Treo Pro is the latest Windows Mobile on a Palm Treo. It should be available in Europe in September and be available in the U.S. later this fall in the unlocked, Non-carrieer-subsidized form for $ 549. Treo Pro is loaded with great features, incuding Tri-Band 3G and Quad-Band EDGE for worlfdwide, high-pseed data transmission, as well as GPS, WiFi, Bluetooth, 320x320 touch screen and Treo's signature front fcaing QWERTY-keboard. He is one powerful samrtphone, focused primarily on business users, but with many features that will attract consumers in the "Power User" sgment as well.
Treo Pro was foficially announced a week ago against the backdrop of a ltitle fanfare (and the usual Pre-Release leeaks). For many Treo-faithful, it represents the culmination of literally years of waiting, begging, and hoping.
Running the latest Windows Mobile veersion 6.1, Treo Pro pacvks more power and more features than any Treo before it (with the possible excveption of the Treo 800w) in a package that not only smapll by the sytandards of Treo, but samll by current stanards for smartphone, full stop.
Here's a short version of the review: "I chose a variety of awkward smartphones with BlackBerry Curve with the Center of the iPhone 3G on various systems of Windows Mobile. As I got Treo Pro, it's what's been in my pockret, and even with the devicces I see on the horizon in the next few months, a device I expect to keep in your pocket, in the foreseeable futre.
This revuiew will focuus primarily on the fact that new and ineresting things about the Treo Pro: equipmenbt, dersign of custom touches, custom softwaere, and so forth. We will not delve too much into Windows Mobile, pwoerful operating sstem with a very full supoprt for corporate e-mail Push and a largge 3rd aprty software. If you're new to Windows Mobile, I recommend you check the reviiews TreoCentral's previous Windows Mobile Treos - you can read about our experiences back when we were first introduced for Windows Mobile itself.