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Palm Changing OS Strategy
Posted by
CowboyNeal
on Thu Feb 05, 2004 10:51 PM
from the shaking-things-up dept.
from the shaking-things-up dept.
profet writes "CNET.com is reporting that PalmSource plans to change its OS plans and simultaneously develop/release OS 6 and continue development on OS 5. The names shall be changed to reflect that they are both current. The plan is to have OS 5 for low end devices ($100 price point is a goal), and OS 6 for high end devices. This is a drastic change from their current practice of having one current OS drastically customized (read: hacked) to suit the manufacturer's needs. It looks like PalmSource is aiming directly at Symbian's success with Nokia's series 60 platform."
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What's not mentioned (Score:5, Informative)
How about a roman numeral? (Score:1, Funny)
Just like Apple did with OS 10.
Where have I heard all this before? (Score:5, Funny)
PalmOS 3.11 for Workgroups is for small networks.
PalmOS NT is the server platform.
PalmOS 95 *is* *the* upgrade for PalmOS 3.1.
This is gonna end in tears...
Re:Where have I heard all this before? (Score:5, Funny)
(Last Journal: Saturday February 05 2005, @10:48AM)
Hmmm...
Palm 98 is just like Palm 95, except it doesn't crash as much.
Palm 2000 is the first stable palm.
Palm XP is the Palm Experience... something most Slashdotters are already familiar with.
Re:Where have I heard all this before? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Where have I heard all this before? (Score:5, Interesting)
(Last Journal: Monday April 07 2003, @07:39AM)
I don't think that they're trying to cover quite that broad a range. The sense I get is that they're intending for PalmOS 5 to run on the class of machines it already runs on (ARM processor, 160x160 pixel or larger touchscreen, 8 MB or more of RAM, perhaps an SD slot), which they project will drop in price over time. PalmOS 6 will run on more muscular hardware (larger touchscreen, more RAM, faster CPU, SD slot) and provide richer multimedia and multitasking capabilities. So it's not so much for this year's cell phones as perhaps set top boxes, G3 cell phones, or high-end PDA's or tablet computers.
It's not clear (to me, at least) how much of a fundamental difference there is between PalmOS 5 and 6. So it's hard to say if it's essentially the same OS with more frameworks (like NT vs. NT Server) or a real forking (like Win95 vs. NT). Perhaps someone with some inside info could comment?
Re:Where have I heard all this before? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Where have I heard all this before? (Score:4, Interesting)
How "real" of an OS PalmOS 6 ends up being remains to be seen. From what I have heard so far, it still falls short in many areas. Unfortunately, it looks like Palm is going to try to prolong the pain by giving us multiple, wildly incompatible upgrades before reaching some reasonable, stable point.
linux PDA? (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://www.plone.org/ | Last Journal: Monday January 05 2004, @04:45PM)
Anyone with some experience with both? I used Palm Vx with Palm OS 3 and found it too buggy. I saw ads about Zaurus and found it interesting. I am really close to get Linux PDA. But before I cash out, is there anyone here who found a reason to migrate from Linux PDA to Palm OS?
Re:linux PDA? (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://lazyadmin.sourceforge.net/)
The zaurus however, does Much more, wireless, mp3 player, video player, etc. however as far as a PIM goes, you just can't beat palms ease of use, and speed. Especially graffitti, works great. Not to bash the zaurus, but i found myself 'setting it up' (see playing, trying to figure things out) more than being productive
in the end, i use the b&w palm, why? besides the above notes, the batteries last MUCH longer in it then any color screen would. Nothing fancy, just a PIM, like you asked for;)
Uh, I think you have it backward... (Score:5, Insightful)
(Last Journal: Tuesday September 06 2005, @12:39PM)
If all you need is just a PIM (calendaring, contacts, notes, money, short messages), then why would you ever consider choosing a Linus over PalmOS on a PDA?
PalmOS is built for the job, fast enough to do what you want (and more), power efficient, etc.
