madison

Has webOS 1.4 won me over to the new Palm Pre Plus?

By | February 28, 2010, 8:26am PST

Summary: My earlier review of the Palm Pre Plus found a few hardware faults, but with a new device and the webOS 1.4 update I am singing a new tune. A Pre Plus may soon be added to my smartphone collection thanks to these improvements.

I posted my review of the Verizon Palm Pre Plus back on 17 February and as you can read most of my cons had to do with the hardware. A local Verizon representative reached out and asked if I wanted to try another device since that unit sounded like it my be faulty. I picked up a Palm Pre Plus and Pixi Plus to try out for a couple of weeks and think that a couple of my concerns (wobbly screen and random shutdowns) were related to that particular device. Palm also just released the major webOS 1.4 update for all US Pre, Pre Plus, Pixi, and Pixi Plus devices over the weekend. I still think that better hardware needs to be created running the webOS operating system, but have to say webOS is a pretty sweet operating system with the 1.4 update and if I was a Verizon or Sprint customer I would definitely consider one of these devices. Actually, I may soon be a Palm Pre Plus owner myself. Check out some photos of the Pixi Plus in my image gallery starting here.


Image Gallery:A few photos of the Palm Pixi Plus on Verizon Wireless. Image Gallery: Four Palm QWERTY keyboards width= Image Gallery: Palm Pixi Plus in hand

webOS 1.4 update

The full changelog for Verizon Palm Pre Plus and Pixi Plus devices is up on the Palm website. As you can see it is very similar to the Sprint changelog, with the exception of the Sprint apps and Palm Mobile Hotspot on Verizon devices. Some of the key improvements for me that make these webOS devices compelling are:

  • Video capture, editing, and upload capability
  • Customization of calendar notification sounds in the Calendar
  • Full hyperlink support for phone numbers and email addresses in Calendar, Memos, web browser, and Email applications
  • Global Address Lookup appears in universal search as a one-tap option
  • You can forward text messages via email
  • Multiple calls to the same person in call history are grouped into single entry so you don’t see a full list of just the same person
  • Better overall performance
  • Custom ringtone

Some other updates that I think enhance the Palm products are:

  • YouTube URL in the App Catalog to show a video of the application in action
  • Better Bluetooth headset support for conference calls
  • You can now Sort emails in more ways (date, sender, subject)
  • You can setup Blink notifications to have the gesture area light up

After playing with 1.4 for several hours on the Palm Pre Plus and Pixi Plus I am also impressed with the startup card appearing and pulsing immediately after tapping an application icon to launch it. Before you would tap and wonder if you actually tapped correctly as you had no status for a couple seconds while the app launched. I think the apps do launch faster, but even if the launch time is the same giving me some sort of status is a nice added feature.

The ease of uploading videos to Facebook is also a nice benefit, especially since the Facebook application currently available for the Palm webOS platform is not that great.

I also have not seen either device freeze up on me, even when using the Mobile Hotspot service and application. This was a problem I had with the previous Pre Plus running on 1.3.x.

Palm Pixi Plus

The Verizon Wireless Palm Pixi Plus has the same form factor as the Sprint Palm Pixi, but includes a WiFi radio inside the same body. It is an extremely compact and pocketable device with a full QWERTY hardware keyboard. The keyboard is pretty tight and does take a bit of getting used to, but is still quite usable. The Pixi Plus does support the Mobile Hotspot application and service from Verizon Wireless. The Pixi Plus has 8GB of storage and a different processor than the Pre Plus so it cannot play the new higher end games that play quite well on the webOS platform. The camera is also only 2 megapixel versus 3.2 megapixel on the Pre Plus

The matte finish back, ringer switch, standard 3.5mm headset jack, Bluetooth and WiFi radios, and 320×400 pixel capacitive display are nice features of the Pixi Plus. I imagine this device will appeal to those looking for a very pocketable device at a low price. I have seen the Pixi Plus for sale as low as $25 through online vendors.

Palm Pre Plus

My thoughts on the Palm Pre Plus were previously posted, but I have to say the hardware on this replacement unit is better than the one I tested previously. The slider is more solid and the device did not turn off randomly like the last one. There still is some very slight display wobble if you move it during the sliding transition, but this isn’t a valid complaint since any display would do this during the transition movement and they have on me in the past with Nokia, HTC, and other slider devices.

I found this Palm Pre Plus with 1.4 on it to also FLY through the cards, be snappy at opening apps, and a real pleasure to use. The Palm App Catalog cannot match the other mobile stores at this time, but I honestly found most all the apps I wanted (Slacker, Evernote, Twitter app, ebook reader, Bible app, and more) and am not really that concerned about things like Office editing applications. Games are very good on the Palm Pre Plus, as are the applications that I do have loaded on it.

