Palm Foleo – Cancelled For Now

Palm Foleo Looks like Palm’s CEO, Ed Colligan, has pulled the plug on the Palm Foleo (at least for now, in its “current configuration”). This after criticisms from many sites (including SL), and even a public exchange of views with Engadget.

We (or at least I) was critical of the Palm Foleo for a few reasons:
– Hardware wise, the ASUS Eee PC and other similar devices offered much more computing power and flexibility for the same or cheaper price (in a smaller format).
– Software wise, the Foleo did not offer much – devices running some form of Windows Mobile were, in many instances, going to offer a lot more in the way of software.
– Connectivity wise, the Foleo relied on a Palm smartphone, which meant you had two gadgets – why not ditch both and pick up one of the Windows Mobile 6 Smartphones with a full keyboard?
– They claimed it didn’t want to be a laptop, but size wise it was creeping up there, with a 10″ display. You might as well spend twice as much and get a 12″ laptop with the same or better battery life and a heckuva lot more computing power, not to mention running a full version of Windows and not a stripped down Linux, along with a full array of expansion ports, memory, and storage.
– It wasn’t a UMPC, with the flexibility UMPCs offer.
– Going along with Engadget, it felt like Palm was neglecting it’s PDA/Smartphone platform, which, was supposed to work with the Palm Foleo. It didn’t make sense to develop another device to work with your existing devices, when your existing devices were in need of some serious attention.

Here is the email we received:

As many of you are aware, we are in the process of building our next generation software platform. We are very excited about how this is coming together. It has a modern, flexible UI, instant performance, and an incredibly simple and elegant development environment. We are working hard on this platform and on the first smartphones that will take advantage of it.

In the course of the past several months, it has become clear that the right path for Palm is to offer a single, consistent user experience around this new platform design and a single focus for our platform development efforts. To that end, and after careful deliberation, I have decided to cancel the Foleo mobile companion product in its current configuration and focus all our energies on delivering our next generation platform and the first smartphones that will bring this platform to market. We will, of course, continue to deliver products in partnership with Microsoft on the Windows Mobile platform, but from our internal platform development perspective, we will focus on only one.

Because we were nearly at the point of shipping Foleo, this was a very tough decision. Yet I am convinced this is the right thing to do. Foleo is based on a second platform and a separate development environment, and we need to focus our efforts on one platform. Our own evaluation and early market feedback were telling us that we still have a number of improvements to make Foleo a world-class product, and we can not afford to make those improvements on a platform that is not central to our core focus. That would not be right for our customers or for our developer community.

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ASUS U3 Available in US

ASUSTeK has announced that the ASUS U3 will be available in the US. The ASUS U3 is ASUS’ latest offering in the 13.3″ widescreen sub-four pound laptop category and is based on Intel’s Santa Rosa technology. The U3 is one of the few laptops in … Read more

HP 2710p – Up to $505 Off Select Models

Those of you sitting on the fence, about whether or not to get HP Compaq’s latest ultraportable Tablet PC/laptop, the HP 2710p, this might help make up your mind: James Kendrick noticed that some models are up to $505 off, through October 31, 2007. Keep … Read more

Apple Ultraportable on September 5th?

Apple Just over a month and a half ago, there were rumors of some kind of “Ultra-thin, Ultra-light” Apple notebook. They concerned an ultraportable Mac with a 12″ widescreen display (something the 12″ iBooks and PowerBooks didn’t have), that weighed around three pounds, and was around 3/4″ thick (very doable with today’s LED-backlit displays). That did not come to pass at the time.

Low and behold, tomorrow, September 5th, there is going to be a major announcement from Apple, with a definite iPod flavor and potentially a Beatles theme. You can view the invitation at AppleInsider.com – it features a yellowish motif and the words “The beat goes on”. Depending on what era you first started listening to music, that either invokes memories of Sonny and Cher, or thoughts of the Beatles’ final press release from April 10, 1970:

Spring is here and Leeds play Chelsea tomorrow and Ringo and John and George and Paul are alive and well and full of hope.

The world is still spinning and so are we and so are you.

When the spinning stops — that’ll be the time to worry, not before.

Until then, the Beatles are alive and well and the beat goes on, the beat goes on.

It’s no secret that Apple (Steve Jobs) has been wanting to add the Beatles to iTunes, and so far three out of the four Beatles’ solo libraries have been added, or are in the process of being added. I think it’s pretty safe to say that they are adding the Beatles (especially now that the lawsuit between Apple, Inc., and Apple Records is over). I wouldn’t be surprised to see new iPods as well.

However, I’m not here to discuss iPods and the Beatles (although I like both), I was asked by a couple of people what I thought, and here goes:

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