Palm Pre to go on sale on Tax Day? Sprint toes the line on ship date
Sprint goes no further than to say ship date in first half of year (see video below of Classic emulator)
April 6, 2009 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - Reports circulated on a Palm Inc. user forum that the highly anticipated Palm Pre smartphone would be available on Tax Day, April 15, but a spokesman for the Pre's wireless carrier would only say that the device would ship in the first half of the year.
A posting by someone identified as "Inittowinit" on the Everything Treo forum claimed that a Sprint Nextel Corp. customer-service representative on Saturday said that the Pre would be available on April 15 or 16 and that it would cost $300 after discounts with a two-year agreement. However, the poster added that the April date seemed too early, given the absence of any Palm advertising for the new smartphone.
Palm officials could not be reached for comment, and a Sprint spokesman said that Sprint is sticking with its original statement that the shipping date will be in the first half of 2009.
Other forum contributors cast doubt on the April 15 release, noting Sprint has tended to release phones on Sundays, while April 15 is a Wednesday. Still other contributors said they had also heard separately of the April 15 release.The potential release date made some sense, however, following Palm's April 1 release of more Palm Pre software details. Included in those details was an announcement that the Palm Pre will run an emulator application called Classic, designed by MotionApps that will allow most of the 30,000 Palm OS applications to run on the Pre's WebOS, the new software created for the Palm Pre and future Palm devices. Neither Palm nor MotionApps released the price of the emulator.
The inability of WebOS to run old Palm OS applications prompted heavy criticism by longtime Palm OS users when the Pre was announced in January. However, Palm officials had said all along that they would allow third parties to provide the emulation capability.In a demonstration captured on video (see below), Palm product manager Tim Pettitt noted that users of older Palm devices will port applications from a PC to the Palm Pre by connecting a USB cable to both and copying applications into the Classic applications folder on the Pre. The WebOS treats the PalmOS applications as "cards," which is Palm's term for how individual applications or files appear on the Pre interface.
However, Palm OS applications running in Classic won't be able to use core WebOS functionality, the company said in a statement. It noted that it is working with partners to make sure that popular Palm OS apps are "optimized to take advantage of everything WebOS has to offer."
The Classic emulator won instant praise from forum contributors. "Honestly, I thought something like this was gonna take 6 months to a year to come out. I have [a] grin from ear to ear," wrote a forum contributor identified as "Lynx."
Read more about mobile and wireless in Computerworld's Mobile and Wireless Knowledge Center.
Palm pre
Additional Resources



Learn the important issues you must consider before starting your next mobility initiative. Get your mobility white paper from IDC now, compliments of Sybase.
White Papers & Webcasts
Accelerating Your Mobile Workers: Controlling the Uncontrollable
Today's workforce is truly mobile. Unlike the managed environment of the office LAN, remote users face many challenges to being productive while out...
eGuide: Enterprise Security
Smart Security Strategies for 2010. Read now!
Managing Laptops Outside the Office
Learn how you can reduce costs by tracking mobile computers no matter where they are located.
How to Improve Remote User Satisfaction and Maximize ROI by Using SSL VPNs
Download this white paper today!
Mobile U Webinar
Watch Now!
The New Mobile Order
Download Now
4G Ahead Video Program
Uncover the features and benefits of the two leading 4G technologies for enterprises considering future deployment.
WAN Application Delivery for Executives
Learn how to simplify server and application administration without creating performance problems for distributed users.
Horror stories: Managing IT Across Multiple Locations
How one extra sharp IT manager eliminates daily agony, hassle and repetition.

