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US Mall 1 - Palm Treo 680 (QWERTY, Grey)

Palm Treo 680 (QWERTY, Grey)
List Price:
Our Price: $209.99
Your Save: $ ( % )
Availability:
Manufacturer: Palm
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5

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Binding: Electronics
Brand: Palm
EAN: 0805931016522
Is Autographed: 0
Is Memorabilia: 0
Label: Palm
Manufacturer: Palm
Model: 1049EU
Platform: Windows
Publisher: Palm
Studio: Palm

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Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Two Stars and a Mercy Star for Palm's Good Intentions
Comment: On paper, the Palm Treo should be the greatest thing since eating the top torn off of a freshly baked baguette from a boulangerie in Reims. (Anyone who has eaten the top torn off of a freshly baked baguette from a boulangerie in Reims knows it far outrates sliced bread of any other kind. But back to our product). Truth be told, in January of 2008 I bought a shining red Treo 680 and it worked like a dream, in concert with the provider service. Phone calls were great, the calendar function almost allowed me to transfer my ancient Franklin Planner ways from the bulky leather planner to the smartphone, and the qwerty was easy to use. I had not one but three choices to link my work and home e-mail accounts and thus receive mail on my Treo; one type of e-mail software did not receive some of my e-mail properly so I simply used one of the others. As a person who waited twenty years before buying a CD player to make sure CDs weren't a fad, I accidentally purchased my first portable MP3 player with this Treo, and enjoyed loading it with just about everything that's been uploaded on my computer that makes a noise. I also found it was just a good a camera as my idiot proof point and shoot for daylight or well lighted indoor shots (I should note that I purchased a 1 gigabyte memory card along with the Treo 680, guessing the extra memory would be helpful, and much of my multimedia is stored on that). I wished the internet browser (Blazer) was different or better, but I think this problem is indemic to the problem of the poor relationship between the net and mobile phones.

I was happy as a clam for about a month....until I let my Treo leave my eyesight for two seconds in a public place.

I never saw it again.

I had been so pleased with the first purchase that I paid full price the next day for a new one. That is where the trouble began. I am now in posession of my fourth Treo 680 since January , and the only reason I haven't exchanged it is because each successive one seems to have more wrong with it. The one that replaced the stolen Treo 680 had problems receiving and making calls. It was replaced immediately by the service provider. My third Treo did last a while without problems, from February until July of 2008. But then the speaker went out, which meant I could not hear the phone ring or the built in alarm clock, and I could only listen to music or videos with the ear plug. There had not been any unusual wear; I use my MP3 with the earplug anyway, and, my social life being a bit on the light side, the phone doesn't ring that often.

The service provider once again was very gracious, honored my warranty for damage without any hassle, and I had my fourth Treo within days. But this one has too many faults to list. After three months, I again am having trouble with the speaker. Synchronization with my desktop is a hit or miss; sometimes it takes a minute, sometimes six hours, and if I try to download songs it seems I never get all of them at one time (and who wants to try another HotSync if it might last six hours?). The stylus works very poorly; I have to sync it with the PDA every time I use it (which takes forever on this one) and even then it only works for some of the apps, some of the time. The PDA does bizarre things that seem to be electronically induced....for example, when I open up the task application, bunches of tasks are automatically crossed off. Last night, late at work, knowing I needed to go to an early meeting, I desperately tried to open the calender application to add a note about the meeting location. The result: I was a half hour later getting home to bed after my afternoon shift, more exasperated than usual, and I had had to find a scrap of paper to write the information on anyway.

I understand Palm is outphasing the Treo 680. But is that an excuse for poor workmanship?

Believing I just have successively got the bottomer of the barrel, I'm looking forward to upgrading as soon as I can, and probably will go with Palm. Perhaps my first Treo, had it not been stolen, would still be meeting most of my human needs.


Editorial Reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Two Stars and a Mercy Star for Palm's Good Intentions
Comment: On paper, the Palm Treo should be the greatest thing since eating the top torn off of a freshly baked baguette from a boulangerie in Reims. (Anyone who has eaten the top torn off of a freshly baked baguette from a boulangerie in Reims knows it far outrates sliced bread of any other kind. But back to our product). Truth be told, in January of 2008 I bought a shining red Treo 680 and it worked like a dream, in concert with the provider service. Phone calls were great, the calendar function almost allowed me to transfer my ancient Franklin Planner ways from the bulky leather planner to the smartphone, and the qwerty was easy to use. I had not one but three choices to link my work and home e-mail accounts and thus receive mail on my Treo; one type of e-mail software did not receive some of my e-mail properly so I simply used one of the others. As a person who waited twenty years before buying a CD player to make sure CDs weren't a fad, I accidentally purchased my first portable MP3 player with this Treo, and enjoyed loading it with just about everything that's been uploaded on my computer that makes a noise. I also found it was just a good a camera as my idiot proof point and shoot for daylight or well lighted indoor shots (I should note that I purchased a 1 gigabyte memory card along with the Treo 680, guessing the extra memory would be helpful, and much of my multimedia is stored on that). I wished the internet browser (Blazer) was different or better, but I think this problem is indemic to the problem of the poor relationship between the net and mobile phones.

I was happy as a clam for about a month....until I let my Treo leave my eyesight for two seconds in a public place.

I never saw it again.

I had been so pleased with the first purchase that I paid full price the next day for a new one. That is where the trouble began. I am now in posession of my fourth Treo 680 since January , and the only reason I haven't exchanged it is because each successive one seems to have more wrong with it. The one that replaced the stolen Treo 680 had problems receiving and making calls. It was replaced immediately by the service provider. My third Treo did last a while without problems, from February until July of 2008. But then the speaker went out, which meant I could not hear the phone ring or the built in alarm clock, and I could only listen to music or videos with the ear plug. There had not been any unusual wear; I use my MP3 with the earplug anyway, and, my social life being a bit on the light side, the phone doesn't ring that often.

The service provider once again was very gracious, honored my warranty for damage without any hassle, and I had my fourth Treo within days. But this one has too many faults to list. After three months, I again am having trouble with the speaker. Synchronization with my desktop is a hit or miss; sometimes it takes a minute, sometimes six hours, and if I try to download songs it seems I never get all of them at one time (and who wants to try another HotSync if it might last six hours?). The stylus works very poorly; I have to sync it with the PDA every time I use it (which takes forever on this one) and even then it only works for some of the apps, some of the time. The PDA does bizarre things that seem to be electronically induced....for example, when I open up the task application, bunches of tasks are automatically crossed off. Last night, late at work, knowing I needed to go to an early meeting, I desperately tried to open the calender application to add a note about the meeting location. The result: I was a half hour later getting home to bed after my afternoon shift, more exasperated than usual, and I had had to find a scrap of paper to write the information on anyway.

I understand Palm is outphasing the Treo 680. But is that an excuse for poor workmanship?

Believing I just have successively got the bottomer of the barrel, I'm looking forward to upgrading as soon as I can, and probably will go with Palm. Perhaps my first Treo, had it not been stolen, would still be meeting most of my human needs.

Array

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