Story Published:
Sep 23, 2005 at 5:42 PM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 2:05 AM PDT
SAN FRANCISCO - Palm Inc. is teaming up with Microsoft
Corp. to launch a Windows-based version of the Treo smart phone,
marking the first time the handheld computer pioneer will sell a
device based on its former rival's software.
The new Treo 700 will be offered through Verizon Wireless,
according to market analyst Rob Enderle and other industry sources.
"In terms of the level of importance, this would be - in this
space - the same thing as Apple announcing they were going to be
using Intel processors," Enderle said.
The three companies have scheduled a press conference for
Monday. Spokesmen for Palm, Verizon Wireless and Microsoft declined
to comment.
The new device will run on Windows Mobile 5.0, the latest
version of the operating system that has been challenging Palm OS
for years.
Though the Palm OS dominated the industry, its lead has steadily
lost ground to Microsoft's offering, which is based on that
company's ubiquitous Windows desktop PC software and thus familiar
to more people.
Users, especially in the corporate world, have been lured to
Windows-based handhelds because they can run several programs at
once and offer better support for documents created on Windows PCs
and for Microsoft e-mail.
As well, the Palm operating system that Treos have until now run
exclusively have more limited multitasking abilities.
In the third quarter of last year, devices running Microsoft's
software outsold those with Palm OS for the first time, according
to the research firm Gartner Inc.
"No question that Microsoft has made significant inroads
compared to where they were just a couple of years ago - which was
no where," said Charles Golvin, analyst for Forrester Research.
Rumors have circulated for months that Palm was ready to embrace
a Windows platform. Palm spent years trying to fend off Microsoft's
forays into the sector.
"Microsoft in the long term wants the kind of strong position
in mobile devices that it has in PCs," Golvin said. "They would
like to have 90-percent market share on PDAs, smart phones or cell
phones.
Besides building handheld devices, Palm once produced its own
software - Microsoft's domain.
Two years ago, Palm, which was known as Palm Computing, spun off
its software division to free it up to cut deals with handheld
makers who may be competing with the hardware side of Palm. But in
the meantime, such companies as Sony Corp. drop discontinued
handhelds based on the Palm OS.
Before Japanese software company Access Co. agreed earlier this
month to pay $324 million for it, PalmSource struggled as a
standalone business.
As PalmSource's troubles mounted, analysts began wondering when
Palm Inc. might seek a more stable company to provide its operating
system.
"Microsoft understands the back end and Palm understands the
front end, and the two of them - if they can work together - they
can do some incredible things," Enderle said.