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Technology Stocks : 3Com Corporation (COMS)
COMS 0.001300.0%Nov 7 11:47 AM EST

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To: mr.mark who wrote (43260)5/15/2000 6:53:00 PM
From: Mang Cheng  Read Replies (1) of 45548
 
"Sony's handheld plans start to take shape"
By Stephanie Miles
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
May 15, 2000, 12:55 p.m. PT

Sony is quietly gearing up the strategy behind its entry into the
handheld market, developing a family of devices with features that
will compete with other Palm licensees.

The company has been characteristically tight-lipped about details of the
device, saying only that it is developing a PDA (personal digital assistant)
with multimedia and wireless capabilities, based on Palm's operating
system, which it licensed from the handheld company last year. The
company declined to comment on specifics of the device.

But sources say the consumer electronics giant
is in fact designing a family of devices spanning
a range of market segments and target
customers. Sony is said to be developing a line
of digital devices focused on wireless
communication and capable of interacting with,
and even controlling, in some cases, other Sony
products, such as TVs and VCRs, via infrared
ports.

The company, which pioneered the portable
digital music market with the Walkman 20 years
ago and led the charge to sleeker industrial
designs in notebook PCs with its Vaio portable
computers, should not be underestimated in its
first foray into the PDA world, analysts say.

"It's very simply the brand name," said Matt
Sargent, a handheld analyst with market
research firm ARS. "When a substantial name gets behind a technology, it
adds legitimacy."

Sony's moves to date, especially its dual licensing agreements with Palm
and the European Symbian consortium, indicate the consumer electronics
company is looking far beyond the PDA market. Sony is clearly positioning
itself to play in the market for wireless voice and data products, including
smart cell phones and handheld computers, as these types of devices
become a more popular and easy way for the masses to connect to the
Internet.

"Sony really is a consumer marketing company," said David Thor, research
director of ResearchPortal.com. "Sony is looking at the consumer space
first, and the messaging business is ultimately going to be consumer-led."

This fall, Sony will introduce a sub-$200 PDA with color display, limited
wireless Internet access, multimedia capabilities and add-on storage
capabilities through its Memory Stick technology, sources say. At the same
time, the company will likely announce another, lower-end device with more
limited capabilities.

The family of products eventually will range from an inexpensive messaging
device to a high-end voice-centric product with smart cell phone capabilities,
sources say, which can easily be adapted to a range of operating systems,
including Palm and the Epoc OS from the Symbian group.

This first device, which will look like a typical PDA, will most likely include
the limited wireless messaging capabilities of the Palm VII.

As part of its strategy to include wireless Internet access of some form in all
of its products, Palm is expected to revamp the Palm VII late this summer,
coinciding with the release of the Sony device, to include improved
messaging and always-on capabilities.


These devices will use Sony's Memory Stick technology and offer more
robust multimedia functionality than current Palms, sources say, including
digital audio imaging applications.

<>The company is simultaneously working on a sub-$100 messaging product,
sources say, capable of two-way messaging. This device will offer
line-of-sight communication with other Sony devices and products, which
may include the PlayStation gaming console, through the infrared port.

Eventually, Sony is expected to begin offering smart cell phones, based on
Symbian's operating system, which is thought to be more extensible than
Palm's and more suited to operate cell phones and voice-centric devices.

"If you're making something that size and shape, people associate it with
Palm. There's brand recognition that goes along with Palm," Thor said,
noting that Palm may update its operating system to support more
applications in the future. "But the Symbian OS is more suited to a hybrid
product; it's much more flexible."

Set to be introduced as early as September, the low-end PDA has all the
makings of a "Handspring killer," according to Thor, referring to another Palm
licensee selling the Visor PDA to non-tech savvy audiences. Sony's retail
presence is much stronger than Handspring's, which just entered the retail
market last month.

Sony is most likely to take sales away from Handspring rather than
Microsoft, which has been gaining momentum recently with the release of its
PocketPC, Sargent said.

"This is really a different category," he said, noting that most Microsoft
buyers are high-end gadget lovers, while Sony is attempting to appeal to
mass-market consumers.

"All it's going to do is prevent Microsoft from going into a new space in the
future," he said.

yahoo.cnet.com

Mang
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