Husky 8-in-1 Torx screwdriver including T5 tip

The other day while I was grocery shopping, I dropped my Treo 650 and bricked it. It would power up and the touch-screen was responsive, but the keyboard wasn’t. Sad, but not defeated, I decided to try and fix it myself since it was bricked anyway. But, it’s secured with Torx T5 screws and I haven’t found a good source for smaller Torx bits. I already have drivers as small as T6, but where could I get a T5 bit?

Husky 8-in-1 precision screwdriver with Torx bitsOf course there’s bound to be plenty of online shopping sites where I could order one, but I wanted immediate gratification–plus, I needed to see if my phone was truly unusable, in which case I’d need to go and get a replacement right away. Luckily, I discovered that Home Depot carries the Husky 8-in-1 Precision Screwdriver, which has 4 double-sided bits ranging of sizes T4, T5, T6, T7, T8, T9, T10 and T15, all for $5.97! I drove down to my local Home Depot and picked one up, got home and took my Treo apart.

It turns out that the lower-right pad under the right-hand shift button on the keyboard PCB was permanently depressed. I’d carefully lifted it with a pair of precision tweezers and popped it back up, exercised it a few times and closed the Treo back up. The keyboard was working once again and I had a usable phone! However, if I weren’t so lucky, apparently Cellular Nationwide Network, a company based out of Hong Kong, is selling a Treo 650 replacement keyboard PCB for $9.99. I have no idea what the shipping costs from HK to the US are, though.

If you’re going to take a stab at fixing your own Treo, this video walkthrough shows you how to take it apart:

I’m just glad I was able to get my Treo working again! I really didn’t want to have to spend money to replace it right now.

If this helped you out with your own Treo repair, I’m glad. Feel free to let me know in the comments below–or, ask any questions you have and I might be able to answer and help you out.

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Motorola HS850 headset and Treo 650, not so great

After putting it off for way too long, I picked up a Black Motorola HS850 Bluetooth headset for my Treo 650. It’s simple to use and pairing it with the Treo 650 wasn’t bad. However, the range is really poor: if I wear the headset on my right ear, and put my phone in my left hand and extend my arm all the way out to the side, the headset becomes nearly unusable. Also, even with the phone and headset volumes maxed out, the audio is still too quiet at times. These all seem to be known issues in general with Bluetooth headsets and the Treo 650, unfortunately. I still really like the Motorola HS850 headset and would recommend it, but perhaps not if you’ve got a Treo 650.


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Chris Leckness spends a week with the Treo 650

Chris Leckness, a Microsoft Mobile MVP and founder of a bunch of niche gadget sites under the LeckMedia, LLC, umbrella, steps away from Windows Mobile long enough to try out the Treo 650 for a week. He doesn’t get too deep into specific tasks or cover a broad range of Palm OS applications, but his review is probably more typical of what an average consumer would do with a Treo rather than a geek like myself, so it’s a good read. Check it out:

Day 1,
Day 2,
Day 3,
Day 4,
Day 5,
Day 6,
Day 7

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Treo 650 Updater 1.17 for Cingular released November 2005

In August of last year, I replaced my aging Samsung i330 with a brand new Cingular Treo 650. It shipped with the latest software, which was Treo650-1.15-CNG at the time. I wrote about some really annoying problems, but the one that’s really bothered me the entire time is how the device keeps turning the screen off after seconds, not 3 minutes as I’ve got configured in the preferences. Well, somehow I missed Palm’s Treo 650 Updater 1.17 for Cingular that was released a month after, in November. There’s a bunch of fixes that are part of the update, but the one I’m most interested in:

Correctly saves Auto-off power setting. This addresses an issue experienced by some users after installing updater version 1.15

Glory be and halleluja! As I write this, I’m in the process of installing the update. A HotSync, a hard reset, the update installs, another HotSync … and it’s done! But, what has it done to my poor phone? It’s totally messed up! The phone won’t power on. Going to Phone Info, it’s blanked out Number, IMEI Number, SA Number and Firmware fields. Going into Prefs, selecting Network under Communication throws me an error: “Network Error … The network library is not available.” Crap! Okay, if being a long-time owner of crappy PalmOS devices has taught me anything, it’s this: when stuff stops working, hard-reset and restore from HotSync. So, that’s what I do … no luck. The phone works fine after the hard-reset, but after I restore my stuff with a HotSync, it stops working again. You know what this means … I’m going to be spending hours playing “Where’s Waldo” with my user profile folder, adding PRC files back in one at a time until I figure out which one is causing the Treo to hang. Oh, I’m so not looking forward to this.

I might post an update after I get this thing working again. Or, I might try and find a way to revert it to the 1.15 version of the software. Or, throw it out the window and finally get a non-PalmOS PDA phone. Argh!