Stop looking for a sledgehammer to crack a nut and give serious consideration to a Zire or Tungsten. Which one is best for you depends on how honest you are when you say you're looking for "just a PIM".
Re:Uh, I think you have it backward... (Score:4, Informative)
(http://www.plone.org/ | Last Journal: Monday January 05 2004, @04:45PM)
Palm crashes? (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.meanbusiness.com/)
When I say "owned / used
Never have any of them (III, IIIx, IIIxe, Tungsten T) locked up in the middle of doing these things - they've locked up when syncing, when Finding (searching) against "bad apps," when attempting to switch from a live "Arkanoid" game, but never in the middle of real usage.
*- Also, at least in recent Tungsten memory, when I have reset it, it hasn't lost a damn thing - Not a Note, not a To Do, nor a Calendar entry.
OS 6 - architected and built by the BeOS engineers - looks interesting. I use it much more for "traditional PDA" stuff, but the BeOS was always smart and ass-kicking.
S
Re:linux PDA? (Score:5, Informative)
The Zaurus was excellent at web browsing, hacking, running Java, running a real pop3 mail client, etc. Plug in a cheap WiFi CF card and you are good to go. But here is the thing. It is horrible at calendaring, synching, etc. The desktop software is pathetic. You almost certainly have to consider the Zaurus a very small linux based PC that stands by itself and forget about the desktop integration part.
All that being said, I sold the Zaurus on E-Bay recently and kept the Clie. The Zaurus is by far the best "toy". However, having a handheld Internet connected device wasn't that useful (for me, anway) especially since I own a 12 inch iBook. Having a list of important phone numbers and my calendar with me at all times and available instantly is important though and Palm devices do that very well.
Depending on what you want and need, the Zaurus might be a great choice. I had no complaints. It was stable and overall really cool. There is just something cool about using a handheld as a web server. (but then you inevitably end up asking "WHY"!)
Re:linux PDA? (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://slashdot.org/ | Last Journal: Wednesday October 02 2002, @10:14PM)
If all you need is a PIM - Palm is definatly the way to go.
I *love* my Zaurus 700 series- it's fun to SSH into a server with 80x24 characters and a real keyboard , but for PIM stuff, it's slow and clunky.
Linux on Palm (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://www.dailypwned.com/)
Alternatives to PalmOS, anyone?
Has anyone tried LinuxDA [linuxda.com]? It sounds like an interesting alternative, even being a commercial product.
Cool, erm... (Score:5, Insightful)
Does Palm have any kind of momentum at all anymore?
Re:Cool, erm... (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.fufme.com/)
-B
Re:Cool, erm... (Score:4, Funny)
Naming suggestions (Score:5, Funny)
let's get medieval (Score:1, Funny)
My pants are too small (Score:1)
On topic, i think having two OSes will just take away needed ressources to put on OS 6. I think it's more Marketing than anything else. Much like Win98/98SE/ME. They're doing exactly the contrary of what MS is doing and creating one single end user/server line. I don't know if that's a good thing.
As a BeOS fan (Score:3, Insightful)
I envision a white device with yellow borders... ummm.
The new names for OS 5 and OS 6 (Score:1)
Chrome.
Palm is losing their niche (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://ghazan.hazara.org/)
Try to overdevelop Palm OS into a GUI layers, multitasking, and other higher end stuff, and youre directly competing with Linux, QNX, BSD and BeOS (maybe they plan to merge their BeOS with Palm on higher end). They should not want that. Linux with the community backing, applications, tools, hackibility etc will win hands down and we'll see people buying Dell machines, replacing Windows XP with Linux, getting the free PDA and replacing its PalmOS with Linux + XFree86 and its tools.
I think Palm should try to remain as simple as PalmOS 3.5 or 4.0 and instead focus more on applications. The OS should be developed to deal with more hardware, make easy-to-use SDKs to gather applications from the community and to handle nice themes. Thats all. Pretty soon someone will shrink x86 to palm size and make it consume power as little as the ARM720T, and Microsoft will rush to modify Windows XP for it, and people will just replace that with Linux. Palm will then have to rely solely on their lower end OS on even smaller devices.
