that for the new Palm Pre phones I was buying (now I own a total of 10 sprint phones, active accounts)
My little brother played with his all day today, and he was a very happy camper. I had to keep telling him to stop playing with it to keep his eyes on the road (he was driving).
We tested out its Bluetooth w/ the $10 adapter for his iPod docking station in the car. Wow, the music quality was awesome! We were streaming YouTube vid's (Lady Gagga), and the audio was going into the car stereo via iPod docking station (with Bluetooth receiver/adapter -- yep, the $10 thing at Sprint store).
After lunch, we went back into the Sprint store to hit the 'trained expert' there on how to best use the Palm Pre with Google 'location' feature in Google maps. He showed us how to use its built-in GPS/Cell-tower/WiFi triangulation feature. Nice!
I've been with Sprint for 8 years now, and I was wondering how fast its data network really was. My Treo755p was able to stream YouTube videos for a long time now, and I use the SprintTV and other internet radio features. They were decent on the Treo755p.
But, (having been told 4G is already in place), I wanted to see how the Palm Pre would be able to use that network layer (only capable device would hit the 4G network, supposedly my Treo755p was able to.) Surprise, Surprise, Surprise; the YouTube videos were so smooth and the audio was so nice, I realized that the only limitation was really the processing speed of the cell-phone/pda device!
Aka, 4G ! wow -- I am keeping my Treo755p with me for the next few days because I'm hunting for a new job (still employed, but seeking better one) so recruiters can get a hold of me. But, I will be trying out the other features of the Palm Pre phone while at work.( i got new numbers on the Pre, that's why).
Instant messaging has a cool adaptive feature; it homes in on which ever sms/instant-messaging network the person you are texting with and tracks the conversation TOGETHER as if it were all one texting session, even if the other person was switching between cell-phone/GoogleTalk/AIM/etc...(sounds like mini version of Google Wave that is under development/testing right now)
A security feature was found on accident. You can wipe your phone simply by logging into your account online and enter your profile security code. BAMM!, your lost phone is wiped.
I look back at my Treo755p with pride, knowing it was a blast to have. But, I had to admit that it was a pain to wait for it to switch applications (and lose session info sometimes). And, seeing the multi-tasking speed of the Pre and its 'cards' interface, I really got annoyed once I used by Palm Treo755p the rest of the day, having gotten used to the Pre's speed/multi-tasking abilities.
#9
Posted 07 June 2009 - 05:16 AM
#11
Posted 07 June 2009 - 05:24 AM
Alex
#12
Posted 07 June 2009 - 05:36 AM
#13
Posted 07 June 2009 - 05:40 AM
I am looking forward to there being an app to add a vitrual keyboard to the Pre. I never wanted (and still don't) a phone with no keyboard. Virtual keyboards are less responsive, harder to use and limit screen space. However, there are times when it would be nice for quick responses to txts etc. What I love about the Pre is you could have both.
#14
Posted 07 June 2009 - 05:42 AM
Alex
#15
Posted 07 June 2009 - 05:54 AM
Alex
#16
Posted 07 June 2009 - 06:13 AM
#17
Posted 07 June 2009 - 06:20 AM
philipcadena said:
Apple has always over priced their products. And they will continue to do so because Apple's customers are willing to pay too much. It's not evil. They are publicly traded company that enjoys a customer base that enjoys their product. If Acer and Toshiba could get away with 33% margins, they'd be doing it too. Apple doing this is not surprising at all.
I just don't think their products merit such prices or attention.
Alex
#18
Posted 07 June 2009 - 08:18 AM
" it's got kind of a short steep learning curve, but once you get use to it, it's great!"
BTW, he said that after having it for about an hour, texting with his girl-friend the whole time.
Honestly, I've been using all the Treo's: Treo600, Treo755p that had buttons thumbpads.
So, if I were to give you my point of view, it would be kind of off-based. I find that Treo's thumbpads
allows me to text quite fast. But, since I'm a touch typist who types about 80 words a minute on a laptop,
I end up buying a folding keyboard for all my Treo phones ( including ones that didn't have a thumbpad ).
