PDAs :
Updated: 2/16/2002; 1:54:36 PM.

 




Virtual Jenny:

Current Home Project:

Work:

Projects:

My Past Life:
including the
(the original library blog!)

Other Shifted Librarians:

Blogiography:

Click to see the XML version of this web page.


 
 

Wednesday, February 13, 2002

Qualcomm's Vision of the Wireless Future "When he finished, there were 20 brand-new, CDMA-based mobile handsets and devices arrayed on the table, the high-tech souvenirs of Belk's most recent trip to Hong Kong and Japan.... 'These are not PowerPoint slides,' Belk said. 'These are real devices that are already shipping in volume in Asia.' " [at Business 2.0]

And there's the rub. When I do my presentations, that's all I have - pictures of prototypes or of devices not available in the U.S.  Europe and Asia really are 18 months ahead of us in this area.

"Beale also discussed Qualcomm's gpsOne location technology....  It also opens the door for many new location-based services, such as traffic information and local weather forecasts. On Japan KDDI's network, there are already more than 20 location-based services available -- all of which are relatively inexpensive, costing less than $5 per month."

I'm looking forward to being able to travel and have information come to me automatically based on my location. For example, if I'm at a conference and I'm looking for a restaurant, I'd like my phone/PDA/whatever to know where I am and offer a list of nearby choices. Maybe it should tell me what movies or plays are on tonight and if there are still tickets available.  You get the idea....

"Predictably, both Belk and Beale anticipate strong growth for the wireless industry as ever-more-compelling products and services become available and the industry settles on a single communication standard. How long will that take? Belk, whose career began in the personal computing business in 1983, likened the wireless industry today to the PC business of the 1980s. 'I wouldn't worry about the wireless industry yet, it's still relatively young,' he said. 'Just look how long it took the PC industry just to get to the point of standardized parallel cables.' "

Not to beat a dead horse, but the ebook industry is even younger than PCs, and PDAs have really only come into their own during the last few years. So don't count any of these technologies out just yet.


8:52:36 AM      

More market share numbers, PalmOS down, Pocket PC up "According to the report expected to be released Wednesday, Palm saw their market share drop more than 10 percentage points in 2001 to 38.9% (5.1 million units) while the PalmOS platform still accounted for more than half of PDA sales worldwide.... The PalmOS platform's decline was the Pocket PC platform's gain with Microsoft's mobile operating system almost doubling its share of the market from 11% in 2000 to 21% in 2001.... It should also be noted that according to this report, over 20% of all PDA's shipped worldwide last year were neither Pocket PC or PalmOS based, an interesting statistic indeed. And while the numbers are slightly different from a similar report filed by NPD last month, the message is clear and that is that PalmOS share is dropping while Pocket PC share is rising." [PDABuzz.com]

Not at all surprising. I'm curious how they'll start counting the combo PDA-phones in next year's reports.


7:23:07 AM      


Comments by: YACCS
© Copyright 2002 Jenny Levine.



Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website.

 


Check this box to open links in a new window

February 2002
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
          1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28    
Jan   Mar

Posts by Category:
Accessibility
Astronomy
Blogging
Chat/IM
Cool Tools
Copyright/IP
Digital Music
Digital Video
eBooks
Fun
Gadgets
GIS
Google
GPS
Homer Library
Information Shifting
Internet
Knowledge Management
Libraries
Net Generation
PDAs
Privacy
Usability & IA
Web Design
Web Languages
Wireless
XML