Reprinted from TidBITS#801/17-Oct-05 with permission.
Copyright (C) 2005, TidBITS. All rights reserved.
http://www.tidbits.com/

Cheap Palm, Connected Palm
--------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>

  Before Apple started teasing the press last Wednesday in a cell
  phone-unfriendly auditorium, Palm announced their two latest
  handheld organizers, both of which come with Mac OS X support
  out of the box.

<http://www.palm.com/us/>

  Palm, Inc. dropped the Zire and Tungsten "sub-brand" names, as
  they called them, keeping just the initials. The $100 Palm Z22 is
  aimed at casual users who can't always remember to keep a battery
  charged, while the $300 TX offers greater connectivity at a mid-
  range price.

<http://www.palm.com/us/products/handhelds/z22/>
<http://www.palm.com/us/products/handhelds/tx/>


**Palm Z22** -- The Z22 comes with infrared and a mini-USB port
  (with a special cable), but more cleverly includes 32 MB of
  flash RAM (which doesn't lose its data if the battery goes dead).
  The Z22 works with Mac OS X 10.2.8 to 10.4.x, Windows 2000,
  and Windows XP.

  Palm hopes that this model will appeal to folks who want to be
  able to run Palm applications and have a portable device with
  a color screen (160 by 160 pixels), and who will find the price
  point appealing. Palm also understands that the primary problem
  for this audience is, in fact, keeping the battery charged.
  The non-volatile memory is a great idea.

  The Z22 comes with a USB sync cable (but doesn't require or
  include a cradle). The Z22 also comes with an AC adapter and
  a selection of built-in software, including a few games.


**Palm TX** -- The Palm TX will attempt to work its magic on a
  different audience: one that wants the portability of a small
  computing device along with Internet connectivity and a good media
  player. It comes with infrared, Bluetooth 1.1, and Wi-Fi built-in,
  128 MB of memory, and a massive 320 by 480 pixel screen.

  The screen orientation can change from landscape to portrait with
  a single click, making it easier to view Web pages and videos.
  The device has an SD/SDIO slot that can accept cards up to 2 GB
  in size (Palm lists a 2 GB card as coming soon on their in-house
  store for $250).

  Out of the box, the device can play only MP3s using PocketTunes,
  but an upgrade to the Deluxe version enables playback of WMA files
  and Plays4Sure-protected files and streaming media from compatible
  services like Rhapsody. This is one way a Mac user could gain
  access to those subscription music services, as none work on
  the Mac.

<http://www.pocket-tunes.com/>

  Transferring music from a Mac requires an SD card, which appears
  on the Mac desktop as if the Palm TX were just another USB storage
  device. The PocketTunes Deluxe version doesn't add playback for
  AAC or Protected AAC (used by the iTunes Music Store) because
  Apple doesn't license its FairPlay digital rights management
  system.

  Palm bundles a variety of Palm software, but two of the three
  third-party packages that Palm highlighted in its announcement
  have some issues with the Mac. Avvenu is a remote desktop file
  access program, but it works only on computers running Windows
  XP SP1 or later. DataViz's Documents To Go handles opening and
  editing Microsoft Office documents; Mac PowerPoint files can
  be viewed but not edited. It also reads specially converted
  PDF files, although a later version promises to be able to
  open them without conversion.

  Finally, although it's only sold separately, Palm's pre-release
  briefing and press release both mentioned a subscription-based
  television service called MobiTV that should work well over
  Wi-Fi. MobiTV's pricing hasn't been set in this trial phase,
  but they expect to offer at least 10 channels of news, sports,
  and entertainment, growing over time.

<http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?
ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20051011005023&newsLang=en>
<http://www.mobitv.com/>


**Video, Video, Everywhere** -- I couldn't help being struck by
  the differences between Apple's new 30 GB video iPod and the Palm
  TX, both of which cost $300. The new iPod has a 240 by 320 pixel
  screen, half the area of the Palm TX's screen, and a 30 GB hard
  drive that dwarfs the TX's 128 MB of RAM. The Palm features four
  connection methods, three of them wireless; the iPod has only its
  dock connector. Out of the box, the iPod can play several music
  formats, but offers no option for Microsoft DRM-protected tunes
  or WMA (without conversion); the TX plays only MP3s and WMA
  (protected and not) with a separate $35 upgrade.

  That's where the feature-to-feature comparison ends. The Palm is
  a general purpose computational device with an operating system
  supported by a microcosm of Palm OS developers. It can play video
  and music, edit documents, run terminal sessions, and browse
  the Web.

  The iPod plays music and video. Apple has secured music and video
  licensing rights and one assumes much more content will be coming
  down the pipe. Palm has none. Though many people may not realize
  it, the iPod provides a variety of built-in PDA-like features,
  along with its capability to act as an external hard drive
  (see Steve Sande's "Take Control of Your iPod: Beyond the Music"
  for details). But there's no way to write new software for the
  iPod, and it seems unlikely that Apple will ever open it up to
  developers.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/ipod-btm.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0025-TB801>

  This doesn't make the iPod worse in any sense. Its hard drive
  makes up much of the difference in price versus functionality,
  for instance. But it's a stark comparison, because the Palm isn't
  unusable in the way that many of the music players that compete
  with the iPod are unusable. Its interface isn't terrible. Its
  speed isn't slow. The Palm does many things quite well; the iPod
  excels at just a few tasks.

  I wouldn't have thought of comparing an iPod and a Palm head to
  head just a few days ago. Now, it's an obvious comparison.