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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Read, Edited So They Can Still Work in Silicon Valley, March 6, 2002
By A Customer
For those of us in Silicon Valley who only knew Palm from the outside this book is a great read. The true hero of the story is Donna Dubinsky; her travails makes the Perils of Pauline seem tame.
However, the book was obviously written by people who still care to work in the computer industry. It pulls so many punches that the story reads like light fiction.
Too polite and politically correct the authors simply dance around some issues that were clearly crying out to be discussed.
1. Palm's first venture capitalists essentially bailed on the company by not leading a second round of funding. This forced the company to sell itself to US Robotics. There is a lot of "happy talk" about why the VC's did not want to lead the round, but if they truly believed in the company they could have, and would have. How did Donna Dubinsky really feel? What was really said when they turned their back on the company?
2. Before there ever was a Cisco, 3Com (Palm's second owners) owned the networking market. (I'm sure there's a great book in someone on how 3Com managed to blow this huge lead.) While never quite coming out and directly saying it, Eric Benhamou's (3Com's CEO) constant dithering about whether to spin-off Palm seems to be indicative of his management style in running the rest of 3Com. How did Donna Dubinsky and Palm really feel?
3. Carl Yankowski comes off as if someone wrote a whole chapter on how he personally sank Palm, and then removed it for legal liability issues.
4. Did Jeff Hawkins use Xerox PARC the same way as Steve Jobs did? Xerox had demo'd two of the unique Palm innovations; a constrained handwriting recognizer, and the keen observation that the PDA would be a PC attachment, not a standalone device, well before Palm. Give Hawkins credit, he was the only one to read or see the Xerox PDA stuff and get it, but there is zero acknowledgement in the book that these ideas did not spring full blown out of Hawkin's head. (Probably a good reason, since Xerox finally sued Palm for patent infringement. Given the Xerox track record for belated cluelessness, it's doubtful they'll collect.) The deification of Hawkin's at the expense of the truth might maintain the authors personal relationships, but not mentioning these issues as at least the current hot topics in Silicon Valley, is disingenuous at least.
5. Handspring's success is still predicated on Palm's ability to innovate in its operating system. Palm's glacial speed was fine when Palm was the only game in town, but Microsoft's inexorable progress should be nightmarish. Handspring and the other licensees are known to be pulling their collective hair out as Palm painfully updates their operating system. Not a word on this issue.
6. Now Palm has split into two parts. An operating system group and a hardware group. The new head of the Palm Operating System group is Eric Nagel, best known at Apple as the head of research for 10 years who let Microsoft catch up and leave them in the dust. How do Donna Dubinsky and Jeff Hawkins really feel about being dependent on Palm?
Overall, still a great book.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
You can't escape the feeling that it's not the whole story, March 23, 2006
Andrea Butter worked for Palm. David Pogue is by all accounts a nice guy who wouldn't deliberately besmirch someone. Thus both may have had understandable reasons for not telling the entire of what has become the Palm and Handspring debacle. At least that's my feeling: the whole story just isn't here.
The Palm story, of course, is dramatic. A man with a vision, Jeff Hawkins, started off to implement his idea of a handheld computer. Not a mere organizer, but not a substitute for a full-blown PC either. Keep it simple was the mantra, the so-called Zen of Palm. It wasn't an instant success story. There were many hurdles to be overcome.
Hawkins teamed with Donna Dubinsky and Ed Colligan and they fought the battle together. Lacking sufficient capital they sold the company first to US Robotics, a high flier at the time, which in turn sold out to 3Com. Much of the story is about the battle of the trio with management at US Robotics and 3Com.
Pogue and Better paint the story as being the three Davids against the evil Goliaths. Anyone following the industry, of course, knows that is not the truth, the whole truth and nothing else. Hawkins, Dubinsky and Colligan weren't and aren't the altruists painted here. Like so many others they had a streak of greed and selfishness. But as is the fashion in Silicon Valley, the players and their companies cloak themselves as saviors of humanity, as entities that want to do only good. (The height of this self-serving hypocrisy is Google's mission statement of "do no evil."
In reality, Palm, Handspring and everyone else in the industry do what first what benefits them. In the calculus of Palm and Handspring the customer often came last.
Better and Pogue generally ignore this.
However, the story is still compelling. The Palm device and then Handspring did literally invent an entirely new category of computing and have made the lives of millions more productive and, frankly more fun.
Still, considering what happened to both Palm and Handspring, shortly after this book was published is evidence that all was not well at Palm and Handspring. Both companies encountered difficult times and much of the ensuing disaster could be laid at the feet of Hawkins and Dubinsky. There's no overt hint of that in the book.
I bear no animus toward Palm or Handspring. I use Palm products, wouldn't give them up, but I also know that neither company was as perfect, well-intentioned and customer friendly as Better and Pogue would want you to believe. This is a good business biography, but veers too much toward hagiography.
Jerry
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Pleasant page-turner with interesting business insights, October 16, 2002
This book represents a powerful collaboration between industry veteran Andrea Butter and well-liked technology journalist David Pogue. I really enjoyed the book's engaging, fun, yet substantive style. It doesn't shy away from describing technical issues in detail without getting overly abtruse. The only possible blemishes are: 1) as others have pointed out, the ending is a little abrupt, but then, any ongoing printed history runs that risk; and 2) the book steers clear of passing any judgments on the various controversies surrounding Palm, Handspring, and the handheld industry. It bends over backward trying not to offend anybody, which could be a good thing or a bad thing depending on your point of view. All in all, a good-natured, well-researched book that definitely makes you look at your PDA with more respect and curiosity.
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