Interview: Palm plans a haven for data

The next version of the Palm operating system will provide increased security, says PalmSource president David Nagel

Martin Veitch

The next version of the Palm operating system will provide increased security, says PalmSource president David Nagel

IT Week: In June, Palm [now PalmOne] said it would acquire Handspring and spin off its operating system subsidiary PalmSource. As PalmSource's chief executive, can you say how that process is going?

Advertisement

David Nagel: We expect [the acquisition] to go through in late-October to mid-November. Certainly, the next major focus is to develop Sahara [codename for the next platform version, Palm OS 6]. It's a fairly massive release and it's much more secure. In the handheld market, devices have to be much more secure than PCs because they are mobile. We think we can do much better crypto engines than with OS 5. In OS 6 we extend it to signed code and signed applications so that if you change just one bit of a program it will not run. OS 6 also handles multitasking and multithreading in much larger quantities.

The release of the original Palm - the Palm Pilot - was a watershed in handheld computing. Will wireless create a new wave?

I don't know whether it will fundamentally change the market. The first device was kind of an overheating. It became the hip product of the era and kind of exemplified the bubble. [Countries in Europe have] been ahead in wireless for years, in mobile phone adoption and in things like SMS gateways. We're just getting them in the US. It's quite bizarre. But 802.11 [wireless LAN technology] is growing like a weed.

Now that RIM is licensing its software, will Palm and some of the other platforms be able to adopt more BlackBerry-like features for email on the go?

BlackBerry [devices are] drawing competition. They're the gold standard in mobile email but there's room for others. It's interesting how they think of themselves as hardware, software or something else. To me, the analogy is Qualcomm - when it got out of the handset business its stock went up. I think software is RIM's core competency. If you look at what's sticky, it's the infrastructure business, the servers that get installed in the enterprise. I rarely meet anybody who doesn't like the mail [on the BlackBerry] but the rest is lousy.

There seems to be a move away from the idea of all-in-one devices...

People have a limit to the number of pockets they have. For that reason, multi-function devices will not disappear. But the greatest customer satisfaction will come from devices that are much more focused, such as combination game/MP3 players, not a Swiss Army Knife approach.

How do you view your company's products against those of its competitors?

We should consider ourselves to be in the communicator market. A phone must have an open operating system in it and there are three [main] contenders [PalmSource, Symbian and Microsoft]. With Linux it's four and Java it's five. And you could add [Qualcomm's] Brew. There are probably a few too many platforms - the rare commodity is developers. Symbian is becoming very tightly integrated with Nokia. The battle lines have been fairly well drawn.

ABOUT DAVID NAGEL

David Nagel is president and chief executive of PalmSource, the operating system subsidiary that is being spun off from PalmOne.

Previously, Nagel was on Palm's board and before that served as AT&T's chief technology officer.

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Share

Tags:

Do you agree?

Further reading

PalmOne unveils Tungsten with 256MB storage

Latest PDA doubles as a flash drive

Pal

Tests show Palm is best for business

Palm boasts upper hand over Pocket PCs in recent independent tests

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Most watched

Social networking

Summit: How businesses should manage their brands online

In part one of V3.co.uk's interview with Dirk Singer, he dicusses social media monitoring strategies

RIM discusses new developer tools

Blackberry exec on the latest offerings for programmers

Analysis and Reports

Remote access - Three steps to getting connected

3.4 million UK professionals now work from home – is your company equipped?

Cost benefits of a global collaboration network

This white paper is a must read for organisations looking for evidence of the bottom-line benefits of high-definition video and voice communications

Poll

Impact of Information Overload poll

Impact of Information Overload poll

What is the biggest problem your firm faces as a result of the data explosion?

View poll results

Advertisement

White paper library

Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies; IThound.com brings you over 6,000 white papers, case studies and analyst reports.

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Spotlight

Information management

Summit: Quiz IBM experts on information strategies

Join our live chat session on Thursday at 11am to...

RIM discusses new developer tools

Blackberry exec on the latest offerings for programmers

Houses of parliament

Summit: Doubts raised over Tory plans for NHS records

Experts say data quality could be an issue

Researchers take down spam botnet

Researchers from security firm FireEye have been able to effectively...

Primary Navigation