Palm Treo Pro (Sprint)
Manufacturer: Palm Part number: TREOPROBLKSPT
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- The Palm Treo Pro for Sprint offers plenty of features and satisfactory performance, but the carrier's business customers will get a better user experience from the HTC Touch Pro.
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CNET editors' review
Palm Treo Pro (Sprint) price range: $149.99
- Reviewed by: Bonnie Cha
- Reviewed on: 03/10/2009
- Released on: 03/15/2009
The good: The Palm Treo Pro features a sleek design that combines a full QWERTY keyboard and touch screen. The smartphone ships with Internet Explorer 6 and offers full connectivity options, including EV-DO Rev. A support and GPS.
The bad: The Treo Pro's QWERTY keyboard is cramped, and we wish the screen was slightly bigger. The smartphone can occasionally be sluggish. Though IE Mobile 6 brings some improvements, it's still cumbersome compared with some other mobile browsers.
The bottom line: The Palm Treo Pro for Sprint offers plenty of features and satisfactory performance, but the carrier's business customers will get a better user experience from the HTC Touch Pro.
Recently, Sprint confirmed the rumors and announced that it will add the Palm Treo Pro to its smartphone lineup starting March 15. Unfortunately, the news received lukewarm response given that most people's attention is focused on another Palm smartphone coming to the carrier (that'd be the Palm Pre, of course). However, the Treo Pro shouldn't be dismissed so quickly.
The business-centric smartphone offers a lot, including Internet Explorer 6, EV-DO Rev. A support, and GPS, and delivers satisfactory performance. We also give it props for being one of the sleekest devices to offer a touch screen and a full QWERTY keyboard, but at the same time, it comes with tradeoffs. The display could stand to be a little bigger, and the keyboard is extra cramped. Plus, for such a corporate-centric smartphone, it looks cheap. It's these little things that make us think the HTC Touch Pro is the better option for Sprint's business customers. The Palm Treo Pro is $100 less, though, so if you're budget-strapped and can get past the design flaws, the smartphone delivers in every other way.
The Palm Treo Pro will be available for $199.99 with a two-year contract after rebates. That includes the addition of an Everything Plan with data for $30 per month. You can also purchase the smartphone through Palm beginning March 16.
Design
Carrier branding aside, the Sprint version of the Palm Treo Pro is physically the same as the unlocked GSM model of the smartphone. You can read all about the design in our full review of the unlocked Palm Treo Pro, but we want to reiterate a couple of points.

First, having already seen it in August 2008, we were surprised at how strongly we reacted to the smartphone's overall look. The Treo Pro offers one of the sleekest touch screen and full QWERTY combinations around, and has a more sophisticated look than its competitors, like the Samsung Saga. We do wish the touch screen was a tad bigger, but it's the keyboard that might be the Treo Pro's downfall.
As we said in our original review, the Pro's QWERTY keyboard doesn't match its intended audience. It's similar to the one found on the Palm Centro and while the gelatinous, sticker-like buttons might work for a broader audience, we'd like to see more solid keys on such a corporate device. More importantly, the keyboard's just difficult to use. The buttons are small and cramped together, so even small hands will have a difficult time typing, error-free messages.

Sprint packages the Palm Treo Pro with the same environmental packaging (recyclable box, user manuals printed with soy ink) as the unlocked model, but the carrier's a little stingy with the accessories, only including an AC charger, a USB cable, reference material, and a recycling envelope. There is no software CD, since it's all preinstalled on the smartphone. For more add-ons, please check our cell phone accessories, ringtones, and help page.
Features
Billed as a business device, the Palm Treo Pro is a well-stocked smartphone but nothing out of the ordinary. Starting with the phone features, the Treo Pro offers a speakerphone, speed dial, smart dialing, conference calling, and threaded text and multimedia messaging. The contact book is limited only by the available memory, and there's room in each entry for multiple numbers, e-mail addresses, instant-messaging handles, and birthdays. For caller ID purposes, you can assign a picture, a group ID, or a custom ring tone. There's also an option to get directions or map an address direct from someone's contact page.
To help with that task, the smartphone offers integrated GPS for real-time tracking and navigation. While an application like Google Maps for Mobile can provide you with real-time positioning and text-based directions, you'll need a location-based service for voice-guided directions, automatic rerouting, and other services. Sprint, of course, offers its own LBS, with Sprint Navigation, which you can use with the Treo Pro. Currently, the carrier offers a special that offers the first five days free; afterward, you will have to pay $2.99 per day, or you can pay $9.99 per month for unlimited access.
