LinuxWorld
LinuxWorld Conference and Expo August 4-7, 2008 Call for papers open until Feb. 22
Subscribe to this site with RSS

LINUXWORLD - Hands on with Palm's Foleo

I spent some time today with Palm's not-yet-released Foleo at the LinuxWorld conference here in San Francisco. Due out this summer, the US$600 not-quite-a-laptop device is small and light and might be of interest for some Treo-using mobile professionals, but most people would likely be much better served by a regular notebook.

Related links

No results were found for your search.

Your query is too restrictive.
You might want to try: small/med.business

The Foleo is the first Linux-based item from Palm, and touts an easy one-button e-mail sync over Bluetooth with Treo smartphones (both Palm OS and Windows Mobile versions). It has a 416Mhz processor, 256MB of flash memory and 128MB of ram, but no hard drive. The 10.2 inch screen has a 1024x600 resolution, and it has 802.11b and Bluetooth 1.2 wireless capabilities.

There's a single USB port, along with slots that can accept SD or compact flash memory cards (Palm says they've tested cards up to 4GB). And you can connect the Foleo to an external display, which will use a 1024x768 resolution.

As the Palm guys at the conference put it, the Foleo is meant to be "what happens when a PDA grows up," rather than a shrunk-down laptop. The applications are similar in look and feel to what you'd use on a smartphone, but are of course easier to use with the larger screen and full-size keyboard.

But the Foleo is far more limited than any given smartphone in terms of programs. It has 14 programs, including a basic word processor from Dataviz, a Palm calendar and mail program, and a Web browser based on Opera 9.

The browser supports Flash 7, but not Flash video. And you don't get Opera's tabbed browsing.

The problem is that you can't use the large array of Palm OS or Windows Mobile apps on a Foleo, unless the company or person who wrote the app reworks it for the new device.

And you likewise won't be able to use Linux apps unless someone reworks them for the Foleo. The device uses a Linux kernel (2.4 now, 2.6 is coming) but has a custom GUI interface that means more work than a simple re-compile to get an app to work.

Palm plans to release a software developer's kit to make this re-development possible for Treo and Linux apps, and some companies are already using it to get their games and remote desktop utilities ready.

1 | 2 |  Next >

For more PC news, visit PC World. Story copyright PC World Communications, Inc.

React: Give us your thoughts on the issues here.
Use this form to start a public discussion with other Linux World users on this article.
Log In | Register for an account (Why you should)

Note: Register to have your user name appear; otherwise your comment will show up as "Anonymous."

*Anonymous comments will only appear once they are approved by the moderator.

Newsletter sign-up

Sign up for one of Network World's newsletters compliments of Linux World

Linux & Open Source News Alert
Web Applications Alert
Video & Podcast Alert
Security: Threat  Alert
Virtualization Alert

Email Address: