nancy_gohring
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Palm plans to sell unlocked Treo Pro

news
Aug 20, 20083 mins

Palm's decision to sell its newest smartphone could be start of a new trend or a sign of harder times to come for the company

Palm’s decision to sell an unlocked Treo Pro, its newest smartphone aimed squarely at enterprise customers, could either be the start of a new trend or a sign that the struggling company may face even harder times to come, one analyst said.

In a break from tradition in the U.S. mobile phone market, Palm on Wednesday introduced the Treo Pro and said it will sell the smartphone unlocked. That means it won’t be marketed, sold, and subsidized by an operator.

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“It may be the beginning of a trend, but it may also be a bad sign,” said Bill Hughes, an analyst with In-Stat. While he said he had no reason to think this is the case, there is a chance that Palm couldn’t find an operator interested in picking it up.

In Europe, O2 and Vodafone will sell the Treo Pro, which will also be available unlocked. Unlike in the United States, it’s common in Europe for people to be able to easily buy unlocked phones. Telstra will sell it in Australia.

The Treo Pro, which runs Windows Mobile and includes Wi-Fi and GPS, will become available later this year on Palm’s online store as well as from other Internet sites, retailers, and enterprise resellers.

While there are reasons that some enterprises might be interested in buying unlocked devices, Palm might struggle to sell the new Treo to individuals without the help of operators. In a recent survey of technology users, Hughes found that 85 percent of them bought their phones in an authorized retail store, such as an operator shop or a store like RadioShack that has deals with operators to sell phones.

But buying unlocked phones can allow an enterprise buyer to better negotiate with mobile operators, Hughes noted. That’s because typically operators factor in the cost of handset subsidies when selling airtime to enterprises.

In theory, having unlocked phones could also allow an enterprise to negotiate a better deal from a competitive mobile operator and easily switch to that operator by simply providing users with a new SIM card to insert in their phone. However, in the United States that’s not a major benefit, given that operators use multiple incompatible technologies. The Treo Pro runs on the third-generation technology used by T-Mobile, an operator not typically favored by enterprise users, and AT&T.

Operators do already sell unlocked phones to enterprises, but they don’t typically widely publicize the option, Hughes said.

The Treo Pro doesn’t come cheap: It will cost $549. It’s difficult to compare that price to other popular phones because most, like the iPhone, require a multiyear service contract with an operator in the United States. In Europe, Vodafone Italia sells the 8GB iPhone 3G without a contract for €500 ($734).

The Treo Pro is an attractive device that in some ways resembles the iPhone; it’s one of the first phones to come out of Palm since Jon Rubinstein, a former Apple engineer who contributed to the creation of the iPod, joined the company. It features a solid black case on the back with rounded edges. It has a full Qwerty keyboard and touch screen.

nancy_gohring

Nancy Gohring is a freelance journalist who started writing about mobile phones just in time to cover the transition to digital. She's written about PCs from Hanover, cellular networks from Singapore, wireless standards from Cyprus, cloud computing from Seattle and just about any technology subject you can think of from Las Vegas. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Computerworld, Wired, the Seattle Times and other well-respected publications.

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