Palm LifeDrive Mobile Manager | 
| Brand: Palm
List Price: $399.99 Buy New: $259.99 You Save: $140.00 (35%)
New (2) Used (6) Refurbished (1) from $144.99
Rating: 186 reviews Sales Rank: 4957
Platform: No Operating System Media: Electronics Batteries Included: No Operating System: Palm OS CPU Speed: 416 System Memory: 4000 Memory Type: SDRAM Native Resolution: 320x480 Modem: None Display Size: 3.8 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 0 x 0 x 0
MPN: 1044NA Model: 1044NA UPC: 805931013767 EAN: 0805931013767 ASIN: B0009JMT38
Release Date: May 2, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: New in open retail box! BONUS INTERNATIONAL ADAPTER PLUGS! Buy from a trusted source with years experience selling quality products on Amazon.com. Includes unit, charging adapter, hotsync cradle, software, stylus, and documents. Item ships lightning fast via Fedex with tracking e-mailed immediately. Pdas_and_more strives to satisfy all customers with an extremely quick processing time and expedited shipping. Your item will ship the same day or next day you purchase with tracking emailed immediately. We are committed to providing each customer with the highest standard of customer service. Please contact us if you ever have a concern
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| Features:
| • | Built-in WiFi and Bluetooth wireless support so you can easily carry all the essentials of your busy life | | • | 320 x 480 high-resolution, color display with choice of portrait and landscape viewing | | • | Support for POP, IMAP, and Exchange e-mail accounts helps you stay on top of your e-mail at WiFi hotspots around the world | | • | Plenty of room for storage with a 4GB hard drive | | • | Also includes a voice recorder, MP3 player, and photo viewer |
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Product Description The LifeDrive mobile manager from palmOne is the perfect companion for your digital lifestyle. With a 4 GB hard drive, extra-sharp high-resolution color display and built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth support, you can easily manage, access and share your documents and media files. Includes email support, plus MP3 player and photo viewer.Drag and drop thousands of files from your PC. LifeDrive Manager does the synchronizing for you, preserving your PC's directory structure and ensuring you always have the most recent versions of your documents safely with you.You can store and access years of email, thousands of documents, presentations and photos, hundreds of songs and hours of video... The non-volatile memory keeps your information safe.Stay connected via your mobile phone or at public Wi-Fi hotspots. Access your POP, IMAP and Exchange email accounts and browse the web. Or, use Bluetooth to connect to compatible devices nearby.View photos and videos with the palmOne Media application. And enjoy all the songs in your personal music collection with on-board support for MP3 files.Rehearse your PowerPoint presentation, on your way to a meeting. Keep all of your important Word and Excel documents at your fingertips. Synchronize and view an Acrobat file.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 181 more reviews...
The first steps towards real convergence. May 18, 2005 Christopher Wanko (Nutley, NJ USA) 262 out of 307 found this review helpful
Good or bad, this marks the beginning of the microDrive convergence into PDAs and cellphones. Yes, South Korea, China, and Japan have had microDrive PDAs for awhile now, but this is the US debut of real storage, and a definitive shift away from HotSync to a more-generic external drive model. Think about that for a moment. Even Microsoft PowerPCs don't support a pure external drive model of synchronizing. This allows you to just connect to a central data store (via Bluetooth, WiFi, or USB) and bring your MP3 files over. Or Word documents. Whatever. It's not the data storage that's most impressive here, it's the final surrender of Palm's