“Devices aren’t enjoyable anymore,” sighed my spouse, watching me faucet away on my Palm Zire 72 as she sat on the sofa along with her MacBook Air, an iPhone, and an Apple Watch.
And it’s true: The smartphone has all however eradicated total courses of devices, from point-and-shoot cameras to MP3 gamers, GPS maps, and even flashlights. However arguably no model of gadget has been so completely outmoded as the private digital assistant, the hand-held pc that dominated the late ’90s and early 2000s. The PDA even set the template for how its smartphone successors would render it out of date, transferring from easy private data administration to embody video games, messaging, music, and photographs.
However simply as smartphones would do, PDAs supplied a dizzying array of working methods and purposes, and an amazing a lot of them ran Palm OS. (I purchased my first Palm, an m505, new in 2001, upgrading from an HP 95LX.) Naturally, there’s no means we might enumerate each single such system on this article. So on this Ars retrospective, we’ll look again at some notable examples of the technical evolution of the Palm working system and the gadgets that ran it—and the way they paved the best way for what we use now.
When Zoom(er) wasn’t assembly software program
Within the mid-to-late Nineteen Eighties, transportable computing primarily meant both heavy, luggable workstations or a novel class of pocket computer systems with tiny screens, small recollections, and calculator-like keyboards. Jeff Hawkins, then vice chairman of analysis at transportable methods builder GRiD, thought he might do higher. He wished to construct a system the place the display itself turns into the enter system, changing keyboards with pens and styluses.
Whereas handwriting recognition was a fair greater problem for methods again then, Hawkins’ PalmPrint system simplified the duty by merely matching strokes to characters as a substitute of making an attempt to acknowledge total phrases. PalmPrint grew to become GridPen, the core of the 1989 GriDPad 1900, or what we might name in the present day the primary commercially profitable pill pc. Utilizing a resistive 10-inch black-and-white LCD because the display and writing floor, it ran MS-DOS on a lower-power 10 MHz Intel 80C86 and weighed nearly two kilograms (4.5 kilos), promoting at an MSRP of $2,500 (about $6,200 in 2024 {dollars}).
The GriDPad line went on to be very profitable for GRiD, however Hawkins more and more thought of his personal creation to be too cumbersome and costly. Surveying present GriDPad company clients a couple of transportable machine they’d personally use, the suggestions was unanimous: It needed to be rather a lot lighter, rather a lot smaller, and underneath a cool grand.
GRiD itself wasn’t interested by producing a low-end mass-market system, however such a unit was properly inside the market vary of Tandy Company, GRiD’s father or mother since 1988 and the house owners of Radio Shack. Tandy administration was entranced by the idea of what Hawkins known as the “Zoomer,” a lot in order that the corporate was prepared to speculate $300,000 in Hawkins’ new enterprise to develop it, which he known as Palm Computing.
Hawkins chosen GeoWorks’ PC/GEOS because the working system based mostly on its confirmed skill to run on cheap {hardware}, and Tandy introduced on longtime companion Casio (additionally a serious pocket pc producer) as the brand new system’s OEM. To handle the rising firm, Hawkins employed Apple-Claris alumnus Donna Dubinsky as CEO and later Ed Colligan as VP of promoting, recent from Macintosh peripherals maker Radius.
Sadly, the Zoomer’s growth grew to become more and more troubled on account of company interference and software program churn, and though underclocking its x86-compatible CPU to 7 MHz dramatically prolonged its battery life, it additionally made the unit sluggish and ponderous. Nonetheless, the Zoomer received to market in October 1993 at a pound in weight (lower than half a kilogram) and for $599 ($1,240 in 2024), markedly undercutting Apple’s Newton MessagePad. However, it was nonetheless too giant and was mainly handled (and judged) as a PC, and although its handwriting recognition was higher than the Newton’s, it was nonetheless outsold 4 to at least one.