Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Palm: Stand-alone or connected, here’s everything you need to know

The stand-alone Palm is available for purchase and still costs $350

Add as a preferred source on Google
Standalone Palm
Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

We live in the era of the reboot. But forget movie reboots — we’re talking about phone reboots. BlackBerry is still launching phones with physical keyboards, Nokia is back from the dead, and now there’s the reboot of the Palm. But this time around, there is no association with its predecessors other than its name. It is, however, manufactured by TCL.

Essentially, the Palm is a smartphone, but its main purpose is to disconnect you from technology for a bit. It syncs to your primary phone so you receive all your notifications and calls, but its Life Mode feature silences all alerts until you wake the screen. For an in-depth look at the Palm, check out our review. Otherwise, here are the key points you need to know.

Recommended Videos

Price and availability

The Palm comes in two flavors. The connected version is available exclusively through Verizon. It requires a second smartphone to work, and you’ll need to subscribe to a data-only plan from Verizon so it can become your second phone. It costs $350 at its full retail price but you can get it for $250 if you sign up for a two-year commitment. The data-only plan will set you back $10 per month, which shares the data from your current smartphone plan and lets you receive texts on both your phones.

The second version of the Palm is the stand-alone model, also called the unlocked Palm. It’s available from the company’s website, and it means you can use the Palm as your only phone because you can pop your SIM into it. It works on AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon, but not Sprint. The hardware is otherwise the same as the connected Palm. It’s $350. You can read about our experience using the stand-alone Palm for more details.

Design and display

The Palm is not only extremely tiny, but has a sleek design — it even bears a striking resemblance to the iPhone XS from the back. On the front is a 3.3-inch HD (720p) LCD display with 445 pixels per inch. On the right edge are a power button and SIM tray.

While it is made of aluminum, both the front and back are coated with Corning Gorilla Glass 3. It also comes in two color options: Silver and gold.

Specs and software update

Under the hood is a Qualcomm Snapdragon 435 processor coupled with 32GB of storage and 3GB of RAM.

On the back of the Palm, you’ll find a 12-megapixel camera with flash and an 8-megapixel front-facing camera. While there’s no fingerprint sensor for security, the Palm instead offers a facial recognition feature to unlock your device.

Since it is also supposed to act as a wearable, the Palm has a few sensors built-in. As with most advanced fitness trackers, it includes a G-sensor to measure acceleration, GPS, a proximity sensor, eCompass, and gyroscope. But if you want to have a visual of your fitness metrics throughout the day, you’ll have to download a third-party app via the Google Play Store.

There’s also a 300mAh battery that will not get you through a day with medium to high use. Battery life deplete faster if you use the Palm while working out — using the built-in GPS and streaming music over LTE will get you about three hours. The device is said to charge quickly, though — it should only take you half an hour to reach 50 percent, and a little over an hour to fully charge it.

In terms of its operating system, the Palm is powered by Android 8.1 Oreo. If you pair it with an iPhone, the only service that won’t work is iMessage. Palm has since pushed an update to the Palm that claims to improve the battery life as well as the camera quality.

Life Mode feature

To help you balance out your smartphone usage, the Palm includes a feature called “Life Mode.”  When turned on, you won’t receive any calls, texts, or notifications as long as the screen is turned off. To see what you’ve missed, you can scroll through your alerts once you wake the screen. You can turn it on and off by swiping down on the display and tapping on the palm tree icon. You can also choose to turn off the feature for a few hours when you need to use the device for longer periods of time.

Updated on June 24, 2019: Added information about the stand-alone Palm and tweaked language.

Julian Chokkattu
Former Mobile and Wearables Editor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
It looks like Apple will treat you to a $200 price hike on the iPhone 18 Pro, after all
The Mac price hike told us a lot about what's coming for the iPhone 18 Pro, and IDC is now putting a number on it.
iPhone 17 Pro

Apple's Mac and iPad prices went up this week, by a good margin, no less, and the memory crisis behind them isn't going anywhere anytime soon. 

The obvious next question is what happens to the iPhone 18 Pro, which is expected to arrive later this year. IDC has an answer, and you might not like it (via MacRumors).

Read more
iPhone 18 could get a RAM boost, but only a tiny sliver to run AI chores in iOS 27
A new report suggests the extra memory is aimed at keeping Apple Intelligence running smoothly.
Apple iPhone 17 back

Apple's next iPhone may not get a dramatic RAM upgrade, but it could receive just enough extra memory to keep its growing AI ambitions running smoothly. According to TF International Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, the standard iPhone 18 and iPhone 18e are expected to move from 8GB to 9GB of RAM, primarily to support deeper Apple Intelligence integration in iOS 27.

Just enough RAM to keep Apple Intelligence happy

Read more
This free iPhone app uses soothing haptics to help you calm down
This iOS app skips accounts and subscriptions, relying on touch alone to help you relax.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Most mindfulness apps want you to create an account, buy subscription, and give a chunk of your attention before they help you unwind. Vän, a new iPhone app from Swiss indie developer Adrian Stanco, is built to be the opposite.

I found the app on Reddit, and the pitch alone made me curious enough to try it. Instead of sounds or endless scrolling, it leans entirely on haptics, the tiny vibrations your phone is already capable of producing. The result is a feeling of calm you get by simply holding your smartphone rather than watching the screen.

Read more