Palm recently announced that some of its Treos will come equipped with a new Linux-based Palm OS by the end of the year, making them the first mainstream North American devices to have an OS based on the Linux kernel.
โThis is significant because Palm has fallen significantly in contrast to other players in the handheld market,โ said Carmi Levy, a senior research analyst with the London, Ontario-based IT research firm Info-Tech Research Group.
โThe Palm OS 5 (Garnet) is a generation that really needs to be put out of its misery,โ Levy said. โItโs incapable of delivering what the modern smartphone user expects. Theyโll never make anything out of this one, so they had to plot a different course.โ
He said Palm has been too busy concentrating on spinning companies out of the corporation, on Garnet licensing, and worrying about a corporate buyout that itโs been unable to upgrade its products very well.
The current OS is a single-thread, single-task device that can only do one thing at a time, said Levy.
New features in the Linux platform will include enhanced security and central administration capabilities, both of which will enhance the deviceโs feasibility in the enterprise space, said Levy. Another industry observer also believes using a Linux-based OS for the Treo brings many benefits.
โLinux will help the Treo to be cutting edge,โ said Evan Leibovitch, executive director of the Canadian Linux Users Exchange.
He said this is a natural progression, as Linux is a proven platform for several devices. These include some European Nokia and Motorola smartphone models.
Levy views Palmโs decision not to license the platform to others as a savvy move. โIf you control more elements of the game, you have more control over the outcome of the game.โ Levy said to thrive, Palm needs to offer services that arenโt available on other handheld vendors at competitive price points.
The offering could also be augmented by the developer community, according to Levy, who said Palmโs opening the OS up to outside tinkering could yield some useful improvements.
The company will continue to lean on its Treos that offer the popular Windows Mobile operating system. According to Levy, he doesnโt foresee the company abandoning this strategy, as it is too much of a cash cow to give up during a trial run of the new in-house OS.
Levy is a little bit skeptical about Palmโs chances, though โ after years of โPalmโ being synonymous with handheld devices, its brand recognition has been usurped by the Canadian company Research in Motion (RIM) and its BlackBerry.
โTheir brand recognition is essentially invisible after years of missteps and failing to capitalize on it. The mantle has been passed to RIM.โ