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BRITISH HAND-HELD COMPUTERS MAKING WAY TO U.S. SHORES.


Byline: Glenn Rifkin The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times

It may seem to take hubris Hubris

An arrogance due to excessive pride and an insolence toward others. A classic character flaw of a trader or investor.
 to enter a new technology market and compete against the likes of Hewlett-Packard, Apple Computer, Sharp Electronics and Motorola. But with little fanfare, Psion PLC, a company based in London that specializes in hand-held computers, has grabbed a lead in the $1 billion worldwide market for these $200 to $600 electronic organizers in the last few years.

Now Psion is pushing its way into the American market. In little more than a year, Psion has more than doubled the number of American retail stores selling its computers, to 2,800 from 1,200.

On Saturday, Psion began a $6 million advertising campaign, and it has dispatched a small army of sales support people to large retailers like Circuit City and Nobody Beats the Wiz.

``The word-of-mouth is terrific,'' said Richard Shaffer, president of Technologic Partners, a consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee
consulting company

business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a
 in New York. ``They make a great product, which is what drives this market. They've gotten good reviews in the trade press, and they don't get many returns.''

Unlike its main competitors, Psion makes nothing but hand-held computers and has spent 15 years refining its software and hardware designs, starting with the first electronic organizers.

``We're purely focused on these devices,'' said David Potter
for the American historian go to David M. Potter


for the American science fiction fan/critic/writer go to Gharlane of Eddore (Pen-name)

David Edwin Potter, CBE
, Psion's founder and chairman. ``We don't have to think about microwave ovens or fax machines. We have more resources focused on this area than even our biggest competitors, like Hewlett-Packard or Sharp.''

The machines start with $69 electronic address books and run up to palm-sized computers that sell for more than $1,000. The challenge facing Psion and its rivals is to persuade people to abandon their date books for something that costs more and has the potential to wipe out a lifetime of phone numbers if a battery dies.

Forrester Research Forrester Research is an independent technology and market research company that provides its clients with advice about technology's impact on business and consumers. Corporate facts
  • Founded: 1983 by George F.
, a technology research company in Cambridge, Mass., says Psion holds nearly 33 percent of the worldwide organizer market, just ahead of Hewlett-Packard's 200LX and brand new Omnigo, and far ahead of Sharp's Wizard and Zaurus and Apple Computer's Newton. Psion sales rose 48 percent in 1995, to $140 million, and profits increased 78 percent, to $18 million. And on the London Stock Exchange London Stock Exchange

London marketplace for securities. It was formed in 1773 by a group of stockbrokers who had been doing business informally in local coffeehouses.
, the company's shares have more than tripled in the last year, closing Friday at 1095 pence.

Psion's presence in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  remains small - just under 20 percent of its sales are here - but as the market for such organizers, known as personal digital assistants, or PDAs, searches for an identity, Psion has the opportunity to grab market share based on its reputation. Psion has 9 percent of the U.S. market, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Forrester Research, trailing Hewlett-Packard, Apple and Sharp.

Despite its success, Psion faces a track filled with hurdles, not the least of which is competing in a market that remains ill-defined and fragmented. John Robb John Robb may refer to:
  • John Robb, British journalist and vocalist for the punk band Goldblade
  • John Donald Robb, American composer and ethnomusicologist
  • John Robb, (author, Global Guerrilla theorist, entrepreneur)
, an analyst with Forrester Research, said that early promises of sales rivaling those of PCs had failed to materialize.

``The upscale end of the PDA (Personal Digital Assistant) A handheld computer for managing contacts, appointments and tasks. It typically includes a name and address database, calendar, to-do list and note taker, which are the functions in a personal information manager (see PIM).  market hasn't found a true reason for existence yet,'' he said. Robb noted that only 500,000 such devices were sold in 1995 worldwide, and though the market is growing by 40 percent annually, it is not likely to become a significant sector until the organizers can be used for effective and cheap access to electronic mail and the Internet.

To that end, Psion has just introduced Psimail, a software package that allows users to connect to popular electronic mail packages through a cable and modem connection. But electronic mail access may not be enough.

Motorola, for example, sells the Envoy, which offers a pen-like device to give commands and a wireless radio modem for transmitting and receiving e-mail and files. The Envoy sells for about $1,000 and requires another $50 to $100 per month in phone charges to operate. Sales have been disappointing.

