Cingular Offering New Windows Phone

By Ed Oswald | Published December 12, 2005, 2:01 PM

The beginning of an expected flurry of Windows Mobile 5.0 devices over the next several months began on Monday as Cingular released the 2125 Smartphone, an apparent update to the SMT 5600 that the carrier offered through Audiovox.

The 2125 is very similar to the 5600 -- in fact it is being marketing as the upgraded version of that phone -- although it offers quad-band GSM technology. Other features include a 1.3-megapixel camera, EDGE data, 64MB of SDRAM, Office Mobile, Pocket MSN, a stereo headphone jack, and Windows Media Player 10. The phone runs on a Texas Instruments OMAP 850 200MHz processor.

Cingular will offer the 2125 for $299 USD before a $100 mail-in rebate with a two year service contract for new subscribers.

The phone is based on the HTC Faraday. Missing from the 2125, however, is Wi-Fi support, which many of HTC's models overseas have included in recent releases.

Jupiter Research senior analyst Joe Wilcox says the thing to watch is how Microsoft integrates the operating system, or the next-generation of Windows Mobile code-named "Photon," into its Windows Live Services.

"That's certainly what I would recommend to Microsoft. Office Live would make loads of sense for the mobility market, particularly smaller businesses that are the target of the services," he said.

Wilcox added that the phone is more powerful than his first Windows home computer he purchased in early 1994. He said such power is important; for many small businesses the phone is the primary computing device.

Cingular is also expected to release the HTC-designed 8125, codenamed "Wizard," sometime next year. Fellow GSM carrier T-Mobile is expected to also carry a version of the device as well as the HTC Tornado, a 2125-like smartphone, starting sometime in early 2006.

Comments

Palm is a dinosaur and is now just getting on the Windows Mobile bandwagon after coming to terms with painful reality that the Palm OS marketshare has been sinking dramatically over the years.

Palm has a decent thumbpad system which could readily compete with the likes of RIM and other smartphones that are GSM (70% world market share) or CDMA (30% world market share). I am not amazed nor surprised that Palm chose to develop and market to a proprietary CDMA duopoly first (e.g. Verizon/Sprint -- networks that lock each other out to encourage new unit purchases). I am sure Palm was offered some smack by the duopoly that gives a cheap quick fix (e.g. temporary revenue increase). However, I think this decision will hurt Palm in the long run, and they will come to regret it like they have with foolishly clinging to an outdated OS.

Palm is no longer best of the breed, and its mentality of pursuing a limited market (which is already well covered by competitors) is evidence of that.

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What I want to know is, when are they getting the Windows based Treo? I know Verizon has it exclusively for a while. Does anyone know when other providers will get it?

TowerDave

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