No more Windows Mobile phones from Palm

Palm said it will stop developing new phones running Windows Mobile software, instead focusing future development on its new WebOS operating system.

The news came as the struggling handset maker reported widening losses for the quarter during which it started selling the new Palm Pre, the first device to run WebOS.

Losses for its first quarter reached US$164.5 million, compared with a loss of $41.9 million in the same period last year.

Nevertheless, the results beat analyst expectations. Adjusted sales were $360.7 million, better than the $297.7 million anticipated by analysts polled by Thomson Reuters.

Palm shipped a total of 823,000 smartphones during the quarter, a 134 per cent increase over its fiscal fourth quarter of 2009 and a year-over-year decrease of 30 percent.

The decrease from last year means that the Pre isn’t making up for declining sales of the older Palm products. So far, the Pre is available to Sprint customers in the U.S. and only recently Bell Mobility in Canada.

Palm has already signed contracts with additional operators to bring phones using WebOS to new and existing markets, said Jon Rubinstein, chairman and CEO of Palm. The Pre is scheduled to debut later this year in Europe with Telefonica. The newest WebOS phone, the Pixi, will come out from Sprint before the end of the year.

Even so, Palm doesn’t expect WebOS phone sales to make more of a dent in the company’s financial results even next quarter. Palm said it expects adjusted revenue for its second quarter of between $240 million and $270 million, lower than first-quarter revenue.

Rubinstein defended the relatively slow ramp-up of the Pre by comparing it with the Centro, an earlier Palm device that was an unexpected hit. That phone started off slowly too, but ended up being sold by about 30 operators around the globe, he said. “I expect a similar trend” for the Pre, Rubinstein said.

In the future, Palm plans to focus solely on WebOS rather than developing phones that run operating systems from other vendors like Microsoft. “While there are still Centros and Treos moving through the channel, our future engineering efforts are based around WebOS,” Rubinstein said. The Centro runs Palm OS, Palm’s previous operating system, and the Treo runs Windows.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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