Using Document in Palm-OS from DataViz, I use my PalmOS cellphones as word-processing tools
when I'm sitting in the bleachers at my son's indoor soccer practice.
Most of the sales people were not used to thumbpads on the treo, so they kept typing with their 'thumb' while
holding the phone in one hand.
For me, the best way (without getting carpal tunnel syndrome) is to hold the Pre in both hands and do the 'texting/typing'
with BOTH thumbs.
I also type international characters quite a lot, and on my Treo755p cell phone, I use the ALT button to get at them.
However, the letters variations are limited. For example, I can't type Russian or full Vietnamese on it. Nor Chinese characters.
But on the Pre, if you hit 'sym' button once, you get extra characters. AND, if you hit it twice, a screen keyboard shows up
with fully internationalized characters list. So, I guess the Pre will be handy for me to study Russian, since my work place
are mostly expatriate Russian IT developers. Yes, it's kind of like out-sourcing, but all Russian folks instead of folks from India.
Oh, I learned something about Bluetooth devices. If you don't fully charge them and the phone prior to doing the synch, they will down-grade to the lowest quality of the synch (e.g. linking the first time you integrate blue-tooth device into the list of "new devices".) Then, from that moment on, even if fully charged, they will still use that lowest quality setting [ think of it as using 10 kbit for MP3 instead of 300 kbit for encoding your music ]
So, if you're going to get the best sound experience from Bluetooth devices [ or highest down load speed when using your Palm Pre as a internet modem for your laptop via Bluetooth linking ] make sure you fully charge the bluetooth device and your Palm Pre before you start linking them. Also, make sure they are right next to each other while trying to link the devices. There's a way to get my HP laptop to use bluetooth connection to an internet modem [ Cell phone with data plan ], but I will have to down load a third party utility similar to what I had to use for my Treo600. The phones are capable already. It's the laptop that has to install the software from Sprint/Verizon/T-Mobil specific for Windows operating system. But, it turns out that for $50 or $70, you can buy third party software driver that works much better than ones provided by the cell phone companies. Why? They bought all their software for Internet Connection from that third party vendor!
Last time on vacation October 2008, we were cruising down I-75 to Florida from Indiana, and my son was able to cruise the internet most of the way while we were driving along the highway. Once we were up in the mountains crossing from Huntsville, Alabama to Orlando, ( no longer on main highway but on state/county roads ) we didn't have a cell tower in sight for three hours, so no data signal there. But, Sprint is pretty good along major US high-ways for data connections. From experience, that's from Indiana to Florida along I-75, and from Indiana to St. Louis, Missouri along I-70. If you travel, I get solid signals on a Cruise ship from Miami for most of the way, since they follow the shoreline anyway (even if you can't see it from the boat). Then, once out in the ocean, I was piggy-back on the Ships own cell signal (beaming from sattelite) for free because I have the Sprint America Plan (back then, that's what it was called) that provided me with free roaming anywhere in USA or Canada (or on Cruise ships hahahaha).
#20
Posted 07 June 2009 - 08:37 AM
The Palm Pre (ok, I'll start calling it as Sprint Palm Pre), is totally focussed on being a WEB OS, not an appstore device.
To integrate Google Wave, all Palm has to do is integrate Google Apps into the Web OS and be HTML 5 compliant.
I noticed that a mini version of 'wave features' were already integrated into Palm Pre's texting. It did it so well that I didn't notice at first, until my brother thought he was having a problem with GoogleTalk. He wasn't able to pull the thread of the conversation up on the screen, and he only saw the AIM texting thread. It turns out that his girl-friend was texting from GoogleTalk at first, then she got home an used another laptop that had AIM for instant messaging. The Palm Pre invisibly merged the two threaded conversation of GoogleTalk and AIM sms into a single thread. WOW ! he didn't even had to switch apps -- btw, everything is multi-tasked, so you don't really "switch apps" anymore like Treo755p ---- task are always ACTIVE.
Seeing how well Google maps worked on the Palm Pre, I think that it's already Google Wave ready.
Message was edited by: luanmikevu
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