Palm (companion)
Android smartphone / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Palm phone, or "Palm companion device", "Palm Palm", "TCL Palm",[4] codenamed "Pepito" with model number PVG100[5][6] is a smartphone running the Android operating system, announced on October 15, 2018, and is first available in the United States from November 2, that year.[7]
Codename | Pepito |
---|---|
Brand | Palm Ventures Group TCL Corporation (In some markets)[1] |
Manufacturer | Tinno Mobile |
Model | PVG100 |
Compatible networks | 3G UMTS, 4G LTE |
First released | October 15, 2018; 5 years ago (2018-10-15) |
Availability by region | November 2, 2018 (US) December 6, 2018 (UK, Spain, Germany) 2019 (Other European countries) January 20, 2019 (Hong Kong) April 4, 2019 (US, standalone) April 24, 2019 (Japan)[2] |
Type | Smartphone Wearable device "Ultra-Mobile" |
Form factor | Slate |
Dimensions | 96.6 mm × 50.6 mm × 7.4 mm (3.80 in × 1.99 in × 0.29 in) |
Weight | 62.5 g (2.20 oz) |
Operating system | Original: Android 8.1 "Oreo" |
System-on-chip | Qualcomm Snapdragon 435 |
CPU | MSM8940 Octa-core (4x1.4 GHz and 4x1.1 GHz) Kryo 360 |
GPU | Adreno 505 |
Memory | 3 GB RAM |
Storage | 32 GB |
Removable storage | non-expandable |
Battery | 800 mAh |
Display | 3.3 in (83.8 mm) 1280x720 LCD (445 ppi) |
Sound | Dual purpose speaker |
Rear camera | 12MP with flash |
Front camera | 8MP |
Connectivity | Bluetooth 4.2 low energy Wi-Fi b/g/n (2.4GHz) USB-C |
Data inputs |
|
Other | Fleksy on-screen virtual keyboard |
Website | www |
References | [3] |
Palm is developed, designed, and marketed by Palm Ventures Group, a San Francisco-based start up founded by Dennis Miloseski and Howard Nuk. Palm Ventures is financially backed by Chinese electronics company TCL that owns the Palm trademark, originally of Palm, Inc.[8][9] The phone is manufactured by China's Tinno Mobile as an ODM for TCL.[10]
With a 3.3-inch screen and 62.5 g weight that is noticeably smaller and lighter than other smartphones released at the same time, the Palm was initially marketed as "an ultra-mobile companion" device that is meant to be used in conjunction with a regular smartphone—positioning it as a cross-over between a wearable and a smartphone, and originally could only be used by pairing the device with another phone on the Verizon network.[11][12] However, the restriction was subsequently lifted for new buyers as well as oversea markets, which make it also possible to use the device as a standalone phone.[13]
It is the first "Palm"-branded device on the market since 2010 (Palm Pre 2).[14]