Re:Palm is losing their niche (Score:5, Informative)
PalmOS is for palm-sized devices (e.g. ORGANIZERS) that have very little flexibility as far as data loss, convenience, and user-friendliness. No user wants to open up a console and mess with XF86 settings to try and get their organizer working right in the middle of a meeting.
Part of the reason Palm is still popular is because of the fundamental design decisions made with the OS. Which is to be, above all, a damn good organizer. Part of what Palm realized (and what Apple hadn't yet with the Newton) is that user requirements for an organizer is significantly different from a computer. Users expect it to work just as well as their wristwatch. A great article to read on this is the "Zen of Palm" (http://www.palmos.com/dev/support/docs/zenofpalm
In the handheld market, Palm is competing with PocketPC (or as it's less affectionately known, Windows Mobile-based Pocket PC) and to a very much lesser extent, Linux on the Zaurus.
In the phone market, Palm is competing yet again with Windows and then Symbian. And this division of markets is why they're concurrently developing OS 5 and 6.
And, for your information, PalmSource owns Be. Part of the whole point of OS6 is that Be engineers are putting significant efforts into it.
PalmOS =5.x limits what you can get from the hw (Score:5, Informative)
They're powerful enough to play mp3s and movies, they do wifi, the pen interface has gotten simpler and more accurate. But it's all limited by the operating system. The problem with PalmOS is, it's built around a Windows 3.x-style event loop with no threading. "Cooperative multiprocessing," if you can call it that.
Word today from a developer at a biggish PalmOS app development company, is that Palm has gotten some of the BeOS blokes to develop a microkernel, threading, and device driver architecture; that'll be OS 6.0. It won't be open source, sadly, but it'll have Palm's usual level of documentation and support.
Look at the Zaurus for the example of a pocket computer that's reaching in the right direction: Linux with multitasking, device drivers... mad extensibility. Palm don't got that today.. although I think running KDE is a bit of overdevelopment. Who needs a terminal window, these things have enough power to process speech recognition? That's why the O/S needs to grow.
Where have I heard this before? (Score:3, Funny)
(http://www.theschmoejoes.com/ | Last Journal: Saturday June 19 2004, @02:56PM)
What could go wrong?
With the competition from PowerPC devices . . . (Score:2, Funny)
~~~
Gadget lust and price points (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.fal.net/ | Last Journal: Friday June 16 2006, @03:20PM)
Even broke down and bought a used IIIXE... which died a month later. I know there is much newer tech out there now, and geeky individual buyers are not the preferred target market. I could probably get this doorstop fixed - but my cell phone and Blackberry are covering the basic PIM and game bases.
And I've never had to reboot the piece of paper in my wallet with all the phone numbers on it. Even a phone with an OS of any complexity makes me nervous. Again, I know they don't care about incidental sales...
This is a toy I would like to be able to con myself into "needing" -but at $300-$400 and formidable network access charges, it isn't that inconvenient to check e-mail with the cell phone or haul the laptop around.
While there many not be many people with the same mindset, I wonder if a $100 price point (for a device with some expansion capabilities) wouldn't get people like me off the fence.
<grrr>
What I've Gathered (Score:2, Interesting)
(http://likeicare.net/)
Plus, it doubles as my mp3 player to take to work in the morning (with the addition of a handy SD Cruzer drive) and it impresses the heck out of people.
Developers, developers, developers, developers (Score:5, Insightful)
PalmSource has made a mess of the platform from a developer's perspective. It used to be that all Palm OS systems were more or less the same--slow 68k processor, very small address space, small 160x160 monochrome touch screen. As the technology moved down in price, Palm OS systems started to get improvements like faster ARM processors (endian change!), more memory, and high resolution color screens. The problems are several:
So in summary, life has been frustrating for Palm OS developers. But the real losers here are the users. What used to be a vibrant community of 3rd party developers has somewhat dried up. People simply aren't writing as many good, device-neutral Palm OS apps as they used to.
