Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Carriers Reveal Storm2, Palm Pixi

New York - Verizon Wireless priced the BlackBerry Storm2 smartphone at $179.99, and Sprint priced Palm's Pixi at $99.99.

BlackBerry Storm2

Verizon’s BlackBerry Storm2 becomes available Oct. 28 at $179.99.

The Storm goes on sale Oct. 28 through Verizon Wireless Communications stores, www.verizonwireless.com, business sales channels, and indirect channels. Its $179.99 price is after a $100 mail-in rebate with a new two-year contract on a voice plan that includes email and Web access or with a BlackBerry email and Web plan. Data plans for the smartphone begin at $29.99 when added to any Verizon Nationwide voice plan. The rebate takes the form of a debit card.

The Storm2's BlackBerry OS 5 is also available as a free update to owners of the existing Storm. The OS is available today from www.blackberry.com/update or www.verizonwireless.com/storm.

For its part, Sprint announced Nov. 15 availability of Palm's second smartphone based on Palm's WebOS. Its $99.99 price is with two-year service agreement after $50 instant rebate and $100 mail-in rebate. The price requires activation on a pricing plan that includes unlimited data, including a plan that starts at $69.99. It will be available at Sprint stores, online at www.sprint.com, through telesales at 1-800-SPRINT1, and at Best Buy, RadioShack and select Walmart stores.

The Storm2, Research In Motion's second-generation touchscreen phone, will offer a more responsive touchscreen, more accurate typing on its virtual keyboard and other enhancements compared with its predecessor, Verizon said. It will also get Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g, which its predecessor lacked.

Palm_Pixi
Sprint’s Palm Pixi
Sprint’s Palm Pixi at $99.99 becomes available Nov. 15.

Like Verizon's first Storm, launched late last year at $199 but currently retailing for $49, the Storm2 operates in 3G EV-DO Rev. A mode in the Verizon network and in 3G HSDPA mode in 2.1GHz-band networks overseas. Also like its predecessor, the Storm2 lacks a hard dialing keypad or QWERTY keypad, and their overall dimensions are the same, as is the 3.25-inch display size. Both also feature GPS for location-based applications, 3.2-megapixel camera and 1,400 mAhr battery.

With a new electronic version of SurePress touchscreen technology replacing a mechanical version, the new model responds quickly to gentle presses, the company said. The new SurePress also accelerates typing by allowing users to type one letter with one finger while another finger might still be resting on another letter. The enhancement also enables multi-key actions such as Shift- or Alt-key combinations.

The new model also adds BlackBerry OS 5, which delivers usability and visual enhancements including inertial scrolling, enabling finger-flick scrolling through contacts, pictures and the like. The OS also provides spin boxes to make it easier to set dates and times, gradient shading on buttons, more animation, sharper icons, brighter colors and blacker blacks than provided by the BlackBerry OS 4.7, RIM said.

In another change, a QWERTY-style keyboard will appear when the phone is held in portrait and landscape orientation. The phones' predecessor displayed a QWERTY keyboard in landscape mode but, in portrait mode, it displayed a dialing keypad with multiple letters per number.

In other changes, the new model incorporates 2GB of embedded memory, up from 1GB, and a microSD/SDHC slot with ability to support future 32GB cards, up from 16GB.

A proximity sensor blanks out the screen when a user is talking on the phone to prevent accidental touchscreen clicks.

The Pixi, a smaller and lighter version of Palm's Pre smartphone, features a fixed QWERTY keyboard compared to the Pre's slide-down QWERTY keyboard, and lacks the Pre's WiFi 802.11 b/g. Pixi's 2.63-inch 320x400-pixel TFT display is smaller than the Pre's 3.1-inch 320x480 display. The 3.51-ounce, 2.17x4.37x0.43-inch Pixi also comes with a new Facebook application.

Both Palm devices feature CDMA 1x EV-DO Rev. A 3G cellular technology, and both use Palm's new WebOS, which features a multitouch motion user interface, runs multiple live applications simultaneously, and stacks live screens from multiple applications on top of one another like a deck of cards. Consumers swipe a finger across the top card to "deal" it away, revealing the card underneath. Users can also stack multiple live Web pages or multiple email messages on top of one another.

Both Palm devices also feature Synergy, a feature that aggregates contact lists, calendar items and email messages from multiple sources, including Web-based sources. The contact list, for example, automatically combines contacts lists from a user's Outlook, Facebook, Google and other contact lists.

Like the Pre, the Pixi features integrated GPS, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR with stereo support, and 8GB embedded memory. The resolution of the Pixi camera is 2 megapixels compared to the Pre's 3-megapixel camera.

The Pixi, however, adds removable rubberized back cover that can be swapped with a series of artist-designed, limited-edition back covers for personalization.

Other Pixi features include ability to link information on Google, Facebook and Exchange ActiveSync into a single view. It also ties in information from Yahoo! and LinkedIn. Users can get their Yahoo! contacts, calendar and IM, and access their LinkedIn contacts, including job titles. Users can also start a conversation on AIM Instant Messenger, Google Talk or Yahoo! Messenger and continue it by text message later, with conversation appearing as a single thread.

The device can also sync with iTunes, and it supports downloadable apps from the Palm Beta App Catalog. Support is included for SMS and MMS messaging and IM messaging, including Google Talk, AIM and Yahoo!

For email, the Pixi supports Exchange ActiveSync for access to corporate Microsoft Exchange servers as well as personal email support, including Google push, Yahoo! push, POP3 and IMAP.

Also like the Pre, the Pixi features removable rechargeable battery and a proximity sensor that automatically disables the touchscreen and turns off the display when the phone is placed against the ear. A light sensor dims the display in low-light conditions, and aAn accelerometer automatically orients web pages and photos into portrait or landscape mode.

It comes with standard 3.5mm headset jack and LED flash.

Although the Pixi comes with charger in the box, the smartphone is also compatible with the Palm Pre's Touchstone inductive charging dock, which lets users place the Pixi on top of the dock without plugging it into the dock. Touchstone is available in Sprint stores nationwide for $79.99 and includes a Touchstone charger and USB wall charger. The Pixi Touchstone back cover, which enables inductance charging is also available for $19.99 (plus taxes).

The Pre's price was recently reduced to $149 from $199 with two-year service agreement after $150 instant rebate and after $100 mail-in rebate.

Source: Twice By Joseph Palenchar -- TWICE, 10/26/2009

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