Press Release

Palm Handhelds Speed Trucking to Better Service SANTA CLARA, Calif., Feb. 11 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The trucking
industry does not usually come to mind when thinking of the most tech-savvy
industries. But, as many innovative companies are showing, Palm(TM) handheld
computers are becoming a useful tool in the fast-paced, deadline-driven
trucking industry to communicate with dispatchers, report information or
problems, and better serve customers. Truck drivers often encounter electrical or mechanical problems that are
hard to diagnose on the road; Palm handhelds can provide drivers with critical
diagnostic information to understand and resolve issues. They can also help to
avoid communication problems and misunderstood invoices, and save companies
money by getting customer information to back offices quickly.
Cat Electronics: Less Note-taking Allows for More-focused Driving Pocket Technician, an application developed by Peoria, Ill.-based Cat
Electronics, coupled with Palm handhelds, provides drivers of vehicles running
Caterpillar electronic engines with records of detailed diagnostic information
and trip data. This data can be viewed on the handheld or later, after
syncing, on a PC. Drivers can choose to view engine information for the life
of a truck or for a specific trip, as well as track routine maintenance.
Customer-programmable parameters also are available, allowing the driver or
fleet manager to later modify the operation of the engine for optimum
performance based on the information provided. Caterpillar's customers did not want to carry laptops to their trucks each
time they needed information. They also wanted something more portable than a
dash-mounted device. The new handheld process solves that problem, is more
convenient, and lets drivers capture vital information necessary to improve
driver and trip performance much more easily. Using Palm handhelds and the Pocket Technician application, Caterpillar's
truck driver customers now have the necessary information to better manage the
operation and efficiency of their vehicles. The application and supporting
hardware are available to customers from Caterpillar dealers throughout the
United States.
Cummins Inc.: Owner/Operators Save Thousands of Dollars Drivers of trucks running electronic engines produced by Columbus,
Ind.-based Cummins Inc. use Palm handhelds and either the QuickCheck or
QuickCheck II applications, and can view maintenance information and save time
researching and reporting problems. Drivers capture vehicle trip summaries,
store maintenance information, log vehicle information, read engine fault
codes, and can download the data onto a PC for analysis. The ability to log
and report information reduces costs by eliminating the need for onsite
technicians, improves diagnostics, and reduces time to process orders or solve
technical problems. The newest version of the application, QuickCheck II, also
reads electronic ABS and Transmission systems. Cummins' customers once bought full-scale PCs, expensive software and
diagnostic equipment costing up to $4,000 per truck. Using Palm handhelds with
QuickCheck now costs as little as $300 per truck. Since the solution's
March 2000 introduction, more than 5,000 worldwide Cummins distributors,
dealers and customers are using Palm handhelds to run the QuickCheck
applications.
Seimac Ltd.: Major Cash-flow Improvements Due to Immediate Order Processing Seimac Ltd. of Halifax, Nova Scotia, developed an Internet-based
application for its drivers called FleetMessenger that gives its dispatchers
the exact location of their trucking fleet and lets them communicate in real
time. Drivers can receive messages, store customer information and respond to
dispatchers via a removable Palm handheld mounted on their dashboards running
FleetMessenger. Seimac truck drivers capture customer signatures, scan
barcodes or record trip logs on the spot and send them back to the office
where the invoices are processed immediately. Real-time billing by drivers
speeds cash flow back to businesses -- if a company bills $100,000 a day and
can bill in real-time what once took three days, the company can more quickly
invest that $300,000 back into its business. Previously, drivers had to pull over, call dispatch and have the paperwork
faxed to their location. Drivers' activity logs were delayed a week or longer
until they could be sent to the office, where they were entered manually.
Seimac has deployed 720 Palm handhelds and plans to deploy a total of 4,500 in
the coming year. Seimac is using Palm IIIc and Palm V handhelds, but the
application runs on any Palm OS(R) based device. The new Palm handheld based
process increases business efficiencies by moving from slow manual processing
to real-time processing. More information on case studies and the use of Palm Powered(TM) handheld
computers in the enterprise is available at www.palm.com/enterprise/studies.
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 platform, Palm's handheld solutions
allow people to carry and access their most critical information wherever they
go. Palm(TM) handhelds address the needs of individuals, enterprises and
educational institutions by offering the foundation for thousands of
application solutions. Palm stock is traded on the Nasdaq national market
under the symbol PALM. More information is available at http://www.palm.com .
NOTE: Palm OS is a registered trademark and Palm and Palm Powered are
trademarks of Palm, Inc. Other brands may be trademarks of their respective
owners.
SOURCE Palm, Inc. Web site: http: //www.palm.com CONTACT: Kristine Boyden of A&R Partners, +1-650-762-2837, or kboyden@arpartners.com, for Palm, Inc.; or Ronni Sarmanian of Palm, Inc., +1-408-878-2547, or ronni.sarmanian@corp.palm.com
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