UPDATE: After playing the twiddle-with-my-backup-folder game and HotSync’ing over and over, finally removing DocumentsToGo got the Treo working again. Yay! And, yes, the “keeps turning the screen off prematurely” problem is fixed.

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Goodbye, Samsung i330 with Sprint PCS. Hello, PalmOne Treo 650 with Cingular.

Back in August of this year, I finally got to upgrading our two-year old Samsung i330 cell phones, serviced by Sprint PCS, replacing them with brand new PalmOne Treo 650‘s, serviced by Cingular. Why the switch? Mostly because one phone went dead again and paying the $50 deductible to get it replaced again through the lock\line insurance just didn’t seem worth it, considering I’ve wanted to get rid of the i330’s for over a year already. So, this was a good opportunity (and excuse) to finally get a new set of phones.

I really wanted to get away from PalmOS-based phones after being utterly disappointed by the i330’s, but I wanted to stay with a PDA-based phone, since it serves more as a mobile calendar and rolodex than a phone for me, most of the time, otherwise I might have seriously looked at the Symbian-based smartphones available. Unfortunately, the only non-PalmOS PDA-phone that I was really interested in was the HP iPaq h6325 but after seeing how badly HP handled the previous version, the iPaq h6315 (see Gizmodo and Engadget to understand what I’m referring to), I just wasn’t willing to take that risk for the ridiculous price the h6325 is selling for. After much teeth-gnashing and indecision, I finally decided to bite the bullet and go for the Treo 650. I figured if someone like Jamie Zawinski thought it was worth the risk and wasn’t saying bad things about it non-stop (which, I’m sure he would have, if it were total crap), I could give it a try. (Turns out Brad Fitzpatrick ended up getting a Treo 650, too.) After all, if it’s PalmOS, there’ll be less data migration headaches moving from the i330’s to the new 650’s, right? Haha. Yeah, right, what was I thinking?

Overall, it’s a really nice phone with lots of good intentions, but as I had feared, PalmOS 5 still sucks, badly. The design of this phone is just horrible: the phone can be configured to automatically engage the “keypad lock” when it goes to “sleep” for power-saving mode, which would be a really nice and convenient feature, except to “wake” the phone up out of sleep mode, you have to press a button on the phone to do so. No big surprise, right? Yeah, except the phone actually processes the button-press and acts on it, then tells you that the keyguard was engaged and to press the center button to unlock it! Hello?! Is this not just flat-out broken? Isn’t the whole point of the keyguard to prevent any keys pressed while its engaged from having any effect on the phone until the keyguard is disengaged? Stupid, stupid, stupid. What’s worse is that all the keys that you can press that’ll wake the phone up all disrupt whatever you might have been doing on your phone when you engaged the keyguard. The only button that doesn’t seem to do that but will still wake up the phone is the red “hang-up” button on the phone. Pushing this button while you’re on a call will hang up the phone, naturally, but at any other time, it’s a great way to just wake the phone to disengage the keyguard. Of course, using this button works great until you end up accidentally hanging up on an incoming call that comes just as you are about to press the red hang-up button to wake up your phone to look at your calendar or something. If the timing is right (or, wrong, in this case), you’ll have just sent that incoming caller directly to your voicemail. Ugh! All of this is made worse by the fact that, while in the phone’s “Preferences” I have told it to “Auto-off after: 3 minutes,” the phone turns itself off far sooner — sometimes even after just a dozen seconds of inactivity or so. It’s pretty damn cruel to taunt me with a preference setting which the phone happily ignores.

There’s also no end of amusement in watching the phone crash and automatically reset itself. What’s even better is having the phone hard-hang (requiring a manual soft reset of the phone). When the phone’s hung, it doesn’t ring with incoming calls, or alert you to new incoming SMS messages or voicemails; when your phone stops being a phone, it’s pretty much useless. There’s no greater joy than having someone complain about you not answering your phone, responding to the SMS they sent you, or calling them back in response to the voicemail they left you hours earlier. That’s when you pull the phone out of your pocket, press the red hang-up button to wake the phone up to check it out, and find out it just won’t wake up. Sigh.

Overall, the older PalmOS on the Samsung i330’s is certainly more stable and reliable than the new Treo 650’s, but the old phones aren’t as feature-full as the new ones are. Having the Bluetooth capability in the new phones is nice, especially if Bluetooth DUN (Dial-Up Networking) actually works as advertised. Having a built-in 0.3 megapixel camera is convenient but even the cheapest digital cameras will take better pictures. Being able to run PalmOS 5-only applications could be a nice plus, too, since the i330’s ran a really old PalmOS 3.5.3. In the end, I wonder if upgrading to the Treo 650’s (and locking into a 24-month contract with Cingular) was really worth it, but I just couldn’t bear spending any money to get yet another Samsung i330.

I wonder if it’s worth trying to sell the old i330’s on eBay, since I still have one that works, plus a few USB cradles and batteries. I wonder if anyone is still buying them.