By Braden FaulknerPublished: February 25, 2010

A little off from today's rumored release date but, according to an admin at Sprint's own
forums webOS 1.4 will hit Pre and Pixi users (on Sprint and in the US anyway) tomorrow evening. The change log, which was supposedly leaked today lists the addition of video recording, something by the name of notification enhancements, which is likely LED notifications and of course, support for Adobe Flash 10.1 beta. Although, the list also includes a few fixes such as, the network time sync issue that seems to be haunting many GSM Pre users. Currently, this is pretty much still a rumor if not, slightly tipped in the direction of happening. Then again, February's days are numbered and if Palm is going to deliver on the February release promised, there isn't much time left. We'll just have to wait and see, I suppose.
The full supposed change log is below.
Update: According to
PreCentral the 1.4 update for the Pixi will be released on February 29th but, as they mention 2010 isn't a leap year, Also there is a new pic from a Sprint source.
Palm Pre and Pixi WebOS 1.4 Software Update
On 2/26, Friday evening, Pre and Pixi device users will receive an Over the Air (OTA) notification to download the new 1.4 webOS software release.
This release includes both fixes and feature updates (listed below).
Fixes:
- Time Zone bug fixed
- Network time sync bug fixed to reflect accurate Network time
- Bluetooth car-kit transition to device corrected
- No EV icon bug fixed (random)
- Random browser formatting bugs fixed
- Fixed bug that incorrectly displayed Sprint when actually was Digital Roaming
- Missing Contact issue specifically with swap down to 1.2.9.1 or less
Feature Updates:
- Phonebook Transfer (import & export)
- Adds Video Capture capability & edit
- Calendar Enhancements
- Messaging Enhancements
- Improved Performance (Phone & CAL)
- Email Enhancements
- Notification Enhancements
- Adds Adobe Flash 10.0 (Pre Only)
- NOTE: The 1.4 software adds the ability to use the Flash 10.0 Adobe plug-in which will be available shortly from the Palm Appl Catalogue.
[via
Engadget]
[Source:
Sprint]
By Max KanterPublished: February 4, 2010 Curious about where the “Mx” from The Mx Web comes from? Want to learn how I learned to program?
Over at Palm Dev Center, an interview with me, Max Kanter, has been published. It was conducted awhile back, but is live now. It is just a one of currently 7 interviews in an on going series titled, “Getting Their Mojo Working: webOS Developer Profiles” According to the site, it is “a semi-regular series of interviews with developers”. I have read the early interviews and it was an honor to be given the opportunity to be interviewed.
Anyways, if you missed the link above, check out the interview here. Be sure to check out the earlier developer interviews.
By volcom45Published: February 3, 2010 
I'd like to start out by saying that I've followed Aonic since day one on his MyTether project and was even the very first one to donate to him back in July of 09 or so, and am very pleased to see how far he has taken it since then. When webOS 1.3.1 came out, it broke his Wifi tethering method and he stayed up 13 straight hours that night working on a fix. Because they removed certain aspects of his ad-hoc methods, he was stuck providing us with a patch which gave us Wifi but compromised the use of the camera app to do so. This had many MyTether donators disappointed but we knew it was better than nothing. Then Mobile HotSpot came along on the new Verizon Pre and soon was hacked to work on Sprint. This required no camera patching and just worked as a nice access point for up to 5 devices simultaneously. After playing with Mobile Hotspot myself, I sent a tweet to Aonic saying, how about a new version that doesn't require patching since MHS can do it. I doubt it was due to my tweet but next day, he tweeted he was working on a new beta and he's gone nuts on it since then! I'd like to highlight some of his recent work for you and tell you why I choose MyTether over Mobile HotSpot. Look for more of it after the break!
So to start out, Aonic made Wifi work again in the same manner that MHS does so. His also allows up to 5 clients to connect simultaneously. You can setup your own SSID name and your own password of 8+ characters. Once this was in place, he added the same "Connected Devices" to show who all is connected just like MHS does. He set it to only refresh the list every 60 seconds to prolong battery life.

