January 10, 2009 5:26 PM PST

Palm Pre wins Best of CES 2009 and People's Voice Award

by Bonnie Cha
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Palm Pre

Best in Show: Palm Pre

(Credit: Corinne Schulze/CBS Interactive)

On Saturday, CNET, in partnership with the Consumer Electronics Association, handed out its Best of CES 2009 Awards, including Best in Show and the People's Voice Award. And this year's big winner? The Palm Pre.

The Palm Pre smartphone took home both honors and became the first cell phone/smartphone to win the Best in Show since CNET started presenting the Best of CES awards in 2006. The Palm Pre went up against some stiff competition, including the Sony DSC-G3 and the Sony P-series Lifestyle PC. So why the Pre?

Well, it was a combination of things. First, and most important in our opinion, the Palm Pre along with the new Palm Web OS, brings an innovative way to how you interact with your device and how it organizes information. The Deck of Cards feature truly makes multitasking on your smartphone a breeze, and the Synergy functionality pulls in all your personal management information (e-mail, contacts, and calendar) from various sources into one place. Sure, other devices and operating systems have made similar attempts, but from what we've seen, the Palm Pre is the first smartphone to truly deliver on this in a seamless way.

We also liked the best-of-breed design, as the Pre offers a multitouch screen that rivals the iPhone and even one-ups Apple's smartphone with a slide-out full QWERTY keyboard. The list of features is long and impressive, including a full HTML Web browser, a full range of wireless options, and multimedia capabilities. Palm will also offer an App Store, and since the Palm Web OS was built with developers in mind, we expect the smartphone's capabilities and uses will only expand.

It's pretty evident that Palm put a lot of thought into the user interface, design, and features, as everything seamlessly works together to offer the best user experience, making the smartphone a really useful tool in your daily life. Obviously, this is a huge win for Palm, a company that has come under harsh criticism for its lack of innovation and struggles to keep up the competition, but it looks like Palm stepped up to the plate and hit one out of the park. It will be interesting to see where the Palm Pre stands in a year and whether it delivers on all this hype, but for now, we'll let Palm bask in its victory. Congratulations to Palm and all the Best of CES winners and finalists.

Check out CNET's full coverage of CES 2009, including the complete list of Best of CES category winners.

