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Comments on: Bringing smart phones to the masses

Palm is the latest smart phone maker to address the consumer market with a smaller and cheaper phone that allows people to easily surf the Web and check e-mail.

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Kinda cute
by Kings X Rocks! September 28, 2007 4:39 AM PDT
I always liked the Palm interface. Nice to see a unit priced in the low range with most of the PDA capabilities. Now, all those young drivers will be holding the steering wheel with their teeth while they use two-hands to send text messages.
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Not phone price but service
by becareful September 28, 2007 5:40 AM PDT
I have a smart phone that is not used anywhere near capability because of the service cost. Individuals can afford decent handsets, just not all the additional cost of the individual services offered by the carriers. Maybe they could use some pointers on lowering cost.
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Completely agree - the issue is service cost and not device price
by cemptor September 28, 2007 8:54 AM PDT
I can see myself getting a so-called "smart" phone, as there are lots of devices based on Windows Mobile and blackberry that can be had for free or small cost of you sign up for a contract.

However this article completely misses the major barrier, which is the $30 odd additional per month that providers charge for e-mail and web surfing. Not worth that for me, given the crappy web experience and for personal e-mail on weekends, when out.

The other thing I have a peeve about is that these "smart" phones have not changed at all in 5-6 years in terms of what you can do, except adding cameras and mp3 players. Calendaring, todo lists, note taking, address book and e-mails are still the same, and not very usable with keyboards.

Calling something a smartphone just because it has e-mail and an address book is a bit much IMO
For some it is phone and not service
by pauliusp September 29, 2007 12:29 AM PDT
I have a good service plan but I can not upgrade my phone without "upgrading" the plan for $20 more a month. With 2 year contract that is $240 extra for basically nothing. $99 for new, unlocked smartphone is a great deal. Palm has a great opportunity here.
What about Windows Mobile smartphones?
by dondtus September 28, 2007 7:06 AM PDT
Why did you leave a whole category out of this article? Doesn't seem like the writer was doing his job by ignoring a whole category. Just mentioning that Palm has WM versions of their phones is not enough of a mention to claim they were in the article, in my opinion.
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Full web browsing?
by Nodack September 28, 2007 11:11 AM PDT
"While other mobile smart phones allow full web browsing the
iPhone has taken it to a new level."

Other cell phones allow you to surf the stripped down cell phone
version of the internet. The iPhone just surfs the regular internet
version your computer at home uses minus flash. Cnet looks the
same on the iPhone as it does on the home computer, just on a
smaller screen.
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Cnet looks fine on my Motorola Q
by wylbur September 28, 2007 8:28 PM PDT
Not to say that Nodack is talking out of his fundament, but Cnet
looks pretty much the same and unstripped down on my Q-phone.
The layout is sometimes reformatted to make it look better on the
small screen, but it is all there. I do occasionally use a "mobile" web
site like the weather underground's mobile version because the
formatting works better. Of course, I use the phone for
information, not infotainment which seems to be the market of the
iPhone.
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Bluetooth
by hht311 September 28, 2007 12:26 PM PDT
Just about every product these days have Bluetooth and every
review that I have read mentions whether a device has Bluetooth.
THE PROBLEM: Very rarely is there ever mention of what CLASS of
Bluetooth a device has. You have people with Class 2 devices
(mainly cell phones/pdas buying Class 1 dongles and can't figure
out, why in the world they don't have and can't get the advertised
range of the dongle.
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Ok
by tehrani625 September 29, 2007 11:53 AM PDT
I like the idea behinde the centro but they missed the os and the easy solution would be to skin it so that it is more apealing to teens like myself. In the process of skining the os as long as the layout of the buttens stays the same then there is no problm. I would also like to point out that even some phones like the razor and not the moto q use a dumbed down web that is usualy suported by the service provider like verizon their service sucks. The sites have adds and It is a paid service and you can't get any of the reall mobil sites like the one for g--mail or google talk or even google search. And then SMART phones like the moto q use the reall web with the option for use of the mobil web.
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Good replacement for OLPC - Perfect for Asia
by jamal_shah September 30, 2007 3:14 AM PDT
As some bloggers have also pointed out, (http://techlahore.wordpress.com), this phone is perfect as a replacement to the OLPC. In fact, in many ways it would be more useful. In large quantities, I am sure it would be available for $50-60.

The only problem, as pointed out elsewhere as well, is the lack of GSM. Hopefully Palm will come out with a GSM enabled phone. And I am sure Nokia and others will follow with equally capable phones in the same price range.

Big move forward for mobile computing at a global scale!
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Perfect replacement for OLPC - Perfect for Asia
by jamal_shah September 30, 2007 3:16 AM PDT
As some bloggers have also pointed out, for instance at http://techlahore.wordpress.com this phone is perfect as a replacement to the OLPC. In fact, in many ways it would be more useful. In large quantities, I am sure it would be available for $50-60.

The only problem, as pointed out elsewhere as well, is the lack of GSM. Hopefully Palm will come out with a GSM enabled phone. And I am sure Nokia and others will follow with equally capable phones in the same price range.

Big move forward for mobile computing at a global scale!
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For $100 bucks = iPhone killer
by clsmithj September 30, 2007 11:04 AM PDT
The features of the Centro seem just as good if not better than my Treo 650, and it's priced $400 dollars cheaper that the Treo 650 cost.
With a nice 4GB SD card thrown into this device, you could make it into a nice portable music or video player.
I hope Palm markets this device strong because I think with the right push, Palm can recapture the PDA/phone market with this device.

Only $100 dollars, that's too good to pass up for anybody.
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Availability in Philippines
by decnet September 30, 2007 11:02 PM PDT
Hope it will be available in Philippines, i think filipinos will embrace this product. specially the budget conscious once
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Bomjpacket - an open source mobile browser
by alexeysmirnov October 1, 2007 10:59 PM PDT
You can browse Internet on a low-end cell phone using OperaMini which requires Java. If your cell phone does not have enough resources than try out another Internet browser called Bomjpacket:

http://research.alexeysmirnov.name/bp
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What about Windows Mobile Professional Phones
by ~Neo~ October 1, 2007 11:14 PM PDT
The article in question seems to have left out the Windows Mobile Professional and Smartphone segment. I know that CNET loves anything Apple, but sheesh give credit where credit is due. Palm could sell millions of these to the "Sidekick", and "Helio" crowd. Personally it's a little stripped down for my tastes but for the price I may just buy one because it's cheap and use it as a backup for my Windows Mobile Professional HTC branded Athena.
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