Author: Derek Kessler

  • Palm App Catalog browser to submitted to Apple App Store, we sit bewildered

    iPhone App Catalog browserWe’d say the chances of this passing through Apple’s draconian approval process are slim, but we’re highly amused anyway. iPhone app developer tijo has whipped up something we never thought we’d see: a Palm App Catalog browser for the iPhone. And he’s submitted it to the iPhone App Store.

    Audacious? Without a doubt. This wonderment of science is of course thanks to the 100% open App Catalog feeds that Palm has made available to all takers (obligatory plug: PreCentral App Gallery). Should this Palm Catalog app ever make it into the iPhone App Store, we’ll start taking bets on how long it takes for Steve Jobs’ head to asplode.

    (and no – of course webOS apps won’t run on the iPhone. It’s just a gallery app, people)

    Thanks to Colonel Kernel for the tip!

  • Pre Plus and Pixi Plus now available through SFR’s website, 79€ and 29€ respectively

    Palm Pre Plus and Pixi Plus now available on SFR

    If you’ve been clamoring to get your hands on the first AZERTY webOS devices (and you happen to live in France, which would make sense), now is your time. The Palm Pre Plus and Pixi Plus have both appeared on SFR’s website as promised, and they’re available for fairly reasonable going rates. The Pre Plus is available starting at 79€ (after a 50€ mail-in-rebate), and the Pixi Plus can be had for as little as 39€, no rebate required. And if that whole contract thing isn’t your, well, thing, you can get the phones without, for 479€ and 349€, respectively. If you’re wondering how that transfers into Yankee coin, you’d be paying as little as US$105 for a Pre Plus (US$637 off-contract) or a paltry US$52 for the Pixi Plus (US$464 off-contract). Not too shabby.

    Thanks to akitayo and alchesson for the tips!

  • New in the App Catalog for 26 April 2010

    App CatalogThis weekend was a light one, as weekends usually are. But hey, we still got new and updated apps, and some of this looks rather interesting.

    New apps:

    • Defensive Warfare, $2.49, by ProDev Software: Fight off an invading army and air force in this tower-defense-esque game.
    • GPS Altitude, $0.99, by Casey Broome – L337tech.com: Use your GPS signal to determine your altitude and location.
    • Pac-Man, $1.99, by Arctic Apps Official: Eat up all the pac-dots in the maze while avoiding the four ghosts in this classic Pac-Man game.
    • Physics Reference, $0.99, by Quizmine.Com: Comprehensive physics reference covering the fundamentals, laws, and formulas of matter, motion, and energy.
    • Ping.fm for webOS, Free, by Erik C. Thauvin: Easily access your Ping.fm account to quickly update your social networks.
    • World Cup 2010, $2.00, by Thomas Haustein: Follow the results of the 2010 World Cup on your phone.

    Updated apps:

  • Pre prices on Bell drop. Again.

    Palm Pre free on Bell with 2-year contractBell Mobility wants you to take a Palm Pre off their hands, and they want you to take it real bad. Why do we say that? As our maple leaf friends at MobileSyrup have noted, the Canadian carrier has dropped their pricing for the Pre considerably. You can now get a Pre for free on a two-year contract (previously you had to sign up for three years for a free Pre), or you can buy a Pre off-contract (CDMA, mind you), for just $299.95. Canada: the time is now.

    Thanks to everybody that sent this in!

  • Paid apps back in Europe

    App CatalogIt was a brief scare, but we always like it when it wraps up with a happy ending. Palm and O2 have whipped up a fix and brought paid apps back to the European App Catalog. If you can think back all the way back to yesterday, you may recall that a second phantom webOS 1.4.1 update was pushed out in Europe, with the intention of helping move users with issues to the newer operating system. Unfortunately, it also hid all paid apps from European users, thought at least any installed apps were still there on affected phones. Thankfully, well within the promised 48-hour time frame, Pre owners on O2 can get back to the downloading of paid applications. Hugs all around.

