HP announces Palm Pre 2, webOS 2.0

Breaking

The news doesn’t come as much of a surprise following a series of leaks, but HP finally made the Palm Pre 2 and accompanying webOS 2.0 official this morning. Starting with the latter, the newest iteration of Palm’s highly acclaimed OS boasts features such as “True Multitasking” (zing!), “Just Type”, the rebranded “HP Synergy” and more. WebOS 2.0 also introduces us to “Exhibition”, a feature that allows apps to trigger events when a Palm phone is placed on a Touchstone dock or removed from the dock. As for the Palm Pre 2, there are really no surprises as far as specs are concerned. The rumored 1 GHz processor, 5-megapixel camera and glass touchscreen are all present and accounted for. Further details are scarce, so the only surprise is the fact that the Pre 2 will launch this Friday, October 22, in France. U.S. availability is still unclear, unfortunately — HP says the handset will launch “in the coming months” from Verizon Wireless.

Of course most were hoping for a more significant hardware refresh when HP’s first post-Palm smartphone announcement came around, but we have to start somewhere. Hit the jump for the full press release with all the juicy details.

UPDATE: More specs for the Plam Pre 2 are now available. Highlights include a 3.1-inch HVGA multitouch glass display, 16GB of internal storage, GPS, Exchange support, an accelerometer, ambient light and proximity sensors, 802.11b/g Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR and a 3.5mm audio port.

HP Introduces webOS 2.0, the Next Generation of Mobile Innovation

Coming first on new Palm Pre 2 in France, the United States and Canada

PALO ALTO, Calif., Oct. 19, 2010



HP today announced HP webOS 2.0, the most significant update to the platform since its launch in 2009 and a substantial step in HP’s vision to transform how people think, feel and connect.

The first device to run webOS 2.0, HP’s new Palm Pre 2 smartphone, will be available Friday in France from SFR and is scheduled to be available in the coming months in the United States from Verizon Wireless and in Canada.

“With webOS 2.0, we’re advancing the innovations we introduced 16 months ago, expanding the features that make webOS great for consumers, enterprises and developers,” said Jon Rubinstein, senior vice president and general manager, Palm Global Business Unit, HP. “We’ve made tremendous strides since the platform launched, and now we’re taking our biggest leap forward with powerful new features that make it easier to get more things done with your webOS device.”

webOS 2.0 offers consumers compelling application experiences not available on any other platform, while providing developers an unparalleled level of openness to integrate their applications and services. The next generation of webOS makes it easier to get more done:

  • True Multitasking – Pause a game, tap an email notification, check your calendar, read a restaurant review, send an email reply, then switch back to the game without closing anything.(1,2) webOS lets you easily manage multiple open applications and notifications using natural touch gestures. New in webOS 2.0, Stacks logically groups together your open apps so they work the way you do. Whether you’re reading email or planning a night on the town, Stacks keeps related items together so managing multiple tasks is even easier.
  • Just Type – Start an email, create a message, update your status, search your favorite websites – all before you’ve even opened an app.(1) With webOS 2.0, whenever you want to do something on your phone – whether it’s emailing, texting, searching or almost anything – just type. And Just Type is open to developers, so they can integrate with the search function and add their own user-customizable shortcuts, called Quick Actions.
  • HP Synergy – webOS was the first mobile OS to connect you seamlessly to multiple web services. With the Synergy feature, you just have to sign in to your Facebook, Google, Microsoft® Exchange, LinkedIn and Yahoo! accounts and your information automatically populates your phone.(3) webOS 2.0 will extend the support for Synergy so developers can easily plug new Messaging, Contacts and Calendar application sources directly into the core webOS experiences.(4)
  • Exhibition – A new way to use your webOS phone, Exhibition lets you run apps designed specifically for the Palm Touchstone Charging Dock, turning charge time into useful time.(4,5) Set your phone on the dock and Exhibition launches automatically, showing you anything from today’s agenda to a slideshow of your Facebook photos. Exhibition will enable developers to display aspects of their existing app experience or create specialized apps for use when users have their webOS device in charge mode on the charging dock.
  • Adobe® Flash Player 10.1 Beta – With version 2.0, webOS now supports a beta of Adobe Flash Player 10.1 in the browser, which provides access to rich, Flash-based web content.(6)

webOS 2.0 also includes many more new features, including the following:

