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{{About|the Personal Digital Assistant |other uses|Tungsten (disambiguation)}}
[[Image:Palm tungsten.jpg|thumb|right|Palm Tungsten T5]]
The '''Palm Tungsten''' Series is [[Palm, Inc.]]'s line of business-class [[Palm OS]]-based [[Personal Digital Assistant|PDA]]s.


{{Information appliance
==Details==
|title=Tungsten E
Tungstens all have high-quality color screens, metal-toned or metal cases, and often have high-end features like [[Wi-Fi]] or [[Bluetooth]]. Since many businesses have prohibitions on the use of [[digital camera]]s, Tungstens do not have those built in. Generally, they cost between US$199 and $399, and, despite being marketed as business-class devices, are also widely sold through consumer outlets.
|image=[[Image:TungstenE.jpg|250px]]
|manufacturer=[[Palm, Inc.]]
|type=[[Personal digital assistant]]
|connectivity=[[Universal Serial Bus]], [[Infrared Data Association|IrDA]]
|media=[[Secure Digital card]]
|input=[[Touchscreen]]
|display=320 x 320 16-bit, 320 x 480 in later models [[TFT LCD]]
|operatingsystem=[[Palm OS]] 5.2.1
|lifespan = October, 2003–April, 2005
|power = [[lithium ion battery]]
}}


The '''Tungsten''' series was [[Palm, Inc.]]'s line of business-class [[Palm OS]]-based [[Personal digital assistant|PDA]]s.
The [[Tungsten]] series, first introduced in Fall of 2002 with the Tungsten T, was part of Palm, Inc.'s move away from arcane model numbers, Palm OS 4, and aging [[Motorola]] [[processors]]. While the [[Zire]] was the same old PDA in a white plastic case, the Tungsten T was a wonder, bringing the Palm line up to date to compete with increasingly popular and powerful [[Sony Clie]] and [[Windows Mobile]] competitors. Since then, the Tungsten line has been palmOne's "prosumer" line, catering to business users and hobbyists willing to pay the price for higher performance.


==Details==
All of the Tungsten PDAs have a few attributes in common. All Tungstens with the exception of the Tungsten W run under [[Palm OS]] 5 "Garnet" on an [[ARM]]-compliant processor. They all have high-resolution (at least 320 x 320 pixels), 65,536 color [[LCD]] screens. They all have metal or metal-toned enclosures. They all have an [[SDIO]] slot for memory cards or accessories. They all have non-user-replaceable lithium-ion batteries. They all use a five-way navigator pad, in the shape of a rounded rectangle or circle, and have four buttons for built-in [[application software|applications]]. All Tungstens use a [[Palm Universal Connector]] for docks and accessories with the exception of the Tungsten E, Tungsten E2, Tungsten T5, and future Tungsten Handheld releases. All Tungsten handhelds include Dataviz's [http://www.dataviz.com/products/documentstogo/ Documents To Go] office suite and some version of [http://www.kinoma.com/ Kinoma Player] with the exception of the Tungsten W. No Tungsten handheld has ever been equipped with a built-in [[digital camera]] since the Tungsten T's debut, as Palm marketed the Tungsten Handhelds with corporate use and code of technology conduct in mind.


The [[Tungsten]] series was introduced in October 2002, created as a "prosumer" line priced at $199 to $300 to compete with the popular [[Sony Clie]] and [[Windows Mobile]] PDAs. The first device in the line is the Tungsten T, making it the first Palm PDA to be labeled with a letter rather than a number and to run Palm OS 5.
==Models==


All of the Tungsten PDAs have a few attributes in common:
===Model features at a glance===
* 65,536 color [[LCD]] touch screen with a minimum 320 x 320 pixel resolution
{| border=1
* metal or metal-toned enclosure
! Model || Form-Factor || Basic RAM || Actual RAM || Processor || Screen Resolution || Connector || Input || Built-In Wireless || [[Palm OS]] Version
* available flip cover to protect the screen
|-
* [[Secure Digital card|Secure Digital (SD) card]] slot with [[Secure Digital card#SDIO|SDIO]] for memory cards and accessories
| Tungsten E || Palm Vx-derived || 32 MB || [http://www.bargainpda.com/default.asp?newsID=2484 28.8 MB] || [http://www.infosyncworld.com/reviews/n/4130.html 126 MB TI OMAP311] || 320x320 || Mini USB || Dedicated || None || 5.2.1
* no built-in camera
|-
| Tungsten E2 || Palm Vx-derived || 32 MB [[NVFS File System|NVFS]] || 29.7 MB || 200 MHz Intel PXA260 || 320x320 || MC || Dedicated || Bluetooth || 5.4.7
|-
| Tungsten T || Collapsible || 16 MB || 14 MB || [http://www.palminfocenter.com/view_story.asp?ID=4490 144 MHz TI OMAP1510 with ARM925 core and DSP] || 320x320 || UC || Dedicated || Bluetooth || 5.0
|-
| Tungsten T2 || Collapsible || 32 MB || 29.5 MB || [http://www.palminfocenter.com/view_story.asp?ID=5718 144 MHz TI OMAP1510 with ARM925 core and DSP] || 320x320 || UC || Dedicated || Bluetooth || 5.2.1
|-
| Tungsten T3 || Collapsible || 64 MB || 52 MB || 400 MHz Intel PXA261 || 320x480 (Rotatable) || UC || Active || Bluetooth || 5.2.1
|-
| Tungsten T5 || Palm Vx-derived || 256 MB [[NVFS File System|NVFS]] || 63.8 MB / 161.2 MB || 416 MHz Intel PXA270 || 320x480 (Rotatable) || MC || Active || Bluetooth || 5.4.5 / 5.4.8
|-
| [[TX (handheld)|TX]] || Palm Vx-derived || 128 MB [[NVFS File System|NVFS]] || 114.8 MB || 312 MHz Intel PXA270 || 320x480 (Rotatable) || MC || Active || [[Bluetooth]] and [[Wi-Fi]] || 5.4.9
|-
| Tungsten W || Palm i705-derived || 16 MB || 15 MB || 33 MHz Dragonball || 320x320 || UC || Thumbboard || GSM / GPRS || 4.1.1
|-
| Tungsten C || Palm i705-derived || 64 MB || 51 MB || 400 MHz Intel PXA255 || 320x320 || UC || Thumbboard || [[Wi-Fi]] || 5.2.1
|}


All models except the Tungsten C, W, and E have built-in [[Bluetooth]] wireless capabilities, while the Tungsten C and TX feature built-in [[Wi-Fi]] connectivity. Furthermore, by using the optional Palm Wi-Fi [[Secure_Digital#SDIO_cards]] Card accessory, the T3, T5, and E2 can also gain Wi-Fi connectivity.<ref>[http://www.palm.com/us/support/accessories/wifi_card.html Palm Wi-Fi Card Support]</ref><ref>[http://store.palm.com/sm-wi-fi-card-by-palmone--pi-1853744.html Palm Wi-Fi Card at the Palm Store]</ref>
====Key and Notes====
<small>* In '''Connector''', ''UC'' denotes the [[Palm Universal Connector]]. MC is the newer [[Palm Multi-Connector]] standard.</small>


With the exception of the Tungsten W, all Tungsten PDAs run [[Palm OS]] 5 "Garnet" on an [[ARM architecture|ARM]] processor and have non-user-replaceable [[lithium-ion]] batteries. Some users replaced battery packs with third-party units.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}} The T3, for example, shipped with a 900 mAh capacity battery but third-party 1100 mAh or 1150 mAh [[Lithium-ion polymer battery|LI-poly]] batteries of the same physical dimensions were available.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}} Tungsten models used a five-way navigator pad, in the shape of a rounded rectangle, circle, or oval and had four buttons for built-in [[application software|applications]].
<small>* In '''Screen res''', ''rotatable'' denotes screens that can be switched between landscape and portrait modes. Rotatable models with collapsible form factors can extend or shrink in either rotation.</small>


The [[Palm Universal Connector]] is used by the Tungsten T, Tungsten T2, Tungsten T3, Tungsten C, Tungsten W, for cradles and accessories, while the Tungsten E uses a mini-USB connection; the Tungsten T5, Tungsten E2 and TX used an [[Athena Connector]] also known as the Palm Multi-Connector.
<small>* In '''Input''', ''Dedicated'' denotes the Hard [[graffiti (Palm OS)|Graffiti]] Area, while ''Active'' denotes the "concealable" Virtual Graffiti area.</small>


All Tungsten handhelds come bundled with Dataviz's [https://web.archive.org/web/20050317031713/http://www.dataviz.com/products/documentstogo/ Documents To Go] office suite and some version of [https://web.archive.org/web/20171212093323/http://kinoma.com/ Kinoma Player], with the exception of the Tungsten W.
<small>* In '''Form-Factor''', ''Collapsible'' denotes a handheld with a slider. ''Palm Vx-derived'' indicates a traditional slate model. ''Palm i705-derived'' denotes a model with an integrated thumboard.</small>


==Models==
<small>* The Tungsten T5 originally shipped with Palm OS 5.4.5 when it was released, but newer shipments will have Version 5.4.8 pre-installed.</small>
===Tungsten E===
Palm's '''Tungsten E''' was the cheapest of the Tungsten series, and as such, has been one of the most successful.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}} It has 32 [[megabytes]] of memory, a [[Texas Instruments OMAP]] (ARM) 126&nbsp;MHz processor, a 2 1/8 x 2 1/8&nbsp;inch (54 x 54&nbsp;mm) transreflective [[TFT-LCD|TFT]] screen, and ran [[Palm OS]] 5.2.1. It is {{convert|4.5|by|3.1|by|0.5|in|mm|abbr=on}}, and weighs {{convert|4.6|oz|g}}.


