Palm Pre Set For Festive UK, European Launch
The Pre smartphone and iPhone rival, running the Linux-based WebOS, will arrive in the UK, Ireland, Germany and Spain during the key holiday season
Palm confirmed yesterday the Palm Pre will make its UK debut with O2 by the Christmas shopping season.
The first smartphone based on the new Palm webOS mobile platform is scheduled to be available initially in the UK, Ireland and Germany, exclusively on the O2 network, and in Spain exclusively on the Movistar network.
Pricing for the iPhone rival has not yet been determined.
The Palm Pre also is scheduled to debut in Canada with Bell Mobility in the second half of 2009.
“Since we showed Palm Pre at Mobile World Congress in February, there’s been a great deal of anticipation for an announcement about European availability, and that day is here,” Jon Rubinstein, Palm chairman and chief executive said in a statement.
“Europe continues to be an important region for Palm, and we’re proud to work with O2 and Movistar to spread the excitement Palm Pre has already ignited in North America.”
In its first weekend of availability in the US, Palm Pre broke Sprint’s previous first-weekend sales records. Palm sold about 50,000 of the smartphones before stocks were depleted. Palm subsequently tripled its US user base to 150,000 devices.
According to Tony Cripps, principal analyst at advisory and consulting firm Ovum, Palm faces tough odds in Europe since the company is competing to regain some European market credibility while at the same time will be going head-to-head with Apple’s iPhone on three of Telefonica’s networks.
“If you’re a Telefonica customer in the UK, Ireland or Spain and you’re in the market for an iPhone-style experience, the iPhone still looks the better bet,” Cripps said in a 7 July analyst note. “Even a heavily subsidised Palm Pre will do well to win the hand of high-end consumers when faced with the two devices side by side. Although some long-in-the-tooth Palm aficionados may be tempted.”
Cripps contends Palm would have been better off with a European telco partner that doesn’t have a deal with Apple. “Offering the two devices side by side looks like a one-sided fight to us, and potentially one that puts the webOS cat back in the bag before without really lifting its head out.”
Developer support, Cripps said, will make or break Palm’s high-end device offerings going forward.
By 8 June, US downloads of Palm Pre apps were already at 252,193, which more than doubled by 13 June, reaching 517,170. By 18 June downloads surpassed 700,000, by 20 June they topped 800,000 and 24 June they leapt over the one million mark, with 1,015,038 downloads of 30 now-available applications.
To compare Palm’s experience against Apple’s, the Apple App Store hit one million downloads 17 days sooner than the Palm App Catalogue did – but at the time, Apple had 16 times the number of apps on offer and 26 times the number of devices doing the downloading. In April, the App Store cruised past one billion downloads.
“Can [Palm] succeed? Palm enters a competitive market where the battle for developers’ hearts and minds is being fought out by far more significant players, despite the residual fondness the Palm brand continues to have in North America,” Cripps wrote. “Apple, Google, Microsoft, Nokia and RIM already have their claws deep into potential mobile developers and there is only so much fragmentation a developer can tolerate.”