Palm Pre Interactive Webcast: Dieter will be there! 37
Palm and Sprint are sending out special invitations to an interactive Webinar featuring the Palm Pre. Dieter has been invited, so he'll be there to get some more Pre goodness!
Sprint and Palm invite you to attend the first in a series of
interactive Webcasts featuring Palm Pre from Sprint.Join Fared Adib, Vice President, Device Operations & Logistics for
Sprint, and Matt Crowley, Product Line Manager at Palm, as they
provide a demo of Palm Pre on the Sprint 3G Network. They will walk
you through why the partnership between Sprint and Palm offers an
extremely compelling new device -- Pre -- and will change the way
customers view and use their wireless device.
Participation is limited and those who are lucky enough to get an invite should RSVP. The Webcast is this month, but that's all I'll say about it. Have fun Boss!! ;-)




























37 Comments
I didn't post the date and time because I didn't know if I should. Glad to know that CNET put it out there though.
Nicely done... ;-) but i HOPE they surprise us
This was supposed to be an answer to Cary....
thank you.
Well, we know that there are a few tech sites being invited to this, but we don't really know what the general audience is. If it's regular news sites (CNN, NBC, ABC, etc.), then it'd be very smart to have a special webcast, even if no new information is given, because the general public still has no idea what the Pre is, it'd end up being like easy advertising.
But on the other hand, if it's mostly tech sites, then they'd better have something new, otherwise they're wasting their time.
For the Q&A the trick will be getting them to respond to questions carefully crafted ("fishing")to reveal what you need, like:
"So if the release date would be June 30, the testing group probably has to sign off on the device around the end of March right?" (hoped for answer: "not really, our marketing campaign is already prepared, we just need a to finish t- d-oh! I mean, no comment!")
or
"Has the production been affected by the low supplies in China?" ("What Chinese? These are being produced in Texas and they're on-ti -- d'oh!!! I mean NO COMMENT!!!")
;-)