Orange SPV
Verdict
The £220 inc VAT asking price is remarkably good value for money even though you are currently tied to the Orange data/voice contract for a minimum of 12 months.
Review Date: 21 Oct 2002
Price when reviewed: around £195 (inc VAT) including an Orange contract
Overall Rating

Index
Overview
Navigating
Applications
Specification
GPRS and beyond
Overview
With US GSM/GPRS networks still in their infancy, Microsoft has chosen its lucrative venture into the mobile phone market to start in the UK. October 28th 2002 sees the release of the Orange SPV running a stripped down version of Microsoft's Pocket PC 2002 (PPC 2002) operating system known simply as the Smartphone OS. We bring you the world's first full review of the SPV featuring Microsoft's new OS.
Originally manufactured by HTC (makers of the Compaq iPAQ), the tri-band, GPRS mobile phone/PDA hybrid will be branded by Orange restricting its release to only those countries with an Orange service. Currently this excludes the US although other manufacturer's Smartphones will launch there early next year.
It's also likely that Orange's SPV will dominate the market for some time with other manufacturers' yet to publish release dates for their Smartphones. Although reports of Sendo's Z100 Smartphone (pictured below) have been filtering through to the public domain for over six months now, the envisaged UK release is still not likely this side of Christmas. We now have a preview Z100, but some of the software is still in development. That said, where relevant hardware comparisons with the Orange SPV have been made.
After only a few days living with the SPV, it's clear that some very sensible choices have been made in stripping out some of the functionality in Windows CE to create the Smartphone Edition of PPC 2002. The choices mainly stem from the restrictions imposed by the design - size, input mechanisms and connectivity options.
Microsoft has removed all apps bar Pocket editions of Outlook, Internet Explorer, MSN Messenger and Windows Media Player, with no native support for touchscreen input or for Bluetooth wireless connectivity. Smartphone's Home screen presents a similar set of features to a PDA with additions for telephony-oriented functions. The navigation is mainly via a four-way rocker switch although keypad shortcuts speed things up.
Not much bigger than a standard handset - measuring 48 x 21 x 116mm (W x D x H), with a weight of 130g - the SPV is powered by a 120MHz processor and fitted with 48MB of memory expandable via an SD/MMC memory slot. As with full-blown PDAs, both the SPV and Z100 are supplied with desktop docking chargers for PC synchronisation. By contrast, the Z100 weighs less at 119g but is chunkier measuring 50 x 21 x 126mm (W x D x H). Although the Z100 features a 132MHz processor, it's difficult to rate any potential performance with the preview sample.
Using the SPV makes it hard to justify owning a separate PDA, especially as Sendo will be supplying viewers for PowerPoint, Excel, Word, Zip and PDF files. And you can even switch off the phone independently from the PDA (although convincing an air stewardess of this might prove a tad difficult). If you're not yet convinced, the SPV also comes with a clip-on 640 x 480 resolution camera.
The £200 inc VAT asking price is remarkably good value for money even though you'll be tied to the Orange data/voice contract for a minimum of 12 months.
Smartphone's Home screen is similar to a PDA including message inbox, diary and tasks, with additions for telephony-oriented functions such as SMS and MMS. Five shortcut icons run along the top, which are dynamically replaced by recently used apps, as with the Windows XP Start Menu shortcuts.
advertisement
- Google Buzz: social networking hits Gmail
- AMD's Fusion processor: first details
- Google caves to Nexus One telephone support
- Nvidia Optimus transforms laptop graphics
- Microsoft: Windows 7 isn't killing laptop batteries
- Adobe apologises for 16-month-old bug
- Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 hits Release Candidate
- Vodafone suspends staff member over tawdry tweet
- Microsoft builds panic button into Internet Explorer 8
- Gmail to steal Twitter's thunder?
- 10 ways to boost traffic to a WordPress blog
- Reaction to the Apple iPad: ten days later
- How to switch off Virgin Media's mobile broadband image compression
- Infotec/Ricoh: here not to help
- TomTom 940T vs iPhone TomTom: a real road test
- Nvidia Fermi update: they have names!
- Twitter oven lets you have your cake and tweet it
- Where online businesses go terribly wrong
- Google Nexus One: first look review
- Dreading the move to ADSL
- Capture the perfect video
- Create the perfect photos
- How to get a job at Google, Apple, or Microsoft
- Top 10 techs of 2010
- Whatever happened to Second Life?
- File-sharing: the facts
- The PC Pro A List: 2000 vs 2010
- Ten tech flops of 2009
- The techs that went missing in 2009
- The funniest IT quotes of 2009
- The hidden treasures of Sysinternals
- Microsoft must stop silently installing browser plugins
- Crack the Microsoft Server 2008 Core with CoreConfig
- Forget Windows: SMBs should try Snow Leopard Server
- Poking into Facebook security
- Has Microsoft shot itself in the foot with Security Essentials?
- Smashing the BlackBerry myths
- Has Microsoft solved our stylesheet woes with Super Preview?
- Automated printing of SQL Server Reports
- Setting up iSCSI on a desktop PC
advertisement
Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk




