Sprint palm pre webos 2.0 update




















Exhibition will enable developers to display aspects of their existing app experience or create specialized apps for use when users have their webOS device in charge mode on the charging dock. When you search for them by name, they instantly show up at the top of the Contacts, Email, Messaging and Phone apps. Favorites make it simple to get in touch fast. OpenSearch plug-in support makes it easy to add your favorite websites to Just Type web search.

IM and buddy management. Accounts — The new Accounts app provides a single place to manage all your Synergy accounts. JS, enabling developers to create services in JavaScript. More information about the features of webOS 2.

Pre 2 is the first Palm phone with a gigahertz processor and features a 5-megapixel camera, a glass screen and a sleeker, streamlined design that still gives users the ideal combination of a vivid touchscreen and a slide-out keyboard. More information about Palm Pre 2, including features and specifications, is available at www.

Palm Pre 2 featuring webOS 2. The webOS 2. Developers will be able to purchase unlocked UMTS versions of Pre 2 in the United States to use as a canvas to build the next generation of webOS applications and services.

Don't forget to VOTE! Vote now and contribute to the industry's most relevant weekly ranking charts. View the discussion thread. For example, if you need 2 lines with 1 GB of data each, you would select 2 GB of data with the data slider below. Alex Wagner. Beau Hamilton. Palm Pre 2 and webOS 2. October 19, 0 shares 0. HP Introduces webOS 2.

Availability Palm Pre 2 featuring webOS 2. The improvements seem to be the new body which I'm not even sure is an improvement over the current Pre, since I kind of like the shape , and the 1Ghz processor which you can already get to with the Pre, via overclocking. Unless HP announces another handset soon that improves over the Pre 2, my next phone won't be a Palm. I'll be going Android. I just can't imagine what kind of bonehead thought a Pre 2 with these specs was a good idea.

Palm again would have the Zen of a beautiful schedular that people would fall in love with. It would have to be more intuitive and user-friendly like Agendus though. Build it and they will come. RE: ZEN! Is your hearing better than Palm's was? On top of that, they need to remove the silly gesture area and use it for a much-needed boost in screen size. Heck, it might even be time for some kind of optical d-pad or something to make for more intuitive one-handed operation. But the latest generation of smartphnes have become decidedly fumbly two-handed affairs to operate.

The Pre 2 is basically what the Pre Plus should've been and the Plus was what the original Pre should've been. And the Pixi simply should've never been released in the first place.

Also, have the external dimensions really changed much or have they just been refined around the edges like the Treo to w revision? I would look very seriously at any phone that could run a full-featured PIM, if something like DateBook6 was ported across and updated. For me, the top priorities are: 1 Full featured PIM at least as good as the option available on PalmOS ; 2 OS that doesn't lock developers out from innovating and integrating there apps tightly into the devices software and data e.

I followed up abosco's recommendation of Pocket Informant as a good PIM for iPhone - which looked interesting until I saw how crippled it was by Apple's restrictions e. While waiting for something can meet those needs, I've decided to go with the Nokia N the first time in 15 years my primary device is no longer a Palm - it meets all the requirements except for the PIM software so I'm still not completely free from my PalmTX and DB6 yet.

But in its favour, it has: a Excellent web browsing both the Flash-supporting built-in browser and the new Firefox ; b Great GPS software - the built-in mapping software is excellent for exploring, walking and trip planning there is also basic routing and navigation, but no voice guidance at the moment and has free lifetime access to Nokia's excellent map data - and the commercial software for voice-guided navigation is decent enough to replace a dedicated GPS nav; c The platform is extremely open, hackable and customisable, which opens up all kinds of options - there is a great Debian VM that includes OpenOffice and GIMP and gives access to the huge library of ARM-compiled Debian packages - and it can multi-boot into Android NITdroid and Meego.

The great thing for consumers at the moment is that the market seems diversified enough for a number of players to survive and to continue to spur each other on and innovate. Automagic sync and push and seamless connections to all of Google cloud services is awesome.

Not quite perfect, but closer than what shipped on my phone. Thank you for that piece of information. Tasks won't sync yet. I'm not sure if it's because I'm wanting to sync them with a Google Apps account. I checked the Market this afternoon and got an upgrade to the latest version for free. Thanks twice. I don't see this as so much of a failure on HP's part as an effort to A: get something in return for all that development.

There are some considerations to think about here. Also, the RAM is faster While we're on the subject, since when is a phone supposed to replace a 'real' camera? Will it rock the market?

I think so. I haven't tried it yet. I was going to buy it on Friday, but a pet's health emergency ate into this month's discretionary spending. Computers were made for relational data bases. This one works as close to perfect as can be, plus it is easy to create the needed database.

That should go over well in a market populated with devices that now run x and beyond. Nice to see the "new" Palm is carrying on its long standing tradition of lagging suicidally behind the rest of the industry.

Thanks CL! I have over 12, calendar entries that Companion Link transferred and synce to my palm pre plus flawlessly. I depend on this software and I just purchased a Palm Pre 2. I need this software bad. Expect an update on our progress soon! According to my palm pre… IT emailed to my gmail accounts. I opened the email accounts, but NONE of the pictures were there … suggestions?

True — syncing via Google does limit the data that can be synced. With the TouchPad, our Sync via Google method is your only options at the moment. Then setup Google on the TouchPad to sync the data back down. Is it possible to get the sync software onto the HP Touchpad as I cant find it in the catalog. Would this allow me to sync to the toucpad?

Sync via Google remains an option.



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