  • Favorites – With webOS 2.0, you can tag your favorite contacts so they appear as favorites in Phone and Contacts views. When you search for them by name, they instantly show up at the top of the Contacts, Email, Messaging and Phone apps. Favorites make it simple to get in touch fast.
  • Skype Mobile™ (Verizon Wireless only) – For Verizon Wireless customers, webOS 2.0 supports Skype-to-Skype calls and messaging while in the United States to anywhere in the world, and low-rate calls to international landlines and cell phones.
  • Text Assist – webOS 2.0 offers greatly expanded capabilities to spell check, auto correct, set up macros and customize the dictionary.
  • Quickoffice Connect Mobile Suite – An all-new document viewer from the leading provider of mobile document viewers offers support for Microsoft Office Word, Excel and PowerPoint documents and provides integration with a variety of services, including Google Docs and Dropbox.
  • Facebook 2.0 – Available via the Palm App Catalog, Facebook 2.0 will support Facebook IM via Synergy in the Messaging application,(4) as well as Stacks, status updates via Quick Action and the Exhibition feature.
  • Browser – The browser adds support for more HTML5 features, including geolocation support. OpenSearch plug-in support makes it easy to add your favorite websites to Just Type web search.
  • Messaging – The unified Messaging app in webOS 2.0 adds Yahoo! IM and buddy management. Customers can now connect to their buddies through SMS, MMS, Google Talk, AIM and Yahoo! IM.
  • VPN – webOS 2.0 supports the most popular ways to connect to a corporate network, including IPsec and Cisco AnyConnect mobile-optimized VPN, which supports SSL (TLS and DTLS).
  • App Catalog – The redesigned Palm App Catalog makes finding and discovering great apps even easier.(7) And the new Software Manager helps you keep your apps up-to-date.
  • Launcher – A redesigned app launcher lets you add, label and reorder launcher pages.
  • Phone – The webOS 2.0 Phone app lets you easily dial your favorites and offers reverse area code lookup and Skype Mobile integration (Skype Mobile for Verizon Wireless only). Accounts – The new Accounts app provides a single place to manage all your Synergy accounts.
  • Bluetooth® keyboards – webOS now supports Bluetooth keyboards and Bluetooth SPP peripherals, enabling applications such as barcode readers and realty lock boxes.
  • A host of developer features – In addition to Exhibition, Just Type and Synergy APIs, webOS 2.0 adds Node.JS, enabling developers to create services in JavaScript. They also can now use the webOS Plug-In Development Kit (PDK) to combine C/C++ with web technologies in a single app.

More information about the features of webOS 2.0 is available at www.palm.com/softwareupdate.

Introducing Palm Pre 2

HP also introduced the Palm Pre 2 smartphone, the latest evolution to the Palm Pre lineup. Pre 2 is the first Palm phone with a gigahertz processor and features a 5-megapixel camera, a glass screen and a sleeker, streamlined design that still gives users the ideal combination of a vivid touchscreen and a slide-out keyboard.

More information about Palm Pre 2, including features and specifications, is available at www.palm.com/Pre2.

Availability

Palm Pre 2 featuring webOS 2.0 will be available Friday in France from SFR and is scheduled to be available in the coming months in the United States from Verizon Wireless and in Canada. The webOS 2.0 update will be delivered to existing customers in the coming months, with exact timing to be announced at a later date.

Developers will be able to purchase unlocked UMTS versions of Pre 2 in the United States to use as a canvas to build the next generation of webOS applications and services. More information about the purchase program will be available at
http://developer.palm.com/devdevices.html
.

Read

62 Comments
  • ruben

    what about a front camera hummmm forgat/,HP please !!get you act together and call me next year w/a 4″ phone.

  • Patrick

    I loved my Pre. But now that I am a man, I have grown to want manly things like by big a$$ Epic 4G with all the Android apps i can handle and ridiculous performance and customizability.

    Still, I wish Hp and the Pre well. It was a great phone.

    • serpentor

      Agreed. Both the Pre and Pixi have more feminine stylings.

      I can’t wait for their beast to be released.

  • Gag

    The phrase “a day late and a dollar short” comes to mind. Palm, epic fail. I’d tell them to drop dead but HP was dumb enough to buy them.

  • Scott

    I really liked WebOS when I tried it out, but the hardware was just horrible. This just isn’t good enough after it’s been 2 years since a hardware refresh! Bring me a slate, with a bigger screen, and now we’re talking. Palm, this is 2010, almost 2011… you’re behind the curve… again!

  • Mark

    Launching in France must be a pilot launch to shake down bugs while they ramp up production. This is a decent update for those who like the existing form factor and I’m sure they have a big slab in the works for those who want that. Unfortunately, this is really where the hardware and OS should have been at launch last year, then they could have really made a splash. Now the window of opportunity feels like it has already closed.