HotSync methodology. That's the big news here. Of course, this device represents a compelling upgrade for older PDA users. Storage at near 4Gb means the iPod mini or Zen Micro are less attractive electronics, by virtue of their single-function purpose. The OS has been ramped up, and it still runs most of the legacy Palm apps (you will find that more and more apps are not migrating, though). The extra treat of Bluetooth and WiFi radios means you can use a Bluetooth keyboard, connect to a BlueTooth cellphone, maybe stream music to your Bluetooth BMW.. or use WiFi to stream to a WiFi stereo system, receive that stream and playback, grab MP3s from your basement machine, and so forth. I can see this being used as a web pad in most homes, allowing for some web browsing, some MP3 playback, and more importantly, remotely viewing another PC on a home network (maybe to shuffle music playback or check email). Of course, having WiFi or Bluietooth in a PDA is not groundbreaking; having both isn't either, but it's impressive and long overdue. The sum of features makes this a worthy addition if you're looking for a new PDA, or if you want something much more than an iPod mini or Creative Zen Micro. However, if you hang on a few months, maybe to Q4 2005, Nokia will have a cellphone with a 4Gb (maybe 6Gb by that time) microDrive, and then the electronics landscape changes forever, because no one will want "just an MP3 player" ever again (unless they really don't want a cellphone or handheld computer). Fred
Good start, but not perfect yet. June 4, 2005 Udaya Liyanage (Saint Louis, MO) 251 out of 272 found this review helpful
I got the Lifedrive one week ago to replace a sony Clie. The following comments are based on one week experience. Pros: 1. New lifedrive manager software which in most cases obviate the need for hotsync. This is truly revolutionary. 2. Larger hard drive. Finally we are catching up with the rest of the world. You may be able to replace your iPod mini with this more versatile handheld. 3. Good voice recorder. I just got back from a meeting and recorded one whole days worth of talks from the back of a room with 60 people and record quality was quite good and no software bugs were noticed. In addition to the time allocated under your voice memo section, you can directly record to your hard drive allowing you to record more stuff. 4. This machine can store an enormous number of powerpoint presentations. This is a big plus for if you do any teaching e.g. quick review of a topic with a med student before a surgery. 5. Nice metallic finish. Looks better than cheap looking T5. Cons: 1. Poor battery life. After a whole day of heavy use, the battery dies without warning. 2. Repeated powering down of the hard drive causing a few second delay in opening new applications. Annoying as hell!!! 3. No way to customize turning off the screen after a short period of inactivity. If you play chess on this machine, it becomes annoying. By the way, Hiarcs chess engine runs quite well on this machine(Downloadable for 39.99). 4. Adobe reader formats most documents well, but some with complex formatting turn into incomprehensible amorphous text. 5. Price. I don't understand why a piece of cheap looking electronics made in china should cost this much money. 6. No integrated cell phone or camera. 7. Some applications don't run on this device. I signed up for audible.com membership to get a $100 rebate. But so far I have been unable to make the audible manager recognize this device and download audiobooks to this device. 8. It is very disappointing palm decided to put the cheaper and slower WiFi. I suspect their next device will have the faster version. 9. Size. More bulky than other palm handhelds. Not a true shirt pocket device. 10. No headphone provided. Why can't they throw in a $10 headphone for this $499 device. I am using my old sony clie headphones which works fine. Overall, 4 stars. I am sure I will find a lot more annoying problems as I use it more.
Do not buy this unit - Many problems August 19, 2005 Adam Boettiger (Portland, OR United States) 69 out of 77 found this review helpful
Like many others, I am profoundly disappointed with Palm's latest release, the Life Drive Mobile Manager. There are many positive reviews posted here, but the majority of them are from users who are relatively new to the Palm PDA line. As a power user, and having owned nearly every model they released, I can say with confidence that if you are a power user, you will be returning this unit within two weeks. The majority of the third party apps that I used to use are not compatible with it and that causes fatal errors and random soft resets. When the app is uninstalled, the error stops, but because the unit boots off of the hard drive memory and not flash memory as all previous models did, a soft reset takes approximately TWO MINUTES 16 SECONDS from start to being ready to use again. It is unbelievable. You should really drive down to play with one to look at the lag time BEFORE you order it here at Amazon. I promise you - it will be time well spent. The power switch on the top of it is a slider that is made of plastic, looks very cheap and I'm guessing will last maybe 3 or 4 months tops before it needs to be replaced. If you are thinking of buying this for watching videos and playing MP3s or as a replacement for your iPOD, keep your iPOD. Sometimes I wish Apple would buy Palm. Maybe then we'd start seeing some quality. No cradle - a flimsy breakaway plugin to charge it. The hard case looks sexy and sleek, but you will soon tire of having to pry it open several times a day with your thumbnail. And if you don't have any thumbnails, you're out of luck. Don't get the hard case or you'll never be able to open it. Overall a big disappointment for me. I made the mistake of selling my T3 and putting the proceeds toward the LifeDrive. I still have time to return it - and I likely will - but am having a huge problem trying to decide what to downgrade to from the LifeDrive. T5 didn't get much better reviews and T3 is a few years old now... If you absolutely MUST buy this unit, please wait until the LifeDrive 2 and LifeDrive 3 come out later this year or in early 2006. Remember the T, T2 and T3? My guess is the same thing is going to happen to this one. They would have saved themselves a lot of headaches if they waited until it was ready to be released as a quality product. Now I don't know what the heck to buy to replace it. T5 maybe, but still nothing compares to the T3 thus far. The only good thing the LifeDrive has going for it is a lot of storage and internal WiFi; HOWEVER, the version of wifi they chose to install is the slow version - it crawls; and I have no idea what all the fuss is about people being able to use this as a 4GB USB drive. Yes, it works as an external drive. It's slow but it works. Big Hooey. Go down and get yourself a 1 GB USB flash RAM drive (tiny) if you want that level of portability. For me as a longtime Palm user, the ability to use this as an external drive is NOT a huge deal. I've been using USB flash drives for years to do what this does. Perhaps the biggest annoyance - and primarily the reason why I am returning the unit - is the lag time switching between apps. You click the stylus on an app and since it is no longer booting from the flash drive, there is a two second noticable lag time before the app launches. It's ridiculous. They say that putting a hard drive in a PDA is an achievement that will allow for a great deal of things to come. It would be. If they had left the unit booting to flash ram and used the 4 GB for storage only. Big mistake. Bad Developer. No cookie for you. This crashes as often as a PocketPC, but it is much slower. That's the best way I can describe it. Hope this helps! Adam Boettiger UPDATE: 22 AUG 2005 - Wanted to add a post script to this to let readers know that I did in fact return the LifeDrive to the store and purchased the Tungsten T5 and some accessories instead. While the T5 is not everything I want in a PDA, in my opinion it is the best unit Palm has on the market - primarily because it has fewer problems than the LifeDrive. After setting it up last week, I've had no problems with the T5 since. As a longtime Palm user, it was nice to see the zippy flash drive again, with no two-second delays in switching between apps, no Fatal Exception errors, etc. It just worked. If you must upgrade now, buy the T5. If you can wait 4-6 months, hold out for the OS 6 devices due out in Q1 or Q2 of 2006. You'll probably be glad you did. Hope this was useful. Adam Boettiger
Mine is perfect May 21, 2006 Allan Lee 64 out of 69 found this review helpful
I had the pleasure of reading some of your reviews, and quite frankly, I don't know if I should feel fortunate or laughing out loud, not to be rude, but literally, given that there is absolutely nothing wrong with mine. After you received your LifeDrive, the unit turned on ok, the jacks don't fall out, the screen is not scratch etc, then, folks, there is nothing wrong with your unit. I can say with 99% confident that it is all software related. Here's some advices for you that might help: 1). You should not use the operating software come with the CD; instead, you should download the latest version from the Palm site. And you should install the update 2.0. Then you need to know how the unit works, there are two storage areas in the unit, the internal memory and your 4 GB hard drive. You need to understand how backup works, and how to backup your cache as well as the files in the hard drive. Use Drive mode to backup your hard drive to your pc, and resync often for backing up the other portion. There is no need to use LifeDrive manager come with the CD. 2). You must have some sort of Uninstall software installed in your unit, because chances are you will installed something and want to get rid of it. I am using Uninstall Manager from Palm, and it works great. Oh, and for the one who complaints about the unit turned itself off after 3 minutes of inactivity ... There are softwares to prevent that, check the web. Now here is the truth. This unit by itself may be over-priced; however, the synergy this unit can provide after you cleverly match it with well chosen softwares will give you a return on investment that is completely unmatched even at 2 to 3 times their combined price point. It's like having an assistant working for you 24/7 and you pay him/her 50 cents a day. My LifeDrive is a powerful breast after I mate it with the following personally chosen softwares: Uninstall Manager, DateBk5, ShadowPlan, DayNotez, Supernames 2.0, Repligo PDF Mobilizer. Doc to Go 8.0, SmartList to Go, MyBible, etc. You get the point. (alternatively, you can replaced Datebk5 with Agendus, and Supernames with Beyond Contact, ShadowPlan with ListPro, or Life Balance etc). I don't play games, watch videos, or listen to mp3, but you can if you like. I have not had one single reset that I am not aware of. Perhaps the only down side is that the unit does take an extra second to load, but after a while, I hardly notice it. It doesn't have a camera which some of you might prefer. Other than this, great unit.
