Santa Clara, California The recent announcement that the 3Com Palm VIIthe first pocket-sized organizer with wireless Internet accesswill enter US field trials in 1999 electrified attendees at the Palm Computing Platform Developer Conference in Santa Clara. But the real news for Palm-using Mac people was the December 4 release of the long-awaited final beta version of the software that turns your Palm OS-based organizer into a natural extension of your Mac.
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| Time was when PDA was a fancy term for an expensive paperweight. Times have changed. The Palm changed them. How a pint-sized handheld device with four basic functions crossed the chasm between fashion accessory and basic necessityand acquired millions of devoted fans in the processmust remain the subject of another story. But a good number of those millions of customers were Mac people who werent getting the full benefit of the Palms promised connectability. And that rankled.
Well, not anymore. The Palm MacPac v2 lets you seamlessly synchronize your personal information between your Macintosh and your Palm III. And, according to author David Pogue (PalmPilot: The Ultimate Guide), the new Palm MacPac v2 software works so well that it will make the Macintosh what it should have been all along: the premier platform for the Palm. Better still, the beta version is free. Palm Desktop for Macintosh It gets even better: As nice as this new front-end software is, theres something even more important, Pogue notes. The new software comes with a universal sprocket, a conduit that permits other Macintosh programs to talk to the Palm. Already you can download the wonderful Chronos Consultant, an unbelievably full-featured Rolodex/calendar, from http://www.chronosnet.comand it talks to the Palm III now. In other words, youre not obligated to use the new Palm Desktop program as your Mac front end: FileMaker, Quicken, Emailer, Outlook Express and many other programs will also be HotSync-able to the Palm with conduit modules that have been announced. Hallelujah, bro. Mac Man Wirnowskis sunny disposition came in handy in the months leading up to the release of MacPac v2. Mac people are accustomed to a superior user experience, and they arent shy about expressing their dissatisfaction when things dont work the way they should. Fortunately, Palm parent 3Com, in a strategic masterstroke, bought the Claris Organizer technology from Apple Computer, and set to work to adopt its core functionality for the Palm Computing platform. Name Game Now, to everyones relief, the wait is over. Palms engineering team put in a heroic effort, Wirnowski notes admiringly. After working into the wee hours week after week, the team has delivered a beta release that combines the robust functionality of Claris Organizer with the ease of use youd expect of its Apple pedigree. No Bloatware for the Palm
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![]() Douglas Wirnowski, Palm product manager for Macintosh Solutions, championed the Mac-friendly software release. And therein lies a tale: Elegant coding is part of the Palms appeal. As computers are getting bigger and faster, people are just turning in a bunch of garbage. Theyre not coding efficiently, Wirnowski says. Were asking our developers to be the talented programmers they really are. Were saying, Heres a challenge for youyou have to write an application thats going to run in a very small memory footprint and not take up a lot of processor cycles. So theyre writing tight code, and delivering apps that are very small and very efficient. And very Mac-like. Mac Development Tools Looks like a lot of them are doing just that: We have over 8,000 developers, and theyre writing everything from a metronome for your piano and a scuba dive log, to a remote-control program that will let you control all the devices in your home from your Palm, Wirnowski says. HotSync Heats Up News about those Mac applications is already creating a buzz around the Palm Computing platform, notes Calin Pacurariu, a partnership manager in Apples Developer Relations group. Pacurariu, who works closely with Palm and with third-party developers, says that Apple is 100% behind the push to encourage third-party Palm products for Mac users. Pacurariu, who has a bad habit of showing up for work at 5 a.m., is pumped about the new Palm software in the works. Actual Software has created a conduit that will enable Mac users to connect MultiMail on their Palms to Claris Emailer and Microsoft Outlook Express on their Macs, he says. DataViz has announced Documents to Go, an application that will allow Mac users to view word processing and spreadsheet files like Word and Excel on their Palm organizers. And Shana Corporation will provide Mac users with a direct link between the Palm organizer expense application and its own award-winning Informed software. For Mac Users Only Third-Party Developers Join the Party
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![]() The Palm Desktop for Macintosh lets you organize your contact list any way you want. The toolbar makes it a snap to perform tasks such as printing. |
![]() The Palm Desktop gives you quick access to all your contact information. (Mac users will able to HotSync more information than Windows users.) |
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Also see The Secret of Palms Success to see why millions depend on the Palm. |
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