It works out great. Now a feature that I'd requested since the very beginning to be on par with tethering apps I'd used on my Treo 755P such as PDANet, I wanted some sort of bandwidth count to show how much data I used on my phone while tethering. Aonic started taking requests after the connected devices list and I reminded him of this. He jumped right on it and even took it to a level beyond what I was hoping for. He added bandwidth graphs like you see in the first 2 screenshots that post a new bar every 10 seconds showing how much download and upload you are using in Kilobytes. He then averages out these 10 second intervals and calculates the total bandwidth you've used (up and down) and displays it nicely below the graph. The result is very impressive. Mobile HotSpot sure doesn't have anything like this to brag about. Aonic has since added this graphing and totals to his USB option as well. More areas MHS lack, no USB or Bluetooth tethering! MyTether offers Wifi, USB and Bluetooth. You choose whatever works best for you. The speeds have been great! On Wifi, I tend to get about 1.3-5mbit download and about 300-400k upload.

Another feature he has added that some may find useful is the ability to disconnect any connected client that you might not want. As you see in the screenshot to the left, you can simply swipe your finger to the right over a client in the connected list and you are given the option to delete as you are familiar with in webOS. This drops their IP. The current release is still in Beta form but very close to full release. The Beta is available to all donators. The donating price is set at $14.95 and you have access to all future releases. He has told me he will fix MyTether anytime a webOS update breaks it. His recent features alone are worth the price! You cannot purchase this from the App Catalog or even download it in Preware or WOSQI. He has created his own installer for it and you put your phone into Developer mode and then install. I have been playing around with every Beta he has released since the camera compromising version and it has been exciting to see the progress! If you are at all interested in picking up MyTether for yourself, hop on over to
http://mytether.net/ and donate! He'll send you access to his donators only forum and the link to his Beta installer which will soon be full version. You can also follow him on Twitter at
www.twitter.com/MyTether. Thanks for the hard work, Aonic!
By Braden FaulknerPublished: February 2, 2010
That's right, some webOS patches, WebOS Quick Install, webOS Repair Utility and now webOS ROM Cooker; all of these projects are those of Jason Robitaille. Jason is starting to become a household name in the webOS homebrew world (or at least in my house). So; webOS ROM Cooker allows a user to take a webOS Doctor Image and add Patches and Tweaks and then allows the user to bundle it up and install it with one swoop. WebOS ROM Cooker is a big step forward for the homebrew/patching scene. This tool looks very promising and will definitely be great for homebrewers, developers and users alike. I, for one can't wait for this to be released and keep up the great work Jason!
[Image via
Jason]
By Gogo YubariPublished: February 1, 2010 What is webOS?
webOS is the groundbreaking mobile operating system from Palm, the company that basically created the smartphone. At CES 2009, Palm unveiled webOS and the Pre to the public with features that changed the way you used your mobile phone. The ability to run and easily control multiple applications, integration of native and third party apps to keep information intuitively accessible, and the introduction of a gesture area for better control of various features of the OS are all reasons why webOS is the most elegant mobile platform available.
Features of webOS
* Synergy
Palm Synergy™ is a webOS feature that groups similar things together and makes them easier to use. It gathers contact and calendar information from places like Facebook®, Google™, LinkedIn®, Microsoft® Office Outlook®, and Yahoo!, and puts it into one view. It recognizes text and IM chats with the same person and combines them into one conversation. With Palm Synergy, important information is all in one place.
* Multiple Apps
Flip from one open app to another. And back again. Palm webOS lets you keep multiple apps open without losing your place.3 Check work email while making plans for the night. Map an address right from Contacts. Automatically add a restaurant reservation to your calendar. Zoom in or out on a page, move open apps around like cards in a deck, or close apps simply by flicking them off the screen.