Great device-- Very pleased! February 26, 2006 Kevin Stinson (San Jose, CA) 38 out of 39 found this review helpful
I've had my Lifedrive for about 3 mos. now and have been very pleased with it. There seems to be quite a few negative reviews about the Lifedrive so I was a little wary at first. Many of the complaints seemed to stem from running older Palm software that didn't operate on the new Palm OS or from people who weren't used to using Palm PDA's. Although Palms are very easy and intuitive to use I think the Lifedrive is a little more complex due to the integrated hard drive, which at first doesn't seem integrated at all. I didn't reuse any of my older Palm OS software which must have spared me from some of the re-starts and lock-ups some people experienced. Once my unit was charged I started with a new user name (so a new synch profile is created) and then immediately installed the 2.0 software update. I've only had 2 restarts on the device since I started using it, but I use it quite a lot. One restart was apparently due to a poor wireless connection and another I think was caused by Versamail while downloading an e-mail with an attachment. Other than that the device has been very stable and the restarts haven't been repeated. At first I wasn't very pleased with the new Graffiti II but now that I'm used to it I'll concede that maybe it is an improvement over the older version. Handwriting recognition on Palms has always seemed far superior than on Pocket PC's to me and the Lifedrive's no exception. Some reviewers have mentioned a "lag" problem when starting a new program. I was a little worried about this before I purchased the Lifedrive after reading it in several reviews. However, I tested a couple of Lifedrives first at electronic stores and didn't really notice any lagging or hesitating. It might have been 3rd party software issues as I haven't noticed this problem-- and I'm very impatient. www.palmfocus.com has a list of Palm software rated for compatability with the Lifedrive. Before installing older Palm OS software it would be a good idea to check this list rather than struggle with your device. (Any software written for the new OS isn't an issue as far as I know.) Pros: +Wireless works well and connects easily. +Being able to store, view and edit MS Word and Excel in their native format is a plus. (no conversion step as on Pocket PC) +Store tons of videos, music and photos and take it with you everywhere. +Synchrone entire folders from your desktop computer (Only folders on the root drive of your device can be synchronized so nested folders won't be synchronized unless you spread them out in the root directory of the drive. This will change the folder heirarchy on your device but not your desktop if you want to keep all the folders synchronized) +The USB synchronization and connection has been flawless. (This hasn't been my experience with Pocket PC's) +Very powerful yet elegant PDA! Cons: -Battery consumption high when using wireless. Don't leave on any longer than you have to. -It's a little big and bulky to hang on to compared to older Palm PDA's. (Wish it had a place for a lanyard) -Working with other applications while listing to music causes interuptions in the music playback. -Versamail synch setup didn't go very easily for me. Make sure your default e-mail profile on your desktop is Outlook before you even get started with mail sync setup. I've installed Dataviz Smartlist which is an excellent and fairly sophisticated database application which can sync with Microsoft Access. It works very well on the Lifedrive. Also installed Mapopolis and it also works well. You must install maps to RAM or on a SD card and not the hard drive.
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