    Thanks to Martin for the tip!

  • New in the App Catalog for 22 April 2010

    App CatalogIf you found yourself disappointed by the general lack of newness in the app drop we covered yesterday morning, then brace yourself – that disappointment is about to be wiped off the face of the planet. For a few minutes, at least. The App Catalog hath redeemed itself, with more than a dozen new apps and dozens more updates. It’s a veritable appapalooza! Of course, there’s the usual raft of cruft, but every application stores has to deal with that. So long as we get plenty of useful stuff alongside it, we’ve got no reason to be complaining. Did we get useful? Well, I’m not going to tell you until you jump past the break and take a peak at the list of new.

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  • New in the App Catalog for 21 April 2010

    App CatalogAfter the appapalooza that was Tuesday, you might find yourself disappointed by Wednesday’s app drop. Don’t be, not every day can be a rock star day. Granted, some new apps would have been nice…

    Updated apps:

  • New in the App Catalog for 20 April 2010

    App CatalogIt’s the morning, and by now you ought know what that means. It means apps! And apps we do have, with sixty odd fresh new and updated apps hitting the App Catalog since we last looked at it, you guessed it, yesterday morning. That’s how we roll, morning style. So what’s in this batch? Nothing particularly mind-blowing, but there’s still plenty of useful and fun stuff to be had. There are apps made for a reason, and for the vast majority of developers, it’s not a “because I can” app, it’s a “I think there’s a market for this app” app. That market, as it would turn out, might be you. To verify your market status, please hit the link to jump past the break.

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  • New in the App Catalog for 19 April 2010

    App CatalogLast week ended on a slow note, but this week blasted off like a rocket. To the moon. Lots of apps, both of the new and updated variety. Which is always a good thing to us. Lots of new stuff. Games from Glu Mobile, quotes from Brighthouse, public domain book collections from Appible, and much much more. Check it out, yo. After the break, naturally.

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  • New in the App Catalog for 16 April 2010

    App CatalogIt’s been a while, but they have to happen every now and then. It was a light day.

    New apps:

    • 20minutes.fr, Free, by 20minutes.fr: (French) French news site 20minutes.fr
    • Fubar, $2.00, by Bent Software: Like the party game Kings, but minus the cards.
    • High On Color, $0.99, by One in the Chamber Development: Guide your player up a never-ending series of platforms.
    • Lemonde.fr, Free, by Le Monde Interactif. (French) Not really sure on this one…
    • PagesJaunes, Free, by PagesJaunes: (French) Find local businesses.

    Updated apps:

  • AZERTY keyboards for French Pre Plus and Pixi Plus

    AZERTY Pre Plus

    Want to see the Palm Pre Plus coming to SFR soon? How about just the keyboard? Accented French characters, Euro currency sign, and AZERTY layout. No surprises here – just as with the anticipated prices.

    [source: Palm Pre France]

    Thanks to Phillipe for the tip!

  • Verizon Pre Plus and Pixi Plus, one penny apiece on Amazon

    Verizon Palm Pre Plus. $0.01 at Amazon

    If you were thinking that the Buy One Get One Free deal still running at Verizon was a good deal, but not good enough for you, we’ll happily direct you towards the fine digital folks at Amazon. The online mega retailer is now selling both the Palm Pre Plus and Palm Pixi Plus for, get this, one cent. Of course, that’s with a new two-year contract, but upfront it’s always fun to know that you can pay more in shipping than for the device itself. Except that the two-year contract also comes with free two-day shipping (you can pay more for faster times, if you’re into that sort of thing). So you’re looking at a grand total of $0.01 upfront.

    And if a new contract isn’t your thing (you still need one to activate the phone, unless you want to go all MetaDoctor on it), you can grab an off-contract Pre Plus for $619.99 or a Pixi Plus for $379.99 – or you can even upgrade your phone on contract through Amazon now. Sweet deals abound. As you may expect, this deal is more thank likely for a limited (and publicly undefined) time, so if you want to jump on the webOS bandwagon for super-cheap, now’s the time.

    [via: webOSroundup]

    Thanks to Complex Pants for the tip!

  • New in the App Catalog for 15 April 2010

    App CatalogYo, there be apps. With the most recent app drop the US App Catalog is slowly creeping towards 2000 (sitting at 1985 right now). But if you roll in all the apps available internationally, that number jumps to 2169. And that’s not including everything available in the web distribution, beta, and homebrew feeds, the available packages. Does it compare to what you can get in other app stores? Quantity-wise, not really. But we’re not concerned with quantity as the only metric of our platform-of-choice’s success. We want quality apps more than just a lot of apps. Is that what we got yesterday? Well, that’s a hard to define metric, so we’ll just let you look at the list after the break and draw your own conclusions.

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  • The Competition: iPhone OS 4.0 vs webOS in depth

    iPhone OS 4.0 - multitasking

    Multitasking. Unified email inboxes. Multiple Exchange accounts. Welcome to the future, our iPhone-toting friends. Well, eventually you’ll get there. Apple last week provided a preview of iPhone OS 4.0, and it looked vaguely familiar to those of us that have been using webOS. There are two truly big features that will be part of iPhone OS 4.0, with multitasking being the one that most users will care about. The implementation, however, is less than impressive.

    Here’s the thing, as Rene Ritchie over at TiPb has pointed out before, webOS’ cards metaphor for multitasking seems to be an extension of what Apple did for managing multiple open pages in mobile Safari, with a dash of gestures thrown in for good measure. If you were to ask me, I’d say that’s more than likely what Steve Jobs and Co. would have preferred to do (and probably were preparing to do) for multitasking on the iPhone. But as important as multitasking is for the future of the iPhone platform, their perception as a leading innovator is also important, so just copying what Palm has done would be a PR disaster.

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  • Palm drops Artist Series Wallpaper app for matching front with back

    Palm Artist Series Wallpaper appIf you’ve got an Artists Series back on your Palm Pixi, chances are you got it because you liked how it looked (and maybe you liked that Touchstone capability as well). If you’re the type that wants to coordinate your entire phone (wardrobe coordination option, and not necessarily encouraged), Palm has an app for you. The free Artist Series Wallpaper app lets you slap a matching pixel version of what’s on the back of your Pixi. The app comes with one wallpaper for each of the five different Artist Series backs available. So if you feel like getting on with your design on, front and back, we suggest you get on with the downloading. Of course, there’s no reason you can’t go wacky and put one of these wallpapers on if you don’t have that Artist Series back – but that’s just crazy.

    Thanks to jpgiv for the heads up!

  • New in the App Catalog for 14 April 2010

    App CatalogWell, we do gots us some apps. Plenty of apps, it would seem. Between updates and new apps, something on the order of eighty or ninety apps were dropped by our benevolent overlords of Sunnyvale. And while the majority of our app drop from yesterday was made up of updated apps (that’s nothing new – no pun intended), there were still plenty of new apps to be had. Including the HTC Sense-like aniWeather, or the first political campaign app in the form of Texas governor Rick Perry. Once you start getting official campaign apps, that’s a sign of having hit the big times, right? Regardless of what signs that entails, you can find these apps and many more, listed in alphabetical list form, immediately following this break.

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  • Adobe CEO: Flash for mobile, second half of 2010

    Adobe President and CEO Shantanu Narayen, recently spoke to Fox Business about the launch of Adobe CS5 and Apple’s resistance to putting Flash on the iPhone OS and banning of Flash-compiled apps. That’s all good and fun, but what we care about is this quote:

    We have a number of excited partners who are working aggressively with us to bring Flash to their devices, whether they be smartphones as well as handsets, and so companies like Google or RIM or Palm are going to be releasing versions of Flash on smartphones and tablets in the second half of the year.

    The first release date Adobe gave us: October 2009. Sigh.