Bluetooth 2.0 is also on-board for use with mono and stereo Bluetooth headsets, hands-free kits, object exchange, and dial-up networking. Be aware that if you to use the Treo Pro as a modem for your laptop, you will need to sign up for a Sprint Power Vision Modem Plan, which runs $39.99 per month for 40MB or $49.99 per month for unlimited.
You should get pretty good speeds since the Palm Treo Pro works on Sprint's EV-DO Rev. A network. The Rev. A bumps up download speeds to the 600Kbps-to-1.4Mbps range versus 400Kbps-to-700Kbps, while upload speeds will average around 350Kpbs to 500Kpbs (compared with EV-DO's 50Kpbs to 70Kbps). In short, you're going to get faster Web browsing, e-mail, and downloads--that is, if you live in a coverage area (you can find a coverage map from Sprint's site).
Alternatively, you can also hop onto any available hot spot, since the smartphone has integrated Wi-Fi. In a nice touch, Palm included a button on the right side of the smartphone that turns on the Wi-Fi radio with a single press. The smartphone will then automatically scan for available networks and allow for authentication and data encryption.
As a Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional Edition device, the Treo Pro comes with Internet Explorer Mobile for your Web browsing needs, but note that this is the first Palm to offer Internet Explorer Mobile 6. This brings some enhancements, such as the capability to switch between mobile and desktop versions of a site, pan support, multiple zoom levels, Adobe Flash Lite 3.1 for Adobe Flash content, and more. The new features are certainly welcome additions, and it made it easier to navigate sites. However, the browser is still unwieldy compared with some of the competition.
In addition to Internet Explorer, you get the full Microsoft Office Mobile Suite for viewing and editing Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents, OneNote Mobile, Windows Live integration, and the standard personal information management (PIM) tools, such as calendar, contacts, and a task list. There is a wide variety of third-party applications available for the Windows Mobile operating system, so you can always download more to the smartphone, whether you're looking for business apps, games, or other PIM utilities. For software recommendations, check out Download.com.
For your messaging needs, the Palm Treo Pro supports Microsoft's Direct Push Technology, which brings real-time e-mail delivery and automatic synchronization with your Outlook calendar, tasks, and contacts via Exchange Server. You can also configure the smartphone to access POP3 and IMAP e-mail accounts, which, in most cases, is a simple process of inputting your username and password. We were able to set up our Yahoo account on our review unit with no problem and started receiving e-mail within a few minutes. Sprint offers a download that installs three of the major instant-messaging clients--AIM, Yahoo, and Windows Live Messenger--onto the phone.

When you're ready to kick back and relax, you have several options with the Treo Pro. You can enjoy your personal library of music and videos (supported formats include AAC, MP3, WAV, WMA, MPEG-4, and WMV files) using Windows Media Player. The smartphone also supports Sprint's various multimedia services, including Sprint TV and the Sprint Music Store. Sprint TV gives you access to programming from a variety of channels, including CNN, Comedy Central, and Sprint Exclusive Entertainment. In addition, you can listen to live-streaming music and talk radio from Sirius, VH1 Mobile, and MTV Mobile. Meanwhile, the Sprint Music Store offers simultaneous track downloads to your PC and wirelessly to your phone. Songs cost $0.99, or you can get a six-pack for $5.94, but this no longer includes a PC download. Both the music and TV services are part of the Sprint Power Vision pack, which ranges in price from $15 to $25 per month.

The Treo Pro also has a 2-megapixel camera with 8x zoom and video recording capabilities. You can shoot still images in one of five resolutions and one of four quality settings. There's no flash, but you do get effects and white balance and brightness controls. A self-timer and time stamp are also available. In video mode, options are a bit more limited. You have your choice of four resolutions and can adjust the picture via white balance, brightness settings, and effects. There's no limit to recording length.

Picture quality wasn't that great. We could make out the objects just fine, but images looked gray and dull. Video clips were decent. After you've shot your photos and videos, you can save them to a contact, as your background image, share them with friends and family via e-mail or multimedia message, or simply enjoy them in a slide show. The Treo Pro has about 311MB of user-accessible memory; you can supplement this via the microSD expansion slot, which accepts up to 16GB cards.
