March 06, 2004
Lovin' the Treo 600
I'm now fully switched over to my new Treo 600 (shown). All the apps and data that resided on my previous smart phone (the Kyocera 7135) have been transferred and I'm living large.
As a phone, it's dandy -- it does everything a phone is supposed to do and it does them superlatively. The size, weight, feel, and interface are all just terrific. Yes, there are smaller phones out there, but the Treo 600 is not what I would call large by any stretch.
As a PDA, it's very good. While the low-res screen reduces the amount of stuff you can see at any one time, the display is amazingly bright and clear (and it's the same 160x160 that I had on my Kyocera). The 32 MB of RAM is adequate (but not tremendous) and the 144 MHz processor is quite snappy. The SDIO slot provides nearly limitless expandability.
The real work of art here is the interface between the PDA side and the phone side. Unlike the Kyocera, there really is no division between these two functions. On the 7135, it was very apparent whether you dealing with a "phone" function or a "PDA" function -- shuttling between the two function sets was difficult and obvious.
In contrast, the Treo 600 blends everything quite perfectly. Using GPRS in a PDA application is seamless and transparent. Initiating a voice call from the Addressbook is fall-down easy. Handspring/palmOne really knows their stuff when it comes to user interfaces.
Then there's the battery life...it's heaploads better than I expected. I can easily go three days on a single charge with moderate PDA and phone/GPRS use. My Kyocera and my old Treo 270 would struggle to go 24 hours. Realizing that "battery = weight" makes me even more accepting of the Treo 600's 6 oz. weight (typical for handhelds, a bit heavier than most cellphones).
But, nothing is perfect. I wish the SDIO slot were full-power rather than it being a bit underpowered (it's not clear whether it's actually SDIO compliant in that regard). I also wish that T-Mobile's GPRS speeds were better. They're not bad in most spots, but the throughput can vary a fair bit from location to location and it still pales in comparison to Wi-Fi. I'm hoping that EDGE will come to T-Mobile fairly soon (is a hardware change required on the phone?). Finally, and this is the tiniest nit to pick, I wish it had a feature that my Tungsten C has -- hold down a letter key to capitalize it. I really like that feature and I wish the Treo 600 had that as an available option. The Shift key isn't inconvenient...it's just that I often capitalize after-the-fact and the TC's approach lets me change my mind after the letter has been struck.
Overall, to borrow from McDonald's, when it comes to the Treo 600, I'm Lovin' It.
Posted by Craig | Permalink | TrackBackThere's a free program called KeyCaps that will let you mimic the capitalization (and handles numbers, too).
http://www.geekandproud.net/software/
More at http://theshiftedlibrarian.com/stories/2003/12/04/whatsOnMyTreo600.html
Posted by Jenny Levine at March 6, 2004 05:35 PMJenny, KeyCaps rocks! Thanks for the link...it does exactly what you said. :-D
Posted by Craig at March 6, 2004 07:09 PMGo to the www.treocentral.com Discussion Forums to get many more tips/tricks. The Treo has a large and very devoted user community, and I think you'll be pleasantly surprised at what folks have found ways to do (MP3 ringtones, call filtering, etc.)
Posted by Mat at March 8, 2004 02:24 PMTo leave a comment or read updated entries, please visit GearBits' current site. Thanks.