Reading Palm's fortune: Does its life line now lead to glory?

By Sharon Fisher | Published January 10, 2009, 1:51 PM

Banner: Analysis

It's a question worth asking: With the Pre looming upon the horizon, is this the same Palm we were talking about only 48 hours ago -- the Palm that was very near to being buried in the desert and fed upon by vultures?

The Pre is a tremendous device, but let's not forget that it has to get here. Sprint and Dan Hesse need to deliver on their promises of delivering a network for this device, and consumers might not have an easy time picturing those 10,000 guys in red and grey coats with service trucks and helicopters, standing behind them wherever they go, when they think of "Sprint." And Palm as a company is in very bad shape. Yes, it may have designed the product of the year, and it could very well have one-upped the iPhone -- we'll see. But Apple had a healthy business infrastructure going for it two years ago at this time, and it's even much healthier now, stock price notwithstanding. Palm is another affair.

We asked our contributor and former Gartner analyst Sharon Fisher to do some Palm reading for us, and remind us about where this company came from and how it got to this point, before the glamour of an exciting product clouded our view of the past.

Palm logo (small)Over the past couple of years up until last Thursday, the reports on Palm had developed a "General-Francisco-Franco-is-still-dead" morbidity. The seminal personal digital assistant company has seen itself passed by with products such as the BlackBerry and the iPhone, and has itself struggled with a long line of botched product launches and decisions. Until quite literally a couple of weeks ago, the company's eventual fate seemed to be just a matter of time.

It's hard to pinpoint a particular beginning, but certainly there were a number of issues in 2007. Rumors spread in March that Palm would be acquired, possibly by Nokia; nothing came of it. The company had planned to release a Linux-based laptop called Foleo; it dropped the project in September. Then, in response to revenues $30 million less than expected, in December 2007, it laid off 10% of its employees.

Things didn't improve in 2008. Palm closed its retail stores. The company released its low-cost Centro, which sold more than a million units, but which cannibalized the sales of its higher-priced Treo, further decreasing Palm's revenues.

Near the end of the year, news came faster. Palm announced a $100 million investment from VC firm Elevation Partners (after the company had made a $325 million investment the previous year), a 20% cost reduction, and an $80 million quarterly loss, and a sales drop for its Treo smartphones by 13% annually. BusinessWeek estimated that the company had just "two quarters' worth of operating capital" remaining.

Yet many industry watchers still seem to hold out hope that Palm will be able to pull it out with this announcement. "D-Day is less than a fortnight away, Palm," said the Motley Fool on December 29, noting that where Go, IBM, and Microsoft had failed, Palm had succeeded. "You've got till then to show us something brilliant. If you don't, then it's likely game over. And none of us wants that."

Before it can tackle Windows, Chrome must leave Safari in the dust

It's a little browser with dreams of becoming a bigger operating system some day. But while it's chasing Microsoft's dreams, Chrome's tail is being chased by Apple.

Silverlight 3 goes live on Microsoft's servers

Microsoft's answer to Adobe's Flash is (unofficially) here, with prospects of higher-speed, higher-resolution video and for the first time, 3D.

Best Buy-brand TVs to get TiVo

A new alliance will place the retailer's own brand alongide the manufacturers, and could also lead to future partnerships on services.

Three Android phones on the way from T-Mobile in 2009

T-Mobile's myTouch 3G, launched Wednesday, will be followed by two more Android phones later this year, but neither of them will be HTC's Hero.

LTE still lacks a voice

The 4G Wireless standard that Verizon hopes to show off before this year is out is still at a loss for (spoken) words.

T-Mobile's strategy to combat Apple's iPhone with Android

With a trio of Android phones now in the pipeline for 2009, T-Mobile hopes to break the iPhone's emerging stranglehold.

EC's Reding: Government should act as broker for media downloads

If Internet media services don't step up and build an attractive way for users to start paying for downloads, a commissioner says, government may do the job instead.

Sony TVs get Netflix, still no PS3

Though it's coming in behind LG, Samsung, and Microsoft, Sony will begin to offer Netflix streaming, too.

Google Chrome OS: Too little, too early

Carmi Levy: Wide Angle Zoom Don't start the revolution just yet, says Carmi, who isn't so certain Chrome OS will be the "Windows Killer."

GAO pen test brings the hammer down on federal rent-a-cops

But are the computers to blame for the contract-guard fiasco at FPS?

What's Next: Chrome OS will have at least some friends in high places

Also: South Korea takes another round of DDoS abuse, and Neelie Kroes and Steve Ballmer may shake hands before she exits stage left.

Data sharing among online advertisers: Is sanity in sight?

Lockdown with Angela Gunn In the middle of a 15-page plea not to get regulated, a spark of smart thinking.

Unistal Data Recovery 12.08.06

July 9 - 11:09 PM ET

BKF Repair 3.0

July 9 - 10:54 PM ET

Vuze for Windows 4.2.0.4

July 9 - 6:26 PM ET

UltraVNC 1.0.6.4

July 9 - 6:05 PM ET

WildBit Viewer 5.5 Beta 3.0

July 9 - 5:44 PM ET

Bvckup 1.0.0.239 Beta

July 9 - 5:30 PM ET