Sunday, December 12, 2010

palm devices


Palm Pad, by Brent Downey

We weren't able to get many details on the Pad, but as these renders show, the new device comes with a kickstand, wireless physical keypad, and a slide-down back with gaming controls and a touch-sensitive input area.

Palm device concept 2

Palm Twist, by Adam Wrigley

With concave sides for easy grip the Twist stands as both a portrait slider phone, but when up you can give the screen a twist to turn it sideways for gaming with exposed joystick controls.

Palm device concept

 

Palm R1, by David Rhyne

Running a totally overhauled webOS 2.0, the new slate-style R1 packs a 1.33GHz processor, a 960×480 3.5 inch super-black screen, a textured magnesium body, and a 6MP rear camera with 1.3MP up front.

Palm device concept 3

 

Palm C40, by David Vogt

A nice big 4.3 inch screen over a BlackBerry-style portrait slider keyboard mark the stand-out features of the C40. Inside you'll find a 1GHz Snapdragon processor, 32GB for storage, and webOS 2.0, all wrapped up in a magnesium shell.

 

Palm device concept 4

Unnamed Palm Phone, by Jamie Myer

This phone slides vertically and rotates, allowing keyboard use with portrait and landscape oriented screens. Rotating exposes a front-facing camera and speaker, and the whole package is nerd-friendly translucent.

jamie-m

 

Unnamed Palm Watch, by Jesus Valenzuela

Details are sparse on this webOS-powered watch, but what is clear is that it packs a projector to take your webOS experience from the super-small screen to however big you'd like.

Palm device concept 5

Palm HD2, by LCGuy

Spec'd out would be an apt description for the HD2, which packs a 1GHz processor, a full GB for RAM, 16GB of Micro SD-expandable storage, a 2250mAh battery, an 8MP camera on back with 4MP up front, all faced by a 3.8" AMOLED 960×640 screen.

Palm device concept 6

 

Palm Pre 2, Palm Pad, and Palm Watch, by Virox

The next generation in personal computing, the Pre 2, Pad, and Watch, all from Palm conspire to take you to the next level of connectivity. All move up to modern standards and then take a leap past, with the Watch in particular pushing the edge of modern consumer technologies with a flexible LED screen for notifications, reminders, and media controls.

 

Palm device concept 7


--
satheesh

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