It had a standard 3.5&nbsp;mm headphone jack and a speaker in back and used a mini [[USB]] connector not supported by most dock accessories. At introduction, it was US$199.
<small>* The Tungsten T5 actually has 63.8 MB Usable Program Memory with 161.2 MB out of the 256 MB Basic Memory left as memory to be used as a built-in Thumbdrive, though not as reliable as stand-alone thumbdrives.</small>


The Tungsten E, released in October 2003, was intended to replace the aging [[Palm m515]], one of the last holdouts from Palm's old product line.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}} The Tungsten E, though, did not include a vibrating alarm and indicator light like the [[Palm m500 series]] had.
===Tungsten E===
palmOne's '''Tungsten E''' is the simplest and cheapest of the Tungsten series, and as such has been the most successful. It has 32 [[megabytes]] of memory, a [[Texas Instruments OMAP]] (ARM) 126 MHz processor, a 2.5 inch (64 mm) [[LCD]] screen, and runs [[Palm OS]] 5.2.1. It is 4.5 by 3.1 by 0.5 inches (114 by 79 by 12 mm), and weighs 4.6 ounces (131 g). It has a standard 3.5 mm headphone jack, and a single tiny speaker. It uses a mini [[USB]] connector not supported by most dock accessories. (It is otherwise a standard Tungsten; see above.) At introduction, it was US$199.


The Tungsten E, released in October 2003, was intended to replace the aging [[Palm m515]], one of the last holdouts from Palm's old product line. (As it was released at the same time as the Tungsten T3, it includes the enhanced "agenda view" for quick viewing of to-do items and upcoming calendar items.) While opinions vary on how well it did so quality-of-manufacturing-wise, the Tungsten E has been one of Palm's strongest sellers since its introduction, to the point where its simple slate form factor prevailed over the Tungsten T series' previous slider form factor in the development of the Tungsten T5 and the TX.
Since it was released at the same time as the Tungsten T3, the Tungsten E included the T3's newer PIM apps and the enhanced "agenda view" for quick viewing of to-do items and upcoming calendar items. The Tungsten E's design influenced the Tungsten T series' subsequent devices, the Tungsten T5 and the TX.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}}


It was superseded in April 2005, when palmOne released the Tungsten E2.
It was superseded in April 2005, when [[Palm, Inc.#Stock offering and PalmOne|palmOne]] released the Tungsten E2.


===Tungsten E2===
===Tungsten E2===
[[Image:Tungsten E2.jpg|thumb|Tungsten E2]]
The '''Tungsten E2''', introduced on [[April 13]], [[2005]], has 32 MB of memory (29.7 available), a 200 MHz [[Intel]] XScale processor, 320x320 Transflective [[TFT LCD|TFT]] color display, and runs [[Palm OS]] Garnet v5.4.7. It is 4.5 tall by 3.1 wide by .59 inches thick (114 x 79 x 15mm) and weighs 4.7 ounces (133g). It has a standard 3.5mm headphone jack, a longer lasting battery than the Tungsten E, has Bluetooth capability, and a single speaker on the back. Much like the Tungsten T5 and [[Treo 650]], it uses [[non-volatile]] flash memory, meaning that the data will be preserved if/when the battery runs out. The Tungsten E2 uses a more efficient NVFS Memory Structure ([[NVFS File System|See the separate article]]). It uses a standard "Athena" Multi-Connector port supported only by some new accessories. When it was released, its retail price was US$249. In October 2005, the price was reduced to US$199.
The '''Tungsten E2''', introduced on April 13, 2005, replaced the similarly named Tungsten E, had 32&nbsp;MB of memory (29.7 available), a 200&nbsp;MHz [[Intel]] [[XScale]] processor, 320x320 Transflective [[TFT LCD|TFT]] color display, and ran [[Palm OS]] Garnet v5.4.7. It is {{convert|114|by|79|by|15|mm|in|sp=us|sigfig=2}} and weighs {{convert|133|g|oz}}. It had a standard 3.5&nbsp;mm headphone jack, a longer-lasting battery than the Tungsten E, had [[Bluetooth]] capability, and a single speaker on the back.

Much like the Tungsten T5 and [[Treo 650]], it used [[non-volatile]] flash memory, this time in the form of ''[[Non-Volatile File System]]'', meaning that the data would be preserved even if the battery ran out. It used standard SD memory cards and was also compatible with the ''Palm Wi-Fi Card'' (sold separately). It used a standard [[Athena Connector]] port supported only by some then-newer accessories.

When it was released, its retail price was US$249. In October 2005, the price was reduced to US$199.

Unlike other models, the ''Find'' function was limited to only the first eight matches, and the calculator incorrectly found percentages at half their actual value, though this was fixed in units shipping after April 2006.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}}

The '''Tungsten E2''' had the ability to use WiFi, but only as an add-on SDIO card made by PalmOne (now [[TCL Corporation#PalmFromHP|TCL Corporation]]). Palm's WiFi card was manufactured by [[SyChip]]. Encryption is restricted to [[Wired Equivalent Privacy|WEP]], and did not offer [[Wi-Fi Protected Access|WPA]] or [[WPA2]].

The maximum size SD card supported on the Tungsten E2 was 1&nbsp;GB due to a software limitation. In order to read larger SD and SDHC cards an upgraded driver is required.<ref>Such as PowerSDHC by Dmitry Grinberg.</ref> The previous model ('''Tungsten E''') had been reported to be capable of using 2&nbsp;GB SD cards.<ref>[http://tamspalm.tamoggemon.com/2007/04/20/2gb-memory-card-compatibility/ SD card compatibility Test in TamsPalm Blog] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071021021347/http://tamspalm.tamoggemon.com/2007/04/20/2gb-memory-card-compatibility/ |date=2007-10-21 }}</ref>


===Tungsten T===
===Tungsten T===
[[Image:PalmTungstenT.jpg|thumb|Tungsten T (with sliding section extended)]]
palmOne's '''Tungsten T''', introduced in November 2002 and known during development as the '''M550''', was the test balloon for both [[Palm OS]] 5 and the entire Tungsten line. The Tungsten T was designed by Palm engineers based in Arlington Heights, IL. It has 16 [[megabytes|megs]] of memory, a [[Texas Instruments OMAP]] (ARM) 144 MHz processor, a built-in microphone, and runs [[Palm OS]] 5.0. It is 4.0 inches (102 mm) tall, 4.8 inches (121 mm) tall with the slider extended, by 3.0 inches (78 mm) wide by 0.6 inches (15 mm) thick, and weighs 5.6 ounces (146 g). It has a standard 3.5 mm headphone jack, and a single tiny speaker. (It is otherwise a standard Tungsten; see above.) It sets itself apart from other PDAs physically by having a sliding lower portion; the bottom third of the casing can be slid up and down to cover or reveal the touch-sensitive [[Graffiti]] writing area. At introduction, it was US$499.
The first Tungsten, the '''Tungsten T''', introduced in November 2002 and known during development as the '''M550''', was the first model to use [[Palm OS]] 5. The Tungsten T was designed by Palm engineers based in [[Arlington Heights, Illinois|Arlington Heights]], [[Illinois]].


It had:
Many of the features in the Tungsten T are palmOne firsts, in response to Sony's successful [[Clie]] series. It was the first palmOne PDA to use a version of PalmOS 5 and an [[ARM]] processor, which meant that it had the software and processing power for real-time video playback and [[mp3]] playback. It was the first palmOne PDA to have a 320 x 320 resolution screen, what is known as "hi-res" in enthusiast circles. It was palmOne's first PDA with built-in [[Bluetooth]]. It was the first palmOne PDA with a microphone, for recording voice memos.
* 16 [[megabytes]] of memory,
* [[Texas Instruments OMAP]] (ARM) 144&nbsp;MHz processor,
* built-in microphone for voice memos,
* dedicated voice memo button,
* vibrating alarms,
* standard 3.5&nbsp;mm headphone jack,
* one front-facing speaker,
* indicator light,
* [[Palm OS]] 5.0


It is {{convert|4.0|in|mm}} tall, {{convert|4.8|in|mm}} tall with the slider extended, by {{convert|3.0|in|mm}} wide by {{convert|0.6|in|mm}} thick, and weighs {{convert|5.6|oz|g}}.
The slider was the real innovation and what made it a critical success, though. When open, the Tungsten T looked like a normal slate-shaped PDA, but the bottom portion, with the five-way controller and four buttons, could slide closed, covering up the Graffiti writing area. This made it much smaller for keeping in a pocket. palmOne's reasoning behind the slider was people spend more time viewing data rather than entering data. Thus, they chose to hide the data entry medium while not in use to make a more compact device.