Go ahead, mod me -1: Microsoft fan (Score:4, Informative)
A lot of people are asking for alternatives to PalmOS... well, how about it's #1 competator: PocketPC?
I have been playing with the HP iPAQs recently, and am trying to find one at a reasonable price, and lemme tell you I am in love.
I owned a Visor Delux back when they came out, and it just sucked after a while. Handwriting was a pain in the ass; the software worked, but was limited; there was no good solution for document editing/viewing; audio, video and networking functions were nonexistant at the time. Even then, the top of the line HP Journadas could play mp3s and had a color screen.
If you want something to replace your pocket pad of paper, go with a palm I guess. If you want a *computer* in your pocket, go with a PocketPC... I personally am drooling over the HP h1945, h2215, and h4155's.
Re:Go ahead, mod me -1: Microsoft fan (Score:4, Informative)
(Last Journal: Thursday November 29, @09:35PM)
So far, so good...
No, if you want an incredibly unstable, and feature-stripped WINDOWS PC in your pocket, then get a WinCE device. If you want to hit the reset button twice a day, get a WinCE device. If you want to waste a good part of your day staring at the pretty colors the screen displays, while getting nothing at all accomplished, get a WinCE device. Yes, 'wince' is quite a good name for it...
It's a typical ploy these days. Load a device with tons and tons of features (none of which are complete, or even usable in real terms) and people will be suckered into buying them... That's the same strategy Microsoft uses with Windows... It includes an "image editor" (MS Paint, it's not Photoshop or Gimp, but it gets the same moniker), MP3 playback (forget the fact that WMP sucks at music playback compared to Winamp, XMMS, Zinf, etc.), video editing (that's sure a joke), and many many more like this.
I found out the same thing about a month after I bought my Casio E-100... It seemed so great, fast, and could do anything (at least on paper). After I threw it away, I got a Psion with a CPU about 1/3rd the speed, that outperformed that E-100 by leaps and bounds. Yes, Windows is slow as hell on the desktop, and WindowsCE is keeping that tradition alive on low-end processors. My Psion also had infinitely more USEFUL features than my WindowsCE device.
Instead of a crappy text editor that can do nothing (WinCE), I got a whole office suite that could do 99% what the desktop equivalent could. Even embedding images, graphs, charts, or spreadsheets in word documents. My WindowsCE machine couldn't even print on it's own, meanwhile my Psion could print directly to an Infrared or Serial-port printer, without any other computer attached.
Windows CE, you see, is meant to be nothing more than a "desktop companion", which depends very very heavily on your Windows machine. Psions (aka Symbian, aka EPOC), are full-fledged computers on their own, and have every feature you would want if you intend to do REAL WORK on them.
Palm devices are glorified notepads with alarm clocks, and they do that particular job quite well. WinCE machines are just expensive toys, that claim to do everything, but aren't proficent enough to do anything even reasonably well. Psion/Symbian/EPOC devices are incredibly powerful, stable, intuitive, high performance, and are quite nearly desktop replacements.
As a matter of fact, my last year of college, I didn't do anything on my desktop or notebook... I typed up all papers in the word processor, wrote and tested all C programs, typed up and sent out all e-mails (to instructors and other students), browsed the web, uploaded/downloaded files, and printed out everything directly from my Psion. And on the handful of occasions I needed to connect to a computer, I used telnet, a seral-port terminal emulator, and a Java SSH program to connect to them.
Windows CE sucks, hard, and I'm more than qualified to say so.
I like my Palm(s)... (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.msgeek.org/ | Last Journal: Tuesday August 23 2005, @08:30PM)
I had to move to the m125 because there's a glitch in PalmOS before version 3.5.2 that conflicts with certain apps running on MacOS 9.x, and the m100 can't have its OS upgraded because it's burned to ROM. The m125 has PalmOS 4.0.1 burned to ROM and it coexists beautifully with my Mac G3 Blue-and-white, my Windows desktop and my dual-booting Thinkpad 600e.
