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Palm Admits Error, Fixes Nothing
By Elisa Batista |
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![]() ![]() ![]() 2:00 a.m. Aug. 20, 2002 PDT Palm is in hot water and some of its customers are steamed. Despite misleading customers as to how many colors its m130 organizer actually displayed, the company said Monday it had no plans to reimburse customers for its error. To the dismay of many Palm owners, it didn't even issue an apology on its website.
Owners of Palm's other color-screened products, the m505 and m515, questioned whether they really had 16-bit PDAs capable of displaying the 65,536 colors Palm promises. Palm insists that they do. Nonetheless, Palm owners in general expressed disgust with the company. "Palm needs to do the right thing here," posted another person on Palm Infocenter. "This was false advertising. Customers were told they were buying X and they got Y. Screw your customers and they will eventually screw you." Hewlett-Packard faced a similar predicament two years ago when it admitted that it offered fewer than the 65,000 colors it promised for its Jornada handheld computer. The company offered refunds to its customers. But Palm doesn't have as much breathing room, industry analysts say. If the company doesn't compensate m130 owners, it runs the risk of "alienating their base," says Todd Kort, analyst for Gartner Dataquest. On the other hand, Palm is in a "weak financial state" -- not an ideal position to be in to reimburse customers' money, Kort said. "They definitely have a big PR problem on their hands at the very least." "It is kind of strange how they are trying to walk away from the issue," Kort said. "I don't know if the customers will allow that to be done, or the attorney general of the state of California who might potentially be interested in this. It is definitely false advertising whether it is intentional or unintentional. They need to correct that." Palm told the media on Monday that its m130 PDA was unable to display the 65,536 colors the company had been advertising since the product was first introduced in March. The company said the handheld supports so-called 16-bit programs, but it can't display the 65,536 colors typical of a 16-bit application. The m130 actually supports 4,096 colors typical of a 12-bit screen. But by using blending techniques, the company can display 58,621 "color combinations -- approximately 11 percent fewer color combinations than we had originally believed" on the m130 handheld, said Palm spokeswoman Marlene Somsak. Somsak said the "honest mistake" occurred in the implementation of the various components of the PDA. But Palm-backers on the Palm Infocenter message boards were weary of Palm's claims. They have heard this one before. 1 of 2 Next >>
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