Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Of your hand

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– it’s tiny.

I’d be tempted to say you could fit one in the palm of your hand, but that’s not strictly speaking true – you could fit more than one in the palm of your hand. Did I say it was small?

Palm is, of course, an illustriou­s name in the history of technology.

Before everyone was carrying smartphone­s with calendars, notepads, and contacts lists in them, Palm was making the Palm Pilot – what they used to call a PDA (personal digital assistant).

The only thing those devices lacked compared to today’s phones was mobile internet connectivi­ty – they were essentiall­y smartphone­s without the phone bit. So you could say the mobile phone tech today owes as much to Palm as it does to Apple and the iPhone.

Sadly, or not, the original Palm company went the way of the dodo in 2010 when its efforts to keep up with Apple in the new world of the iPhone proved to be too little, too late.

HP bought the company name and started producing Palm branded phones in 2011, but soon put a stop to that when sales were disappoint­ing.

The Palm brand name was sold on by HP in 2014 to a Chinese company called TCL, which makes phones under the name Alcatel – and they said they’d be bringing the Palm brand back to the smartphone world.

Then all went quiet. Until now. The new Palm smartphone is made by a start-up based in San Francisco, financed by TCL and, in what you might call an odd twist, NBA basketball player Stephen Curry.

So it’s not really the same company at all – different people, different technology.

But I have to say, the phone itself won’t dent Palm’s reputation as an innovative company that makes useful technology.

It’s a curious device. One thing you can say for certain is that it’s different from the other smartphone­s on the market.

In the US it’s marketed as a go-anywhere companion device, like a smartwatch, that is supposed to be paired with a larger phone and taken places you wouldn’t want to take your big phone – like the beach or the gym.

With its 3.3in display (compared, for example, with the Samsung Galaxy S9’s 5.8in screen) perhaps Palm doesn’t see anyone using it as a day-to-day phone. But I would beg to differ on that – especially if you’re the kind of person who would like to use their phone a little less.

Because it does everything a regular smartphone can, using a full-version of Android that’s modified only slightly – the home screen icons are arranged in a scrollable grid to account for the smaller screen size.

You might struggle a little if your eyesight’s a bit off, granted, but you are not going to plump for this phone if you’re going to be reading or writing lots of text.

Even intensive social media hounds will find it uncomforta­ble.

But if you’re dashing off short text messages, reading the odd email, checking out the odd tweet, listening to music – you’ll be fine. You’ll also be fine if you’re under 40.

As if to emphasise the point, the phone has a special setting called Life Mode, which effectivel­y turns it into a passive device with zero notificati­ons – it won’t even ring if someone calls you, and you’ll only see what’s been going on if you wake the phone up and look at the screen.

I can almost guarantee you will have missed nothing important.

There’s a pair of decent cameras, too – 12MP on the back and 8MP on the front, so you can still snap those perfect selfies.

Other features include the Google Assistant, facial recognitio­n for unlocking, water and dust resistance, and battery life of about eight hours with typical usage.

So it’s a cool-looking and rugged device, which can run all your favourite apps, but is designed for more mindful usage.

I could get used to that.

You can get the Palm exclusivel­y from Vodafone at the moment, free from upfront cost on plans starting at £30-a-month. Vodafone is currently only offering the Palm as a standalone device, but is expected to add pairing with a standard-sized smartphone later this year.

FACETIME FRIENDS WILL HAVE TO WAIT

IT’S not been that long since Apple introduced Group FaceTime to the iPhone and iPad, but had to pull the feature to fix a security flaw in the system. Apple said a fix was on the way, and would roll out to devices this week.

The bug was discovered, and reported to Apple, by 14-year-old Grant Thompson, while he was starting a Group FaceTime session with friends.

When he swiped up to add a second friend to a call before the first had answered, he was immediatel­y connected to the first friend’s phone… even though they had not answered. Which could’ve been awkward.

Anyway, Apple’s fixing the bug, and the word is it may even “compensate” young Grant for his trouble.

THE END FOR GOOGLE+

SAVE the date – Google+ will finally be laid to rest on April 2.

There’s very little chance many of you will have much saved in Google’s ill-fated social network (if you had, it wouldn’t be shutting down, would it?), but if you do, you’ll want to head over there and download it before Google deletes it.

To do so, log on at Google’s “download you data” page (

where you can select the data you want to save, and where to save it to.

Google has said the deletion of data will take some time, so yours might not be gone on April 2, but I wouldn’t take that chance.

If you have stuff you want to keep, go and get it now…

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It’s the phone you can take anywhere whatever you are doing
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Although many of the 500,000+ artworks in the app at the moment are based on selfies, you don’t have to stick to portraits.If you’re in any way interested in painting and drawing, there is much inspiratio­n to be had, and a ready-made audience to present your work to.
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