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The Backside
of Your Palm
The Travel Technologist · April
17, 2002
Donna Hart is an
unhappy Dell Computer customer. But she’s particularly peeved at the manufacturer
of the personal digital assistant (PDA) she bought through Dell: a Palm
m505.
No, this isn't another column about how Dell
disappoints technology users. I'm not interested in a protracted
debate on the PC manufacturer. You probably aren't either.
Instead, let’s hear
from Hart and other Palm users in order to find out if there’s a back
side to this popular PDA – and what you can do about it.
“I have found the Palm almost impossible to see,” she says. “It’s to the
point where I don’t use it.”
Hart, who lives in Glen Ellyn, Ill., contact Palm’s customer service after
seeing its new color product line in an e-mail. The m515 looked as if
it was “wonderfully illuminated” and she asked if she could upgrade to
one. No way, she was told.
So she called Palm’s customer service line. “The technician told me that
my color drivers weren't installed after running a few tests,” she recalls.
Dell sent her a refurbished unit, but Hart says the screen was just as
dull and difficult to read. “I am so ticked that they won’t at least sell
me a new unit at their cost,” she adds.
Should you think twice about your next Palm purchase? Maybe, maybe not.
I’m still impressed by the Palm operating system and what its potential
with convergence devices such as cell
phones. At the same time, I think Hart’s story serves as a cautionary
tale: some computing devices shouldn’t be bough sight unseen.
That’s why I like Gateway’s
stores. You can walk into one and see the computer, monitor or printer
you’d like to buy. The Web is a convenient place to buy technology – so
is the phone – but sometimes you’ve got to kick the virtual tires. Not
being able to do so may end up costing you. Hart is left with a Palm that
doesn’t meet her needs, and that’s just a waste of money.
Don’t think that Hart is the only person with this kind of PDA problem.
Even experts like Bob Beilstein, a computer consultant in North Syracuse,
New York, occasionally have a reason to complain about their Palm. “Mobitex
isn't available everywhere, and where it is available it's dog slow,”
he says of his Palm. “I use it all the time - especially for checking
on flight status - but if there was a better alternative, I'd switch in
a heartbeat.”
Of course not everyone is left high and dry when they purchase a Palm.
Matt Turner, a Charleston, W.Va., communications consultant, is one such
traveler. “I've owned a Palm III since they were released a few years
ago and the customer service and technical support dealings I've had with
that company have been consistently superb,” he reports. “Any phone calls
have been answered very promptly and I received e-mail replies, with the
correct solution on at least three occasions. All for free and well beyond
the warranty period of my device.”
So is there a back side to Palm? Sure. But not everyone gets to see it.
Turner hasn’t. Beilstein caught a glimpse of it and Hart saw the whole
thing. The question, really, is how do you avoid seeing it – and what
to do if you happen to. Answer: take a look at the PDA before you purchase
one. Study the catalog, check out the specs online, but in the end, make
sure you see what you’re buying before you actually give someone your
credit card number.
And what if you’re stuck? The key is to make a decision to return the
deficient product within 30 days (there’s usually an exchange or refund
period). Don’t wait. Once that period is over you’re at the mercy of the
manufacturer or reseller, and it can do whatever it wants to.
Christopher
Elliott is a travel commentator based in Key Largo, Fla. All e-mailed
questions may be edited, condensed or republished at the site's discretion.
The Travel Technologist appears weekly on
this site. This
story was also published on SmarterLiving.com.
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