The early reviews are in, and the verdict on the Palm Pre appears to be relatively positive--albeit with plenty of caveats. The highly anticipated gadget will be commercially available Saturday, and the wallets of regular shoppers ultimately will have the final say on whether the device lives up to the hype. In the meantime, read on for the nitpickings--both good and bad--by a variety of industry pundits.
And for additional Palm Pre reading:
- see our Palm Pre sound off
- check out our Palm Pre timeline
- or vote on the future of the Pre
The device seemed to live up to some expectations but fall short on others for this reporter, who played around with the Pre for just a few days. The interface does feel new and interesting with some lovely bells and whistles. But features like photo-viewing and surfing are sometimes painfully slow and social networking integration does not go as far as this correspondent hoped. --Sinead Carew, Reuters. Article
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But is it an iPhone killer, as some gadget bloggers have been asking? The Pre will be a hit, but the iPhone isn't going away. First of all, Apple's lead of 20 million phones will only grow when the new iPhone 3.0 software (and, presumably, a third iPhone model) come out shortly. Second, Palm's audience for this model is limited to the United States. It requires a CDMA network, so it works in few other countries. Third, even the Pre has its annoyances. Opening certain programs can be very slow--sometimes eight or nine seconds--and there's no progress bar or hourglass to let you know that it's still working. --David Pogue, The New York Times. Article |
...All in all, I believe the Pre is a smart, sophisticated product that will have particular appeal for those who want a physical keyboard. It is thoughtfully designed, works well and could give the iPhone and BlackBerry strong competition--but only if it fixes its app store and can attract third-party developers. --Walt Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal. Article |
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