vibol hou

Impressions after two weeks with the Palm Pre Plus – Review, Pros and Cons

Palm Pre Plus

Having decided to go back to Verizon after two years of AT&T, I started shopping for a new smartphone. My poor experience with the Blackberry Bold really made me shy away from spending more money on a new Blackberry — I was on my 4th replacement Blackberry Bold by the time the one-year warranty ran out on the phone. The shoddy data network and mediocre voice quality of the AT&T network were important factors for my switch to Verizon.

My choice of carrier meant that the iPhone was out, though the lack of a physical keyboard took the iPhone out long ago. That left me to choose between a Google Android phone or a Palm webOS phone. With a keyboard being a requirement, I could choose from the Motorola Droid, Palm Pixi Plus or the Palm Pre Plus.

I spent some time with a Motorola Droid a few days after it was released, but I wasn’t awed by the user experience. The UI felt like it was cobbled together and the keyboard was… well, was it really a keyboard? It was harder to type on than those old Casio calculator watches that had the same flat grid for a keyboard. Sometimes I wonder… when taking the time to build a product, months are spent on engineering something but sometimes it’s obvious that very little time is spent allowing target users to touch the device. That Droid keyboard is one of these situations; call it user experience ignorance. Apple does wonderful things with their hardware with incredible attention to detail; take the headphone jack, for instance, that triples as a headphone jack, an optical jack *and* a headset jack. Why can’t other companies do the same? It’s not always about what device has the most features; a lot of times it’s better to just do one thing extremely well and leave out the rest.

So I guess that left me with the Palm Pre Plus as the only choice left. I did a lot of reading and spent some time with the Palm Pre Plus before I decided to buy it. I read a lot of mixed reviews about the product, some from angry iPhone users that didn’t feel the phone lived up to they hype, others on forums complaining about hardware issues and so on and so forth… I don’t tend to believe things until I see them, so I went to try the phone out myself.

The story that follows is quite an interesting one in several ways. I knew of the Palm Pre’s mediocre sales in the market and was always curious about why they were doing poorly. Perhaps it is because I was one of the many people who believed that the Palm Pre was going to be a dud when it first came out. I never had a good impression of Palm, their software nor their devices. The company has had such a fractured past with product development that I stopped caring about them. When a friend of mine purchase the Palm Pre from Sprint on release day, told me how much he loved it and showed it to me, I dismissed the phone without so much as a thought. It’s a Palm, I thought, how great could it be?

Fast forward a whole year and now I’m sitting here contemplating buying one. Many of the choices on the market just don’t reflect what I need, but this phone seems to have it all: keyboard, touchscreen, good form factor, clear screen, a selection of apps and tethering on steroids (it can act as a WiFi router). I went to a real Verizon store (not one of those lookalike independent stores) to try one out and hit my first road bump: the in-store demo unit was broken. It was stuck on the Palm loading screen. Not starting off so well, I thought. I asked the manager if he had one I could take a look at and his response was “don’t buy that phone, those guys are going out of business.” I guess he hadn’t heard of HP’s recent acquisition of Palm. A few questions later and it was obvious to me that the store was not interested in selling the Pre. I was given a variety of reasons to stay away from Palm, but the kicker was the redirect to their newest Droid Incredible.

I still wanted to try the Palm Pre Plus so I eventually found a store that had one. It was an independent shop and the guy selling phones had a Pre Plus strapped to his belt. He was kind enough to  allow me to use his phone as we talked about his impressions of the Pre Plus. “How do you like it?”, I asked him. “It’s a simple phone. I don’t mind it but I like being able to tinker with the settings.” He told me about the back gesture as he handed it over and it took me a few seconds to figure out the rest.

After spending an hour at the store with the phone, I decided to buy it. My impressions were positive overall then and two weeks and one application developed later, they remain the same now. The phone does have some issues, but they are problems that can be solved with software updates. Here are some highlights of the pros and cons from my last two weeks with it.

Palm Pre Plus Pros

Palm Pre Plus Cons (and Complaints)

I haven’t played a single game on my Pre since I got it. I use it mostly for email and business and it works like a charm for that. However, I read that it has a dedicated GPU for 3D graphics so games should be pretty impressive once the apps start rolling in.

Despite its inadequacies, I’ll be keeping this phone. It does the things I need it to do well enough to offset those things it doesn’t do well. Since Verizon is giving away the Mobile Hotspot for free, the cost savings from not having to pay $40/month for tethering will save me $480 this year and pretty much offset the cost of the phone and some service.

I have faith that Palm’s architecture and software roadmap around the phone is built in such a way that the concerns I have with it today will be remedied with a future software update. I say this because the open-source webOS movements (Preware, Homebrew) have already patched up many of the things they’ve found with the phone. If I wanted to fix the issue where closing my phone should end a call, there’s a patch for that. Palm just needs to take the time to LISTEN to its customers and developers and quickly incorporate those enhancements into the phone’s software.


2 Comments

As a Palm Pre owner since 6/6/09 (Sprint’s release day), I have a few comments:

1) I’m surprised that you didn’t comment on speed. It’s one of the things that irritates me: the phone gets inconsistently laggy. Of course, that’s on my Pre w/only 256MB RAM compared to your Pre Plus w/512MB RAM.

2) There’s a patch in preware to hang up the phone when you close it. It’s called “Closer Slider to End”. I prefer the one where it only ends “regular calls” e.g. if you have a headset on or are using speaker phone, closing the slider does not hang up those calls.

Posted by dullgeek on 23 May 2010 @ 6pm

I’ve gotten some comments about speed and heat with Sprint’s Pre, but I can’t say that I’ve experienced that myself yet. Another friend of mine had two Sprint Pres, each of which were swapped out at least 2 times for hardware issues (heat, bad speakerphone, etc.) I have experienced sluggish moments, but nothing remarkable when compared to my Blackberry Bold. I think the additional memory probably does help because the phone has to do less swapping. I heard in one of the developer videos from Palm that some apps become sluggish when the phone’s memory management swaps the app’s memory space into slower memory. This often happens to cards that have been placed in the background for a while.

Thanks for the tip about the patch. I haven’t actually installed any Homebrew/Preware patches and apps yet, but I have put the phone into developer mode for writing apps. Besides that, it’s 100% vanilla for now. I just want to be sure that if I run into issues in this honeymoon phase, it’s clear the issues are native to the software and hardware. I’ll cross that road in a couple weeks time.

Posted by Vibol on 23 May 2010 @ 7pm

Leave a Comment


Audi Driving ExperienceIchiJulian + YoshiThe Huntington LibrarySan PedroPaintball 6/27/2009Weekend Project: NemesisLong Beach Cambodian New Year Parade 2008San Francisco