Version: 2008

Comments on: Psion says Intel 'unjustly enriched' by Netbook

Psion answers Intel's claim that its use of the term "Netbook" is generic.

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by docparkny March 2, 2009 9:08 PM PST
This is all terribly sad. At one point, Psion was the only manufacturer to create the box (Psion Series 5) and the operating system (EPOC OS), but gave up the ghost when faced with turbulence at the end of the dot.com boom. What they had in the original netbook was the absolute best combination of form factor and operating system with the technology available at that time. By giving the OS away to Symbian and giving up on consumer electronics, Psion basically gave up on early smartphones, leaving it to Treo and others. But what really killed them was Microsoft -not in its dominance this time, but in the suckiness of Windows CE on clamshell PDA's. People saw these more frequently -horrible lookalike, crash alike failures from Casio, HP, NEC, and others, and rarely saw the British jewels created by Psion, that people assumed all clamshell PDA's just sucked.

Palm almost died this death by Windows Mobile (CE), and is just escaping (maybe) with their new OS and Pre phone.

What netbooks should be are what the first netbook by Psion promised to be: instant on, portable, wireless, great keyboard, 8-10hrs battery, and instant off. Windows is again killing the category by proving to everyone that a netbook is just a really small and barely usable Windows laptop. Runs acceptably well with XP and not so great with VISTA, but hey, you get what you pay for -so goes Microsoft thinking.

netbooks should do what the Nokia 810 achieves and what iPhone maddeningly dances around -true portable internet appliance. The clamshell formfactor needs a hero, but not one that boots up Vista like the Fujitsu 820, or costs over $2000 like the Sony UX50 UMPC. Psion shouldn't be suing, but updating its Revo with a color screen, Li battery, Wifi, and maybe a phone, using Linux or EPOC 6.0. It should offer an updated, wireless, Series 5mx. And simply put, if they merely offered their netbook Pro, which they sucked up and failed by using Windows CE, by updating with built in wireless and a working Linux and sold it for $500 to $700, they would sell these hand over fist.

I've been bellyaching about this on my blog entries below:
http://golfism.wordpress.com/2009/03/02/top-12-features-not-yet-found-on-any-one-netbook/

http://golfism.wordpress.com/2009/01/10/the-netbook/

http://golfism.wordpress.com/2009/02/18/the-protonetbook/

http://golfism.wordpress.com/2009/01/31/12-things-i-hate-about-iphone/
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by slickuser March 2, 2009 9:37 PM PST
Intel called a "category" of notebooks as netbooks. They did not sell any
Intel branded notebooks as "netbooks".

psian's claim is wrong and looks like they are after $$$$
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by forever4now March 3, 2009 1:52 AM PST
Independent of the outcome of this trademark case, Psion Teklogix should consider refreshing the hardware of their Netbook Pro and offering it with Android. Everyone else is getting into this market and the Netbook Pro already has many of the important attributes: attractive compact design, touchscreen, long battery life, etc.

Since Android is expected to become a significant OS in the mobile computing space, attaching themselves to it early could provide them a significant boost in visibility & product sales.
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by hammeroftruth March 3, 2009 9:18 AM PST
Intel has a lot of money. They should just pull an Apple and buy a license to use the phrase "netbook" and then have all the manufacturers buy a license as well. Hey it worked for Cisco, they licensed "iPhone" to Apple and are raking in the cash.
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by Button Boy March 3, 2009 12:24 PM PST
Psion ran out of ideas, so in come the lawyers.
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