A Fan of Foleo Fan

June 3, 2007

Someone at Palm writes:

I found your discussion through a Technorati search. I’m glad you’re seeing the potential in our product idea — we certainly don’t think the platform will be limited to what was shown at D, but instead we hope that a number of creative solutions will come out of our developer community, both those who came from the Palm OS world and those attracted from the Linux world.

As for portability — I use a laptop, but it takes a lot more effort to put it to sleep, unhook all the cords, detach the Kensington lock, and grab the power adapter when I run to a meeting. I can grab my Foleo in a few seconds and have something that works well for note taking, sending off an email of action items, or looking up information on the web (or goofing off with Solitaire or Newsgator Online if it’s a particularly boring meeting).

Like he says.


The Foleo Debate Continues

June 3, 2007

A friend writes: “I agree with you and Tim Bajarin — I think the Foleo is cool, but if you already carry a laptop do you really need one?”

Ron K. Jeffries, Foleo Fan, responds:

Yes. I now carry my ThinkPad many places where all I really want is email, instant messaging and a browser. I want it to turn on and off instantly (no laptop does). It should be light, have good battery performance, and offer a useable screen and keyboard.

Having Foleo leverage the mobile broadband connection my Treo offers will save on the order of $60 a month. That saving alone pays back the cost of a Foleo in under a year.

In the future I plan to use be two computers plus a mobile phone. My main PC will be a killer laptop, with a Core Duo 2, hardware virtualization, 2 to 4 G of memory, and a 300 MB hard drive.

Yes, a laptop by definition is portable. However, I’ll often carry my Foleo for the joy of instant on, plus doing everything I wish to do at the bookstore, restauraunt or while drinking a Starbucks.

I especially want email that’s always in sync with my IMAP account. ChatterEmail on my Treo 700p does that, but the screen is tiny and the keyboard only works fro one sentence messages. As you may know, Palm recently bought ChatterEmail. How convenient.

My on the move computing needs are simple:

Email. I read and write email. Web mail clients — Google Gmail, Yahoo, Microsoft and LaszloMail all work great.

Instant messaging. I like Pidgen (was called GAIM), a free, open source IM client.

Browsing. Firefox or Opera are fine. I read Atom/RSS feeds with Google Reader, in my browser.

Photo viewing. There are plenty to select from in Linux land.

Keep it light and simple. These are not power hungry applications. As we ride the curve of ever lower silicon prices, the Foleo will either get cheaper with the same capabilities, or remain the same price and become more powerful. Most likely both will happen, with different model numbers.

Foleo is not a new idea. The Nolkia 880 is a different collection of points craved from the same general design space. Nokia focuses on multimedia, especially video and audio playback, It has a fabulous screen, is smaller and lighter than the Foleo. But it’s not an email or text machine like the Foleo aims to be.

My friend continues:

[tease]

Foleo is aimed for the shrinking number of desktop users that need a truly portable keyboard device.

One of my favorite machines from the past was a Toshiba T1000 — instant on, DOS 2.11 in ROM, 80C88, MS Works and ASR/VT52 emulator with portable 2400 baud modem so I could dial into CompuServe. At about 6 pounds I carried it everywhere as a companion to my desktop Macintosh II (long before the first PowerBooks…)

But, just to show you that some ideas are a bit too early see the this link… all this original was missing was the Bluetooth link to a phone…

It’s sort of bizarre that Jeff Hawkins went backward in his thinking, but maybe it’s time again. I look forward to checking yours out when it comes in.


Tim Bajarin on Foleo

June 3, 2007

Tim Bajarin writes about the new Palm Foleo instant on email companion. I want one.

Palm got it right with Foleo:

Instant on, instant off.
WiFi built in + Blutooth to connect to phone.
Easy one-button access to email
Lightweight
Full size keyboard and screen
Good battery life
Moderate cost ($499)

People seem to miss a great benefit: with a Foleo, you no longer need two mobile phone data connections — one for your laptop, the other on your smart phone. That alone reduces your connectivity cost by $60 permonth or more, depending on your wireless carrier.

[tease]

It [Foleo] weighs about 2.4 pounds but feels much lighter, and even with its small battery it can deliver five full hours (even while using Wi-Fi the entire time). The large screen supports 1024-by-600 or 1024-by-768 VGA resolution. Navigation is done through a TrackPoint nub in the keyboard and it has a roller wheel below the keyboard to provide fast and easy scrolling.

[tease]

But, whether planned or not, Hawkins may have actually hit on a more powerful mobile-computing idea. Since this is a small, lightweight Linux computer, it could eventually become a new stand-alone portable-computing platform that the Linux or open-source crowd embraces.

Imagine what could happen if the open-source movement decides to start building software applications for this platform. I think it is plausible that Foleo will become the darling of this movement and help get Linux into the mainstream mobile marketplace, perhaps even challenging the dominance of the Windows portable computers.

I know that might be a stretch, but this device is the exact type of mobile e-mail machine I have personally wanted for over a decade. Because it can handle a full Web-browsing experience, it provides a serious alternative to taking a full laptop with me every time I hit the road. Jeff said Foleo is the most exciting device he’s worked on, and I think he might be right.

Tim, I am with you. I’ll buy a Foleo soon after they ship.

[from Cloudy Thinking, May 30, 2007]


Palm’s Folio is a GREAT Idea. So-called “experts” wrong, again.

June 3, 2007

The Folio announced recently by Palm has generated negative buzz. Naysayers include TechDirt, Wired, and Business 2.0.

They are all totally missing the point. Folio is a BRILLIANT idea.

I want one. I greatly lust after instant on and ease of use.

The dumbest critique of Folio: Palm should make the Treo keyboard and display bigger. Hello? By definition a mobile phone is constrained to a certain size and shape, and by definition it EXCLUDES the size of a full keyboard and screen.

Instant on, big screen, big keyboard and uses my Treo for wide area connectivity. I am in LOVE!

Screw the critics, they are wrong again.

[via Cloudy Thinking, my other blog]


Ron K. Jeffries is a Foleo Fan

June 3, 2007

Welcome to Foleo Fan, where we’ll discuss the Palm Foleo mobile companion. Let’s have some fun!


Foleo Fan Legal Mumbo Jumbo

June 3, 2007

Foleo Fan is not affiliated with Palm Inc.

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