Performance
We tested the dual-band (CDMA 850/1900; EV-DO Rev. A) Palm Treo Pro in San Francisco using Sprint service, and call quality was good. Audio was crisp and clear on our end, posing no problem whether we were talking to friends or using an airline's voice-automated response system. On the other side of the conversation, our friends reported similarly positive results, though there were a couple mentions of our voice sounding somewhat digitized. Speakerphone quality wasn't as pristine as regular calls (no surprise there) but the Treo Pro offered generally clear calls and plenty of volume. We had no problems pairing the Treo Pro with the Logitech Mobile Traveller Bluetooth headset and the Motorola S9 Bluetooth Active Headphones, and we didn't experience any dropped calls during our review period.
The Treo Pro features a 528MHz Qualcomm MSM7501A processor, and the smartphone was generally responsive during our testing period. We encountered some delays with the camera and a couple of isolated instances during which the smartphone seemingly froze when selecting menu options but would then snap back into action after a few seconds.
There's no question about the speed of Sprint's EV-DO Rev. A network, however. For once, we didn't have to wait ages for Sprint TV to launch, and the streamed content was smooth and surprisingly watchable. We also downloaded several songs from the Sprint Music Store, which only took seconds. Using Internet Explorer Mobile 6, the full CNET site took about 25 seconds to load, while CNN's mobile site loaded in 7 seconds and ESPN's mobile site came up in 5 seconds.
The Treo Pro's GPS receiver was quite impressive. Using Sprint Navigation, the smartphone was able to find our position within two minutes, and subsequent starts were faster. Real-time tracking was almost on the mark as we followed a course set out by Sprint Navigation from the Marina District of San Francisco to CNET's downtown headquarters.
The Palm Treo Pro features a 1,500mAh lithium ion battery with a rated talk time of 5 hours. The smartphone met the rated talk time in our battery drain tests. According to FCC radiation tests, the Treo Pro has a digital SAR rating of 1.4 watts per kilogram. The smartphone is also compliant with the FCC Hearing Aid Compatibility with a M3/T3 rating.
User reviews
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I love my new Treo Pro
by yaoon on March 12, 2009
Pros: Hardware switch to silent mode
Cons: It's glossy, and black, but also very smooth. At times feels very slippery, and opening the case to get to the battery can be a pain.
Summary: I love my new Treo Pro. I have been using it for about 2 weeks and already plan to hold on to it for the long haul. Little, history, I ...
Summary: I love my new Treo Pro. I have been using it for about 2 weeks and already plan to hold on to it for the long haul. Little, history, I have had the Origional Treo, 200, 600, and 650. This is the best of them all. I swtiched two windows mobile 2 years ago because... well the PALM OS is dead in my book. That aside, I really missed the treo. I think palm gets how to build a nice device.
Keyboard: Works great. I find for a thumb keyboard and now with some experience I can fly with it. Personally, I love the thumb keyboard. Perfect for one handed operation with little compromise.
Thin: This thing fits very nicely into the pocket and the screen guard is excellent. I dont even know I have it with me and I never accidently Dial anyone. It fits in the hand wonderfully.
Buttons.. Some devices are going away from having so many buttons. However I like the ability to launch frequent programs. The Pro is great at letting you customize. (You have many hardware buttons and some of them can also be configured to have an Option + Hardware button application bound to them)
Also, you have hardware button access to volume control and wifi.
GPS: Works great. I installed and worked right away.
Power: this device is not a power pig. With normal use I get a good run off it. Mind you, I use applications on it all day along and SMS extensively.
Camera: I havent used it. Frankly, it doesnt matter how many mega pixels any phone has, it still just a phone camera. Quality is never that good. But it is good enough for those fun quick shots.
Dislikes: well, the screen is a standard windows mobile device screen. I was hoping for a new device, especially manufactured by HTC it would have a bit more kick to it. However, its very functional and does what I want. One thing I love is how they built into the keyboard access to the brightness control. This is something all devices should have. Its really hard to increase the brightness if you can read the screen. No problem with the treo.
The ALT key on the keyboard allows you to access characters not on the keyboard, including accented letters for various languages. What I dont like is that its a little window that shows up with about 8 characters show and you scroll to see more. Well there are a lot of characters, it would be better if they just filled the screen so you can quickly find the special character you want.