* Unintrusive Notifications
Keep up with email, messages, event reminders, and more without being completely interrupted. Incoming notifications appear at the bottom of the screen, giving you a quick snapshot of new information. You can respond or ignore with one touch—and without having to close any applications.
* Universal Search
Automatically start searching the phone or the web just by typing on the keyboard. Palm webOS begins looking for results on the phone—and then offers to search Google, Google Maps™, Wikipedia, or Twitter.
* Gesture Area
Directly under the screen of each webOS device is a gesture that allows you to perform gestures that control various functions of the OS.
o Go Back: Instead of having a button taking up screen real estate, you can simply swipe your finger from right-to-left to move back in the web browser or other applications. This gesture will also "minimize" notifications you have received and want to leave open at the bottom of the screen to be dealt with at another time.
o Card View: "cards" is a metaphor for the apps you have open on your device. Either tap once in the center of the gesture area, or swipe up from the gesture area when you want to switch from full screen view where you are directly interacting with an app to Card View. This way you can choose a new app to bring into view or close apps you don't want to remain open.
o Open Launcher: While in Card View you can tap the Launcher icon, or you can perform a similar "swipe up" that got you into card view in the first place to bring up the Launcher to choose another application to open.
o Quick Launch Wave: To leave your current app open and bring up the apps you've chosen to be included at the bottom of the screen for quick-access you can drag your finger from the gesture area to the screen and keep it held down to bring up the wave. Simply bring your finger off the screen when it's over the app you want to launch and it will open in a new card.
o Switch Applications: When you want to quickly switch between apps without moving to Card View, you can swipe your finger across the entire gesture area either left or right to move to the next open app. This feature needs to be enabled as it is off by default. It is accessible in the Screen & Lock app located in the launcher.
* OTA Software Updates
Over-the-air software updates keep you up to speed with the latest enhancements to webOS. The same goes for data backup, which happens automatically each day. You can even erase your data remotely if your phone is lost or stolen.
* Applications *Now With 3D Gaming!*
Applications designed for the Palm® webOS™ platform make your phone more powerful, more useful, and more fun. And many take advantage of the Palm Synergy™ feature, allowing you to do more with just a touch. Automatically add an event date to your calendar. Share location information in one step.
At CES 2010, Palm introduced the PDK (Plug-in Development Kit) that allows developers to write apps in advanced coding languages to take full advantage of the hardware contained in the Palm Pre. Palm has partnered with a handful of high profile developers to deliver complex 3D games to the Pre such as Need For Speed, Sims 3, Oregon Trail and others.
webOS Updates
* 1.3.5.1 - 1/4/2010 - Changelog
* 1.3.5 - 12/28/2009 - Changelog
* 1.3.1 - 11/13/2009 - Changelog
* 1.2.1 - 10/2/2009 - Changelog
* 1.2.0 - 9/28/2009 - Changelog
* 1.1.0 - 7/23/2009 - Changelog
* 1.0.4 - 6/29/2009 - Changelog
* 1.0.3 - 6/19/2009 - Changelog
* 1.0.2 - 6/05/2009 - Changelog
Devices
click image for device info at Palm.com
Palm Pre (left) is available on Sprint
Palm Pre Plus (right) available on Verizon Wireless
Palm Pixi (left) available on Sprint
Palm Pixi Plus (right) available on Verizon Wireless
Comparison Chart
Touchstone
Palm Touchstone is based on inductive technology. Inductive coils inside the Touchstone Charging Dock generate a small, oscillating electromagnetic field and transmit it through the Touchstone Back Cover on your device. This allows you to charge your Palm webOS™ phone without connecting a wire directly to it.
As you place your device on the Palm Touchstone Charging Dock, it magnetically aligns in portrait or landscape mode, and charging begins. It's easier, more convenient, and it charges your phone in about the same amount of time as a standard power charger.
Features of Touchstone
* Place your phone on the Palm Touchstone Charging Dock when you're on a call and its speakerphone automatically turns on.
