The Trouble With Palm OS :: Symblogogy

by Edmund Jenks | May 23, 2007 at 06:09 am
595 views | 10 Recommendations | 2 comments

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The Trouble With Palm OS :: Symblogogy

The Trouble With Palm OS :: Symblogogy

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The trouble isn’t that the operating system doesn’t work, or is reliable, or even that it isn’t even owned by the company that had originally developed it. The trouble with the Palm OS is that everyone knows that it is time to move on to an operating system that will take advantage of all that this new mobility world has to promise.


Phone, Camera/Imager, WiFi, Bluetooth, Digital Video, Physical World Connection & Hyperlink Applications, and More are functions better left to the next generation of operating system that ACCESS is busy developing with Linux. Microsoft has led the agenda in the mobility arena and it is now time for the Palm OS to become the Windows 95 of its world.


Excerpts from Computerworld Mobile & Wireless -


Treo 755p: The Palm OS goes out with a whimper, not a bang


The end of the Palm OS?


By James Turner – Freelance Writer For Computerworld - May 17, 2007


So, if this is, indeed, the last significant product based on the Palm OS, it goes out with a whimper, not a bang. Palm hasn't released much that has been new or interesting since the Treo 700w, its first Windows Mobile phone, which started shipping more than a year ago. Of course, that will change dramatically when it releases its first Linux devices, which could see the light of day before the end of the year, according to some reports.

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Sounds like the Linux OS can not arrive soon enough.


Rumor has it that Motorola may scoop up Palm and kill two birds with one stone … own and eliminate a major cellphone competitor and have access to ACCESS support of the Palm OS through Palm’s perpetual license agreement in order to prop up the Symbol Technologies products that were sold with the Palm OS. If the rumor becomes true, this would be a significant play.


If this were to happen, Motorola would become very strong in its core business and it would hurt the fortunes of any company that had been put together in order to capitalize on the vacuum created through the recent non-renewal of the Palm OS license to Symbol Technologies before Motorola had purchased the company.

recommend This comment thread is now closed
Jordan Yerman
Jordan Yerman
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:42 on May 23rd, 2007

Edmund, nice one. The smartphone revolution is happenign a lot faster than I thought: the functionality of the iPhone has been out in the wild for a while now. Meanwhile, the grandmother of them all is wending towards obsolescence. Good stuff.

 

(My favorite item on my brother's old-school Palm Pilot: the Jedi Wisdom app, where you ask a question and Yoda answers you in fractured Degobah-English) 

0
osde.info

cant wait for the embedded gnu/linux versions

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