Windows Mobile Phone Dialer stinks! This is true in my opinion for any windows mobile device. Its a phone, but you have to navigate often 2 to 3 screens deep just to get a phone number. For example, you start typing someones name and the dialer appears. It instantly starts searching for a name. Great! When you select a name by pressing enter, it pulls up their contact screen. (HUH???) yes, you now get to see more info about them. I just want to DIAL the phone number. Long story short, for simple dialing its more complicated than it needs to be. Second, the Windows Mobile phone dialer always seems unresponsive and slow. Its a phone... but the phone is slow. it makes no sense. This is not a critisim against the treo, but if this your first Windows Mobile device you will be a bit disappointed with this.
My Final gripe is that it uses the Micro USB Cable. I dont know why. All I can say is that about 90% of my small electronic gizmos use Mini usb and now I have a new cable standard to deal with. I am sure there is some value to it, but I dont see it. Yes, the connector is smaller, but the cable is still just as thick and just as long. So why I need a thinner (by maybe a few hair widths) I dont know.
I buy Unlocked version from $450 here http://astore.amazon.com/fivestaritems-20/detail/B001E96PK0
If you made it this far, thanks for reading.9 out of 10 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Liking so far. Coming from longtime Palm OS user.
by newgear on March 20, 2009
Pros: Excellent GPS, 3.5 headjack, Stereo BT, responsive, sleek
Cons: Needed to grow nails out to type on keyboard efficiently. 2mp camera. Slippery.
Summary: Overall great phone, coming from using many of the previous palm os treos & pda's. Fits great in the hand, I would reccomend a skin for better grip though. ...
Summary: Overall great phone, coming from using many of the previous palm os treos & pda's. Fits great in the hand, I would reccomend a skin for better grip though. Plenty of dedicated buttons for shortcuts. Wish the shortcut feature using the letter keys were included like on the Palm OS. Using my whole thumb to type was not an option and I consider my hands as average size. I had to grow out my nails to assist typing with the smaller gel keys. So far, it's been very stable, no crashes yet. I was certain at least one every other day with my old 755. Internet is fast 3G or WiFi. Battery door is tricky to get off, but how often do you remove batteries and/or cards. The GPS is the greatest. Compared it to my TomTom and it fared very well. Voice prompts need to be louder. Found satelites fast and adjusted quickly to wrong turns. Google maps works well also. Camera is not that greatest, but that's not important to me. Video was great, handles YouTube smoothly.To close, this is a very nice phone for business users who are looking for a pocket friendly, full physical keyboard, stable, quick and great looking phone.
4 out of 4 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Treo rules. Windows molbile grows on you
by robair12 on March 11, 2009
Pros: all the buttons for speedy access
Cons: key board cramped.
Summary: having used a treo since te 280 and a 650 for teh past three years, it took a little getting used to Windows mobile. I especially liked its intutive search ...
Summary: having used a treo since te 280 and a 650 for teh past three years, it took a little getting used to Windows mobile. I especially liked its intutive search for last called or recived numbers as you start to type. Windows Mobile is a bit utilitarian so i added Agenda one and SPB Shell. now i cant put the phone down. it foloows me eevry where and is always within arms reach.
3 out of 4 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Bonnie Cha is HOT!
by mike_in_honolulu on April 4, 2009
Pros: She's super cute, a great talker, seems down to earth, knows about techie products
Cons: Her sweater. Recommend hotter outfits
Summary: She rocks!
Summary: She rocks!
2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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How FRUSTRATING
by mmcoffman on July 16, 2009
Pros: It has a few . . . it's speaker is nice, it has menus similar to previous palms so if you've had one before it makes it an easy switch
Cons: Okay . . .too many to list, the big one is the Sync option!
Summary: Okay, my Treo 850 was a GREAT phone until Sprint upgraded their GPS and Sprint TV, then neither worked with the only 8 month old phone. So, Sprint upgraded me ...
Summary: Okay, my Treo 850 was a GREAT phone until Sprint upgraded their GPS and Sprint TV, then neither worked with the only 8 month old phone. So, Sprint upgraded me to the Palm Pro which I had not desire to own, I didn't need a new phone. The sync seems to be a HUGE problem. I connected it up to sync and i ONLY care to sync my calendar it's the only thing up to date on my laptop. So, you uncheck "contacts" so they don't sync and and it says "this will remove all contacts from your device". So, if you want to sync anything to the phone you have to either sync the contacts or loose them all?? Seems like a HUGE error on Sprint or Windows part . . . .so I decided to take 2 hours and update all my contacts in Outlook and sync with it, OMG, it put 2 of some of my contacts in there, then when I updated a few phone numbers, when I synced again it DID NOT change those numbers, left the old ones in there! UGH!! I got this phone for free, as an upgrade and I don't even want it FREE.