    This does line up with what PreCentral Forum member deesugar heard from Adobe employee Antonio Flores: "As Mark indicated, we’re holding Palm to strict ship criteria but they are close. We expect that a public beta should occur in a similar timeframe to that of Android – May/June. At this time, we’re not doing a wider pre-release program."

    [via: Business Insider]

    Thanks to coasterer for the tip! Also: the irony of having to post a Flash-only video on this story is not lost on us.

  • Real Tennis on sale for $0.99, €0.99

    Real Tennis

    We always like getting in on good stuff for cheap, and Gameloft is giving us a chance to do that with some sweet PDK action. Their game, Real Tennis, is on sale for 99% of a standard currency unit worldwide, retailing for $0.99 in the US of A and €0.99 across the Atlantic in all European countries currently serviced by Palm. The sale’s only good for a few days, so if you’ve got ninety nine hundredths of your local currency to spend, this is certainly one place we’d certainly recommend looking.

    Thanks to Germansurfer for the tip!

  • Harbinger Capital Partners buys a 9.48% “passive stake” in Palm

    Philip Falcone, head of Harbinger Capital Partners

    Palm announced today that hedge fund Harbinger Capital has purchased a 9.48% “passive stake” in the company. The purchase of 16 million shares, completed on April 12, equates to an investment of approximately $83 million at Monday’s stock price. The passive stake is one with no voting powers, otherwise this large of a share would have given Harbinger significant influence over the executive board of Palm. It is worth noting that this stock purchase is of common stock (the kind traded on the New York Stock Exchange) and does not represent an additional cash infusion for Palm.

    Harbinger Capital Partners specializes in what they call “event/disaster strategies.” Their investment strategy revolves around putting money into companies they view as perched to experience significant growth and in companies that have fallen on hard financial times. Either (and both) could be used to describe their investment in Palm. Harbinger is headed by Philip Falcone, a billionaire who made his fortune from hedge fund management. The firm has made significant investments in the technology sector, and is actively engaged in the purchase and development of 4G wireless technologies. Last month Harbinger purchased satellite communications firm SkyTerra for nearly $262 million, and plans to spend as much as $4 billion building LTE network infrastructure to lease to American cellular carriers. As such, the 16 million share purchase of Palm stock is a drop in the bucket compared to how much Harbinger throws around on a daily basis.

    What this means for Palm is nearly as complicated as what Elevation Partners’ investments in the company meant (Elevation Partners currently owns 30% of Palm). While Harbinger does not hold a voting stake in Palm, they can still exert significant influence on how the company is operated. It is worth noting that there are two other areas in which Harbinger invests: corporate shorts and value investments, both of which are passive investments, and have polar opposite opinions of the investment. Corporate shorting revolves around the borrowing and sale of shares that are believe to be overvalued, followed by the purchase and return to the lender of the shares at lower cost. Value investment is the more positive of the two, “where Harbinger believes a positive catalyst for value realization is already present” and the stock is poised to ride higher.

    Given recent developments, we see the last option as the most likely. Even if it’s just Harbinger riding Palm shares into the takeover sunset and reaping a healthy profit, they see the stock value on the rise and want to take advantage of it. As speculated by StreetInsider.com, Harbinger also has the option to convert their passive stake into a vocal one should they not like what they see, and with the billions of dollars they have to play with, Harbinger could even make a bid for Palm themselves and take the company private.

  • New in the App Catalog for 13 April 2010

    App CatalogWith all the potential doom and gloom surrounding Palm right now, it’s always nice to be able to say that there is some good news to be had. And if anything qualifies as good news, it’s apps, right? Of course it is. And while we’re not ones to say “the more the better” when it comes to apps (though we will to sales numbers, profits, and the like), right now we’ll take what we can get. Though quality never hurts. The new app drop for yesterday didn’t have anything particularly amazing, though at least it wasn’t overflowing with less-than-desirables. It’s all listed for you, after ye olde break.

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