Palm V
Palm V is a personal digital assistant (PDA) by 3Com. Released in 1999 by 3Com,[1] the four-ounce (110 g) PDA has an aluminum enclosure containing a Dragonball EZ central processing unit[2] (capable of overclocking to 39 MHz) and 2 MB of memory.[3] Measuring 4.5 inches (110 mm) tall and less than 0.5 inches (13 mm) thick, the device's 16-shade grayscale display[1] has a backlight and increased resolution from the previous-generation Palm III.[2] Unlike that older device, which uses disposable batteries (AAAs), the Palm V has a built-in rechargeable lithium-ion battery with an expected charge lasting 1–2 weeks. Palm Vs are equipped with a serial port that is electrically though not physically compatible with the EIA-232-D telecommunications standard[1] (the redesigned enclosure design prevents Palm III-compatible accessories from connecting to the port)[2] and a Consumer IR transceiver.[4] Upon launch, the Palm V cost about US$500 (equivalent to about $910 in 2023), though it had reduced to $300–400 by January 2000 (equivalent to about $530–710 in 2023). Units sold in late 1999 came pre-loaded with Palm OS version 3.0, though 3.3 was available to download and install.[4] The IBM WorkPad c3 is the Palm V, relabeled.[1] Ars Technica's Will Smith raved about his Palm V in 1999, recommending it to all interested, excepting Palm III users for whom the technical-specifications upgrade wasn't substantial enough.[2] Writing for TechRepublic in January 2000, Jeff Thompson was enthusiastically full of praise for the Palm V, both for personal and enterprise uses.[4] See also
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