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Palm Pro is fast!, highly recommended
by Wworld on April 12, 2009
Pros: Super fast with email, multi apps, attractive sleek design.
Windows Live automatically imports all your contacts when you enter your ID for both Hotmail/Live Mail and MSN messenger. WOW!
Very customizable home page. Excellent touch screen!Cons: A slightly larger screen and keyboard, but the keyboard is a very accurate compared to HTC Pro's!
A 3.2 meg camera instead of the 2.0 and flash for the camera, would make it perfect.Summary: I bought first day Palm Pro was available in Canada on Telus network. April 2009. after using Palm 700p.
Telus is excellent. Fast, excellent customer service and they know the ...Summary: I bought first day Palm Pro was available in Canada on Telus network. April 2009. after using Palm 700p.
Telus is excellent. Fast, excellent customer service and they know the phone!
I use this for business and am on it all day long for calls, chat, email and its very easy to use with 1 hand for most functions.
1. some apps you cannot cut and paste!?
it would like a 'key' that would be 'right click' equivalent of Windows desktop.
the right click is touch screen option is on the touch screen.
2. overall its an excellent phone. it so fast on the internet, its actually faster than my
2 gig ram laptop! how do they do that?
3. Internet Explorer works great on Windows Mobile 6.1
4. Compared to HTC Pro is way to big and bulky. Next, Palm Pre!
5. Blackberry storm very hard to use touch screen. Other Blackberry's no touch
screen. Palm Pro with Windows Mobile 6.1 is great. Looking forward to using
Windows 6.5!1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Nothing has changed, so sad!!
by ddawson258 on April 4, 2009
Pros: Hmm, the phone feature works well!! It was good to see the communication mgr not regulate running programs along with the bluetooth, wifi, phone etc.
Cons: Hang ups, hang ups, hang up!! Freezes wayyy too much!! Phone still hangs up and in my opinion far worse than before than it did with my old Audiovox pocket PC!! Every function performed was literally a frozen moment. Three resets first day of use
Summary: I had such high hopes for this phone and it being Palm's last chance to shine. Well now I understand why its their last chance. Everything about this phone ...
Summary: I had such high hopes for this phone and it being Palm's last chance to shine. Well now I understand why its their last chance. Everything about this phone was a disappointment minus phone feature. Nowhere near worth the money I paid however I am so glad the flaws revealed their ugly heads early enough to make a switch to something else. I look for a reset button and could not locate one. I had to pull the battery out and reset it that way. When I reset the phone (battery removal) I noticed the battery was really hot. I don't know if the freezing up had anything to do with the battery being extremely hot but it wouldn't suprise me one bit.
Windows 6.1 could have been part of the problem but it was difficult to determine that conclusion. I say this because I wasn't really able to try it out much because of all of the issues I was having with the phone. All I can qualify for Windows 6.1 is Internet Explorer freezing up, updating the phone each time would fail after attempting. I mean every update failed!! I wasn't able to sync due to not having Outlook on my computer however, the phone did not even come with an installation disc for Activesync 4.2. I figured I didn't need it and I just downloaded it from the MS site. This had no baring on my issues with the phone because I never got the chance to hook it up after realizing I needed Outlook!
After resetting the phone I noticed the freezing still happening, especially after going to internet explorer. Phone would show the attempt to go to IE however it would not display the homepage. Keep in mind this is all the first day of usage and ownership. I had to reset the phone again to release the frozen desktop. No programs were installed other than what came with the phone. All my personal files were on my 2.0 Microsd card. Anyway after resetting again, I tried to send a text and noticed all of my contacts were gone!! I manually typed the name of the person I was trying to send to and it appeared that way. However it would not display through the phones listings under contacts. So, here we go again, I had to reset the phone again, BATTERY STILL HOT!!
At this point I got the contact list to appear again. Functions are still running very slow, plenty of memory to spare and then some, nothing running in the communication mgr whatsoever!! Phone was still working just fine but everything else was literally garbage!! I disabled everything but the phone feature and put on the charger and went to bed!!
Now the phone is on the charger all night, and I told myself first thing in the AM I will be calling Sprint and making arrangements to return the Palm Treo Pro!!
The morning comes, I turn the phone on and disconnect the wall charger only to find the battery stuck at 97%!! Are you kidding me?? I didn't even attempt to perform any functions other than call Sprint and demand a new phone...Something else other than Palm!
