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The Top 10 Free Palm webOS Apps 2010

 & Jamie Lendino Executive Editor, Reviews

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Buying Guide: The Top 10 Free Palm webOS Apps 2010

Contents

Top 100 Free Apps For Your Phone

Palm's App Catalog finally has a well-stocked store. Here are the best free apps for your Palm Pre or Pixi.

Well, it certainly took a while. Palm finally got an App Catalog worthy of the name, just in time to be snatched up by HP. The PC mega-corp has said that it plans to "double down" on Palm's webOS operating system, so hopefully that bodes well for the app community going forward.

Unfortunately, this doesn't mean it's easy to figure out what's worth downloading, just as it isn't with any of the mobile app stores. Fortunately, that's where we come in. Here are the 10 best free apps available for the Palm Pre, Palm Pixi, and the later variants (Palm Pre Plus and Palm Pixi Plus). Who knows? Maybe in the future you'll be able to download these apps onto HP printers, too.

If you know of more great webOS apps, make sure to tell us in the comments area below. They just may get included in the next version of our story.

Note: The Palm Pixi has a slightly shorter resolution than the Palm Pre. This didn't seem to present much of a problem in testing; the worst I saw was an occasional dialog button that I had to scroll down to.

About Our Expert

Jamie Lendino

Jamie Lendino

Executive Editor, Reviews

My Experience

I’ve been a technology journalist and editor for more than 20 years, including for PCMag since 2005. I've also written seven books about retro gaming and computing. Previously, I was the editor-in-chief of ExtremeTech. I’ve been on CNBC and NPR's All Things Considered talking techplus dozens of radio stations around the country. My articles have also appeared in Popular ScienceConsumer ReportsComputer Power UserPC Today, Electronic MusicianSound and Vision, and CNET.

Before all this, I was in IT supporting Windows NT on Wall Street in the late 1990s. I realized I’d much rather play with technology and write about it, than support it 24/7 and be blamed for whatever went wrong. I grew up playing and recording music on keyboards and the Atari ST, and I never really stopped. For a while, I produced sound effects and music for video games (mostly mobile and online games in the 2000s). I still mix and master music for various independent artists, many of whom are friends.

The Technology I Use

I’ve been cross-platform for decades, with PCs and Macs, iPhones and Android, Atari and Intellivision, NES and Sega…I’ve been doing this a while. Especially everything Atari, from the 2600 and 800 through the Atari ST, Jaguar, and Lynx. I bought my first 286 PC in 1989, the same year I bought my first issue of PC Magazine from a newsstand. I subscribed in the 1990s and upgraded to a 386, two 486s, and beyond.

Today, I use a 16-inch MacBook Pro, a custom AMD Ryzen 7 PC, and an Acer Nitro 5 gaming laptop. My phone is an iPhone 14 Pro Max. For music recording, I work in a variety of DAWs (and review them all for PCMag), but my main ones are Logic Pro and Pro Tools. I use an LG 27-inch 4K monitor, a pair of PreSonus Eris E8 XT studio monitors, Beyerdynamic and Sennheiser studio headphones, and a Focusrite audio interface. For my books, I use Scrivener, Microsoft Word, and Adobe InDesign and Photoshop. I also use a zillion emulators of old computers and game consoles for…work. 

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