Gameboy70
Member

Registered: Oct 1999
Location: Metro Station, Hollywood and Highland
Posts: 1018 |
I'd love to get a Treo, but after reevaluating the urgency of the switch, I've realized that it'll be at least a year before Handspring releases the model I want: a color CDMA version.
After many false starts, I finally got my Prism connect to my Qualcomm QCP-2760 a couple of months ago. Sending and receiving email and being able to access a few crucial sites without from anywhere is infinitely more important to me than memory expansion, high resolution, MP3, etc.
The two kludges in my current setup are (1) having to pull out the data cable to connect the two devices and (2) having to carry two devices on me at all times. A hybrid device like the Treo eliminates both liabilities. Unfortunately Cingular's GSM rate plans are outrageous next to my current Sprint PCS service.
This weekend I took a look at the Samsung and Kyocera hybrid communicators that are currently available. While I didn't like the quality of the color screen or the overall design of the Samsung, the Kyocera (monochrome) looks like it'll be my next handheld. The only thing that's missing is the Stowaway keyboard, which is due for release anytime now.
In a matter of weeks, I'll be selling my Prism, my accessories and Springboards. I'd rather opt out of the frustration now than watch Handspring kill any hopes for future Visor accessories and Springboards through announcements like last week's.
With the benefit of hindsight, given that the Treo has been in development for as long as the Visor has been on the market, Hawkins ostensibly designed a platform with the primary intention of optimizing voice calling. A Handspring employee I interviewed in the summer of 2000 said (paraphrasing from memory), "Communication is the reason for the Springboard." Everything else -- GPS, MP3, etc. -- was an afterthought. VisorPhone owners were paying beta testers for the Treo's functionality.
I expect Handspring to have a huge success in Europe with Treo sales, which will likely further delay the product's US release, even beyond February; but it won't matter since all we want is a CDMA version. So while I love the form factor of the Treo, it won't be my next PDA. And it won't be my first hybrid.
And Handspring won't release another color Visor. Color TFT active matrix displays cost too much to make reasonably priced PDAs profitable enough to be worthwhile for the company. I'd be willing to bet that Handspring makes more money from each Visor Pro sold at $249 than each Prism sold at $299.
But as a consumer, I can't support the understandable but fundamentally flawed business model of standalone PDAs, and my instinct for self-preservation is as strong as Handspring's. The Prism will be my last Visor.
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Eye of Gameboy
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