Its design set itself apart from other PDAs by having a sliding lower portion; the bottom third of the casing could be slid up and down to cover or reveal the touch-sensitive [[Graffiti (Palm OS)|Graffiti]] writing area. At introduction, it was US$499.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}}
It was succeeded by the Tungsten T2.

Many of the features in the Tungsten T were Palm firsts. It was the first Palm PDA to use a version of Palm OS 5 and an [[ARM architecture|ARM]] processor, which meant that it had the software and processing power for high-quality real-time video playback and [[MP3]] playback.

It was also the first Palm PDA with a:
* 320 × 320 resolution screen
* [[Bluetooth]] wireless communications radio built-in
* microphone with a dedicated voice memo button
* front-facing speaker instead of rear-facing
* telescoping stylus
* reset hole large enough to be pressed by the included stylus' tip instead of a pin as with previous Palm PDAs

The slider feature was unique. When open, the Tungsten T looked like a normal slate-shaped PDA, but the bottom portion, with the five-way controller and four buttons, could slide shut, covering up the Graffiti writing area. This made it the smallest Palm PDA in height. The Tungsten T was the last Palm PDA to use the original Graffiti Version 1 handwriting recognition software. Because of a lawsuit by [[Xerox|Xerox Corporation]] Palm Inc. was forced to discontinue Graffiti 1 and later Palm PDAs used Graffiti Version 2. The revised software required two separate strokes for entry of some letters of the alphabet, such as the letters "t" and "k". Most all of the other letters required strokes different from those used in Graffiti 1.

Palm's reasoning behind the slider was that users spent more time viewing data rather than entering it.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}} Thus, they chose to hide the data entry medium while not in use to make a more compact device.

The slider caused two problems with the Tungsten T. One drawback was that the Tungsten T was known for its [[digitizer]] becoming miscalibrated after about one year of use and requiring further [[calibration|recalibration]].{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}} A software patch issued by Palm helped with this problem. Another problem was that the ribbon cable between the mainboard and the [[digitizer]] connectors that tended to become loose over time, requiring disassembly to reconnect the ribbon cable for further use.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}}

The Tungsten T was succeeded by the Tungsten T2.


===Tungsten T2===
===Tungsten T2===
The '''Tungsten T2''', introduced in July 2003 for US$399, was simply a minor update to the Tungsten T, and had exactly the same form factor. (Save for the label and the T|T2's slightly lighter case color, they are superficially identical.) The memory was increased to 32 [[megabytes]], the screen was replaced with a superior TFT [[LCD]] of the same size and resolution. Since it is much like the Tungsten T model, PalmOne did not deliver this model to some markets, such as [[mainland China]] or [[Brazil]].
The '''Tungsten T2''', introduced in July 2003 for US$399, was simply a minor update to the Tungsten T, and had exactly the same form factor. (Save for the label and the T|T2's slightly lighter case color, they are superficially identical.) The memory was increased to 32 [[megabytes]], the screen was replaced with a superior (backlight) TFT [[LCD]] of the same size and resolution, Palm OS upgraded to 5.2.1, Graffiti replaced with Graffiti2. Since it is much like the Tungsten T model, PalmOne did not sell this model in some markets, such as [[mainland China]] or [[Brazil]].


The Tungsten T2 was discontinued in April 2004, having been succeeded by the Tungsten T3.
The Tungsten T2 was discontinued in April 2004, having been succeeded by the Tungsten T3.


===Tungsten T3===
===Tungsten T3===
[[File:Palm Tungsten T3 PDA with stylus.jpg|alt=Tungsten T3|thumb|Tungsten T3]]
'''Tungsten T3''', was the third T-Class Tungsten device, sporting 64 MB on-handheld memory (52 MB useable), a 400 MHz Intel PXA255 processor, and a new 320x480 transflective TFT touch-screen. It was the last product designed by the Palm engineers in Arlington Heights, IL. One of the most apparent improvements of the T3 was the rendition of Active Input Technology with Virtual [[Graffiti 2]] with Virtual Keyboard with the typical Tungsten line slider. With many other additional features, the T3 was released with the same $399 retail price tag as the Tungsten T2 until the release of the Tungsten T5, when it was reduced to $349.
The '''Tungsten T3''' was the third ''T-Class'' Tungsten device, released in October 2003. It had 64&nbsp;MB of memory (with 52&nbsp;MB usable), a 400&nbsp;MHz Intel [[XScale#PXA26x|PXA261]] processor, a new 3.7" 320x480 transflective [[TFT LCD]] touch-screen, and ran [[Palm OS]] version 5.2.1. It was the last product designed by the Palm engineers in Arlington Heights.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}}


The T3 included Active Input Technology with Virtual [[Graffiti 2]], a [[Virtual keyboard]], and the typical Tungsten line slider. Along with many other additional features, the T3 was released with the same $399 retail price tag as the Tungsten T2 until the release of the Tungsten T5, when it was reduced to $349.
The machine runs Palm OS version 5.2.1 and has an in-built speaker, as well as a microphone for use with the included voice recording software. Like the Tungsten E, the Tungsten T3 came with an enhanced On-Handheld PIM Suite which categorized all appointments and tasks on the front Calendar (formerly Date Book) screen. The Enhanced PIM Software also has an improved Task suite which can categorize Tasks by either urgency, category, et. al. The Tungsten T3 comes with Real Player for Palm OS Handhelds (called ''RealOne Player for Palm OS Handhelds'' at the time of its release) in addition to having a 3.5" Stereo Jack, making it a digital music player when in combination with a [[Secure Digital]] (SD) flash memory card. The machine has 5-way navigation buttons, and a Palm Universal Connector with which it sits in the included USB cradle unit, used both for charging the PDA (at the mains supply or through a desktop computer) and for synchronizing the Palm's data to a PC or Mac (software is included for Windows and [[Mac OS X]], but with the [[pilot-link]] software, the unit synchronizes perfectly with a [[Unix]] machine).


Like the Tungsten T and T2, the T3 still had a front-facing speaker, a microphone, a vibrating alarm feature, an indicator light, and all of their other features.
Early criticisms of the Tungsten T3 included it physically damaging SD cards, and its rather modest battery life. Palm addressed the Secure Digital Card problem by releasing a Firmware Update. After the "SD Card Patch" was applied in early and later release of the Tungsten T3, no other criticisms were known to have risen from the Tungsten T3's use.


Like the Tungsten E, the Tungsten T3 came with an enhanced [[Personal information manager|PIM]] Suite which categorized all appointments and tasks on the Calendar (formerly Date Book) screen. The Enhanced PIM Software also featured an improved Task suite (formerly To Do List) which could categorize Tasks by urgency, category, etc., and an improved Contacts (formerly Address) application with picture support and more fields.
Shortly following the early 2005 release of the Tungsten T5, the Tungsten T3 was discontinued. Many power users branded the Tungsten T3's discontinuation without a true successor as a disappointment.

Furthermore, a new status bar appeared at the bottom of screen, giving quick access to the time, system information, home, find, menu access, alerts, Bluetooth, full-screen writing, screen rotation, and what is shown in the input area.

The Tungsten T3 came with [[RealPlayer]] for Palm OS Handhelds (called ''RealOne Player for Palm OS Handhelds'' at the time of its release) in addition to a 3.5&nbsp;mm Stereo Jack, making it a digital music player when used with a [[Secure Digital]] (SD) flash memory card.

The T3 had a bigger, non-round, 5-way navigation pad with the four application buttons placed around it in a circular fashion instead of in a row, breaking from Palm's traditional application button layout. Palm would return to its more traditional layout in the following Tungsten T5 and [[TX (handheld)|Palm TX]].

The T3 had a Green/Red [[LED]] indicator light, however Palm only used the green LED for most purposes, red only being used by certain third-party programs and libraries.

The T3 also had the [[Palm Universal Connector]] and an included [[USB]] cradle. The cradle was used for both charging and synchronizing the Palm's data to a PC (With support included for [[Microsoft Windows|Windows]] and [[Mac OS X]], but with the [[pilot-link]] software, the unit synchronizes perfectly with a [[Unix]] operating system).

Early criticisms of the Tungsten T3 include it electronically damaging [[Secure Digital card|SD cards]]{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}} and its relatively low battery life (900 [[milliampere-hour|mA·h]] battery, larger display and processor clocked above most other Palm handhelds). Palm addressed the [[Secure Digital Card]] problem by releasing a Firmware Update. After the "SD Card Patch" was applied in early (by the user via a [http://kb.palm.com/SRVS/NUA/launchKB.asp?c=15318 firmware patch]) and later (at the manufacturing stage) releases of the Tungsten T3, no other criticisms were known to have risen from the Tungsten T3's use.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}}

Shortly after the early 2005 release of the Tungsten T5, the Tungsten T3 was discontinued. Since then, no other Palm handhelds included a vibrating alarm, a slider to make the device smaller, or the [[Palm Universal Connector]].


===Tungsten T5===
===Tungsten T5===
The '''Tungsten T5''' is combination of the Tungsten E and Tungsten T3, the first to have a 416 MHz Intel PXA270 processor and sports a 320x480 TFT 16-Bit Color Screen instead of a 320x320 Color Screen with a hard input area. It still retains the shape of the Tungsten E, but is slightly thicker. It is the first Palm PDA to have 320x480 pixels all revealed without a "slider," as used in the Tungsten T3, though other brands have had sliderless HVGA displays for years. It is also the first to have 256 MB of [[computer storage|memory]] (versus 64 MB in the Tungsten T3), 161.2 MB available for storage (doubling as a ''Flash Drive''), 63.8 MB available for applications, and 31 MB reserved for system-level heap memory. This results in real confusion as the memory is not equally useable. The desktop software doesn't know what is either; it calls the user memory "Expansion Card" while calling the other "Internal." A very uncomfortable fudge.
The '''Tungsten T5''', introduced in October 2004 and now discontinued, was aesthetically a combination of the Tungsten E and Tungsten T3. It was the first and only Tungsten to use a 416&nbsp;MHz Intel [[PXA27x|XScale PXA270]] processor. It had a 320x480 TFT 16-bit Color Screen with a virtual input area. It retained the shape of the Tungsten E, but was taller, instead of the sliding bodies of the previous Tungsten T-series handhelds.


The Tungsten T5 was the first Palm PDA to have a 320x480 pixel screen without a slider mechanism as used in the Tungsten T3, T2, and T, though other brands have had sliderless HVGA displays for years. It was also the first to have 256&nbsp;MB of [[computer storage|memory]] (versus 64&nbsp;MB in the Tungsten T3), with 161.2&nbsp;MB configured as a ''Flash Drive'' - accessible to computers via the device's Drive Mode feature, 63.8&nbsp;MB available for applications, and 31&nbsp;MB reserved for the OS. This often resulted in some confusion as the memory was not equally usable as in previous Palm PDAs.
While the Tungsten T5 was meant to be a replacement for the Tungsten T3, it is missing important high-end features from the Tungsten T3 as follows: charge-indicator LED, vibrating alarm, included HotSync cradle, and voice memo. Handheld aficionados and Palm OS loyalists criticize the Tungsten T5 for its plastic casing, which is considered out-of-place for a $400 Handheld (many handheld aficionados and Palm OS loyalists prefer a metal case for a $400 handheld, but technology experts fear that a plastic casing might cause heat issues since processor speed has increased year after year). Power users also criticise the Tungsten T5 for its Tungsten E-derived form-factor.


While the Tungsten T5 was meant to be a replacement for the Tungsten T3, it lacked several features from the Tungsten T3 such as a charge-indicator LED, a vibrating alarm, an included HotSync cradle, and built in microphone for voice memos. Furthermore, its speaker became rear-facing instead of front-facing and the PDA used the then-new [[Athena Connector|Multi-Connector/Athena Connector]] instead of the [[Palm Universal Connector]]. The speed of the Bluetooth connection can only be set to a maximum of 128&nbsp;kbit/s.
At the time of its release, the Tungsten T5 (alongside with the Treo 650) was plagued with memory inefficiency problems, third-party application issues, and device driver crashes. Read the [[NVFS File System|NVFS Article]] to learn more about the NVFS File System.


At the time of its release, the Tungsten T5 (along with the [[Treo 650]]) was plagued with memory inefficiency problems, third-party application issues, and device driver crashes, due to the new [[Non-Volatile File System]].{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}} The addition of NVFS however, brought the benefit of no longer losing all stored data in the event of a complete battery drain.
Tungsten T5 owners are urged to check out the [http://www.palmone.com/us/support/downloads/tungstent5/tungstent5update.html Tungsten T5 1.1 Update], which addresses the memory inefficiency issues alongside other operating system-level problems.


Tungsten T5 owners were encouraged to install the [http://www.hpwebos.com/id/support/downloads/tungstent5/tungstent5update_install.html Tungsten T5 1.1 Update], which addressed the memory inefficiency issues alongside other operating system-level problems.
Issues/problems with the power-on switch have also been discovered, where it will not switch on unless a menu button is pressed or sometimes an SD card needs to be inserted.


The power button was prone to reliability issues causing it to become inoperative over time, requiring the user to either use a third-party app, rely on the PDA's other physical buttons or insert a SD card which would then switch the PDA back on. {{Citation needed|date=April 2008}}


In some countries, including Australia, the Tungsten T5 was withdrawn early since the [[TX (handheld)|Palm TX]] offered more advanced, built-in WiFi support, instead of requiring the optional ''Palm Wi-Fi Card'' in its one and only SD slot as many other non-Palm PDAs on the market at the time came standard with built-in WiFi.


===Tungsten W===
===Tungsten W===
The '''Tungsten W''' (known as the i710 during its development period), introduced in February 2003, is a bit of an odd duck in the Tungsten series, and has little to do with the other Tungsten handhelds. The only [[smartphone]] (PDA/[[cellphone]] hybrid) in the Tungsten series, instead of running [[Palm OS]] 5 on an [[ARM]]-compatible processor, it used [[Palm OS]] 4 with a low-power [[Motorola DragonBall]] processor, to increase the battery life. This trick certainly worked since the combination of using a highly advanced lithium polymer battery and energy conserving electronics yielded a phenomenal battery life. Likewise, it had a thumb-sized keyboard, more like the [[Treo 600]] than the flagship [[Tungsten T]] (This form factor would be reused in the Tungsten C).
The '''Tungsten W''' (known as the i710 during its development period, and X420 at the prototype stage<ref>[http://blog.compuseum.de/bilder/P1040409.jpg Picture of a Tungsten|W and the two versions of the X420]</ref>), was introduced in February 2003. The sole [[smartphone]] (PDA/[[cellphone]] hybrid) in the Tungsten series, instead of running [[Palm OS]] 5 on an [[ARM architecture|ARM]]-compatible processor, it used last-generation [[Palm OS]] 4 paired with a [[Motorola DragonBall]] processor that was typical of Palm OS 4 devices.


It had a thumb-sized hard plastic keyboard, like the [[Treo 600]] rather than the typical silkscreen Graffiti Writing Area found on most Palm handhelds. (This form factor would be reused in the Tungsten C, except lacking the W's external antennae).
The Tungsten W focused more on its PDA half as opposed to its cellular telephony half, the focus of the succession of the [[Palm i705]] and [[Palm VII]]. Unlike either the Palm i705 and the Palm VII (which both could only make data connections over the [[Mobitex]] [[pager]] network), downloads and uploads were done using comparatively-fast [[GPRS]] connections. It didn't actually have a microphone and the speaker couldn't be used for phone calls; instead, you'd use an included ear bud and microphone [[loopset]] for voice calls. (In the US, it was sold exclusively by [[AT&T Wireless]], and all Tungsten W handsets sold in the US were [[w:Subsidy lock (cellular)|locked]] to [[AT&T Wireless]]'s service). Because the Microphone was absent, the Tungsten W wasn't appropriate to be used as a telephone, as its focus was to be a PDA that could connect to the internet and read e-mail through a GPRS connection. The Tungsten W doesn't qualify for the Smartphone Classification since you can't hold the Tungsten W like you would with a telephone device.


The Tungsten W focused more on its PDA half than its cellular telephony half, much like its predecessors, the [[Palm i705]] and [[Palm VII]]. Unlike either the Palm i705 and the Palm VII (which both could only make data connections over the [[Mobitex]] [[pager]] network), downloads and uploads were done using comparatively-fast [[GPRS]] connections. It lacked a microphone and the speaker couldn't be used for phone calls; instead, an included ear bud and microphone loopset was used for voice calls.
It has 16 [[megabytes]] of memory, a [[Motorola DragonBall]] 33 MHz processor, a built-in microphone, and runs [[Palm OS]] 4.1.1 with special enhancements for its hi-res display. It is 4.8 inches (121 mm) tall by 3.1 inches (79 mm) wide by 0.7 inches (18 mm) thick, and weighs 6.4 ounces (181 g). It has a standard 2.5 mm cellphone loopset jack, and a single tiny speaker. The bottom half is a thumb-sized keyboard for typing, and it has no silkscreened Graffiti input area. (It is otherwise a standard Tungsten; see above.) At introduction, it was US$419 before service provider subsidies.

A flip cover was also released that allowed the user to hold the handheld like a normal phone and talk on it, although it did obscure the screen. (In the US, it was sold exclusively by [[AT&T Wireless]], and all Tungsten W handsets sold in the US were [[w:Subsidy lock (cellular)|locked]] to [[AT&T Wireless]]. Canadian W's were not locked to any service provider and could operate with T-Mobile SIM cards).{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}}

It had 16 [[megabytes]] of memory, a [[Motorola DragonBall]] 33&nbsp;MHz processor, vibrating alarms, indicator light, and ran [[Palm OS]] 4.1.1 (with an optional upgrade to 4.1.2) with special enhancements for its 320x320 display since most Palm OS 4 devices had 160x160 displays. It is {{convert|4.8|in|mm}} tall by {{convert|3.1|in|mm}} wide by {{convert|0.7|in|mm}} thick, and weighs {{convert|6.4|oz|g}}. It had a standard 2.5&nbsp;mm headset jack, and a single rear speaker. At introduction, it retailed at US$419 before service provider subsidies.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}}


The Tungsten W was succeeded by the [[Treo 600]] after Palm purchased Handspring and became palmOne.
The Tungsten W was succeeded by the [[Treo 600]] after Palm purchased Handspring and became palmOne.


===Tungsten C===
===Tungsten C===
The '''Tungsten C''', introduced in April 2003, was at the time of its release palmOne's only handheld that allows the user to access the internet wirelessly through 802.11b [[Wi-Fi]] without the use of a card or other external device. There are programs that support this such as an [[AOL]] version for Palm. However, accessing the internet through it can be considered somewhat handicapped, as it has no [[Macromedia Flash|Flash]] support. Its 320x320 pixel screen is also sometimes considered too small to view the [[World Wide Web]] practically, although some conclude that PalmOne built it mainly to be a portable email device. The [[web browser]] is PalmSource Web Browser 2.0. [[Novarra]] Web Pro 3.0 can be purchased as an upgrade.
[[Image:T c.jpg|thumb|right|Tungsten C]]The '''Tungsten C''' introduced in April 2003 was, at the time of its release, palmOne's only handheld that allowed the user to access the internet wirelessly through 802.11b [[Wi-Fi]] without the use of a card or other external device. It lacked support for the [[Wi-Fi Protected Access|WPA]] encryption standard but did however have built in PPTP VPN support for secure connections to VPN servers.


The [[Mobile browser|web browser]] included was PalmSource's Web Browser 2.0. [[Novarra]] Web Pro 3.0 could be purchased as an upgrade.
Other details are its 400 MHz [[Intel]] processor, 64 MB of memory (51 MB available for programs), built-in thumb keyboard, a "five-way navigator," a [[Secure Digital]]/[[Multi Media Card|Multi media]] card slot and a headset jack, capable only of voice recording. [[MP3]] playback or [[VOIP]] are not officially supported by the Tungsten C though there has been third-party applications that works around the Tungsten C's Mono Handicap.


Other details were its 400&nbsp;MHz Intel [[XScale#PXA210/PXA25x|PXA255]] processor, 64&nbsp;[[megabyte|MB]] of memory (51&nbsp;MB available for programs + 12&nbsp;MB heap), built-in thumb keyboard, a five-way navigator, a [[Secure Digital]]/[[Secure Digital card#SDIO|SDIO]]/[[MultiMediaCard]] slot, vibrating alarms, indicator light, and a 2.5&nbsp;mm headset jack, capable of voice recording and monaural sound output with a proprietary earbud headset (sold separately).
The Tungsten C is no longer in production&mdash;it's superseded by the [[LifeDrive|LifeDrive Mobile Manager]] and the [[TX (handheld)|Palm TX]].

Third-party applications and hardware were available that worked around the Tungsten C's monaural audio. For instance, a special adapter could be purchased to convert to a standard 3.5&nbsp;mm jack that splits the mono output into left and right channels.

The Tungsten C was superseded by the [[LifeDrive|LifeDrive Mobile Manager]], the [[TX (handheld)|Palm TX]], and the [[Palm Treo|Treo]] series.

== Comparison ==
{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="10" |'''Comparison of Tungsten devices'''
|- align="center"
!Name
!T<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.cnet.com/products/palm-tungsten-t/specs/|title=Palm Tungsten T Specs|website=CNET|language=en|access-date=2019-01-29}}</ref>
!W<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cnet.com/products/palm-tungsten-w-series/specs/|title=Palm Tungsten W Series Specs|website=CNET|language=en|access-date=2019-01-29}}</ref>
!C<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cnet.com/products/palm-tungsten-c/specs/|title=Palm Tungsten C Specs|website=CNET|language=en|access-date=2019-01-29}}</ref>
!T2<ref name=":0" />
!E<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cnet.com/products/palm-tungsten-e/specs/|title=Palm Tungsten E Specs|website=CNET|language=en|access-date=2019-01-29}}</ref>
!T3<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cnet.com/products/palm-tungsten-t3-handheld-palm-os-5-2-1-256-mb/|title=Palm Tungsten T3 - handheld - Palm OS 5.2.1 - 256 MB Overview|website=CNET|language=en|access-date=2019-01-29}}</ref>
!T5<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cnet.com/products/palm-tungsten-t5-series/specs/|title=Palm Tungsten T5 Series Specs|website=CNET|language=en|access-date=2019-01-29}}</ref>
!E2<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cnet.com/products/palm-tungsten-e2-handheld-palm-os-garnet-5-4-td151lla/|title=Palm Tungsten E2 - handheld - Palm OS Garnet 5.4 Overview|website=CNET|language=en|access-date=2019-01-29}}</ref>
![[Palm TX|TX]]
|- align="center"
!Release date
|November 2002
|February 2003
|April 2003
|July 2003
| colspan="2" |October 2003
|October 2004
|April 13, 2005
|October 2005
|- align="center"
!Original retail price
|US$499
|US$419
|US$499
|US$399
|US$199
|US$399
|US$399
|US$249
|US$299
|- align="center"
!Weight
|{{convert|5.6|oz|g|abbr=on}}
|{{convert|6.4|oz|g|abbr=on}}
|{{convert|6.31|oz|g|abbr=on}}
|{{convert|5.6|oz|g|abbr=on}}
|{{convert|4.62|oz|g|abbr=on}}
|{{convert|5.4|oz|g|abbr=on}}
|{{convert|5.1|oz|g|abbr=on}}
|{{convert|4.7|oz|g|abbr=on}}
|{{convert|5.2|oz|g|abbr=on}}
|- align="center"
!Storage size: total/Non-volatile
|16 MB/No
|16 MB/No
|64 MB/No
| colspan="2" |32 MB/No
|64 MB/No
|256 MB/Yes
|32 MB/Yes
|128 MB/Yes
|- align="center"
!Dynamic heap size
|823 kB
|
|12.6 MB
| colspan="2" |
|11.5 MB
|4.2 MB
| colspan="2" |6.3 MB
|- align="center"
!Display
|Transflective TFT<br />(active matrix)
|Reflective TFT<br />(active matrix)
| colspan="7" |Transflective TFT screen
|- align="center"
!Resolution
| colspan="5" |320*320
| colspan="2" |320*480
|320*320
|320*480
|- align="center"
!Processor
|[[OMAP#OMAP 1|Texas Instruments OMAP1510]]
|[[Freescale DragonBall|Motorola Dragonball]]
|[[XScale|Intel XScale]] PXA255
|[[OMAP#OMAP 1|Texas Instruments OMAP1510]]
|[[OMAP#Basic multimedia applications processors|Texas Instruments OMAP311]]
|[[XScale|Intel XScale]] PXA261
|[[XScale#PXA27x|Intel XScale PXA270]]
|[[XScale#PXA210/PXA25x|Intel XScale PXA255]]
|[[XScale#PXA27x|Intel XScale PXA270]]
|- align="center"
!Processor frequency
|144&nbsp;MHz
|33&nbsp;MHz
|400&nbsp;MHz
|144&nbsp;MHz
|126&nbsp;MHz
|400&nbsp;MHz
|416&nbsp;MHz
|200&nbsp;MHz
|312&nbsp;MHz
|- align="center"
!Palm OS version
|5.0
|4.1.1 (4.1.2 is available)
| colspan="4" |5.2.1
|5.4.5 (upgradable to 5.4.8)
|5.4.7
|5.4.9
|- align="center"
! Audio output
| 3.5&nbsp;mm Headphone Jack,<br />Speaker (Front)
| Jack for proprietary Headset/Mic
| 2.5&nbsp;mm Headphone Jack for proprietary Headset
| 3.5&nbsp;mm Headphone Jack,<br />Speaker (Front)
| 3.5&nbsp;mm Headphone Jack,<br />Speaker (Back)
| 3.5&nbsp;mm Headphone Jack,<br />Speaker (Front)
| colspan="3" | 3.5&nbsp;mm Headphone Jack,<br />Speaker (Back)
|- align="center"
! Multimedia capabilities
| Music Playback (with third party application (PTunes) and SD card) [https://www.palmarchive.com/files/xandros9%20Archive/Updates%2C%20Drivers%2C%20and%20Other%20Official%20Bits/PalmTungstenTUpdate_enUS.zip Patch available to improve sound quality]
| colspan="4" | ?
| Music Playback<br />(w/[[RealPlayer]] + [[SD Card|SD card]])
| colspan="3" | ?
|- align="center"
! Wireless Connectivity
|[[Bluetooth]],<br /> Infrared ([[Infrared Data Association|IrDA]])
|[[General Packet Radio Service|GPRS]], Infrared ([[Infrared Data Association|IrDA]])
|802.11b WiFi,<br />Infrared ([[Infrared Data Association|IrDA]])
|[[Bluetooth]],<br />Infrared ([[Infrared Data Association|IrDA]])
| Infrared ([[Infrared Data Association|IrDA]])
| colspan="3" |[[Bluetooth]],<br />Infrared ([[Infrared Data Association|IrDA]])
|802.11b WiFi,<br />[[Bluetooth]],<br />Infrared ([[Infrared Data Association|IrDA]])
|- align="center"
! PC Connection
| colspan="4" | [[Palm Universal Connector|Universal Connector]]
| Mini-USB Port
| [[Palm Universal Connector|Universal Connector]]
| colspan="3" | [[Athena Connector]]
|- align="center"
!Additional features
|
|Keyboard, Cellular
|Keyboard
| colspan="2" |
|WiFi via SDIO card,<br />Voice memo recording
| colspan="2" | WiFi via SDIO card
|
|}


