|
|
PALMPOWER CLASSIC
Movies for your low-cost Palm handheld
By Vince Lee
About this PalmPower classic Because Palm recently introduced a low-cost color device, their new m130 handheld, we feel it's important to showcase some interesting applications. Although we originally ran this article last year, it's still interesting -- and now relevant to a wider audience. There's a very prolific developer named Vince Lee who's written a whole bunch of wonderful software. Last year, he figured out how get video clips to play on handhelds (including synchronized sound). In this PalmPower Classic (updated and re-edited for this issue), you can learn about the potential applications of this technology and get some tips on how to best take advantage of TealMovie, his cool software.
|
Movies on a Palm handheld? A few years ago, most people wouldn't have thought it even possible, but the flurry of product releases in the past years have shown that it can not only be done, but it's a hotbed of activity and the newest "cool" thing. At the PalmSource 2000 developer's conference in Santa Clara, no fewer than four companies were exhibiting some form of movie playback technology. Curiously, their booths were all located in close proximity to each other, apparently by pure coincidence.
What's it good for? Sure, playing a small video clip on the Palm handheld makes for a really great demo, but what's it really good for? If you talk to some of the companies working on the technology, they often talk about its use in corporate training, scientific visualization, and education. While this type of copy has probably helped make handheld video the current darling of some hi-tech investors, is the ability to view a video clip on a handheld compelling enough to have a real, practical use?
At the very least, movies on a Palm computer have undeniable "wow" power. And perhaps herein lies its greatest potential. Whenever I start to play a video clip on my Palm handheld, it's amazing to watch people gather around in wonder and disbelief. "I didn't know a Palm handheld could do that," is what they almost always say. And if they have Palm units themselves, they inevitably follow with "Hey, can you beam that to me?"
|
|
|
|