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Technology Stocks : PALM - The rebirth of Palm Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: mr.mark who wrote (3359)1/12/2001 2:08:32 AM
From: Mang Cheng  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6784
 
"GM joins handheld beaming craze"
By Rachel Konrad
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
January 11, 2001, 3:10 p.m. PT

DETROIT--Save a tree: Buy a handheld computer?

The 2001 North American International Auto Show is a pack rat's paradise, where
consumers can load up on free brochures, posters and fact sheets for virtually any
vehicle sold in North America. The show will open to the public Saturday and run
through Jan. 21.

But for those who don't enjoy lugging armfuls of glossy
prints or hauling tote bags laden with manufacturers'
manuals--or for tree huggers loath to consume extra
pulp--General Motors is experimenting with a solution.

At its Cadillac luxury display, the automaker features a
Palm handheld computer that beams informational
leaflets into consumers' compatible devices.
Show-goers receive the material--16K of data ranging
from specifications on the 2001 Cadillac DeVille to the
newest onboard navigation systems--in an application
for handhelds.

GM had a similar setup for the 5,000 journalists who
attended the show's four-day media preview earlier this
week. GM prepared digital versions of its full public
relations contact list, executive biographies, new
products, press events, and a map of the sprawling show floor.

Roughly 200 reporters, photographers and editors had the information beamed into
their Palms and Handspring Visors during the media preview. People who used
handhelds by Compaq Computer, Hewlett-Packard and others couldn't receive the
information.


Although only 4 percent of the attending journalists, at best, received GM's digital
contact kit, GM representatives were thrilled with the response. The company's
public relations team conceived of the idea only a few weeks ago and relied on an
outside contractor to rush together the data and create its understated,
wood-mounted display.

"We didn't really know how many
people would use it, frankly," said Len
Marsico, a GM spokesman who has
an aged Palm and hopes to upgrade
for his next birthday. "We said, 'Let's
not go overboard, but let's see the
acceptance level'...Yeah, we got
confirmation all right that this is
something people want. We will definitely do it again."

GM's handheld experiment at the Cadillac stand--one of the first of its kind at a
general-interest consumer show--mirrors a larger movement toward beamed
information among consumer products manufacturers. Beaming data is far less
costly than printing and distributing glossy brochures, and it's easier for consumers
to carry.

Beaming is simply the use of infrared beams to send information between two
compatible devices. Standing a few feet apart, people with Palms or Handspring
Visors can trade memos and software with a few taps of their handheld wands.

Swapping business cards is one of the most common uses of beaming. The digital
cards are automatically alphabetized in a handheld's address book, including the
beamer's title, email address and other contact information.

The technology sector pioneered alternative uses for beaming. Sun Microsystems
sold 10,000 Palm V models at its JavaOne conference in June 1999 in an effort to
encourage Java programmers to start writing Java programs for Palms. The show
was littered with docking stations. Hard-core tech conferences such as the
Consumer Electronics Show, Comdex and PalmSource have also featured docking
stations and beaming.

But broader corporate America is now discovering beaming, which has gone from
geeky to glamorous as sales of handhelds mushroom. Banana Republic beams
maps and directories of the flagship store in New York, compliments of a
handheld-toting concierge at the front desk.

In addition to receiving information, consumers may eventually be able to purchase
items directly through their handhelds from the show floor or store. At the Consumer
Electronics Show last week in Las Vegas, Palm CEO Carl Yankowski outlined
plans for handhelds to become "eWallets," from which consumers can receive
coupons, purchase goods, and automatically track finances.

GM does not anticipate that customers will be able to research, finance and
purchase vehicles at auto shows anytime soon. But GM officials are jazzed about
the Palm display because, they say, it gives the automaker more of a high-tech
aura. Like all automakers, GM is engaged in a companywide campaign to digitize
business processes and find new revenue streams in the high-margin world of
information technology.

"At the end of the first press conference, we wanted an executive to say to the
crowd, 'Now everyone hold up your Palm, and we'll beam you the press kit!'"
Marsico enthused. "But we didn't get that far quite fast enough. We know some
people still want that hard copy, but we figured this would be a good start."

news.cnet.com

Mang



To: mr.mark who wrote (3359)1/12/2001 5:13:13 PM
From: Daniel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6784
 
> "PalmPOS, which the company categorizes as a point-of-service (POS) technology"

> not the best acronym, if you ask me

In fact, they didn't even get it right--it's Point of Sale.

Daniel