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| Handhelds and Smartphones Palm OS, Windows Mobile, Symbian, BlackBerry, etc. Archive! |
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#1 |
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Fully Converged
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Posts: 13,267
Karma: 77335
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Switzerland
Device: Sony Portable Reader
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Palm handheld celebrates 10-year anniversary
It was exactly ten years ago, back in March 1996, when Palm Computing (then a division of U.S. Robotics, later a division of 3Com, and finally a standalone corporation) introduced the very first Palm handhelds: the Pilot 1000 and Pilot 5000. Digged out from a 1996 product advertisement:"The Pilot connected organizer is a handheld extension of your PC, rather than a miniaturized PC running a stripped-down version of a PC-style operating system. U.S. Robotics Palm Computing subsidiary engineered Pilot to leverage the capabilities already on your desktop, without forcing you to split information between a handheld and a full-size device." Neither the Pilot 1000 nor the 5000 had an infrared port, backlight, or flash memory. RAM was limited to 128k and 512k, respectively, and both were powered by a Motorola 68328 16MHz running Palm OS V1.0! For nostaglic sake, I uploaded some goodies for you:
From all of us: A Happy Birthday, Palm Pilot! |
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Enthusiast
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#2 |
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Zealot
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Posts: 110
Karma: 216
Join Date: Aug 2005
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Is it really ten years. Where does it all go!
Mat |
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#3 |
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MobileRead Editor
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Posts: 5,059
Karma: 25827
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Device: iPad, PRS500, Treo 700p, Dell x50v & Mini9, Lenovo X61t
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It's funny... I had the opposite reaction... I thought "Has it ONLY been 10 yrs!"
But when I think about really neat steps in computing over the last 30yrs or so, it includes some pretty amazing steps like (no particular order): * The early Palm devices, of course * Video displays instead of card punches or teletypes. (I'm showing my age!) * That Altair computer with the toggle switches and leds (I used to love Popular Electronics and then BYTE magazine and couldn't wait for the next issues to arrive!) * The various CP/M computers that were out there (can't even remember anymore, but that was CP/M wasn't it? And I think there was software like PeachTree acctg software to run a small business on. * The early spreadsheet software and early games. * The various Commodore PET, TRS-80s, etc * The first versions of MS Windows * The rise of networking * The first TI & HP programmable calculators * The appearance of various removable media like big and small floppy discs, optical media, jump drives. Remember how hard it used to be to move data from one computer to another! * The Apple Macintosh and the first mouse devices * Early hard drives (I paid hundreds of dollars for a 20meg hard drive!) and inkjet/laser printers * The introduction of the internet and the web (we sometimes forget that these are separate things!) I still remember visiting CMU's Software Engineering Institute for a CMM software capability model presentation where they were giving demonstrations of this brand new thing called the "World Wide Web!" My gosh, there's been a lot happening in the last 30 years or so, and the introduction of the Palm was certainly a big deal. But I'd have to give big credit to TI and HP for all those early programmable calculators. Anyone remember how solid those HP devices were? I sure wish someone would make some premium mobile device products that are built as solid as the HP calculators were. And I think that if you compare the speed of innovation now in mobile devices to what you saw 30yrs or 20yrs or even 10yrs ago, there's no comparison. It's so fast paced these days, and we get to see it all unfold at sites like MobileRead and Palm Addicts and all the other fun sites out there. What a fun ride we're on!!! |
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#4 |
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Jah Blessed
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Posts: 1,295
Karma: 1373
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: The Netherlands
Device: iPod Touch
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Longing back to the mid-90s...
__________________
"Love like your life depends on it - because it does!" - Michael Franti |
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#5 |
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Zealot
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Posts: 110
Karma: 216
Join Date: Aug 2005
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A list such as this, especially on the MR forum, can’t ignore the Psion Series.
It is getting pretty much forgotten just how innovative and revolutionary these things were – and way before the Palm, even before the Newton. In my book the Psion Series 5 is still the best PDA ever made. We still get support requests for them and people are still using them – the same can’t be said of the early palms or CE, for example. In fact…. I’m going to check ebay…. |
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#6 |
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MobileRead Editor
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Posts: 5,059
Karma: 25827
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Device: iPad, PRS500, Treo 700p, Dell x50v & Mini9, Lenovo X61t
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Good point. I never used a Psion myself, or even heard of them until Palm Addicts mentioned them. If I had, I'm sure I would have bought one. But everyone familiar with them has very positive things to say.
Here's a nice review of the series 7.... http://www.clieuk.co.uk/psion7.shtml And a source for lots of Psions... http://www.clove.co.uk/index/index.asp Search on Psion, but there's even a Psion Revo Plus on the front page at the moment. They still sell this device with WinCE... http://www.psionteklogix.com/public....ducts&pID=2550 There was also some offer with some newly built ones (from spare parts I think), but I can't find the link. If you get one, you'll have to let us know your thoughts now that it's quite a bit "aged" and the competition is better. |
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#7 |
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Uebermensch
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Posts: 2,480
Karma: 8228
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Italy
Device: Kindle
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Wow, ten years! What a nice, round number. I am surprised Palm hasn't picked it up yet for marketing purposes.
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#8 | |
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Fully Converged
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Posts: 13,267
Karma: 77335
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Switzerland
Device: Sony Portable Reader
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Quote:
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#9 |
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Addict
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Posts: 268
Karma: 298
Join Date: Mar 2005
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What was the price for an original Palm Pilot? I bought a Z22 last year for $99. It is a pretty minimalist device, but it works well and was inexpensive.
Heck, I remember when having one at all was either an executive status symbol or a sign of serious geek cred. CP/M was an operating system for microcomputers written by Gary Kildall and published by the company he formed around it, Digital Research. It typically worked on S-100 bus machines running Zilog Z80 or Intel 8080 chips. Part of the BIOS was open and patchable, which was how people got it to run on so much varied hardware. It was limited to 64K of ram, which became an issue fairly quickly. I cut my teeth on an old NCR computer running CP/M that booted off an 8-inch floppy. I remember playing a version of Crowther (sp?) & Wood's Adventure written in a strange language called SAM76. The load time was incredible. I also did a lot of writing in WordStar, and sent the files to my dad's work to print on the daisy wheel printers they had there...you know, the kind that sounded like machine guns going off when they ran. |
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#10 |
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Junior Member
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Device: Treo 650
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I just checked my records, & I paid $303 with tax on July 15, 1996.
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#11 | |
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Fully Converged
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Posts: 13,267
Karma: 77335
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Switzerland
Device: Sony Portable Reader
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Quote:
The attached press release mentions a SRP of $299.
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#12 |
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Uebermensch
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Posts: 2,480
Karma: 8228
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Italy
Device: Kindle
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#13 |
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Fully Converged
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Posts: 13,267
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Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Switzerland
Device: Sony Portable Reader
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The official press release from Palm released today!!
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/060327/20060327005239.html?.v=1
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