Palm TX

The Palm TX (written as "Palm T|X" in official documentation[1]) was a personal digital assistant which was produced by Palm, Inc. It was announced and released as part of Palm's October 2005 product cycle, and was in production until March 2009.[2][3][4]

Palm TX
The Palm TX
ManufacturerPalm, Inc.
TypePDA
LifespanNovember 2005-2009
Media128 MB Flash memory and (1) SD/SDIO/MMC slot
Operating systemPalm OS Garnet, 5.4.9
CPU312 MHz Intel XScale PXA 270
Memory32MB Random Access Memory, 128MB Flash
Display3.9 in, 320x480 px TFT LCD, 16-bit color touchscreen
InputTouchscreen (stylus-based)
CameraNone
Connectivity802.11b Wifi, Bluetooth, IrDA
Power1250 mA·h rechargeable lithium-ion non-removable battery
Dimensions120.9x78.22x15.5 mm (4.8x3.1x0.6 in.)
Related articlesTungsten T5

It succeeded the Tungsten T5 PDA. The TX marked Palm's discontinuation of "Tungsten" sub-branding for its high-end handhelds. It featured 802.11b Wi-Fi and Bluetooth wireless connectivity. It ran Palm OS Garnet, version 5.4.9. As Palm considered the LifeDrive to be separate from its PDA line, designating it as a "Mobile Manager", the TX was Palm's flagship PDA.

Hardware

The Palm TX featured a 312 MHz ARM-based Intel XScale PXA 270 microprocessor; a 320x480 transreflective screen that supported 65,000 colors; 802.11b Wi-Fi with an internal antenna; 128 MB of non-volatile storage, of which 100 MB is user accessible; an SDIO and MMC compatible SD expansion card slot; standard 3.5 mm headphone jack; infrared I/O port; single speaker capable of full audio playback; and an Athena Connector, referred to as a 'Multiconnector,' with separate data and power input. Trickle charging is possible via USB data cable.

The SD expansion card slot used 2 GB cards directly, and 4 GB capacity was usable if formatted to FAT32 with an included driver. The FAT32 driver was much slower than the FAT16 driver. Compatibility with the SDHC format could be achieved by a third party vendor add-on. To use the device as an mp3 player, it was generally necessary to use an SD card, as internal memory could not be used to store the associated mp3 files. However, it was possible to use a utility such as E2 Internal drive to use the internal memory as an SD card to store files.

Bluetooth connectivity was 1.1; the 1.2 indicated on some rear-panel stickers was erroneous.

Prior to its official announcement, a prototype was photographed with palmOne branding, labeled the "Tungsten XX,"[5] which was in-line with Palm's then-current lineup of higher-end PDAs.

Software

The organizer applications received slight improvements. For example, each entry in the Contacts application had nine "Custom" fields, up from four in the T5.

In addition to the basic organizer features, the built-in software for the TX included an email client (Versamail v3); DataViz Documents To Go 7 Professional Edition; clients for Adobe Acrobat PDF, Microsoft Exchange, E Reader, Audible audiobook, Avvenu and MobiTV, and could also connect to Kerio Connect using the Exchange ActiveSync protocol; Pocket Tunes v3 MP3 player; Blazer (web browser) v4 from Palm; connection wizards for Bluetooth and Wifi, and a phone dialer. The Wifi utility could be used as a crude sniffer.

gollark: Minoteaur development (pair programming).
gollark: Hmm. Apparently service discovery has an XEP number *after* various others. Worrying.
gollark: Which is long and inconvenient versus just saying "yes, this is an osmarkshypotheticalchatprotocol™-v2.1-capable system".
gollark: There's no particular benefit to it, and it makes it hard/unuseful to say you have a server/client supporting "XMPP" if that might mean a ton of different combinations of modules.
gollark: Putting core features into extensions brings nothing but more complex negotiations and fallbacks, and makes it a bit more annoying to depend on in other features.

See also

  • List of Palm OS devices
  • List of Palm OS software

References

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