PalmOne 's Tungsten E handheld computer has been on the market since October 2003, which is a long production run for a PDA. That reign has come to an end with the April 13 release of the Tungsten E2.
If PalmOne 's Tungsten T5 handheld was an automobile, it would be described as being a facelift rather than a complete overhaul of the model that preceded it, the Tungsten T3. As such, the T5--PalmOne ...
Rivals PalmOne and Microsoft appear to have cast aside their differences, as the handheld maker licenses an e-mail synchronization tool from the software giant. The deal eliminates the need for people ...
Shares of PalmOne Inc., the world’s biggest maker of hand-held computers, rose 11% on Monday after the company won a lawsuit filed by Xerox Corp. over handwriting-recognition technology because a ...
Handheld-computer maker PalmOne is considering moves that would take it beyond the operating system that helped make the company a household name. The Milpitas, Calif.-based firm has evaluated both ...
PalmOne Inc. faced with slumping sales of what was once a must-have consumer gadget, is taking the story of handheld computers directly to the public with its own retail stores. Following in the ...
The stock may be an opportunity for trend-bucking investors, if they ask the right questions. Contrarian investors go against conventional wisdom. They separate themselves from the herd, tuning out ...
PalmOne is hoping that the addition of a hard drive to the handheld computer will help breathe new life into a product that has lost a significant amount of its "cool factor" in recent years. The ...
When I showed PalmOne's new Treo 650 to a co-worker who had just bought the Treo 600, my now-jealous colleague paid this new model one of the highest compliments imaginable: a two-word obscenity we ...
PalmOne Inc. said Monday that Chief Executive Todd Bradley, who oversaw the company’s return to profitability, would resign. The company’s shares fell 11% on the news. PalmOne, which makes the Treo ...
There are always going to be times when you're wrong in your investing. Today, I'm tempted to wonder about whether David Gardner and I were wrong in picking palmOne (NASDAQ:PLMO) for Stocks 2005. Why?
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