Right. Palm's been through a lot, and a lot of the road was downhill. But as far as I can see, the New Palm -- starting around Rubinstein's time -- has been doing pretty well given what they started with.archer6 wrote:One of my best friends from college is a senior executive with them. He's been with the brand from day one. They "used" to own the PDA space per say, but lost it, then in the years since have been up and down largely due to the fierce competition in the segment and their internal struggles. Palm, began as Palm Computing, then was acquired by U.S. Robotics, then later sold to 3Com. Each of these transitions have taken their tool on the company and 3Com has not allocated the funds to that division that it will take for them to succeed in the long run. Now emerging once again with a good product, their success will largely depend on whether they can sell enough to generate the revenues to stand on their own.
I'm fairly interested whether RIM will be able to remain relevant in the customer space. Something has to be done with the OS, but historically RIM's been much better at improving and perfecting than at remaking from scratch. The last really new thing to really be successful was the half-QWERTY format, and even there the 8100 was much more successful than the initial 7100. I'm not sure if the OS is going to be fine with just a thorough overhaul, rebuild, and maintenance, or if there has to be a complete rewrite, and if the latter, whether RIM is actually capable of doing it right. It's going to be interesting.