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Palm, Inc.]]
*[[TX (handheld)|Palm TX]] - the newest Palm handheld; does not carry the Tungsten name.
*[[Palm Pilot]]
*[[Zire Handheld|Zire Series]] - Palm's band of Consumer-Grade Handhelds
*[[TX (handheld)|Palm TX]], the first business-oriented Palm-branded handheld without the Tungsten moniker.
*[[Treo|Treo Series]] - Palm's band of [[smartphone|Smartphones]]
*[[LifeDrive]] - Palm's band of ''Professional-Class Mobile Managers''
*[[Zire Handheld|Zire Series]], Palm's brand of consumer-grade handhelds
*[[Palm Treo|Treo Series]], Palm's brand of [[Smartphone]]s
*[[Personal Digital Assistant]]
*[[LifeDrive]], Palm's brand of ''Professional-Class Mobile Managers''
*[[Palm m500 series|m500 Series]]
*[[Palm Handheld Modifications]] to increase battery life


===Competitors and contemporaries===
===Competitors and contemporaries===
*[[Dell Axim]]
*[[Dell Axim]]
*[[iPAQ]]
*[[Hewlett-Packard]] [[IPAQ]]
*[[Sony Clie]]
*[[Sony Clie|Sony CLIÉ]]
*[[Tapwave Zodiac]]
*[[Tapwave Zodiac]]
*[[iPod Touch]]


==References==
==External Links/Works Cited==
{{Reflist}}
*[http://www.palm.com Palm Official Website]

*[http://www.mobiletechreview.com MobileTechReview] - Review site and (incomplete) database of models
==External links==
*[http://www.palminfocenter.com/ PalmInfoCenter] - Longstanding Palm review site
*[http://www.palm.com/us/company/pr/2002/102802b.html Palm Unveils Palm Tungsten T, the Most Compact and Powerful Palm Branded Handheld], Palm Press Release, Oct. 28, 2002
*[http://www.1src.com 1src] - Large Palm OS user community
*[http://www.palm.com/us/company/pr/2002/102802c.html Palm Introduces New Integrated Wireless Handheld], Palm Press Release (Tungsten W), Oct. 28, 2002
*[http://www.palmone.com/us/products/handhelds/tungsten-c/ Tungsten C Specifications]
*[http://www.palm.com/us/company/pr/2003/072303.html Palm Introduces Tungsten T2 Handheld, With Palm's Sharpest Screen, More Memory and Software], Palm Press Release, Jul. 23, 2003
*[http://www.infosyncworld.com/reviews/n/3479.html infoSync World Review]
*[http://www.mobiletechreview.com MobileTechReview], review site and (incomplete) database of models
*[http://www.palminfocenter.com/ PalmInfoCenter], longstanding Palm [http://www.palminfocenter.com/news/3628/pda-and-smartphone-reviews/ review] site: [http://www.palminfocenter.com/view_story.asp?ID=4490 T] [http://www.palminfocenter.com/view_story.asp?ID=5718 T2] [http://www.palminfocenter.com/view_story.asp?ID=6073 T3] [http://www.palminfocenter.com/news/7210/ T5]
*[http://www.1src.com 1src], large Palm OS user community
*[http://www.palm.com/us/support/handhelds/ Palm Handhelds Support Pages]: [http://www.palm.com/us/support/tungstene/ E] [http://www.palm.com/us/support/tungstene2/ E2] [http://www.palm.com/us/support/tungstent/ T] [http://www.palm.com/us/support/tungstent2/ T2] [https://web.archive.org/web/20060429221255/http://www.palm.com/us/support/tungstent3/ T3] [http://www.palm.com/us/support/tungstent5/ T5] [http://www.palm.com/us/support/tungstenw/ W] [http://www.palm.com/us/support/tungstenc/ C]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20050703084418/http://www.infosyncworld.com/reviews/n/3479.html infoSync World Review]
*[http://kb.palmone.com/SRVS/CGI-BIN/WEBCGI.EXE?New,Kb=PalmSupportKB,ts=Palm_External2001,case=obj(10714) list of all Palm OS versions on PalmOne handhelds]
*[http://kb.palmone.com/SRVS/CGI-BIN/WEBCGI.EXE?New,Kb=PalmSupportKB,ts=Palm_External2001,case=obj(10714) list of all Palm OS versions on PalmOne handhelds]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080628233426/http://www.vume.com/videos/view/6029 Easy to use interface (video)]


{{Palm Devices}}
[[Category:Palm OS devices]]


[[de:Tungsten (PDA)]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tungsten (Handheld)}}
[[Category:Palm OS devices]]
[[pt:Tungsten Handheld]]

Latest revision as of 22:54, 25 April 2024

Tungsten E
ManufacturerPalm, Inc.
TypePersonal digital assistant
LifespanOctober, 2003–April, 2005
MediaSecure Digital card
Operating systemPalm OS 5.2.1
Display320 x 320 16-bit, 320 x 480 in later models TFT LCD
InputTouchscreen
ConnectivityUniversal Serial Bus, IrDA
Powerlithium ion battery

The Tungsten series was Palm, Inc.'s line of business-class Palm OS-based PDAs.

Details[edit]

The Tungsten series was introduced in October 2002, created as a "prosumer" line priced at $199 to $300 to compete with the popular Sony Clie and Windows Mobile PDAs. The first device in the line is the Tungsten T, making it the first Palm PDA to be labeled with a letter rather than a number and to run Palm OS 5.

All of the Tungsten PDAs have a few attributes in common:

  • 65,536 color LCD touch screen with a minimum 320 x 320 pixel resolution
  • metal or metal-toned enclosure
  • available flip cover to protect the screen
  • Secure Digital (SD) card slot with SDIO for memory cards and accessories
  • no built-in camera

All models except the Tungsten C, W, and E have built-in Bluetooth wireless capabilities, while the Tungsten C and TX feature built-in Wi-Fi connectivity. Furthermore, by using the optional Palm Wi-Fi Secure_Digital#SDIO_cards Card accessory, the T3, T5, and E2 can also gain Wi-Fi connectivity.[1][2]

With the exception of the Tungsten W, all Tungsten PDAs run Palm OS 5 "Garnet" on an ARM processor and have non-user-replaceable lithium-ion batteries. Some users replaced battery packs with third-party units.[citation needed] The T3, for example, shipped with a 900 mAh capacity battery but third-party 1100 mAh or 1150 mAh LI-poly batteries of the same physical dimensions were available.[citation needed] Tungsten models used a five-way navigator pad, in the shape of a rounded rectangle, circle, or oval and had four buttons for built-in applications.

The Palm Universal Connector is used by the Tungsten T, Tungsten T2, Tungsten T3, Tungsten C, Tungsten W, for cradles and accessories, while the Tungsten E uses a mini-USB connection; the Tungsten T5, Tungsten E2 and TX used an Athena Connector also known as the Palm Multi-Connector.

All Tungsten handhelds come bundled with Dataviz's Documents To Go office suite and some version of Kinoma Player, with the exception of the Tungsten W.

Models[edit]

Tungsten E[edit]

Palm's Tungsten E was the cheapest of the Tungsten series, and as such, has been one of the most successful.[citation needed] It has 32 megabytes of memory, a Texas Instruments OMAP (ARM) 126 MHz processor, a 2 1/8 x 2 1/8 inch (54 x 54 mm) transreflective TFT screen, and ran Palm OS 5.2.1. It is 4.5 by 3.1 by 0.5 in (114 by 79 by 13 mm), and weighs 4.6 ounces (130 g).