Gestures took a couple of days to get used to, but now I find myself swiping on other smartphones and think it is actually a fun and quick way to interact with the device.

Palm wrap-up

I suppose launching with Sprint made sense for Palm since Sprint had the fewest smartphones at the time and Sprint and Palm have a good relationship. Sprint also has the best monthly rate plans and included services. However, Verizon Wireless is the largest US carrier who also had a weak smartphone lineup at the time of the Palm Pre launch. I think Verizon has done a poor job of promoting the Pre Plus and Pixi Plus, but can’t say I blame them since the Motorola DROID has been a hot seller for them and hasn’t been available that long. We heard last week that Palm and Verizon have agreed to change this approach and start promoting the Palm offerings more on their network through Project JumpStart. I am not sure if this alone will be enough to get people excited about the new Palm offerings, but webOS update 1.4 goes a long ways to making the devices better.

If there was a webOS device available now on T-Mobile I would buy it in a second because the OS is quite robust and I have not seen it freeze or lock up since I have been using the replacement devices. I do see my Nexus One pop-up with application warnings from time-to-time asking me to wait or force close. Neither the Palm Pre Plus or Pixi Plus have done anything like this to me since I have been using them. I do think the Nexus One is a more solid feeling piece of hardware and would love to see a webOS device built like this.

That said, I am pretty sure I will be buying my own Palm Pre Plus on Verizon Wireless very soon. Readers know I recently bought my own Sprint Overdrive for those times when I wanted to connect to a wireless network with my laptop and other devices. I guess I am much more of a smartphone user than a tether person as I only used about 300MB on the Overdrive over the last month and found myself rarely using it the last two weeks. I do think it is a fantastic solution for those road warriors who want fast 4G speeds, but on a phone 3G is just fine and for about $10 more per month I can get the latest webOS device and always have the option to turn on the Mobile Hotspot feature when I need it for a show like CES or something.

The Palm Pre Plus and Palm Pixi Plus on Verizon Wireless are the latest webOS devices and offer a compelling experience. With their improved Exchange experience (searching the Global Address Book for one), excellent Synergy service integration, and Mobile Hotspot option these devices should appeal to business user too.

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Topics

Matthew Miller started using a Pilot 1000 in 1997 and has been writing news, reviews, and opinion pieces ever since.

Disclosure

Matthew Miller

Matthew is a professional naval architect by day and a mobile gadget freak at all other times. He purchases his own devices and then sells them on eBay or Craigslist to buy more. Many other devices are sent for review on a 30-day loaner basis and then returned to the carrier or manufacturer. If any are provided as “long term loaner units” this will be clearly disclosed in his reviews.

Biography

Matthew Miller

Matthew Miller started using a mobile devices in 1997 and has been writing news, reviews, and opinion pieces ever since. He is a co-host with GigaOM's Kevin Tofel on the MobileTechRoundup podcast and an author of three Wiley Companion series books. Matthew started using mobile devices with a US Robotics Pilot 1000 and has owned over 125 different devices running Palm, Linux, Symbian, Newton, BlackBerry, iOS, Android, webOS, Windows Mobile, and Windows Phone operating systems. His current collection includes an HTC Radar 4G, Dell Venue Pro, Apple iPad 2, HTC Flyer, Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Nokia N9, Apple iPhone 4S, MacBook Pro, and many more, along with tons of accessories and classic devices like the Apple Newton MessagePad 2100 and Sony CLIE UX50. Matthew can be found on various discussion forums under the user name of "palmsolo".

Talkback Most Recent of 19 Talkback(s)

  • These new features sound old
    Hmmm. With new features like custom ringtones
    and custom sounds for calendar events, it
    sounds like webOs is playing catch up at a very
    slow pace. Telephone hyperlinks are great (I
    think my G1 had that though). Are you really
    going to step down from a nexus one to a Palm device?? Forget for a second that the nexus
    one's hardware blows these devices out of the
    water but what about features like free navigation and native speech recognition? And
    you have to consider that Android's market
    share is blowing up while Palm's continues to
    decline so, less developers creating apps for
    WebOs. This seems like a no brainer to me but
    to each their own, I guess.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    randel77
    28th Feb 2010
  • ZDNet Blogger

    Nexus One and T-Mobile still stay
    I have a 5-line family plan with T-Mobile so will always have that account with the Nexus One (or other T-Mobile 3G device). However, as a guy who covers mobile devices and carriers I want a second line/service for other needs and this is where the Palm Pre Plus fits in. I tried AT&T and was not happy with them and Verizon has better coverage for me than Sprint so this looks like one of the best Verizon choices.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    palmsolo (aka Matthew Miller)
    28th Feb 2010
  • 5-line Sprint
    After the Pre came out, I left Verizon and went to Sprint. I am just blown-away by how much less I am spending on Sprint ($180/month) than I did with Verizon (never the same, but often >$250/month).