* Pick your phone up from the Palm Touchstone Charging Dock while you're on speakerphone and the conversation is automatically routed back to the earpiece.
* For incoming phone calls, simply pick up the phone from the Palm Touchstone Charging Dock and it answers automatically, without having to tap the screen.
* When your phone is not in use, Nightstand mode displays the time and incoming notifications while on the Palm Touchstone Charging Dock.
Carriers
Pre
* Sprint, Verizon
* Bell
* Movistar
* SFR
* O2
* Germany: O2
Pixi
* Sprint, Verizon
What's in store for the future of webOS (so far)?
Palm announced that in webOS version 1.4, scheduled to drop in February, that all devices will gain:
* Video record/edit, and direct upload to YouTube or Facebook.
* FULL Flash capability in the browser.
What makes webOS better than the iPhone?
I feel that there is pretty much nothing beneficial about the iPhone except the fact that it supports an assload of apps that can serve a wide variety of purposes. If you were to completely remove the ability to run downloadable apps from every platform, the iPhone wouldn't have a leg to stand on. It's entire OS is just a launcher and that's it.
* An OS with actual features like drop down menus, notification area, gestures. Universal search, that allows you to visit a website without launching a browser, call/text/e-mail contacts without opening contact info.
* Merges multiple web based accounts to offer a variety of information from different sources. Create an event in Google Calendar or Facebook on your PC and it automatically appears on your device. Add a friend on Facebook or AIM and they're automatically in your contacts.
* Support from Gameloft, EA and other developers to bring high quality 3D games and direct ports of high profile games available on the iPhone.
* You don't have to quit any app to take a call, answer a text, write an e-mail, etc.
* When you want to update the phone's software you aren't tied to a computer, specifially, your own computer with your own iTunes account. You download updates directly over the air.
* Instead of having to purchase new hardware to get new features like the 3G to get better data reception or the 3GS to get video recording, Palm is bringing new features to all existing devices.
* Palm fully embraces (and officially thanks in their CES presentation) the Homebrew community and the webOS Internals team who modify the way the device operates, adding capabilities not found on a stock device. Apple is not as forgiving to the people who go to great lengths to jailbreak their precious iPhone.
What makes webOS better than Android?
* Multiple open applications that you can actually see and manipulate without needing a task manager.
* Multi-touch enabled throughout the OS instead of being dropped from flagship devices like the Droid and Nexus One.
* Ability to store apps directly to the hard drive (8/16GB space, so far) instead of a small portion allowed on Android phones.
* Support from high profile game developers as has been said before.
* Same webOS version across all devices as opposed to multiple different versions available on an annoyingly vast amount of Android devices out there that may or may not get upgraded and all have a different look and feel.
What makes webOS better than Windows Mobile?
*
Useful Links/Resources/Help
* Official Palm US Site
* Official Palm Blog
* Palm webOSdev Development Site - Download SDK for development, read helpful documentations, developer forums, etc.
* Official Palm Pre (Sprint) Help & Support page - Support, Help, Video Walkthrough, basic stuff (how to zoom in, close cards, etc)
* PreCentral - Pre/Pixi Community Forums/Blog/News etc. Also a place to browse Homebrew Apps, Themes, Patches.
* webOS Internals - Team of individuals who have been paving the way for things like: how to gain Linux Access, Development Tools, browse Documentation, etc. Lot of deep internal stuff.
* webOSroundup - A site that I have been helping out with that features video reviews of numerous apps to help you get a better idea of what's good (and bad) in the App Catalog.
Homebrew Help
Homebrew is the terminology describing applications, patches, themes and tweaks that can be custom installed without having to use the official App Catalog on your device. There are many things that the Pre and Pixi are capable of once you unlock these features and there are multiple ways of going about gaining access to these tweaks, both on and off your device.