Bonnie Cha is a senior editor for CNET, covering smartphones and GPS. When she's not testing the latest gadgets, you can find her chasing after her crazy lab or surfing in the chilly waters of Northern California. E-mail Bonnie.
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by Mr. Dee January 10, 2009 8:49 PM PST
It actually looks good, definitely wouldn't mind owning one. Looks like iPhone OS and Android have some serious competition in the market.
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by bdaughtry January 11, 2009 6:53 AM PST
It does look, at long last, as if truly usable smart phones may be upon us. I've still got tons of data in my Palm even though I finally gave up hope on Palm and bought the iPhone 3G. It's a great device, but there is still room for huge improvement. With Palm now in the fray, along with Andriod and Blackberry pushing the advances, I think 2009 will finally be the year of the smart phone.
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by AppleSuxLeo January 11, 2009 12:14 PM PST
I watched the demos at CES and it is just amazing how fluid and fast this device is at multi-tasking. The Synergy that brings all these web2.0 services together is just brilliant. And the gesture area is genius as it lets you change pages and focus on programs without your fingers touching the screen (think Apple notebook track pad). But most of all , it lets the device work one-handed with left or right hand. iPhone looks plodding and WAY behind the curve compared to this. It`s funny how most of us thought the iPhone was the the Jesus of phones. Well this Pre is God in the flesh ! It`s that good. And apps take days to write/port to the device compared to months. I Pre-dict this WebOS will revolutionize the smart phone market.
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by dctech08 January 11, 2009 6:37 PM PST
its gonna be junk...
by July 15, 2009 12:10 AM PDT
I may swap from my Blackbeery to this. <br /> <br />dctech08 - I'm guessing you're an Apple fanboy??
by AppleSuxLeo January 11, 2009 12:16 PM PST
BTW...the KERNEL of the device is LINUX !
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by DarkHawke January 11, 2009 1:28 PM PST
This does look great, don't it? Took 'em a bit, but I think this might just go the iPhone interface one better, especially since it multi-tasks, and it's not trying to emulate a desktop as with Android. I'm not a personal fan of the slide-out keyboard, though. I'm normally all for some tactile controls in this increasingly touch-oriented world, but having a "full" keyboard like this seems to add bulk to the design, though even at that, this bad boy is ULTRA sleek. I'd also like to see more memory on it. My hope for the iPhone was to have it get up to 32 GB onboard, and the Pre only has 8! I'm not so interested in any smartphone for the phone aspect; more the "smart" of having a reasonably capable computing device that'll let me web-browse at decent speeds, play my media and play some casual (or better) games. The iPhone has seemed like the closest fit so far, but I'll be paying close attention to the Pre to see what comes and when.
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by AppleSuxLeo January 12, 2009 11:59 AM PST
Apple got out Appled ! <br />In a research note, Citi analyst Jim Suva upgraded the Palm to a ?hold? from a ?sell? based on the Pre, which ?looks like a game changer? and ?could help improve financials.?<br />The Pre fixes all the iPhone weaknesses like task switching , multi-tasking , the brilliance of the gesture area , the genius of being able to close an app by flicking it off the top of the screen , the genius of Synergy which updates all your contact info from many different services automatically and pulls them all into one list. The improvements over the iPhone go on and on. <br />The iPhone was no Jesus phone after all...not even an Apostle !
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by January 12, 2009 11:59 PM PST
I am a long long time treo user and slightly before being a treo user a palm OS user. I was beginning to lose faith in the OS I had faithfully preached had beaten Microsoft, as palm's focus and treo line headed towards win OS. <br /><br /> WITH THE PALM PRE MY FAITH IS NOW RESTORED.<br /><br />I just recently told my friends of mine who were saying Palm inc. was a thing of the past that I wanted a phone with a iphone/itouch size touch screen, slide away keyboard and Palm OS. I told them these three features would make me happy. I would have said any one of the following features in addition to my three requirements would make it a great phone:<br /><br />1. Integrated GPS <br />2. GBs of memory (as opposed to MBs)<br />3. A revamped palm/phone OS with real improvements (in the palm pre this turned out to be palm webOS with: synergry, a "super search" and multiple windows at a finger flick)<br />[4.] Integrated push email system - (I consider this the only thing blackberries have over treo but this is already possible with chatter on the treo but the integration without having to buy software is nice)<br /><br />The PALM PRE has the large touch screen, physical keyboard and palm OS in addition to all 4 of these super additions. It even sounds like it won't break the bank which is amazing considering there is not a single thing more I could ask for in this phone! Maybe I would style it a bit differently lol, but at least the look still tops the treo 300's clear plastic flip cover ear piece that I got made fun of for in HS because it was possible to see the callers ear through the phone. [Not to mention the duck tape I used to hold the thing together when it would break]<br /><br /> PALM IS BACK!
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by AppleSuxLeo January 13, 2009 1:30 AM PST
Game Changer !
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by LuisRizo January 18, 2009 7:46 PM PST
Will Palm Pre synchronize with Lotus Notes (calendar and contacts)?
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by PrepaidWirelessGuy January 21, 2009 11:35 AM PST
My only concern with switching from my 755p are the applications that I have. I'm very surprised they didn't launch backwards compatibility so they could launch with a massive app store. Perhaps they're expecting developers to rewrite their apps? Also, no memory card slot? Backing up to a card is critical to me based on my past experience with data loss with Palms.<br /><br />www.prepaid-wireless-guide.com
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by falonap January 25, 2009 8:47 AM PST
When will Verizon offer the phone?
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CES 2009 Awards


Best of CES and
People's Voice Award

Since 2006, CNET has presented the Best of CES Awards, given to the top product in 10 categories as well as one coveted Best in Show award. See the gadgets that topped our list for this year, and find out the People's Voice winner, decided by more than 10,000 member votes.

Now accepting submissions for the 2010 Best of CES Awards.


About CES

The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) is the world's largest consumer electronics trade show. CES 2009 is scheduled for January 8 through 11 in Las Vegas, and it will feature thousands of exhibitors showcasing their latest tech products. CNET's team of reporters and reviewers will be at the show, covering technology's heavy hitters and previewing thousands of products before they are released to the public.

Each year, CNET, in partnership with the Consumer Electronics Association, produces the Best of CES awards at the International Consumer Electronics Show. The CNET editorial team recognizes the best new products at the show with awards in 10 categories, an overall Best of Show award, and the People's Voice award, which is selected by CNET's online audience.