It had a standard 3.5 mm headphone jack and a speaker in back and used a mini USB connector not supported by most dock accessories. At introduction, it was US$199.

The Tungsten E, released in October 2003, was intended to replace the aging Palm m515, one of the last holdouts from Palm's old product line.[citation needed] The Tungsten E, though, did not include a vibrating alarm and indicator light like the Palm m500 series had.

Since it was released at the same time as the Tungsten T3, the Tungsten E included the T3's newer PIM apps and the enhanced "agenda view" for quick viewing of to-do items and upcoming calendar items. The Tungsten E's design influenced the Tungsten T series' subsequent devices, the Tungsten T5 and the TX.[citation needed]

It was superseded in April 2005, when palmOne released the Tungsten E2.

Tungsten E2[edit]

Tungsten E2

The Tungsten E2, introduced on April 13, 2005, replaced the similarly named Tungsten E, had 32 MB of memory (29.7 available), a 200 MHz Intel XScale processor, 320x320 Transflective TFT color display, and ran Palm OS Garnet v5.4.7. It is 114 by 79 by 15 millimeters (4.5 by 3.1 by 0.59 in) and weighs 133 grams (4.7 oz). It had a standard 3.5 mm headphone jack, a longer-lasting battery than the Tungsten E, had Bluetooth capability, and a single speaker on the back.

Much like the Tungsten T5 and Treo 650, it used non-volatile flash memory, this time in the form of Non-Volatile File System, meaning that the data would be preserved even if the battery ran out. It used standard SD memory cards and was also compatible with the Palm Wi-Fi Card (sold separately). It used a standard Athena Connector port supported only by some then-newer accessories.

When it was released, its retail price was US$249. In October 2005, the price was reduced to US$199.

Unlike other models, the Find function was limited to only the first eight matches, and the calculator incorrectly found percentages at half their actual value, though this was fixed in units shipping after April 2006.[citation needed]

The Tungsten E2 had the ability to use WiFi, but only as an add-on SDIO card made by PalmOne (now TCL Corporation). Palm's WiFi card was manufactured by SyChip. Encryption is restricted to WEP, and did not offer WPA or WPA2.

The maximum size SD card supported on the Tungsten E2 was 1 GB due to a software limitation. In order to read larger SD and SDHC cards an upgraded driver is required.[3] The previous model (Tungsten E) had been reported to be capable of using 2 GB SD cards.[4]

Tungsten T[edit]

Tungsten T (with sliding section extended)

The first Tungsten, the Tungsten T, introduced in November 2002 and known during development as the M550, was the first model to use Palm OS 5. The Tungsten T was designed by Palm engineers based in Arlington Heights, Illinois.

It had:

  • 16 megabytes of memory,
  • Texas Instruments OMAP (ARM) 144 MHz processor,
  • built-in microphone for voice memos,
  • dedicated voice memo button,
  • vibrating alarms,
  • standard 3.5 mm headphone jack,
  • one front-facing speaker,
  • indicator light,
  • Palm OS 5.0

It is 4.0 inches (100 mm) tall, 4.8 inches (120 mm) tall with the slider extended, by 3.0 inches (76 mm) wide by 0.6 inches (15 mm) thick, and weighs 5.6 ounces (160 g).

Its design set itself apart from other PDAs by having a sliding lower portion; the bottom third of the casing could be slid up and down to cover or reveal the touch-sensitive Graffiti writing area. At introduction, it was US$499.[citation needed]

Many of the features in the Tungsten T were Palm firsts. It was the first Palm PDA to use a version of Palm OS 5 and an ARM processor, which meant that it had the software and processing power for high-quality real-time video playback and MP3 playback.

It was also the first Palm PDA with a:

  • 320 × 320 resolution screen
  • Bluetooth wireless communications radio built-in
  • microphone with a dedicated voice memo button
  • front-facing speaker instead of rear-facing
  • telescoping stylus
  • reset hole large enough to be pressed by the included stylus' tip instead of a pin as with previous Palm PDAs

The slider feature was unique. When open, the Tungsten T looked like a normal slate-shaped PDA, but the bottom portion, with the five-way controller and four buttons, could slide shut, covering up the Graffiti writing area. This made it the smallest Palm PDA in height. The Tungsten T was the last Palm PDA to use the original Graffiti Version 1 handwriting recognition software. Because of a lawsuit by Xerox Corporation Palm Inc. was forced to discontinue Graffiti 1 and later Palm PDAs used Graffiti Version 2. The revised software required two separate strokes for entry of some letters of the alphabet, such as the letters "t" and "k". Most all of the other letters required strokes different from those used in Graffiti 1.

Palm's reasoning behind the slider was that users spent more time viewing data rather than entering it.[citation needed] Thus, they chose to hide the data entry medium while not in use to make a more compact device.

The slider caused two problems with the Tungsten T. One drawback was that the Tungsten T was known for its digitizer becoming miscalibrated after about one year of use and requiring further recalibration.[citation needed] A software patch issued by Palm helped with this problem. Another problem was that the ribbon cable between the mainboard and the digitizer connectors that tended to become loose over time, requiring disassembly to reconnect the ribbon cable for further use.[citation needed]

The Tungsten T was succeeded by the Tungsten T2.

Tungsten T2[edit]

The Tungsten T2, introduced in July 2003 for US$399, was simply a minor update to the Tungsten T, and had exactly the same form factor. (Save for the label and the T|T2's slightly lighter case color, they are superficially identical.) The memory was increased to 32 megabytes, the screen was replaced with a superior (backlight) TFT LCD of the same size and resolution, Palm OS upgraded to 5.2.1, Graffiti replaced with Graffiti2. Since it is much like the Tungsten T model, PalmOne did not sell this model in some markets, such as mainland China or Brazil.

The Tungsten T2 was discontinued in April 2004, having been succeeded by the Tungsten T3.

Tungsten T3[edit]

Tungsten T3
Tungsten T3

The Tungsten T3 was the third T-Class Tungsten device, released in October 2003. It had 64 MB of memory (with 52 MB usable), a 400 MHz Intel PXA261 processor, a new 3.7" 320x480 transflective TFT LCD touch-screen, and ran Palm OS version 5.2.1. It was the last product designed by the Palm engineers in Arlington Heights.[citation needed]

The T3 included Active Input Technology with Virtual Graffiti 2, a Virtual keyboard, and the typical Tungsten line slider. Along with many other additional features, the T3 was released with the same $399 retail price tag as the Tungsten T2 until the release of the Tungsten T5, when it was reduced to $349.

Like the Tungsten T and T2, the T3 still had a front-facing speaker, a microphone, a vibrating alarm feature, an indicator light, and all of their other features.

Like the Tungsten E, the Tungsten T3 came with an enhanced PIM Suite which categorized all appointments and tasks on the Calendar (formerly Date Book) screen. The Enhanced PIM Software also featured an improved Task suite (formerly To Do List) which could categorize Tasks by urgency, category, etc., and an improved Contacts (formerly Address) application with picture support and more fields.

Furthermore, a new status bar appeared at the bottom of screen, giving quick access to the time, system information, home, find, menu access, alerts, Bluetooth, full-screen writing, screen rotation, and what is shown in the input area.

The Tungsten T3 came with RealPlayer for Palm OS Handhelds (called RealOne Player for Palm OS Handhelds at the time of its release) in addition to a 3.5 mm Stereo Jack, making it a digital music player when used with a Secure Digital (SD) flash memory card.

The T3 had a bigger, non-round, 5-way navigation pad with the four application buttons placed around it in a circular fashion instead of in a row, breaking from Palm's traditional application button layout. Palm would return to its more traditional layout in the following Tungsten T5 and Palm TX.

The T3 had a Green/Red LED indicator light, however Palm only used the green LED for most purposes, red only being used by certain third-party programs and libraries.

The T3 also had the Palm Universal Connector and an included USB cradle. The cradle was used for both charging and synchronizing the Palm's data to a PC (With support included for Windows and Mac OS X, but with the pilot-link software, the unit synchronizes perfectly with a Unix operating system).

Early criticisms of the Tungsten T3 include it electronically damaging SD cards[citation needed] and its relatively low battery life (900 mA·h battery, larger display and processor clocked above most other Palm handhelds). Palm addressed the Secure Digital Card problem by releasing a Firmware Update. After the "SD Card Patch" was applied in early (by the user via a firmware patch) and later (at the manufacturing stage) releases of the Tungsten T3, no other criticisms were known to have risen from the Tungsten T3's use.[citation needed]

Shortly after the early 2005 release of the Tungsten T5, the Tungsten T3 was discontinued. Since then, no other Palm handhelds included a vibrating alarm, a slider to make the device smaller, or the Palm Universal Connector.

Tungsten T5[edit]

The Tungsten T5, introduced in October 2004 and now discontinued, was aesthetically a combination of the Tungsten E and Tungsten T3. It was the first and only Tungsten to use a 416 MHz Intel XScale PXA270 processor. It had a 320x480 TFT 16-bit Color Screen with a virtual input area. It retained the shape of the Tungsten E, but was taller, instead of the sliding bodies of the previous Tungsten T-series handhelds.