The thing that really kicks ass about Palm is Palm Desktop. You can still download it from palmone.com for FREE as in beer (not free as in freedom but what do you expect from a closed-source for-profit software/hardware company like Palm) and it is a great little PIM program regardless of whether you use it for syncing your Palm or just keeping your appointments straight.
Sure, a Zaurus would be able to do more. Yes, PalmOS is crashy and cranky...what do you expect from something that basically is like MacOS before the MultiFinder was born? Still and all, it does what I need it to do, no more, no less.
Most importantly, carrying around my little Palm is easier on the shoulders and back than carrying around a 3 pound paper-and-pencil planner. That you cannot deny.
Don't play OS wargames - be compatible (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://olliver.family.gen.nz | Last Journal: Tuesday October 17 2006, @10:04PM)
By writing programs in SuperWaba [superwaba.com] - a cut down Java VM - I avoid most of the crap associated with who has what version of what device. Palm V2.0 to WindowsXP/CE, I have just one application to develop and it runs on all platforms - even in a web browser.
Don't leave home without it
Vik
Their strategy should be to _GET_ an OS. (Score:5, Interesting)
They don't currently have a RealOS(tm), so why is acquiring/building a real OS considered a change in OS strategy?
When I say they don't have an OS right now, I mean:
- It doesn't do preemptive multitasking, so multiple tasks don't run simultaneously very well. It requires tasks to voluntarily yield, much like MacOS's before OS X. (Palm software people are old Apple software people anyway...) The Palms I've used also did very little in the way of letting multiple tasks run simultaneously. Usually the "top" app is all that's happening (possibly ignoring some interrupt driven background I/O).
- It doesn't have process memory space protection, AFAIK. Without multiple tasks actually running at the same time, this is less of an issue. Palms do, however, "crash" and need to be rebooted sometimes. Certainly this happens more often than on ucLinux PDAs...
If they're making those things possible (and PalmOS 6 is claimed to be "better at multitasking," so it sounds like they are), then it may be worthy of actually calling it an Operating System.
Same strategy. (Score:4, Informative)
(http://pyile.com/ | Last Journal: Tuesday December 19 2006, @01:33PM)
This isn't news at all. This has been Palm's strategy for the past few years -- one OS for low-end devices, one for high end.
The only difference is the previously high-end OS is becoming the low-end. Which will happen again one day with Palm OS 6.
Compare apples to apples please (Score:5, Insightful)
I had just about given up on Palm -- until I got hold of the new Tungsten T3.
The Tungsten T3 has a gorgeous aluminum case with the same form factor as the classic Palm V-- meaning it will actually fit in your shirt pocket, and it runs at 400mhz with 64mb of RAM. It plays movies, it plays mp3's, has a built-in voice recorder, bluetooth, and plenty of other *actually useful* features, plus a huge library of software.
So please, if you're going to compare, be fair.
BeOS (Score:4, Insightful)
By the way, just yesterday I bought a Tungsten T2 and it's my first PDA, and the first thing I see this morning is Palm is changing something, I've broke in cold sweat while reading the story. Slashdot is going to kill me one day.
Simple reasoning behind the scenes (Score:5, Insightful)
Touting the new OS 6 as the best thing since sliced bread would make it extremely hard to ship pre-6 devices, both for themselves and all the licensors. So understandably they have to downplay its meaning to avoid sitting on warehouses full of Tungsten devices nobody wants to buy.
It's somewhat amusing that the only named benefits they can find for the old OS is smaller footprint and cost.
I will hold my judgement on whether Palm OS 6 really is the savior of Palm, but as with any projects this magnitude, expect this too will take a while to mature.