So if you are thinking of getting this phone, please allow my experience with this phone (the one that's suppose to be the "ONE") to say "USE CAUTION" it's not worth the money, headache, time, patience or effort to deal with such a poor communication device. Oh, one last thing, THIS IS MY VERY FIRST PALM PHONE THAT I HAVE EVER OWNED" so please do not take this as retaliation of any kind whatsoever! I have never owned a Palm until this experience!!
For those of you who have experienced different, I sure would love to see how your getting along with that aggrevation!! Maybe every other unit being manufactured has different innerds!!
I wish things were different for Palm but I see why they say this unit will be hard to sell!!1 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Treo Pro is buggy
by Austin6r on March 25, 2009
Pros: the new mobile IE is awesome! call quality is great, better reception than my old Q.
Cons: I've had mine for almost a week now and it's randomly gone into stealth mode twice, no longer ringing and/or vibrating on incoming calls. The only solution is to hard reset and reconfig the phone.
Summary: Cant deal with having to hard reset the phone on what seems will be a consistent basis. I'm off to browse for a new phone.
Summary: Cant deal with having to hard reset the phone on what seems will be a consistent basis. I'm off to browse for a new phone.
1 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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How's the battery life?
by Patrick Brown on March 19, 2009
Pros: I have a Treo 800W. I love its features, especially as a Realtor, since it allows me to open lockboxes on houses, and the GPS is invaluable, again, as a Realtor.
Cons: But the battery is suitable for a Disney toy. How is the battery life on the Pro? I don't want to have to read things like "to extend battery life, turn off the phone, and don't use any of its features."
1 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Great PDA, Phone lacking
by CPUser1 on March 18, 2009
Pros: PDA Functions great, good sync & internet
Cons: Poor phone reception
Summary: Needs software update to improve phone reception
Summary: Needs software update to improve phone reception
1 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
Specifications
- Manufacturer: Palm
- Part number: TREOPROBLKSPT
- Description: The Treo Pro smartphone by Palm is thoughtfully designed for people who define their workday the way they see fit. Respond to business and personal email, stay on top of appointments and contacts, and use Wi-Fi or GPS when you're out and about. Then watch a video on YouTube, catch up with news and sports on the web, or listen to a few songs. Treo Pro is perfectly balanced.
General
- Product Type Smartphone With digital camera / digital player
- Service Provider Sprint PCS
- Width 2.4 in
- Depth 0.5 in
- Height 4.5 in
- Weight 4.7 oz
- Body Color Obsidian
Cellular
- Technology CDMA2000 1X
- Band CDMA
- Phone Design Candy bar
- Phone Navigation Buttons Navigation button
- Wireless Interface IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g, Bluetooth 2.0 EDR
- Application Software Sprint TV, WorldMate, ActiveSync, Calculator, Sprint Music, Windows Live, Sprite Backup, Adobe Reader LE, Kinoma FreePlay, Instant messaging, Sprint Navigation, Microsoft Live Search, Handmark Pocket Express, Microsoft Office Mobile, Windows Media Player Mobile, Microsoft Internet Explorer Mobile
Communicator Features
- Operating System Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional
- User Memory 300 MB
Messaging & Data Services
- Messaging Services Yahoo! Messenger
- Mobile Email Yes
- EV-DO (Evolution-Data Optimized) Yes
Digital Camera
- Camera highlights With a resolution of 2 megapixels, this model will give you better pictures than other phones.
- Sensor Resolution 2 megapixels
- Digital Zoom 8
GPS System
- GPS Navigation GPS receiver
Display
- Type LCD display
- Technology TFT
- Display Resolution 320 x 320 pixels
- Color Depth 16-bit (65000 colors)
Memory
- Flash Memory 170 MB
Connections
- Connector Type 1 x Headset jack - Mini-phone 3.5 mm, 1 x USB
- Slot Provided 1
Miscellaneous
- Cables Included USB cable
Power
- Type Power adapter
Battery
- Technology - Lithium ion
- Capacity 1500 mAh
- Talk Time Up to 300 min
- Standby Time Up to 250 h
Manufacturer info
- Palm
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Palm products on Shopper.com
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- Website: http://www.palm.com/us/
- Address:
950 W. Maude Ave., Sunnyvale, CA 94085 - Phone: 408-617-7000
- Fax: 408-617-0100








