Gameboy70
Member

Registered: Oct 1999
Location: Metro Station, Hollywood and Highland
Posts: 1018 |
PastaGrrrl wrote:
I think Handspring would go out of business eventually even if it does keep it's Visor line. The new Palm i705 makes the Treo pale in comparison. I have used the Kyocera Smartphone (the cell phone with Palm OS screen). From my experience with that, I don't believe that a phone and a PDA were meant to live in the same unit. Having a phone and PDA as the same device is awkward, and the screen sizes inevitably get smaller, or oddly sized.
I'm not sure how extensive your "have used" is on the Kyocera Smartphone, but after a week and a half, I'm extremely satisfied with the one I just purchased. The Treo has superior ergonomics, but isn't CDMA yet.
The size of the screen does inevitably get smaller, which is the compromise for losing the deadweight of a second device. In my case the benefit far outweighs the cost. Inevitably, some people are going to compare the size of the screen with devices that have come before. When the Pilot was released, many pundits were quick to note how small the screen was relative to the Newton. The Newton drew even more criticism when it was released, having the misfortune of a screen too small for "serious" computing (i.e. it wasn't a laptop).
Handspring should have released the Treo simultaneously with the GPRS rollout for maximum impact; then it be obviously superior to the Blackberry or the i705. If I valued push email above everything else, I'd take the Blackberry over the i705 for the keyboard alone. Since device consolidation is even more important to me than wireless connectivity, I'd go for the Treo. Push email is more of a priority for the burgeoning enterprise market than it is for consumer market. Social email is too casual for consumers to pay for anything beyond a dialup wireless connection, at least for the short term.
I think Palm has the right idea with the i705: Always on. Always connected, email, messaging, web, all in the format we have come to know and love. I think no one in their right mind would buy a Treo, especially seeing how other PDA/phones have entered the market and been so soon forgotten about. If you want connectivity, stick with the cell phone you've got, and buy the Palm i705, or a Blackberry or something.
I wouldn't even consider the i705 or Blackberry. I refuse to go back to carrying around a second device, and won't pay for another wireless service provider. But it will probably be a hit in the enterprise market. Initial sales have been stronger than expected.
But as a consumer, until Handspring releases a CDMA Treo, I'll stick to the cell phone I've got 
Other PDA/phones, especially the Nokia 9210 in Europe, are selling quite well. Since cell phones outsell PDAs by a factor of 100, a poor selling cell phone still does better than any PDA that isn't a blockbuster. They enjoy better distribution channels (Cingular and Sprint PCS stores, mall kiosks, etc.) and require less explanation than standalone PDAs. No one ever asks, "What do you use a cell phone for?".
Fast Company did an article on the Kyocera development team last year, and the project leader's conservative projections for the 6035 were 250,000 units in one quarter. He deliberately downgraded his estimates to minimize the repercussions from upper management if sales turned out to be as frosty as the earlier pdQ. I haven't found any returns on the 6035 yet, but if sales were in line with lower-end projections, they would exceed the VDX's first quarter.
The fact that a 3G-ready 6035 and a new Samsung hybrid (the i330) will be released this year suggests that sales have been encouraging, to say the least.
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