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This is a small printed catalog of add-ons and accessories for the Handspring personal digital assistant.
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Artifact Details
PennWell Corporation
English
2000
Color, printed, saddle-stitched document, purposefully cut at an angle with the top of the guide narrower than the bottom.
5-5.5" x 5.5" (48 pages)
50-0060-00 B
613c4f573f8f1241
2000
2020-06-21
Organizations
History
The Handspring Add-On & Accessories Catalog is a printed product guide published in September 2000 by the Affinity Publishing Division of PennWell Corporation, of Seattle, Washington, and produced independently of Handspring.1 It catalogs third-party Springboard expansion modules, accessories, and Palm OS software for the Handspring Visor handheld computer, organized into three sections — Springboard Modules, Accessories, and Palm OS Compatible Software — across some fifty pages and a closing product index.1 A welcome note describes the guide as a successor to an earlier volume, expanded by sixteen additional pages of products and solutions.1
Handspring had introduced the Visor a year earlier, on September 14, 1999, presenting it as the first in a family of expandable handheld computers built around the Springboard expansion slot — a plug-and-play hardware bay on the back of the device.2 The company priced the Visor line from US $149 and promoted the Springboard slot as a way to add a camera, MP3 player, modem, or GPS receiver to the handheld.2 Handspring had been founded in July 1998 by Jeff Hawkins and Donna Dubinsky, both veterans of Palm Computing, and by August 2000 its Visor Deluxe had become the top-selling handheld computer in the retail market.3
The Springboard Modules section opens with hardware sold directly by Handspring — a Hayes-compatible 33.6Kbps modem at $129, a Backup Module at $39.95, and an 8MB Flash Module at $79.95 that could hold almost three hundred Palm OS applications.1 Most of the section presents third-party modules: the GeoDiscovery Geode GPS receiver, Good Technology's SoundsGood and InnoGear's MiniJam digital music players, the eyemodule digital camera, PSC's Momentum bar-code scanner, and wireless modem and messaging modules from Glenayre, Novatel Wireless, CardAccess, and Xircom.1 Further entries turned the Visor into an FM radio and pager through CUE's CUERadio, a voice recorder through Digital 5's Total Recall, a smart-card and RFID reader through Inside Technologies' Hand'IT, and a city travel guide through Lonely Planet's CitySync.1
The Accessories section listed carrying cases from DirectCase.com, RhinoSkin, and E&B, the ReturnMe.com eTagit lost-and-found labels, and two folding keyboards — the Targus Stowaway, a full-size keyboard that folded to the size of a handheld and won three International CES awards, and LandWare's GoType at $69.95.1 The Palm OS Compatible Software section gathered synchronization and productivity titles, among them DataViz's Desktop To Go and Documents To Go, Chapura's PocketMirror, Cutting Edge Software's Quicksheet, and Pumatech's Intellisync.1 Handspring's own branded accessories — leather Matching Cases at $29.95, a Bi-Fold organizer at $49.95, replacement styluses, and a USB HotSync cable at $19.95 — appeared on the inside covers.1
The back cover directed readers to an online edition of the guide at handspring.resourceguide.net and invited them to subscribe for a free printed copy, with Affinity Publishing describing itself as “The Partner Specialists.”1
AI generated using primary sources referenced in the footnotes
Footnotes
- Affinity Publishing Division of PennWell Corporation, Handspring Add-On & Accessories Catalog (image scan), September 2000
- Handspring, Inc., Handspring Introduces Breakthrough Class of Expandable Handheld Computers, September 14, 1999
- RedHerring.com, RedHerring.com's 'Live Q&A' to Feature Handspring Founder Jeff Hawkins, August 21, 2000
Oral History
Media
Donna Dubinsky – Chairman of Handspring
A 40 minute presentation by Donna Dubinsky, Chairman of Handspring (and originally Palm), held at UC Berkeley.
Connections
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