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Do I need a Smarter Phone?

If you haven't already been hooked by the Smartphone revolution, you may be looking for the right entry point. The first thing to consider is what benefits might be realized by moving into one of these devices.
  1. Remote access to my calendar- Probably the #1 benefit immediately realized by a new Smartphone user is remote access to his/her calendar. If you're like most busy professionals and/or business owners, you do a pretty solid job of keeping your calendar on a PC (or you have an admin or office manager that keeps it for you). The problem is you're constantly having to use the line, "Let me check my calendar when I get back in the office" as you're visiting with your clients, suppliers, and partners. With the snazzy wireless syncing options available on most Smartphones, you'll have an up-to-date calendar in-hand whenever you need it.
  2. Checking email on the road- For some Smartphone users, this capability is absolutely invaluable. Not only are you accessible via the phone, but you also can communicate via email from wherever you are without having to haul out your laptop and find a "hot spot". Others don't use this capability for a variety of reasons (e.g., keys are too small to type with, the screen's too small for reading that much text, or difficulty with attachments).
  3. "Whiz-bang" mobile applications- There are tons of little niche applications that are very handy to have with you on-demand (e.g., customized cost calculators, quick-reference manuals, or mini-invoice builders).
If any or all of these benefits sound profitable, your next question is likely, "Which device should I get?" After all, there's lots of choices. Some are much cheaper than others. Some are much more popular than others. What's the difference and what are some of the major benefits of each device (Note: these summaries are being written in May 2007, and the landscape is very dynamic)?
Special Offers Only at the Palm Store!
Palm® Treo- Palm introduced their first Smartphone in 2002 (it was actually Handspring that introduced the Treo 180). The first mass entry in the space, though, was in 2003 with the Treo 600. The line has rapidly grown into one of the most popular and most versatile. Palm's stability in the space is probably its most distinguishing trait. The table below breaks down some of the details for each of Palm's Treo models.
ReleasedModelFeaturesPrice*
2003Treo 600
  • Palm OS 5
  • 160x160 screen
  • 0.3MP camera
  • 32MB RAM
No longer sold directly by Palm
2004Treo 650
  • Palm OS 5.4.8
  • 320x320 screen
  • 0.3MP camera
  • 32MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Palm
2006Treo 700w/wx
  • Windows Mobile 5.0
  • 240x240 screen
  • 1.3MP camera
  • 64MB-128MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
$250+
2006Treo 700p
  • Palm OS 5.4.9
  • 320x320 screen
  • 1.3MP camera
  • 128MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
$250+
2006Treo 680
  • Palm OS 5.4.9
  • 320x320 screen
  • 0.3MP camera
  • 32MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
$200+
2006Treo 750
  • Windows Mobile 5.2
  • 240x240 screen
  • 1.3MP camera
  • 128MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
$300+
2007Treo 755p
  • Palm OS 5.4.9
  • 1.3MP camera
  • 128MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
$280+
*- prices taken directly from http://www.palm.com

BlackBerry®- The BlackBerry was introduced in 1999 by Research in Motion (RIM). Although not officially a Smartphone until 2001, BlackBerry's niche is definitely remote access to email (it's the pioneer in the space). The line has rapidly grown into one of the most popular and most versatile Smartphones (with 8 milliion subscribers as of April 2007). RIM also offers the BlackBerry? Connect software to allow users access to BlackBerry's email service on other devices (such as the Treo). The table below breaks down some of the details for each of RIM's BlackBerry models.
ReleasedModelFeaturesPrice**
2001BlackBerry Quark
  • 160x100 monochrome screen
  • 16MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 5 hrs.
    Standby Time- 12-16 days
No longer sold directly by RIM
2003BlackBerry 6510
  • 160x100 monochrome screen
  • 8MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 165 mins.
    Standby Time- 75 hrs.
No longer sold directly by RIM
2004BlackBerry 6700 series
  • 160x100 monochrome screen
  • 10MB-16MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 3-4 hrs.
    Standby Time- 8-10 days
No longer sold directly by RIM
2004BlackBerry 7200 series
  • 240x160 color screen
  • 16MB-32MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 3.3-5 hrs.
    Standby Time- 8-10 days
  • Bluetooth
$150+
2004BlackBerry 7500 series
  • 240x160 color screen
  • 16MB-32MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 165-175 mins.
    Standby Time- 75 hrs.
  • Bluetooth
$320
2005BlackBerry 7700 series
  • 240x240 color screen
  • 14MB-16MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 198 mins.-5 hrs.
    Standby Time- 8-9 days
No longer sold directly by RIM
2005BlackBerry Charm
  • 240x260 color screen
  • 32MB-64MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 170mins.-4 hrs.
    Standby Time- 90 hrs.-8 days
  • Bluetooth
$200+
2006BlackBerry 7130
  • 240x260 color screen
  • 64MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 3-4 hrs.
    Standby Time- 8-18 days
  • Bluetooth
$150+
2006BlackBerry Electron
  • 320x240 color screen
  • 64MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 2.75-4 hrs.
    Standby Time- 8-16.5 days
  • Bluetooth
$200+
2006BlackBerry Pearl
  • 240x260 color screen
  • 64MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 3.5 hrs.
    Standby Time- 15 days
  • Bluetooth
$150-$200
2007BlackBerry Gamma Ray
  • 320x240 color screen
  • 64MB RAM
  • Battery
    Talk Time- 3.67-5 hrs.
    Standby Time- 9-22 days
  • Bluetooth
On-sale
June 2007
2007BlackBerry Curve
  • 320x240 color screen
  • 64MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 4 hrs.
    Standby Time- 17 days
  • Bluetooth
Coming Soon
**- prices taken directly from http://www.blackberry.com

Apple iPhone- Apple is introducing their new iPhone in June 2007. iPhone's niche is that it combines the popular iPod with a mobile phone and PDA. The device looks fantastic, but because it's so new, it's still evolving in the areas of interoperability and scalability. Its screen is a 320x480 color screen. Storage is in-line with the iPod (4GB-8GB) which places it well beyond other Smartphones in capacity. Regarding battery life, it has 5 hours of talk time and 16 hours of audio playback time. With Bluetooth capabilities and a 2.0MP camera, it is definitely a strong competitor to the more established players.

