| Main |

The Irrelevancy of Treo

Category: Toys, Tools, Tech

Thursday, April 21, 2005

Russ Beattie gives PalmOne a well-deserved smack today over sales of the Treo line:

PalmOne's sold a million Treos (isn't that quaint?) and to "celebrate" they're giving away a free Treo every five minutes [yesterday]... It'd be great to have a Treo... so I could pull it out and mock it at meetings and other gatherings of mobile professionals. You see, the Treo 600 was launched in September 2003, so it's taken them roughly 20 months to sell a million units, which works out to about 50,000 Treos sold a month. That's pretty pathetic. Keep in mind there were roughly 675 million mobile phones sold last year worldwide, including 14.38 million Symbian phones (and 6.67m in 2003). Palm's numbers aren't just anemic compared to this, they're statistically nonexistant.

It's official: Palm (One/Source) is completely irrelevant in the mobile market.

Yup. I've written before on my problems with Palm's strategy, and this is another example: keeping the Treo priced at the "executive toy" level kept it from ever developing any real market share. Classic Apple-circa-1988 thinking. Way to go fellas.

UPDATE (04/27/2005): Russ highlights some new numbers that point to slightly better performance from PalmOne than he originally anticipated. I still stand by my points, though; Palm is increasingly marginal as a platform.

Leave a comment


Recently on Just Well Mixed

Going Meta

Syndicate Me, Baby

Feed iconWeb feed

Share and Enjoy

Except where otherwise noted, all content on this site is provided under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license.

Obligatory Disclaimer

If you think anything I write here represents the opinions of anybody but myself, you need more help than I can give you. The opinions are all mine, folks. Nobody else's.

If that's too hard to understand... well, I'm sorry. There's only so much I can do. I'm not a therapist, and I'm not a miracle worker. I wish I could help you work through your delusional belief that I'm speaking for anyone else but myself. Honestly, I do. But in the end, that's a monkey you'll have to get off your back on your own. Sorry.