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Press Release

Palm Bringing Bluetooth Wireless Communications to Handhelds Unveils First SDIO Add-on for Expandable Palm m500 Series Handhelds
MONTE CARLO, Monaco, June 7 /PRNewswire/ -- Bringing the Bluetooth
short-range wireless communication standard one step closer to reality for
Palm(TM) handheld computers, Palm, Inc. (Nasdaq: PALM) today announced the
Palm Bluetooth Card here at the Bluetooth Congress 2001. The card, somewhat
larger than a postage stamp, will enable quick, easy and secure local
communication (within 10 meters, or 30 feet) between Palm handhelds and other
Bluetooth-enabled devices, such as mobile phones, laptops, printers, network
hubs and other handhelds. Designed using the open industry-standard Secure Digital Input/Output
(SDIO) specification, the Palm Bluetooth Card can be slipped into Palm
products that have the SD/MultiMediaCard expansion slot, currently the
Palm m500 and m505 handhelds. The card, jointly developed between Palm and
Toshiba, a leader in the development of SDIO add-ons, is expected to be
available before the end of the year for $150 or less (estimated U.S. street
price). The Bluetooth wireless communication standard -- supported by industry
leaders such as IBM, Ericsson, Nokia, Toshiba and Intel -- was developed to
encourage the adoption of wireless communications worldwide. The Bluetooth
standard is a specification for small form-factor, low-cost, short-range radio
links among devices, allowing a variety of portable and mobile computing
products to talk to each other across platforms. "Bluetooth has the ability to change the way we work, share information
and interact with each other," said John Cook, senior director of product
marketing for Palm, Inc. "As Bluetooth-enabled products become more
pervasive, we believe they will inspire people to create a new class of
products and services that we can only begin to imagine."
A Wireless Bridge to the Internet One of the initial uses of the Palm Bluetooth Card will be to wirelessly
connect handhelds with mobile phones. For example, a woman who wants to dial
up the Internet or her corporate network might have a Palm handheld in her
hand and a Bluetooth-enabled mobile phone in her purse. Using Bluetooth
communications to connect to the phone, within seconds she could send and
receive email, use web clipping applications, browse the web for information,
or send instant messages -- all without opening her purse. "This is only the beginning," Cook said. "Much the way modems changed
personal computers from isolated computing machines into pervasive
communications tools, we believe Bluetooth will open a new era in
interoperability among devices and collaboration among people."
Collaboration and Sharing Palm and the Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG) believe that products
like the Palm Bluetooth Card will play a key role in making Bluetooth a
wireless industry standard for Personal Area Networking (PAN). Multiple
Bluetooth-enabled devices in proximity to one another can -- at the user's
initiation -- form a PAN in which up to eight devices communicate and share
information. In this case, a group of people in a meeting room can use
handhelds to compile their discussion items into a single agenda viewable by
all. Notes immediately can be distributed to all attendees, and the group can
confirm the next meeting by searching each attendee's schedule, recommending
and securing a time that works for all. "We are very glad to work with Palm and excited about their implementation
of the Bluetooth SD card in their leading handheld computers," said
Kenji Hibi, General Manager of Toshiba's Bluetooth Business Development
Division. "As a leader in Bluetooth and SD card development, we will continue
to offer mobile users more flexibility and options in mobile solutions, and we
expect to contribute to the expansion of the SDIO Card including Bluetooth
into various applications."
Pervasive Interoperability Today, makers of handhelds, phones, laptops, printers and Bluetooth access
points are working with Palm and other members of the Bluetooth SIG to lead
development of the Bluetooth standard and create Bluetooth devices of all
kinds that work instantly and seamlessly with each other. With the kind of
third-party software applications that Palm and other Bluetooth SIG partners
are encouraging developers to create, handheld users will have the power to
communicate with almost any other user or device. For example, a man is about to enter an important contract negotiation
meeting. Before joining the group, he checks email on his Palm handheld by
connecting to one of the Bluetooth access points deployed throughout his
corporate campus. He receives a revised contract in email; he edits the
contract and prints the new version to a local Bluetooth-enabled printer
-- all from his handheld. In the future, small Local Area Network (LAN) access points in offices,
airports and stores -- called "hot spots" -- may provide wireless access to
the Internet using Bluetooth. The types of services that might be available
to a user via a hot spot include access to important corporate information,
favorite Internet content via the MyPalm(TM) portal, or vertical applications
for retail, healthcare and financial services. Palm is working with companies
such as Axis Communications with the goal of making connectivity into these
hot spot networks a simple and elegant user experience. Cook said, "In a few years, we believe people could potentially use their
handheld to talk to a small Bluetooth server hub at a local coffee shop and
check email while they drink their cafe au lait."
Palm OS Support for Bluetooth In addition, Palm will offer Bluetooth support for Palm OS(R) 4.x software
by the end of the year. This will allow licensees to easily incorporate
Bluetooth into products or release add-on Bluetooth solutions for current Palm
Powered(TM) products. This also will enable Bluetooth-based software
applications to work seamlessly on all Palm Powered handhelds.
Developer Opportunities Palm is working with Bluetooth developers to create a variety of solutions
for Bluetooth users that will be available when the Palm Bluetooth Card hits
store shelves by the end of the year. Developers can get a developer tool kit
and links to technical APIs to make current Palm OS solutions Bluetooth
compatible at www.palmos.com/dev/tech/bluetooth/.
About Bluetooth The Bluetooth wireless technology is set to revolutionize the personal
connectivity market by providing freedom form wired connections. It is a
specification for a small form-factor, low-cost, radio solution-providing
links between mobile computers, mobile phones and other portable and handheld
devices, and connectivity to the Internet. The Bluetooth Special Interest
Group (SIG), comprised of leaders in the telecommunications, computing, and
network industries, is driving development of the technology and bringing it
to market. The Bluetooth SIG includes promoter companies 3Com, Ericsson, IBM,
Intel, Lucent, Microsoft, Motorola, Nokia, Palm and Toshiba, and more than
1,800 adopter companies. For more information, visit the Bluetooth Special
Interest Group web site at www.bluetooth.com.
About Palm, Inc. Palm, Inc. is a pioneer in the field of mobile and wireless Internet
solutions and a leading provider of handheld computers, according to IDC
(December 2000). Based on the Palm OS(R) platform, Palm's handheld solutions
allow people to carry and access their most critical information with them
wherever they go. Palm(TM) handhelds address the needs of individuals,
enterprises and educational institutions through thousands of application
solutions. The Palm OS platform is also the foundation for products from Palm's
licensees and strategic partners, such as Franklin Covey, HandEra
(formerly TRG), Handspring, IBM, Kyocera, Sony, and Symbol Technologies.
Platform licensees also include Nokia and Samsung. The Palm Economy is a
growing global community of industry-leading licensees, world-class OEM
customers, and more than 155,000 innovative developers and solution providers
that have registered to develop solutions based on the Palm OS platform. Palm
went public on March 2, 2000. Its stock is traded on the Nasdaq national
market under the symbol PALM. More information is available at www.palm.com.
NOTE: Palm OS is a registered trademark and Palm, Palm Powered and MyPalm
are trademarks of Palm, Inc. or its subsidiaries. Palm, Inc. uses the
Bluetooth trademarks under express license from Bluetooth SIG, Inc., U.S.A.
Other brands may be trademarks of their respective owners.
SOURCE Palm, Inc. Web site: http: //www.palm.com CONTACT: Media, Julia Rodriguez of Palm, Inc., 408-326-9390, or julia.rodriguez@corp.palm.com
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