The Tungsten T5 was the first Palm PDA to have a 320x480 pixel screen without a slider mechanism as used in the Tungsten T3, T2, and T, though other brands have had sliderless HVGA displays for years. It was also the first to have 256 MB of memory (versus 64 MB in the Tungsten T3), with 161.2 MB configured as a Flash Drive - accessible to computers via the device's Drive Mode feature, 63.8 MB available for applications, and 31 MB reserved for the OS. This often resulted in some confusion as the memory was not equally usable as in previous Palm PDAs.

While the Tungsten T5 was meant to be a replacement for the Tungsten T3, it lacked several features from the Tungsten T3 such as a charge-indicator LED, a vibrating alarm, an included HotSync cradle, and built in microphone for voice memos. Furthermore, its speaker became rear-facing instead of front-facing and the PDA used the then-new Multi-Connector/Athena Connector instead of the Palm Universal Connector. The speed of the Bluetooth connection can only be set to a maximum of 128 kbit/s.

At the time of its release, the Tungsten T5 (along with the Treo 650) was plagued with memory inefficiency problems, third-party application issues, and device driver crashes, due to the new Non-Volatile File System.[citation needed] The addition of NVFS however, brought the benefit of no longer losing all stored data in the event of a complete battery drain.

Tungsten T5 owners were encouraged to install the Tungsten T5 1.1 Update, which addressed the memory inefficiency issues alongside other operating system-level problems.

The power button was prone to reliability issues causing it to become inoperative over time, requiring the user to either use a third-party app, rely on the PDA's other physical buttons or insert a SD card which would then switch the PDA back on. [citation needed]

In some countries, including Australia, the Tungsten T5 was withdrawn early since the Palm TX offered more advanced, built-in WiFi support, instead of requiring the optional Palm Wi-Fi Card in its one and only SD slot as many other non-Palm PDAs on the market at the time came standard with built-in WiFi.

Tungsten W[edit]

The Tungsten W (known as the i710 during its development period, and X420 at the prototype stage[5]), was introduced in February 2003. The sole smartphone (PDA/cellphone hybrid) in the Tungsten series, instead of running Palm OS 5 on an ARM-compatible processor, it used last-generation Palm OS 4 paired with a Motorola DragonBall processor that was typical of Palm OS 4 devices.

It had a thumb-sized hard plastic keyboard, like the Treo 600 rather than the typical silkscreen Graffiti Writing Area found on most Palm handhelds. (This form factor would be reused in the Tungsten C, except lacking the W's external antennae).

The Tungsten W focused more on its PDA half than its cellular telephony half, much like its predecessors, the Palm i705 and Palm VII. Unlike either the Palm i705 and the Palm VII (which both could only make data connections over the Mobitex pager network), downloads and uploads were done using comparatively-fast GPRS connections. It lacked a microphone and the speaker couldn't be used for phone calls; instead, an included ear bud and microphone loopset was used for voice calls.

A flip cover was also released that allowed the user to hold the handheld like a normal phone and talk on it, although it did obscure the screen. (In the US, it was sold exclusively by AT&T Wireless, and all Tungsten W handsets sold in the US were locked to AT&T Wireless. Canadian W's were not locked to any service provider and could operate with T-Mobile SIM cards).[citation needed]

It had 16 megabytes of memory, a Motorola DragonBall 33 MHz processor, vibrating alarms, indicator light, and ran Palm OS 4.1.1 (with an optional upgrade to 4.1.2) with special enhancements for its 320x320 display since most Palm OS 4 devices had 160x160 displays. It is 4.8 inches (120 mm) tall by 3.1 inches (79 mm) wide by 0.7 inches (18 mm) thick, and weighs 6.4 ounces (180 g). It had a standard 2.5 mm headset jack, and a single rear speaker. At introduction, it retailed at US$419 before service provider subsidies.[citation needed]

The Tungsten W was succeeded by the Treo 600 after Palm purchased Handspring and became palmOne.

Tungsten C[edit]

Tungsten C

The Tungsten C introduced in April 2003 was, at the time of its release, palmOne's only handheld that allowed the user to access the internet wirelessly through 802.11b Wi-Fi without the use of a card or other external device. It lacked support for the WPA encryption standard but did however have built in PPTP VPN support for secure connections to VPN servers.

The web browser included was PalmSource's Web Browser 2.0. Novarra Web Pro 3.0 could be purchased as an upgrade.

Other details were its 400 MHz Intel PXA255 processor, 64 MB of memory (51 MB available for programs + 12 MB heap), built-in thumb keyboard, a five-way navigator, a Secure Digital/SDIO/MultiMediaCard slot, vibrating alarms, indicator light, and a 2.5 mm headset jack, capable of voice recording and monaural sound output with a proprietary earbud headset (sold separately).

Third-party applications and hardware were available that worked around the Tungsten C's monaural audio. For instance, a special adapter could be purchased to convert to a standard 3.5 mm jack that splits the mono output into left and right channels.

The Tungsten C was superseded by the LifeDrive Mobile Manager, the Palm TX, and the Treo series.

Comparison[edit]

Comparison of Tungsten devices
Name T[6] W[7] C[8] T2[6] E[9] T3[10] T5[11] E2[12] TX
Release date November 2002 February 2003 April 2003 July 2003 October 2003 October 2004 April 13, 2005 October 2005
Original retail price US$499 US$419 US$499 US$399 US$199 US$399 US$399 US$249 US$299
Weight 5.6 oz (160 g) 6.4 oz (180 g) 6.31 oz (179 g) 5.6 oz (160 g) 4.62 oz (131 g) 5.4 oz (150 g) 5.1 oz (140 g) 4.7 oz (130 g) 5.2 oz (150 g)
Storage size: total/Non-volatile 16 MB/No 16 MB/No 64 MB/No 32 MB/No 64 MB/No 256 MB/Yes 32 MB/Yes 128 MB/Yes
Dynamic heap size 823 kB 12.6 MB 11.5 MB 4.2 MB 6.3 MB
Display Transflective TFT
(active matrix)
Reflective TFT
(active matrix)
Transflective TFT screen
Resolution 320*320 320*480 320*320 320*480
Processor Texas Instruments OMAP1510 Motorola Dragonball Intel XScale PXA255 Texas Instruments OMAP1510 Texas Instruments OMAP311 Intel XScale PXA261 Intel XScale PXA270 Intel XScale PXA255 Intel XScale PXA270
Processor frequency 144 MHz 33 MHz 400 MHz 144 MHz 126 MHz 400 MHz 416 MHz 200 MHz 312 MHz
Palm OS version 5.0 4.1.1 (4.1.2 is available) 5.2.1 5.4.5 (upgradable to 5.4.8) 5.4.7 5.4.9
Audio output 3.5 mm Headphone Jack,
Speaker (Front)
Jack for proprietary Headset/Mic 2.5 mm Headphone Jack for proprietary Headset 3.5 mm Headphone Jack,
Speaker (Front)
3.5 mm Headphone Jack,
Speaker (Back)
3.5 mm Headphone Jack,
Speaker (Front)
3.5 mm Headphone Jack,
Speaker (Back)
Multimedia capabilities Music Playback (with third party application (PTunes) and SD card) Patch available to improve sound quality ? Music Playback
(w/RealPlayer + SD card)
?
Wireless Connectivity Bluetooth,
Infrared (IrDA)
GPRS, Infrared (IrDA) 802.11b WiFi,
Infrared (IrDA)
Bluetooth,
Infrared (IrDA)
Infrared (IrDA) Bluetooth,
Infrared (IrDA)
802.11b WiFi,
Bluetooth,
Infrared (IrDA)
PC Connection Universal Connector Mini-USB Port Universal Connector Athena Connector
Additional features Keyboard, Cellular Keyboard WiFi via SDIO card,
Voice memo recording
WiFi via SDIO card

See also[edit]

Competitors and contemporaries[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Palm Wi-Fi Card Support
  2. ^ Palm Wi-Fi Card at the Palm Store
  3. ^ Such as PowerSDHC by Dmitry Grinberg.
  4. ^ SD card compatibility Test in TamsPalm Blog Archived 2007-10-21 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Picture of a Tungsten|W and the two versions of the X420
  6. ^ a b "Palm Tungsten T Specs". CNET. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  7. ^ "Palm Tungsten W Series Specs". CNET. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  8. ^ "Palm Tungsten C Specs". CNET. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  9. ^ "Palm Tungsten E Specs". CNET. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  10. ^ "Palm Tungsten T3 - handheld - Palm OS 5.2.1 - 256 MB Overview". CNET. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  11. ^ "Palm Tungsten T5 Series Specs". CNET. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  12. ^ "Palm Tungsten E2 - handheld - Palm OS Garnet 5.4 Overview". CNET. Retrieved 2019-01-29.

External links[edit]