SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Incorporated (QCOM)
QCOM 171.02-1.5%Dec 31 3:59 PM EST

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Craig Schilling who started this subject11/13/2000 3:22:55 PM
From: Ruffian  Read Replies (2) of 152472
 
Union of handhelds, phones tightens at Mobile
Focus
By Michael Kanellos and Wylie Wong
Staff Writers, CNET News.com
November 13, 2000, 8:05 a.m. PT

comdex LAS VEGAS--The marriage of mobile phones and personal digital assistants
will occur rapidly, if manufacturers have anything to say about it.

Hewlett-Packard, Ericsson, Motorola and others showed off upcoming products and prototypes
of devices that will integrate cellular capabilities into PDAs or vice versa at Mobile Focus, a
pre-Comdex event that took place here Sunday night.

On Monday, for instance, both HP and Casio will announce
packages designed to allow their respective Pocket PC handhelds to
take cellular traffic. For HP's Jornada, consumers will be able to buy
a Novatel Minstrel 540 wireless modem bundled with service from
Omnisky or GoAmerica, while Japan's Casio will announce a similar
deal involving GoAmerica and a Pocket Spider modem from Nextcell.

Both offerings will be similar to packages already available with
Compaq Computer's iPaq or some of Palm's
handhelds. Under these deals, users sign up for
monthly service and receive the modem at a
subsidized price. With Casio, for example, the
Pocket Spider modem costs $199 if purchased in
conjunction with GoAmerica's service. Other wireless services can
be brought in through the modem but raise the price to $249, said
Scott Nelson, product manager for Casio. The cost of service is
between $39.95 and $49 a month, depending on the carrier and the
service plan.

"It covers 80 percent of the metropolitan areas in the U.S.," Nelson
said.

HP has demonstrated wireless connections before, but this is the
first time the Palo Alto, Calif.-based company will market them with
Jornadas, said Debbie Rivers, a company representative. The Novatel
modem was designed specifically for Jornadas, but is very similar to those offered with Palm's
devices, she said.

A number of wireless modems and service offerings will be on display this week at Comdex,
according to Ed Suwanjindar, product manager of the mobile devices division at Redmond,
Wash.-based Microsoft. With the growth of the device market, the company is putting the heft of
its marketing organization behind seeding development of add-ons and other enhancements.

"Our role is in the matchmaking, making the
introductions," he said.

Cell phone manufacturers, meanwhile, are
integrating organizer capabilities into their phones.
In December, Sweden's Ericsson will begin to
market its R380 world phone in the United States,
according to company representatives. The R380 is
approximately the size of a standard cell phone, but a horizontal screen--about the size of a
package of Dentyne gum--occupies one side of the phone. The larger screen allows Ericsson to
incorporate an organizer based on the Symbian operating system.

To use the organizer, users hold the phone sideways. The R380, which will cost just under $700,
has already been released in Europe.

Motorola, of Schaumberg, Ill., unwrapped its first Java-enabled cell phone, which also doubles as
a pager and a two-way walkie-talkie.

The forthcoming phone will support the Java programming language, allowing people to download
into their phones software programs such as games, address books and calculators. It is due in
the first half of 2001 and will cost between $149 and $199.

While Ericsson and Motorola demonstrated prototypes that actually worked, Finland's Nokia
showed off a plastic prototype.

Nokia displayed a yellow, egg-shaped handheld device intended to serve as a cell phone,
personal digital assistant and camera. The phone has a color screen and supports the Epoc
operating system from Symbian. Nokia executives said the company will start releasing some of
the features in its family of cell phones next year.

Some home networking companies also demonstrated their products at the event.
SimpleDevices, a wireless start-up whose investors include Casio and wireless equipment
company Proxim, showed off three wireless Internet devices that will be available in the first
quarter of 2001. The devices included an Internet alarm clock that streams Web-based content,
such as music and news, and a music gadget that allows people to play MP3 files--i.e., music
downloaded from the Net--on their stereos.

Mountain View, Calif.-based SimpleDevices, which will partner with consumer electronics and
tech companies that will resell its products, also showed off an adapter for Palm handhelds and
other PDAs, allowing people to listen to MP3s and Net-based radio stations on the devices.

Among other companies showing devices at the evening event, Japan's Sony presented its
Digital Handicam Megapixel, a digital video camera that includes a Megapixel still video camera.
The package also includes an application called MPED Movie mode, which allows users to
compress and send 60-second films over email. The camera will cost $2,000.
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext