http://www.psionplace.com/articles/2006/7/2006-7-21-Wi-Fi-Integration.html

By James Alan Miller
July 21, 2006

For years Wi-Fi hadn't been a priority for Palm with its PDAs, until the 
release of the Palm TX and LifeDrive Mobile manager, and today that trend 
unfortunately continues with the handheld-maker's smartphones. Not one Treo 
model on the market integrates the widely-used wireless technology. Wi-Fi is 
nearly a check off item for most other smartphone vendors nowadays, including 
Nokia, Hewlett-Packard, Samsung, those who sell HTC-built devices like Cingular 
and T-Mobile, and many others, however. Even RIM has admitted to plans to 
placing the technology in future BlackBerrys. 
Not Palm, however. But this may change soon. 

In a recent statement to the Washington Post, Palm CEO Ed Colligan said his 
company would release Wi-Fi-enabled Treos. He doesn't say when, however. 

"We do believe Wi-Fi is an important technology. There's no question that we'll 
ultimately put in our products, but at the right time," said Colligan. 

In order to leverage Wi-Fi today, Palm's models like the Treo 650 and Treo 600 
must use Enfora's bulky Wi-Fi sled. With the Windows Mobile Treo 700w, at 
least, you can use the device's SDIO slot with a more space-saving friendly 
WLAN SD card. 

So why has it taken so long for Palm to consider Wi-Fi for its smartphones? 
Because of the drain on battery life, according to Colligan. That's a bit of a 
red herring. 

As Geek.com points out, smartphones with smaller batteries than a Treo's-which 
use a standard 1800 mAH, but can go up to 2400 mAh-do just fine with Wi-Fi. 
Take the Nokia N91 and its mere 800 mAh battery, for example. 

The real reason-the same as to why it took Palm so long to make the technology 
more widely available with its PDAs-the company, unlike so many others in the 
mobile market, simply didn't see a reason to offer Wi-Fi in its smartphones. 

When PDAStreet met with Palm representatives a few months back to get a preview 
of the Treo 700p, we asked about the lack of Wi-Fi in the smartphone. Palm 
senior product manager Steve Sinclair said at the time Wi-Fi shouldn't really 
be missed because of the device's high-speed cellular-broadband EVD0 
technology. 

"No more looking for a Wi-Fi hot spot, let alone paying for a Wi-Fi hot spot," 
Sinclair asserted. There's a simplicity and convenience in knowing you can get 
broadband access wherever you are, and you pay your carrier a nominal fee to 
have this feature on your regular cellular bill, he added. 

Another Palm rep emphasized how he didn't have to pay hotel Wi-Fi fees because 
newer Treos support for dial-up networking, which allows users to leverage 
those smartphones as a means to access the Internet or corporate network from a 
laptop via a Bluetooth or USB connection. 

Perhaps what Colligan's statement to the Post indicates is a growing awareness 
on the part of Palm that it is not one or the other (Wi-Fi or cellular 3G) that 
consumers want, but both. It's about time. 

And with dual-mode technology, which seamlessly hands offs calls and data 
connections between cellular and Wi-Fi networks, depending on which is best or 
most cost effective at a given moment, on the near horizon, it's probably best 
that the company finally starts to integrate WLAN into its smartphones if it 
wants to keep up with competitors. 

There are rumors that an upcoming Windows Mobile Treo, codenamed Lennon, may 
integrate Wi-Fi. This device could be headed for Cingular by the end of the 
year. And it may be similar, if not the same, as the GSM 3G/UMTS Treo (possibly 
named the Treo 750v) slated for Vodafone this fall. 

The worldwide carrier giant just setup a Web page for the smartphone, which 
will enable its customers to send and receive data (e-mail, video and the Web, 
for example) at about 400 to 700 kbps; comparable to what CDMA/EVDO-operators 
like Sprint and Verizon offer for Palm's Treo 700w and Treo 700p in the U.S. 

The Windows Mobile 5.0 for Pocket PC Phone device will also support Microsoft's 
Messaging and Security Feature Pack for Exchange to deliver push e-mail out of 
the box.





"Embora ninguém possa voltar atrás e fazer um novo começo, qualquer um pode 
começar agora e fazer um novo fim." Chico Xavier (1910-2002)


http://bananasdigital.blogspot.com/

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