• On GameSpot: Wii Fit tells 10-year-old she's fat
September 27, 2007 10:54 AM PDT

Palm Centro for Sprint gets official

Posted by Bonnie Cha
  • Font size
  • Print

Well, it wasn't a complete secret, but today, Palm and Sprint officially took the wraps off the Palm Centro at the Digital Life event in New York. It's the first non-Treo, as well as the smallest and lightest, smart phone from Palm, and the company hopes it will attract a new customer base of those ready to make the jump from cell phone to smart phone. Measuring 4.2 inches long by 2.1 inches wide and 0.7 inch deep and 4.2 ounces, the Centro has more of a cell-phone-like form factor but still has a full QWERTY keyboard and 65,000-color, 320x320-pixel touch screen. It also manages to pack in all the features of a Treo and then some.

Messaging options are aplenty with VersaMail, Microsoft Direct Push Technology compatibility, support for Gmail, AOL, and Yahoo accounts, and threaded text messaging. Like the Treo 755p, Sprint also throws in Yahoo, AIM, and Windows Live instant messaging clients, which we always love to see. Web browsing should be swift with EV-DO support, and you can also access Sprint TV, YouTube, Yelp, and MySpace from the device. There's integrated Bluetooth 1.2 for hands-free kits, wireless headsets, and dial-up networking but no Wi-Fi. For multimedia, the Centro is equipped with a 1.3 megapixel camera with 2x digital zoom and video recording capabilities and for the first time, the smart phone ships with Pocket Tunes Deluxe (instead of the Standard edition) so you can listen to DRM-protected music. For now, the Centro won't work with the Sprint Music Store, though this is something that may be added in the future. Other highlights include 64MB user-accessible storage, a microSD expansion slot (can accept up to 4GB cards), Documents to Go Professional 10, Google Mobile Maps, and Palm OS 5.4.9.

Sprint will have a 90-day exclusive on the Palm Centro, which comes in onyx black or ruby red, and it's expected to be available in mid-October for $99.99 with a two-year contract and after rebates. Sprint Power Vision packs start at $15 per month.

Palm Centro

Palm Centro in red

(Credit: Palm)

First impressions
Palm actually stopped by our offices a couple of weeks ago to give us a sneak peek at the Centro, and I've got mixed feelings about the device, mostly about the design. The size of the Centro is certainly smaller than the bulky Treo, and I think it's a nice compromise between a regular cell phone and business-centric smart phone like the Sprint Mogul. However, the design doesn't do much for me. It lacks the flash and "wow" factor of a device from HTC or Nokia, and in the hand, it feels, well, a bit cheap. The navigation controls below the display feel plasticky, and I think the QWERTY keyboard may give some users problems since they had to cramp it into a smaller space. If anything, I could see the Centro attracting more female customers than men, which is part of Palm's goal.

As for features, it's pretty well-stocked. Of course, the Palm OS is a bit outdated but it still offers ease of use and out-of-box Mac synchronization. You pretty much get all the essentials for work and play, the extra apps are a bonus, and hey, you can't beat the price. Anyway, those are just some initial thoughts. We expect to get a review unit within the next week or two; in the meantime, you can check out CNET TV Rich DeMuro's First Look video above and CNET UK's review of the similar Palm Treo 500v. Also, talk back to me! What do you think of the Centro?

On Sale Now: $0.00
View the latest prices for Palm Centro - red (Sprint)

Bonnie Cha is a senior editor for CNET, covering smartphones and GPS. When she's not testing the latest gadgets, you can find her chasing after her crazy lab or surfing in the chilly waters of Northern California. E-mail Bonnie.
Recent posts from Crave
A flying toy safe to play with in the house
Could nanotech create speech-powered phones?
'Brothers in Arms: Hour of Heroes' storms App Store
JVC's Time Square display finally on...display
Presents for the Apple iPod Classic
Magnetic headphone organizer prevents accidental death
Gizmine.com enables your Japanese gadget addiction
Billionth Logitech mouse scampers off assembly line
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 10 comments
Ugh. The Thing is UGLY!
by Renegade Knight September 27, 2007 11:47 AM PDT
I would actually like to give Palm a try, but they are going to have to beat out the Nokia N95 or the Sony P1. I'm not interested in a cheesy smart phone. I need one to replace my PDA and ideally do more and better than the PDA did.

At least Palm is trying. That's more than they have done for the past few years.
Reply to this comment
I don't understand
by larca170 September 27, 2007 2:12 PM PDT
i don't understand why palm hasn't come out with a 800 treo with a palm os of course, wifi, 3mp camera. that is the phone i would buy in a heartbeat. i have a 700p and love its looks anf it feel. anyone know if this will ever happen?
Reply to this comment
Stop playing games Palm!!!
by Macajuel September 27, 2007 4:45 PM PDT
I'm totally in agreement with LARCA170........First the Foleo nonesense now this junk; where is the Palm device for the Palm fans? where is that Palm 800 series phone with wifi, gps, 3 megapixel camera (or better), 3G, several gigs of on board storage and an updated Palm OS.

My Treo 680 will have to hold me over till Palm decides to get its act together; just don't take too long - that US edition Nokia N95 is tempting.......
Reply to this comment
THIS IS SO MY PHONE!!!!
by gjonenson September 27, 2007 9:02 PM PDT
Alright, so I'm a student in my local high school and just recently lost my Palm Z22 (Thank goodness! It was a piece of crud!). At the moment, my 2-year contract has just expired with Sprint, and now I see this phone. I say, "The with the iPhone, this phone is meant for people MY AGE!!!!!"

Some of us don't have $1,000 to decicate all for just a phone! Those that hate the Palm Centro, maybe it's not for you. Check out the iPhone, it might have more compatibility with your life. ;)
Reply to this comment
The iPhone Falls Short
by Renegade Knight September 28, 2007 7:26 AM PDT
The iPhone isn't a smart phone. It's an Apple Walkman Phone that can surf the net. It flat out won't do the job I need a phone to do. Besides, I'm on T-Mobile and don't feel the need to switch to AT&T and upgrade my account to something that costs more than twice what I pay now.
You are right.
by Renegade Knight September 28, 2007 11:56 AM PDT
I read the specs on the phone on Palms website and it's actually looking good. The buttons in the middle take up too much space (you can never have too large of a screen...) but the phone appears to be solid.

If it were a GSM phone I'd be tempted to try one out.
I like it =
by DuckInA.Pond September 29, 2007 12:12 PM PDT
Reply to this comment
I like it but...
by DuckInA.Pond September 29, 2007 12:14 PM PDT
... I don't like the navi controls. And I don't think it's that ugly...
Reply to this comment
Comprehensive and cheap
by Kushojin September 29, 2007 5:25 PM PDT
At first glance this looks like it could be my next phone. As well as needing a
phone with good call quality, etc. I've 3 main needs, must sync contacts,
calendar and to do lists with my mac. So, no iPhone for me!
Would like to see an unlocked gsm version as I'm not sure I want to switch to
Sprint from my pay as you go service but it might just be the phone to make me
do that.
Reply to this comment
Low-end play by Palm... will it succeed?
by Jagadeesh Venugopal September 30, 2007 1:05 PM PDT
Palm has ceded the differentiated high end of the smartphone spectrum to the iPhone. Now it is trying to capture the low end of the market with the Centro. I am not sure if it will succeed -- can they really produce a competent low end product in competition (over the long term) with the likes of Motorola, Samsung and Nokia? I suspect not. And keep in mind that their PalmOS is showing its age more and more with each passing day. Time was when it was state of the art. Now it's irrelevant.

One way to regain the leadership... go to a new niche. Market the centro at, say, a $200 price point to prepaid users. This is a smartphone market just crying to be tapped.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

About Crave

The name says it all. Crave is our blog about gorgeous gadgets and other crushworthy stuff. If you would like to contact Crave with a tip or comment, please write to: crave@cnet.com

Add this feed to your online news reader

Crave topics

In the news now

Confessions of a man who does the layoffs

It's easy to vilify the guy who hands out the pink slips. But contrary to popular notions, these aren't decisions that are taken lightly, at least with the executive we interviewed.


Dell racks up Microsoft as data center customer

After finding itself on the losing end of a number of deals, Dell creates a special unit aimed at getting its gear inside the world's largest data centers.


advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right