Despite the setbacks, there is no shortage of companies seeking to enter the competition. A new PDA called the Pilot One-Touch Organizer from U.S. Robotics (U.S. Robotics, Inc., Schaumburg, IL, www.usr.com) A modem manufacturer highly regarded for its quality products. The company manufactures its own chipsets (data pumps) and often leads with innovations. Its HST protocol was a high-speed, reliable protocol before V. , for example, has already attracted attention. The $299 device, shipped this month, offers connections to desktop computers, allowing files to be transferred easily between the two.

Mitchell Kertzman Mitchell Kertzman is a venture capitalist with Hummer Winblad Venture Partners, and former CEO of Sybase, Powersoft, and Liberate Technologies. [1] References

1. ^ Hummer Winblad biography of Kertzman
, the senior vice president of worldwide sales and marketing at Sybase Inc. and a gadget lover, said the Psion was ``the best-designed and most integrated'' of the organizers on the market. And he owns many of them.

Though 70 percent of Psion's sales are in Europe, the company's marketing director, Peter Norman Peter George Norman (June 15, 1942 – October 3, 2006) was an Australian track star best known for winning the silver medal in the 200 metres at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. His time of 20.06 seconds still stands as the Australian 200 metre record[1]. , said Psion was focused on the United States for its growth. The company has set up an American headquarters in Concord, a suburb west of Boston.

In the United States, 35 percent of Psion's sales are going to corporate and industrial customers like Chrysler, Allied Signal, Dunkin Donuts and American Airlines American Airlines

Major U.S. airline. American was created through a merger of several smaller U.S. airlines and incorporated in 1934. It continued to buy the routes of other airlines, becoming an international carrier in the 1970s; its routes include South America, the
, for customized applications like inventory control, route accounting and asset management.

To Europeans, Psion is no upstart. The company was founded in 1980 by Potter, a former computational physics Computational physics is the study and implementation of numerical algorithms in order to solve problems in physics for which a quantitative theory already exists. It is often regarded as a subdiscipline of theoretical physics but some consider it an intermediate branch between  professor. Potter had written software, including a successful flight simulator for one of the world's earliest personal computers, a machine made by Sinclair.

Psion actually created the electronic organizer market and gave the category its name when it introduced the $150 Organiser II in 1984.

The latest models are powerful computers with many of the capabilities of a far more expensive laptop or desktop system. The tiny computer has a 16-bit operating system that can run many applications simultaneously, plus two megabytes of random access memory, which can be increased to 10 megabytes, and a liquid crystal display liquid crystal display (LCD)

Optoelectronic device used in displays for watches, calculators, notebook computers, and other electronic devices. Current passed through specific portions of the liquid crystal solution causes the crystals to align, blocking the passage of light.
 screen.

Psion has sold more than two million of its products, including 750,000 of its current high-end $399 Series 3a models, a notable success in a market known mainly for the disappointment of the Apple Newton.

The Psion Series 3a machine employs a small but reasonably efficient keyboard. Normal touch typing is difficult, but two-fingered typing, often using the thumbs, can be mastered.

``I was tired of carrying a Daytimer and a laptop on business trips,'' said Norma Spreeman, who works for a San Francisco architectural company and bought a Psion six months ago. ``I can download pretty much everything I need onto the Psion and work from that.''

She did take issue with the machine's design, which she said she found less than user-friendly. If anything, it is too complex, with countless features and a daunting daunt  
tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts
To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay.



[Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin
 300-page manual that has turned off more than a few users. ``It gets frustrating because I don't have the time to try to learn all these features,'' Spreeman said.

As Psion raises its profile in the United States, the competitor that causes most alarm, Potter said, is Microsoft, which he said had a development group with more than 200 people writing software applications for palm-top computers.

``It will be the software that really drives this market,'' he said, ``and Microsoft has the resources to be a key player in this segment.'' A spokesman for Microsoft acknowledged that the company was investigating the organizer market, but declined to provide details.

CAPTION(S):

Chart

Chart: THE WHOLE WORLD IN ITS HANDS

Global market share in1995 for multipurpose mul·ti·pur·pose  
adj.
Designed or used for several purposes: a multipurpose room; multipurpose software.


multipurpose
Adjective
 hand-held cmputers weighing less than two pounds.

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COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
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Title Annotation:BUSINESS
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:May 6, 1996
Words:1206
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