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TECHNOLOGY => Computing and Internet => Topic started by: ayodele on Jan 27, 2010, 12:00 AM

Title: Reviews of Palm Pre Plus - What a facet of Technological Growth!
Post by: ayodele on Jan 27, 2010, 12:00 AM
(http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/4/2010/01/500x_palmpreplustop.jpg) (http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/4/2010/01/palmpreplustop.jpg)Sprint customers: If you're worried that you bought a first gen Palm Pre (http://gizmodo.com/tag/palmpre/) only to watch helplessly as Palm released a better Pre on Verizon, stop. The Palm Pre Plus (http://gizmodo.com/tag/palmpreplus/) is essentially the same phone as the Palm Pre.

Sure, there are minor hardware differences—most notably the doubling of the RAM and the storage space—but it essentially feels like the same phone.What's changed in the hardwareThe three most visible changes you'll notice are the removed front button, the matted inductive-charging-capable backplate and the slightly improved keyboard.

Palm realized with the Palm Pixi that a front button was unnecessary, since it broke up the smooth finish of the face, and replaced it with a touch-sensitive button instead. It's what the Pre should have been like in the first place. The new touch button works fine, and within a few minutes you'll barely even miss the hardware key like you would never miss a sixth toe you never had.

(http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/4/2010/01/500x_palmprepluskeyboard.jpg) (http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/4/2010/01/palmprepluskeyboard.jpg)The keyboard has been upgraded as well, made much less mushy with more tactile feedback when you hit a key—another lesson Palm learned from the Pixi. You'll type faster and more accurately with these keys compared to the original Pre, even though they don't raise up any higher off the body and their layout remains unchanged.

The Touchstone-compatible inductive backing comes standard on the Pre Plus (http://gizmodo.com/tag/preplus/). Palm effectively lowered the cost of their inductive charger by $20—it's $70 on Sprint, which comes with the back, and $50 on Verizon, which doesn't—and makes the accessory all the easier to justify buying. Even if you don't go the wireless charging route, the matted, inductive finish makes the phone a lot classier and less prone to fingerprint smudging.Everything else is the sameThat same cheese-cutting bottom edge of the phone is still there, and the overall mold of the device is exactly what we saw with the first Pre. There's no change in camera, processor, graphical capability or screen. And, luckily for Pre owners, the software is identical, too.

Basically, if you didn't like the original Pre, you won't like the Pre Plus any more than before. But if you did like the Pre and didn't want to jump to Sprint, Palm's graciously brought it to you.

(http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/4/2010/01/500x_palmpreplusback.jpg) (http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/4/2010/01/palmpreplusback.jpg)How does it compare to the original in performance?Both phones took almost exactly two minutes to boot up, side by side. Flicking around, browsing websites, listening to music and answering emails—in any of these routine tasks, you'd never tell the two phones apart through blind testing. However, there is a slight difference when you start getting to heavy multitasking.

The increased RAM starts to be utilized when you open a LOT of apps—I'm talking about ten or more, something you normally wouldn't do unless you were really bored, really forgetful or really lazy about closing your apps. Once you have all these things open at once, you'll notice that the old Pre takes somewhere between 5 to 10 seconds longer to start up new applications than the Pre Plus. While this improvement may be handy for some, the fact that the discrepancy is only 5 to 10 seconds is a testament to how well the multitasking memory allocation worked in the original Pre. Once all these apps are open, there isn't much difference, but switching around is a bit faster.

(http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/4/2010/01/thumb160x_hotspot.jpg)Mobile HotspotWhile the Sprint Pre lacks tethering, Verizon's Palm Plus includes an excellent Mobile Hotspot app that's quite simple to use. It's essentially the same as other tethering apps out there: Fire up the app, set a hotspot password and switch on the tethering. Any Wi-Fi device (laptops, phones) will see the broadcasted network and be able to connect to it as you would any other hotspot.

Read more: Palm Pre Plus Review (http://gizmodo.com/5453043/palm-pre-plus-review)
Title: Re: Reviews of Palm Pre Plus - What a facet of Technological Growth!
Post by: dragonball on Jul 07, 2011, 09:43 PM


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