The news comes right on the heels of the company’s June 6 release of its smartphone answer to the iPhone, the Palm Pre, just two days before Apple’s highly anticipated announcement of the new iPhone 3G S at WWDC.
No stranger to Palm, Rubinstein has for the past two years worked with Colligan in creating the innovative Palm webOS, an operating system for the handheld that attempts to seamlessly and securely marry the user’s data with online data. An application on the Palm Pre called Universal Search, for example, allows a user to simultaneously search their phone data, Google, and Wikipedia all in one place.
This is the technology he’s talking about when Rubinstein remarks, “With Palm webOS we have ten-plus years of innovation ahead of us, and the Palm Pre is already one of the year’s hottest new products.â€
What everybody wants to know is what Rubinstein’s hiring means for the future of Palm. As head of Apple’s iPod division during its most highly successful years, the new CEO hopes to bring to Palm the same spark of creative energy that helped boost Apple to the monumental force of new and exciting technology that it is today.
And the Palm Pre, with its webOS developed in part by Rubinstein, may already be helping push Palm in that direction.
As former CEO Colligan said in the Sunnyvale press release yesterday, “we are on our way to defining the standard for the mobile web.†In light of the iPhone’s popularity, Palm and Jon Rubinstein have some work ahead of them to make that a reality.