Symbian OS-based devices- Smartphones running the Symbian OS represent 72.8% of the worldwide market share (mostly because of their predominance in Japan through a relationship with Nokia). There is a wide variety of Smartphones manufactured with the Symbian OS, and most are very robust devices. There has been an outbreak of malware among these devices, but most of the security risks are introduced through downloaded applications (so the risk is very manageable). Below is a table with some of the more popular Symbian OS-based Smartphones.
ReleasedModelFeaturesPrice***
2003Motorola A925
  • 208x320 color screen
  • 640x480 camera
  • 32MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Motorola
2004Motorola A1000
  • 208x320 color screen
  • 1.2MP camera
  • 32MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Motorola
2002Nokia 9290 Communicator
  • 640x200 color screen
  • 14MB-16MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 10 hrs.
    Standby Time- 230-400 hrs.
No longer sold directly by Nokia
2003Nokia 3620
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 640x480 camera
  • 3MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 4 hrs.
    Standby Time- 8 days
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Nokia
2004Nokia 6620
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 640x480 camera
  • 11MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 4 hrs.
    Standby Time- 8 days
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Nokia
2004Nokia 9500 Communicator
  • 640x200 color screen
  • 640x480 camera
  • 80MB-192MB RAM
  • Battery>:
    Talk Time- 4-6 hrs.
    Standby Time- 4-6 hrs.
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Nokia
2004Nokia 7610/6670
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 1MP camera
  • 8MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Nokia
2004Nokia 6630
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 1.3MP camera
  • 10MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Nokia
2004Nokia 3230
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 1.23MP camera
  • 5MB RAM (w/32MB card)
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Nokia
2005Nokia 6682
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 8MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 4 hrs.
    Standby Time- 11 days
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Nokia
2005Nokia N70
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 2.0MP camera
  • 22MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
2005Nokia N90
  • 352x416 color screen
  • 2.0MP camera
  • 30MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
2005Nokia 9300 Communicator
  • 640x200 color screen
  • 80MB-192MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 7 hrs.
    Standby Time- 8 days
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Nokia
2006Nokia E62
  • 352x416 color screen
  • 64MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 2.5-6.4 hrs.
    Standby Time- 4.5-13 days
  • Bluetooth
$200
2006Nokia N73
  • 240x320 color screen
  • 3.2MP camera
  • 128MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 3.7-4.1 hrs.
    Standby Time- 14.5-15.4 days
  • Bluetooth
$430
2006Nokia N91
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 2.0MP camera
  • 8GB RAM
  • Bluetooth
2006Nokia N93
  • 240x320 color screen
  • 3.2MP camera
  • 128MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 3.7-5.1 hrs.
    Standby Time- 10 days
  • Bluetooth
2007Nokia E50
  • 240x320 color screen
  • 70MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 6.8-8 hrs.
    Standby Time- 9-10 days
  • Bluetooth
Coming Soon
2004Panasonic X701
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 640x480 camera
  • 8MB RAM (w/16MB card)
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 2-6 hrs.
    Standby Time- 80-250 hrs.
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Panasonic
2005Panasonic X800
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 640x480 camera
  • 8MB RAM (16MB w/card)
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 5 hrs.
    Standby Time- 230 hrs.
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Panasonic
Samsung
SGH-D720
  • 176x208 color screen
  • 1.3MP camera
  • 18MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 6.5 hrs.
    Standby Time- 200 hrs.
  • Bluetooth
2003Siemens SX1
  • 176x220 color screen
  • 640x480 camera
  • 16MB-32MB RAM
    (1GB w/card)
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 4 hrs.
    Standby Time- 200 hrs.
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by Siemens
2002Sony Ericsson P800
  • 208x320 color screen
  • 0.3MP camera
  • 12MB RAM
  • Battery:
    Talk Time- 13 hrs.
    Standby Time- 400 hrs.
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by
Sony Ericsson
2003Sony Ericsson P900
  • 208x320 color screen
  • 0.3MP camera
  • 16MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by
Sony Ericsson
2004Sony Ericsson P910
  • 208x320 color screen
  • 0.3MP camera
  • 64MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
No longer sold directly by
Sony Ericsson
2006Sony Ericsson W950
  • 240x320 color screen
  • 4GB RAM
  • Bluetooth
2006Sony Ericsson M600
  • 240x320 color screen
  • 2.0MP camera
  • 60MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
2006Sony Ericsson P990
  • 240x320 color screen
  • 2.0MP camera
  • 80MB RAM
  • Bluetooth
***-prices taken directly from individual manufacturer websites

Obviously, there are many choices, and you shouldn't just go for the cheapest device you can find. Because of the growing popularity of these devices, you might want to consider contacting your existing wireless carrier to see if any special deals are available for current customers (you might be surprised what the carrier is willing to do to keep your subscription... after all, that's where the real money is).
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