
ZDNet reports Sunderland Technologies will showcase the Waveclip a $320 device designed to link a Palm V to other Bluetooth-enabled devices within 30 feet.

GeoView Mobile 1.3 is now available for download at GeoDiscovery.com.

Llamagraphics announced Life Balance version 2.6.

CNET News.com reports 3Com said it will discontinue Audrey, its Web-surfing appliance, and Kerbango, an Internet radio, by June. According to the article, “Audrey’s quick demise… is the latest evidence of a growing trend. Namely, consumers don’t want simplified computing devices for surfing the Web, or at least they don’t want them yet.”

Coola Inc. launched its new Coola InterChange platform and announced a consortium of partners and customers to extend high-growth, mobile enterprise market applications to mobile and wireless handheld devices.

AvantGo, Inc. announced that Brokat Technologies has selected AvantGo Enterprise to develop a next-generation mobile device gateway for the Brokat Server Technologies product family.

Kite Networks announced that it has chosen Bechtel Telecommunications, a global engineering-construction organization, as its strategic implementation partner. Bechtel will assist Kite Networks in its rollout and delivery of fixed wireless broadband services in select metropolitan areas across the country.

Pumatech unveiled Intellisync.com, its new Web service that enables mobile professionals and consumers to synchronize information via the Internet, browse Web content both on and offline with their handheld devices, and be notified of changes to relevant information via their PC or mobile device.

Ecocys Technologies Inc. announced the extension of support for handheld and wireless devices of its flagship offering, TaskShare. TaskShare is designed to provide peer-to-peer collaborative process and data/content management for the processes and interactions among a company’s employees, vendors, partners, suppliers, and customers. TaskShare’s wireless component should now make such interactions possible through WAP and Palm devices.

There’s an interesting article by Larry Garfield at PalmStation in which he notes that the most interesting part about the release of the new Palm m500 series is not the products themselves, rather “What’s important about the m505 (and m500) is how well Palm rolled it out.”