  • brianw

    A friend has the preplus on Verizon. While I agree the hardware blows, the OS is amazing. I’ve had every Gen iphone except iPhone4 and now the droid X. The webOS platform, in my mind, blows away android and iOS. I just wish we could have the build quality of the iphone, or a motorola/HTC device with webOS and I’d be sold.

  • Ez

    Can someone please tell me if they got rid off the horrendous slider form ? It’s was just attrocious on the first palm, i know I had it

  • Zap B.

    If they don’t release WebOS 2.0 for the Pre Plus, there will be blood. Hope for an improved OS is the only thing taking the sting off using such crappy hardware..

    • Mark

      It says on Palm’s website that the Pre and Pre Plus are getting WebOS 2.0 also “in the coming months.”

  • J

    Here’s my story…

    Got a Palm Pre back in October/November had it for 1 month or so before I traded it in for a Hero (then later switched to Bold 9650)…. Why did I go for the Hero instead of the Pre?

    1. Quality! If I drop my Hero on the ground I didn’t have to care because I knew it could survive it. With the Pre I thought the first time I dropped it that it would crack :(

    2. Battery life! Although I still need to recharge my Hero after 7-8 hours of use (WiFi, SMS, Email, Internet…), my Pre would die by lunch!

    3. Customize (spell check and apps)! I didn’t like how Palm didn’t let me stick a big clock on the home screen like HTC Sense, but it could vary based on users..

    What do I miss the MOST about my Pre?

    1. The fact that the phone was actually ENJOYABLE to use, I liked opening it and playing around with the OS, it was never boring because of all the amazing gestures.

    2. WebOS. Enough said, simply the best OS out there and the BROWSER was amazing, iOS(almost WebOS kills iOS in multitasking) is the closest that comes to it. Android and OS 6 does not even compare to how smooth this thing ran.

    SOOOO HP should listen to our voices and let other PHONE COMPANIES use WebOS! Can you imagine how sweet WebOS would be running on something like the EVO????

  • http://jhrj.com yang

    love the palm pre plus. WebOS is the best OS out there. all Android has is cool commercials…..

  • http://qtp.blogspot.com Sachin

    i don’t think it will launch before aug 2011 in india and that too is not sure….:(

  • http://www.yanofit.com nikatnight

    i’ve had android phones, ios, bb, and webos. ios is clean, smooth and very bla. android is clunky but not so boring. bb is so basic but very powerful and very fast. now webos blends all of the customization (homebrew…) as android, the smooth feel of ios and the speed and power of the bb. it is truly the best. now if only that phone was sexier…

  • Keith1212

    How are the apps on WebOS? Does the amount of them even approach the amount on Android or IOS?

    The hardware for this one obviously blows but if there aren’t a decent amount of apps than what are they really doing?

  • MartMart

    lol i can’t believe people actually like the WebOS especially when compared to vastly superior Droid OS. Im sorry, but Palm phones have always sucked and always will suck they can barely do anything and considering they’re smart phones and cost 30 dollars a month like other smartphones you’re truly getting ripped off. I feel sorry for anyone who wants a Palm over the other smart phones, hell i would even take a windows phone over Palm

  • DW

    How does the hardware ‘blow’? From what I read it’s a 1GHz proc, 5Mpx camera, bluetooth, WiFi. It’s screen is smaller than the others and is lower resolution but doesn’t suck. It’s not pushing the edge, but it’s by no means crappy. Heck, the iPhone 4 doesn’t even have a 1GHz proc,

    Really, hardware wise all the iPhone 4 has on this is a vastly superior screen.

    I have an iPhone 3G that I got for $50 2 1/2 years ago and I am looking for a new phone. I really don’t want an iPhone 4 as I am tired of staring at the same generic app icons and lack of customization.I want my phone alerts to be different than the rest, I want to know it’s mine that’s alerting me!

    And honestly for me it’s the way the phone syncs to my computer that will determine my next phone. I hate the iPhone’s conglomerate ‘backup’ so that when I want to re-install the os (and start clean) I loose all my data for my apps and SMS messages. Why can’t you restore just SMS and specific app data?

    My 8 year old Palm Pilot had more features than iOS 4 and the iPhone 4. I could tether my palm pilot via bluetooth to another palm pilot or to my flip phone (over GPRS… shudder) and get Internet. Seriously, why can’t we do that now but with tablets and smartphones? Why do tablets need a separate data plan?

    I don’t need the latest hardware, I just want a phone that works and has good features.

1 2
blog comments powered by Disqus