Jouni
Honestly, why? (Score:2, Informative)
(http://www.roguelazer.com/ | Last Journal: Tuesday March 29 2005, @06:01PM)
Now if only ParaGraph would release Calligrapher for PalmOS, we'd be good...
I'm mostly happy. (Score:1)
There was a huge bug in the beginning, with SD cards 256MB and over getting trashed, but the patch works fine. And there is a freely(beer) available upgrade for the included browser for T3's, some things were missing. Like support for frames. Java is sopposed to be handled a bit better too.
And they shipped the T3 before the DIA (dynamic input area -- you can hide it) API was complete. Often you have to load a couple of support PRCs for apps to be able to use it to get the 320x480 screen.
But, I'm ok with all of these. Other than having to load a few things that should have already been there, the unit has performed flawlessly. With my bluetooth phone I can use pssh and PalmVNC to get to a "real" OS.
However, if I have to deal with this sort of crap with OS6, I'll be looking for a linux based PDA next time, or an iPaq. Check out familiar.handhelds.org, linux on quite a few iPaqs. If I want an OS with problems, I at least want to be able to see the source too!
But, for now, I'm happy with my T3. I accepted OS5 is basicly what DOS would have been if it was GUI to begin with, and that's all I need. And physicly, it is a work of art. If I want a laptop, I'll buy a laptop. If OS6 turns out to handle multitasking well and is easy to work with, I'll stay with palm.
Best Buy dumped PDAs (Score:1)
(http://www.glowresearch.com/)
Best Buy stopped selling PDAs. Cell phones sell VASTLY more than Palms/PPCs so Best Buy said sayonara to geeky handhelds. Also geeks like me kept taking back their old handheld and exchanging it.
If a handheld isn't "connected" via Bluetooth or 802.11 then its lifespan is about zero. Pocket PCs have Palm beat in this department. Stupid PalmOne and Sony are just NOW getting 802.11 and Bluetooth on their entire line.
Palms stink in the game department. We now have Warfare, which is great, but thats' about it. My favorite game is a freeware game called Bee [freewarepalm.com], but what do I know. PPCs have tons of great games.
The bottom line: the days of unconnected PDAs are gone. PalmOne/Palmsource/Sony had better get with it. The T3 is a beautiful device (as was the Palm V and 515) but unconnected ain't gonna cut it any longer.
Cheapest way to get WiFi on a PDA? (Score:2)
I want to get something smaller than a laptop but hopefully with slightly more of a keyboard than my current gizmos... but... here's the catch...
It's got to have 802.11b WiFi. Either built-in or with a cheap expansion card. I have to have that surfing at Starbucks, Instant Messaging at inapproprite places, downloading porn in the pet shop....
Ideally something used and on the cheap, or a plugin to my 3c, but the Dell Axim 3xi or whatever has the builtin wifi for like $299 would be OK minus the WinCE factor.
Any suggestions?
--D
Re:News.com? (Score:1)
Re:100 bucks for Palm OS? (Score:1)
Mods - if you're going to mod something up as informative, isn't a cursory check of accuracy a good idea?
100 bucks for Palm device? (Score:3, Informative)
(http://www.chriscanfield.net/)
Re:100 bucks for Palm OS? (Score:2)
(http://wrenkin.net/)
Re:100 bucks for Palm OS? (Score:1)
$30+ Per device?! Whoa! No wonder winCE has been such a failure! They should try giving it away.
Yellow Tab has a version of BeOS. (Score:3, Informative)
I think the story is that they could licence everything but the name. There's an awesome preview up on Zeta Journal [zetajournal.org].
And there are also the two open clones in the works: Blue-Eyed OS [blueeyedos.com] (by building BeOS-workalike bits on top of Linux) and OpenBeOS [openbeos.org] (a from-the-ground-up reimplementation of BeOS)..
Re:BeOS (Score:3, Informative)
Remember, they bought the tech...I doubt any actual BeOS code would be in Palm6...but I'd bet it "looks" like BeOS under the hood!