    As for the coverage - whenever I'm roaming (which is fairly often), I'm on the Verizon network - and there's NO EXTRA CHARGE!

    If the extra memory and hot spot functionality are worth it to you, OK - but no way would I go back to Verizon.

    I've had my Pre since OS v1.1 - and both battery and application performance have improved dramatically. This is a great phone.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    MAKsystems
    3rd Mar 2010
  • RE: These new features sound old
    While I agree with some of the substance of your comment, calling the move to a Pre Plus from the Nexus One a STEP DOWN is quite harsh.

    I've played with the Nexus One extensively, and while it's a nice device, there are two fatal flaws for me: 1) Android is still janky compared to webOS, sorry. 2) I owned the best software keyboard on the market (iPhone), and after two years, I STILL hated it. I'll never own another device that doesn't have a PHYSICAL keyboard.

    Luckily, Mr. Miller will have BOTH phones, so he will be able to offer us a unique perspective on the strengths/weaknesses of each. No need to call the Pre Plus an inferior device. It lags a bit in hardware, yes. But IMO, its OS blows Android out of the water.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    vara411
    9th Mar 2010
  • video trimming looks familiar ...
    mmmh, the video trimming looks so familiar. where did i see
    it before? in exactly the same way, even with the same
    design of the ui elements? mmh?

    matthew, you are the pundit. help me out.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    bannedfromzdnetagain
    28th Feb 2010
  • RE: video trimming looks familiar ...
    *Groan* ... iSheep are all the same. Brainwashed into thinking Apple invented everything, including something as ubiquitous as video clipping.

    How ELSE would you have recommended Palm incorporate that feature without looking like they copied Apple? Sheesh.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    vara411
    8th Mar 2010
  • RE: Has webOS 1.4 won me over to the new Palm Pre Plus?
    I have to disagree with you in terms of features. While it is
    true that each device has its pros and cons, webOS offers
    quite a few features that Android does not including:

    * multi-tasking
    * multi-touch
    * 3D gaming
    * true calendar and contact integration
    * gestures

    I'm also not seeing how the hardware "blows these devices
    out of the water." I saw a droid at the Verizon store today
    and thought it was too big and bulky to comfortably carry.

    I'm also not see where you imply that developers are not
    developing for webOS. The rate at which quality apps are
    being created for webOS seems to be greater than android.

    I don't see it as a step down, but merely as a step
    sideways. They are two different experiences.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    davel77
    28th Feb 2010
  • t
    Yeah "blow these devices out of the water" may
    have been a bit strong, but I was comparing the
    nexus not the droid and the nexus really is
    better in every technical aspect. Hate to tell
    you but android does have multi-touch,
    multitasking and 3d gaming.
    Not sure what you mean by "true calendar and
    contact integration" but I can tell you that my
    calendar appointments do have hyper-links to
    phone numbers and addresses for navigation.
    When I open my contacts it doesn't tell me if I
    have a meeting coming up with that person and
    that would be a good idea.
    As for "quality apps", that"s a bit subjective
    so it's tough to compare that point but I read
    recently read that over half of the apps for
    android are free. Android doubled it's market
    share in the last three months, so it only
    makes sense for dev's to jump on board.
    Don't get me wrong though, competition in the
    market place benefits us all.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    randel77
    1st Mar 2010
  • I owns a Pre , great phone.
    If WebOS fails we'll all be worse off for it, but far the
    best UI I've used on a phone. It's actually kinda fun to
    use.

    Once Flash is released, it'll have an application library
    larger than the iPhone or any other system. Not to
    mention possible Hulu support (I kinda doubt it, but it
    may happen)
    ZDNet Gravatar
    JoeMama_z
    28th Feb 2010
  • Look guys, the SPAMTARD strikes again...
    Wow.. 4 posts on one article. You've sunk to a new low.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Wolfie2K3
    28th Feb 2010
  • Matt - Any word on if Palm is going to make a GSM version of either one?
    If there was a webOS device available now on T-Mobile I would buy it in a second...

    I'd have to go along with that.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Wolfie2K3
    28th Feb 2010
  • rumors
    ATT is supposed to be getting it 1st half or 2010.

    and new hardware is rumored to be in the mix as well.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    JoeMama_z
    1st Mar 2010
  • ZDNet Gravatar
    doctorSpoc
    1st Mar 2010
  • Palm screens to small
    May be but all the phones with bigger screens are too damn big
    ZDNet Gravatar
    djjdevos
    1st Mar 2010
  • RE: Has webOS 1.4 won me over to the new Palm Pre Plus?
    What about Palm Pre devices using the GSM networks.
    Seems to me you couls just about tripple your customer base if you had that.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    joergsattler
    1st Mar 2010

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