bookrats
Member

Registered: Sep 2000
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 501 |
Given all the discussion about Palm OS upgradability on Visors, I was wondering if (and when) Handspring might decide to stop using the Palm OS. I don't desire this -- as a developer, who wants to have two platforms to write for? And all the people writing for a single OS means a larger selection of software.
But given the talent that the Palm founders brought over to Handspring with them, I'd be surprised if Handspring's SW team wouldn't like to take the drivers seat, design-wise, and be able to steer the Visor in directions other than those dictated by the Palm OS team.
If so, the question is when: at what version of the Palm OS would Handspring abandon it? A few initial thoughts:
4.0?: A lot of posters on this board have complained that Palm OS 4.0 adds very little to Palm OS 3.5 -- at least from the user's view. However, it appears OS 4.0 has built-in support for BlueTooth wireless communication -- and BlueTooth-enabled Springboard modules could be extremely useful.
5.0?: As I understand it, Palm OS 5.0 is not going to run on current or older Palms or Visors -- it is aimed at PDAs using the ARM processor, instead of Motorola Dragonball processors. Current Palm software (i.e., written for Palm OS 4.0 and earlier) will run on Palm OS 5.0 using a software emulator for backwards compatibility. (E.g., like the WOW component -- Windows on Windows -- that runs Windows 3.1 16-bit software on 32-bit Windows systems. (Hopefully OS 5.0's emulator will run better than WOW. ))
Given this, Palm OS 5.0 would be a logical point for Handspring to break all ties with Palm, i.e., start using their own OS -- as long as they, too, have an emulator for current Palm software. (Maybe that's all they license from Palm.)
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My own suspicion is that Visors this year will be released with Palm OS 4.0 (e.g., "4.0H" -- altered for Springboards), so that BlueTooth modules/software can be used on the Visor. But I could really see Palm OS 5.0 be the point where Handspring decides to get off the Palm OS train.
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Jeff Meyer
"And he died like he lived: with his mouth wide open."
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