Mobile Archives

Tuesday, October 24, 2006, at 11:54PM

Apple keeps finding more ways to drive me into bankruptcy. First they nickel and dime me with repeated assualts from iPod rollouts. Then they introduce the Mac Pro. Now comes a beefed up MacBook Pro running Intel's latest mobile processor; Core 2 Duo. This release seems to be watered down as upgrades come; aside from a new processor under the hood, nothing significant has changed over the previous models. Even pricing remains the same.

My biggest concern is the much maligned heat issue that some users complain to be so hot, the laptop can literally be used as a portable grill top. If these machines run cooler and more reliably than its predecessor, then I might bite the bullet. As it is now I don't own a Mac portable at all, in no small part to issues I keep reading about. We'll see

Check out the new MacBook Pros here.

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Thursday, August 3, 2006, at 04:10PM

The market for traditional handhelds continues to shrink, as it has done for the past three years, with the last few remaining players in this spacing taking big hits in unit sales. Smartphones are replacing the PDA, unfortunately not fast enough to offset the decline. Palm still remains the leader of this dying segment, with tallying sales of 475,000 units sold...down from 638,376 in the year ago quarter. HP reports a dismal 260,000 units sold, while Dell, who remains at the number three slot, is scraping bottom with a mere 132,050 units moved. What these figures show is that the bottom is falling out of the PDA market at a quickening pace. In fact, the numbers are so low now that the breakers are finally kicking in. By that I mean that the numbers of units sold literally don't justify the cost of development. That's especially true for Dell, where a recent report from DigiTImes indicates that Dell secretly ceased manufacturing its line of Axim Pocket PC handhelds late last year and are trying to clear out remaining inventory.

Dell isn't alone either. HP will soon follow its PC rival out the door, focussing entirely on Smartphones, leaving only Palm in this dwindling market. Naturally the more dimwitted among the Palm fanboy community will see that as some kind of victory, after all...Pocket PC will be for all intents and purposes a dead product category. However the cheering will be short lived, as Palm is doing precisely what Dell and HP are right now. As a matter of fact, I'm betting that Palm's entire handheld line has already ceased production, with no plans for further development. By early next year or mid-year there will no longer be any Palm handhelds on the market.

Friday, June 9, 2006, at 09:34PM

In a startling turn of events, Walt Mossberg chooses the PalmOS-based Treo 700p over Windows Mobile-based Motorola Q phone. Stunning!

What I love about Mossberg is that he's always predictably last in line to catch on to whats already been happening around him. I have my stopwatch set to see how long it will take before realizes that PalmOS is already dead. And when he does finally figure this out, how much longer will it be before he begins writing articles implying that he knew all along that.

It's not just Mossy either. The entire mainstream media is equally inept at recognizing a trend in motion. I just love these epiphany news titles that read "Is Microsoft starting to catch up with Palm?". Windows Mobile has been outselling PalmOS for well over two years now. PalmOS is laying in a coffin, in almost mummified form, appearing on elderly devices making its rounds on hardware like Lincoln's body on display as it makes its cross country train ride to its final resting place. After Access introduces an entirely new platform, eliminating PalmOS Garnet for good, the media will still be chanting about how many fewer taps it takes to access your data on a dead OS. Enough already! It's over, get over it!

About me

Name: Kent Pribbernow
Occupation: Creative Professional (Web designer)

"Design is the method of putting form and content together. Design, just as art, has multiple definitions; there is no single definition. Design can be art. Design can be aesthetics. Design is so simple, that's why it is so complicated."

Paul Rand

  • Believe it or not, I don't own a laptop. I generally have little need for a portable, as most of my work in done primarily in front of a workstation (actually two in fact). But on the odd occasion a laptop would be a welcome accessory. So I began researching various PC laptop models on the market today, notably Apple, and came away surprised...
  • Over the Labor Day weekend I and a fellow Mac fanboy decided to pay a visit to our nearest Mecca to all things Apple...the Apple Store located at Keystone, in Indianapolis....
  • *Movie announcer voice* "In a world...where one web browser looks and works just like any other...a small company with big ideas challenges an industry with a browser unlike any before."...
  • In many ways the evolution of mobile devices reminds me so much of another great story in the evolution of mobility...the evolution of the tank in modern warfare.


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