How to Install Homebrew Apps
webOS Quick Install
webOS Quick Install (WOSQI) is a GUI desktop program that allows you to customize your device with patches, apps, themes, etc. This is what most people use to install things onto their devices who don't want (or know how) to use Linux commands to do so.
How to: Getting Started: Homebrew Apps, Patches and Themes with WebOS Quick Install
Preware
Preware is installable via WOSQI and is an on-device application that allows you to do most, if not all of the things that WOQI can do on your computer. Want to install a Patch or Theme on the go without being tied to your dekstop? Preware lets you do it.
How to: How to Use Preware for Homebrew Apps, Patches, and Themes
Random things you should know, FAQs
* Data while Roaming - If you want to be able to access data while roaming, go to the Phone app, Menu, Preferences, enable Data Roaming. You might want to disable this when not in the U.S. because I think you can get charged for this while in Canada.
* Contact Integration - There is currently no way of ciphering out the contacts you import from Facebook, Gmail, Aim, etc. Everyone that is on your list will be added as a contact whether you like it or not. For me this is no big deal as you can type the contact you want and barely ever have to go to the contacts app itself. For some people this is an issue. YMMV.
* Cut/Copy/Paste How-To, Limitations, Text Input - In editable text fields - you hold the Shift key and the entire screen becomes somewhat of a trackball, you swipe in any direction and text becomes highlighted from where the cursor was. To edit the text you can either hit the Menu button at the top left of the screen and hit "edit" then either "cut", "copy" or "paste". More easily you can hold your finger in the gesture area so the button lights up, and then hit C for copy, X for cut, or P for paste. Similarly, hold the function key and swipe the screen to move the text input line around for more precise selection than just tapping the screen. In web pages/e-mails you can hold the Shift key and tap on any paragraph and it will become selected so you can copy it. You cannot only select a word or sentence, the whole paragraph will become highlighted. You can open Memos to paste the entire thing and then re-select the tidbit you want to paste elsewhere. In messaging, tapping a message will give you the option to copy or forward the text.
Easter Eggs
Palm has been a little playful by hiding certain features in the OS. Some features have to be unlocked by typing in a secret code or message, others are simply written in the OS but have to be enabled with Linux access. You guessed it, another list!
* Clock App- Open Clock, then prefs, then type "sixtyten". You'll hear a little notification sound. Now you set the alarm in 1 minute increments instead of only 5.
PLEASE THANK ShoogaSlim FOR THIS POST WITHOUT HIS INSIGHT THIS COULD NOT BE POSSIBLE
By Braden FaulknerPublished: January 31, 2010 
While browsing Palm's
international Internet presences, I paid a visit to the Asia Pacific areas. To my surprise, front and center was the Palm Pre. I discovered this originally on Palm's Hong Kong site but, the same promo appears on all the Asia Pacific countries Palm operates in except for China. That's Hong Kong, Australia, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. Although, when "Learn More" is clicked it does redirect to Palm's US page. There isn't a lot to say about this right now but, perhaps, somebody slipped up or more likely, its nothing to get excited about. However, this image doesn't extend to anywhere the Pre isn't offered outside the Asia Pacific areas so; there is still hope. We'll just have to wait and see.
By Braden FaulknerPublished: January 28, 2010
Somewhat understandably, there is no paid apps available outside of the US of A. Mostly because of licensing agreements and the basic business fact of not expanding your service until it's strong and profitable in the original market. That means there is no 3D games in Europe, Canada or Mexico. Although, we now know that paid apps will be arriving in Europe sometime in March. However, just the other day, a free version of Asphalt 5 hit the catalog. Following the logic Palm has previously displayed, one would think that it, (being free) would be available everywhere the App Catalog is. Well, unfortunately, that is not the case, it is only available to US webOS users. It may very well be the developers decision to make it available only in the US but, either way, it still leaves many Pre/Pixi(plus) out of the 3D fun. Which keeps the grand total of PDK apps in the international catalog at zero. But, hey at least there's
Quake.
[Image via
Palm]