Wednesday, January 9, 2008
Search Site:
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Archives | Feedback | Career Avenues
News
National
State
District
City
Business
Foreign
Sports
Comments
Edit Page
Panorama
Net Mail
Your Take
Infoline
In City Today
HelpLine
Daily Almanac
Festivals of India
Weather
Leisure
Crossword
Horoscope
Year 2008
Weekly
Daily Astrospeak
Calendar 2008
Pearls of Wisdom
"The question isn’t at what age I want to retire, it’s at what income."
- George Foreman
Supplements
Economy & Business
Movie Reviews
DH Avenues
Cyber Space
Metro Life - Thurs
Metro Life - Mon
Metro Life - Fri
Open Sesame
Metro Life - Sat
Living
DH Realty
Fine Art / Culture
Articulations
Entertainment
Science & Technology
Spectrum
Sportscene
She
Sunday Herald
Reviews
Book Reviews
Hi Life
Art Reviews
DH Education
ENGLISH FOR YOU
Bangalore IT.in
Dasara dazzle
Columns
Kuldip Nayar
Khushwant Singh
N J Nanporia
Tavleen Singh
Swami Sukhabodhananda
Bittu Sehgal
Suresh Menon
Shreekumar Varma
Movie Guide
Ad Links
Deccan
International School
Real Estate Properties in Bangalore
Deccan Herald
Now Available
Globally
in Print Format
Others
About Us
Subscription

Send your Suggestions / Queries about the Website to the
Webmaster


To send letters to Editor :
Letters to Editor

You are welcome to post your letters/responses to NETMAIL here.

For enquiries on advertisements :
Contact Us

Deccan Herald » Cyber Space » Detailed Story
Fishing for the mobile that has it all
Stephen Fry
Here comes the high-end Glofiish X800 Pocket PC running Windows for mobiles (professional). It really does seem to be as loaded as anything out there.


Chasing the perfect smartphone is a frustrating game. This one is perfect but it doesn’t have Wi-Fi, that one would be ideal if only it had GPS. The other is OK but isn’t 3G. Aha, this is it! Oh bother, it can’t do video calls. And so on.

Not that I actually need all those features, it’s just that for us knights of the smartphone, grail the terms of the quest demand the ‘One Device That Has It All’.

And here comes the high-end Glofiish X800 Pocket PC running Windows for mobiles (professional). It really does seem to be as loaded as anything out there.

I have to say I’m not a fan of Windows for mobiles with all those maddeningly small menus, submenus and fiddly nested commands torment me almost beyond endurance, as do the horrors of trying to synchronise with anything other than a PC. Were it not for Missing Sync’s suite of programs that allow powerful and controllable syncing between Macs and mobile operating systems, I'd be in a home by now.

For all that, I’ve lived for weeks using HTC and Palm devices that run WM5 and WM6 and I happily concede that Microsoft’s cut-down OS does have strengths.

Like a thoroughbred

Glofiish is made by E-Ten and you can colour me impressed. It is true 3.5G. That’s nothing to do with gigabyte memory, by the way, but indicates “third and a half generation” capability. In short, it obtains the highest data transfer speeds possible in mobile telephony. It will first try to pick up HSDPA or UMTS signals from the network, then EDGE, then GPRS and finally good old data-free GMS.

Major population centres will allow it to gallop like a thoroughbred through its full 3.5G paces, but if you live in the country, you’ll be lucky to get much more than the donkey speeds of GPRS.

Glofiish has both a front and rear camera, allowing you to make face-to-face video calls. The main camera has autofocus, which I’ve not seen on a comparable device; at 2MP, it is not going to deliver staggering images but the output is satisfactory. The video footage was hardly broadcast quality but again adequate. It is armed with a bright and crisp VGA display, Bluetooth 2.0, WiFi, FM Radio and GPS. Input is by stylus to soft keyboard, handwriting recognition or numeric dial-pad, although a model with a slide-out keyboard has just been announced.

Irritatingly, despite having a Sirf Star GPS receiver built in, no SatNav mapping software is included, so the user is forced to download and buy an application or try the free Google Maps for Mobiles.

Glofiish says satellite information can be automatically incorporated into an SMS text: “This could be helpful,” says the manual, “in preventing kidnapping, reporting disastrous situations, calling for help in emergencies or locating an individual.” Wow!

Pleasant to heft

The device is attractively designed with delightful red accents on the lenses; it is pleasant to hold, to heft and for the most part, to operate. Windows for mobiles’ advantage lies in the availability of so many functions, the powerful customisable options and the wealth of downloadable software. This also creates the disadvantage of complexity, endless non-intuitive menus and option screens and a life of picking your way by stylus through an often messy and confusing environment.

For those who want it all, then, the Glofiish X800 can compete with the HTC Tytn II and the other big players. I give it a big tick.

Its processor is made by Samsung, who also makes phones, of course. I heartily recommend its fatuously named SGH-G800 for anyone after a top-notch phone with an emphasis on photography.

Balanced and well-finished, it boasts a 5MP camera with Xenon flash and 3X optical zoom, no GPS or WiFi, but all the usual accoutrements such as 3G, front camera for video calling, Bluetooth 2.0, WAP 2.0, FM radio, music players, image editing software and so on.

It was rumoured that it would have an OLED display, but they’ve settled for traditional LCD. It has a Samsung Fun Club splashscreen that would make anyone wince with embarrassment and is stupidly at odds with the sophisticatedly simple and stylish hardware design of this high-quality 3G slider phone. Even so, it’s a worthy rival to the Nokia N95.


The Guardian

comment on this article
Other Headlines
Crawling the web
Newsdesk online
The talking machine
Fishing for the mobile that has it all
When the blue print is writ
E-utilities
Ad Links
Flowers to India , Gifts to India
Flowers to Trivandrum , Bhopal , Kanpur, Mangalore, Patna, Vadodara, Amritsar
Gifts to India , Flowers to Bangalore India
India Flowers - Dehradun Hyderabad Kolkata Gurgaon Punjab
Flowers to Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Delhi, Mumbai, Pune Kolkata.
Send Flowers, Cakes, Chocolate, Fruits to Pune.
Flowers to India , France , Japan, Germany, Hong Kong, Singapore, Mexico, USA
Flowers to India , Mumbai , Pune, Delhi, Chennai,
Your Life Partner? Get personalized proposals daily. Thousands of New members with Photo Profiles. Profession,Religion, Community searches & more. Register FREE!
Copyright 2007, The Printers (Mysore) Private Ltd., 75, M.G. Road, Post Box No 5331, Bangalore - 560001
Tel: +91 (80) 25880000 Fax No. +91 (80) 25880523
click here