Round Two: Treo vs. iPhone
Monday, July 30th, 2007Well, here we are at the second time around. On Saturday, because I could barely stand not having a phone, I went to the Sprint store and bought myself a Palm Treo 755p. I figured, well, it’s $400 cheaper up front, and I can keep my plan a bit lower than what I would get from AT&T. Plus, it’s still Palm OS, so I can use all my favorite Palm apps. And, yes, Palm OS 5 is a bit more slick. It’s got Bejeweled and a nice Google Maps app. But that’s where the fun ends.
My last Palm phone (the Samsung i500) was small and functional. It was a flip-phone, so the screen was well-protected. It worked as a phone because it was just a bit bigger than most cell phones but had all the Palm functionality. It may have been running Palm OS 3, I think, but it still did everything I wanted it to. I could check e-mail, I could write notes, I could read the Bible.
Yeah, I can put all my old apps on this new phone, including Pocket Quicken. But the form factor sucks. It looks and feels like I’m carrying around a PDA, not a phone. There’s 49 buttons on the phone, compared to the Samsung’s 28.
With no protection for the large screen, I feel like I need to get a case, but I can’t find a case that I like at all. And, most of all, there’s no way to use Graffiti. On my old Palm, I entered all the text by writing on the writing pad area instead of pressing a bunch of keys. It was a much better use of space than putting 35 tiny keys that, if any smaller, would be impossible to press. I’m pretty sure I could type faster with writing letters out than hunting and pecking on a mini-keyboard. So far, it’s been totally frustrating.
Unless the condition improves over the next couple weeks, I may forgo the Palm and go with the first-generation iPhone. It’s not going to be too much better, but at least I won’t be frustrated with the basics of the phone.
I just won’t have Pocket Quicken, MyBible, or Bejeweled to keep me on top of things and entertained. What I will have, though, is the ability to only carry my iPhone around, and not a phone and an iPod. One a weekday basis, I really only listen to podcasts, so I would save my iPod for trips or doing the dishes. Also, if I wanted to, I could be watching that podcasts I currently listen to the audio version of while on the way home from work. It won’t be perfect, but right now, it seems like it’ll be better than the Treo, that’s for sure.

On Saturday, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the seventh and final book of the series, was released worldwide. It seems that, like the last couple books J.K. Rowling wrote, it will go down in history as the world’s fastest-selling book.


From the look at the specs, this stuff is also using the coolest in Open Source technologies. Of course, it’s running Debian, Apache and MySQL, but it’s also running on the new Django framework for Python. Plus, it’s got everything a Web 2.0 start-up team needs, from 
Also, one of the most ingenious things is their recent partnering with 7 Eleven to transform a dozen stores into a full-fledged Kwik-E-Mart for a month or two. There’s not one in my market, but everyone who does have one seems to be talking about it. Not only does the outside look like a Kwik-E-Mart, but they’ve hired people that look like Apu to man the counter and make the usual silly comments. They also have all the signature Kwik-E-Mart foods, such as Squishies, Buzz Cola, and Krusty-Os cereal, and even a Radioactive Man special-edition Comic Book. In my opinion, this is a very creative and fun way to promote the movie, and I applaud 7-Eleven for doing something a bit risky but ultimately fun.