Email Alerts
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Palm says goodbye to Windows Mobile devices
Palm, Inc. has announced that it is going to stop making devices based on Microsoft's Windows Mobile, and will instead focus entirely on webOS-based smartphones like the Palm Pre. News | 18 Sep 2009
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Say goodbye to Palm OS devices
Palm's CEO confirmed something last week many have suspected: there will be no more new models running the Palm OS. Ed Colligan also talked extensively about plans for webOS -- Palm's new operating system. News | 13 Feb 2009
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Palm webOS announced
Palm has taken the wraps off its newest operating system the Palm webOS which features a "cards" based metaphor, and is completely driven by JavaScript and CSS web-based technologies. News | 09 Jan 2009
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Out of the gates, Android a long way from enterprise ready
Android's launch device, the G1, has some neat features, but few of them make it a better enterprise phone. Article | 25 Sep 2008
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Palm announces next-gen Palm OS II by mid-year 2009
Palm recently announced that their long-anticipated next-generation Palm mobile operating system, commonly dubbed Palm OS II, would be running by mid-year 2009. Article | 22 Sep 2008
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Palm sales up but revenues falling
Though Palm's smartphone sales are soaring and recovering, Palm as a whole has revenues down. Article | 02 Jul 2008
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Palm's new head of Product Development begins quietly
Contrary to typical Palm Inc. behavior, new head of Product Development Mike Bell has begun his new position without much publicity. Article | 29 Jan 2008
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Palm banks on BlackBerry
Research In Motion Ltd. continues its momentum as Palm inks a deal to use BlackBerry software in its Treo 650 mobile device. News | 17 Oct 2005
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Palm success, past and future, depends on developers
Amid growing competition from Microsoft and Symbian, the Palm organization is endorsing interoperability like never before. Experts say the OS-maker's freebie-focused strategy had made developing Palm applications much easier. Article | 11 Feb 2004
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Mobile platforms on collision course
Today there are a dizzying array of mobile platform choices, from Microsoft's .NET and Java, to niche frameworks offered by Pumatech Inc., Sybase's iAnywhere Solutions Inc., and others. But Jack Gold, a vice president with Stamford, Conn.-based Meta ... Interview | 04 Feb 2004