2004: The year of the smart phone? Yes and no

What do the Treo 600, the BlackBerry 7230 and xda II tell us?

By Tony Hallett, 23 December 2003 16:35

COMMENT Smart phones have been one of the big subjects of 2003. But how close are we to the dream of a single device, great for voice, multimedia and various data apps, one equally at home in a high-powered meeting or down the pub? Tony Hallett has been trying out three of the most interesting devices organisations are considering…

Let me put my cards on the table. I’ve long been a Palm OS user and someone who hates doing text messaging without a keyboard. If that clouds what you’re about to read, I hold my hands up now. But my gut feeling is that it won’t – and that, more importantly, we’re on the eve of a period of common-sense smart phone adoption by businesses that has been forecast for some time.

The three devices I want to concentrate on are the Treo 600, exclusively available on the Orange network in the UK; the xda II which, when available, will be exclusively an O2 play; and the BlackBerry 7230, now offered by O2, Vodafone and, in the case of this review, T-Mobile.

Other smart devices have made a splash this year in various ways. Nokia smart phones such as the 6600, based on the Symbian operating system and Series 60 interface, are undoubtedly at the start of a growth curve, and Microsoft’s Windows Mobile advances with its contract-manufactured SPV (also only on Orange) and, more impressively this year, the MPx200 from Motorola would feature in many reviews.

But the purpose here isn’t a fully comprehensive in-depth technical review. With so many people with a vested interest in proclaiming the smart phone market alive and kicking – but seemingly forgetting what the point of any shift is – I wanted to get a sense for which type of device will help move the market.

The launch of the Treo 600 this autumn received a lot of attention. It was brought out by Handspring, just before that company was acquired by Palm, leaving us with a PalmOne at the end of this year featuring PDA pioneers Donna Dubinsky and Jeff Hawkins returning to the fold, as well as communications devices sitting alongside Tungsten and Zire PDAs.

The most notable thing about the Treo 600 is that it looks more like a mobile phone than a PDA. There is a fair size, good quality screen – though it doesn’t do justice to photos taken with the integrated VGA camera – and an aerial that could be from any number of mobiles, most memorably an Ericsson from two or three years back.

Where the Treo 600 wins is on two fronts. First, it is truly an open, smart phone. Palm’s 17,000 or so applications can run here, as they would on a mobile-but-not-wireless PDA.

Second, there is the design, which rivals that of some of Nokia’s best efforts over the years or, indeed most interestingly, the classic Palm V. Now that’s saying something but the device isn’t just good to look at. In hand, it is relatively heavy but works as either a ‘candy bar’ phone or as a device to hold at arms length for handsfree voice or messaging.

Innovations include a usable keyboard that is, frankly, about as small as Qwerty can get, and messaging that includes ‘chat threads’ for SMS messages – meaning texts to and from the same two people don’t appear as lots of individual entries (waiting to be deleted separately at some later point in time).

Let me get to messaging in a moment but, in general, two thumbs up. Orange, like O2 among the more ballsy operators when it comes to trying various devices, will be hoping that offering the Treo 600 will drive defections from rivals. I wouldn’t predict that, at least not in significant numbers, but over the past two months, this is the device that has received the biggest wow factor when shown around – and that’s just a looks thing.

Talk of keyboard-based devices inevitably leads to the BlackBerry, the baby of successful Canadian company Research in Motion.

The BlackBerry 7230 is a colour screen, tri-band handheld, like all three devices considered here, but is strange to use for voice calls. Sure, it works just fine, but a thin, square design marks this out as a handheld still concentrating on doing one thing very well – email.

BlackBerrys have grown up as mobile phone supplements. I have doubts many people will ditch their regular cellphones and use this as an all-in-one. It strictly isn’t ‘smart’ in the sense of downloading applications, and – not being Palm OS- or Windows-based – I didn’t find it easy for calendaring, contacts, memos and other information management functionality. There is no camera or Bluetooth.

Some have criticised BlackBerry navigation being based around a trackwheel operated by a thumb (assuming you don’t hold it in your left hand) but I found it easy enough to operate after a little practice, as have most BlackBerry users over the years.

So in terms of industrial design and usability the BlackBerry passes, without setting the world on fire. Its strong point is messaging but, as I said, hold on for that.

The xda II is the follow up to the xda, being a Windows Pocket PC-based device from O2 and one now equipped with Bluetooth, an integrated camera and aerial, and a slightly better screen than its predecessor.

For anyone familiar with the Pocket PC OS – I had to reacquaint myself – navigation is pretty straightforward, and the device comes packed with options. The inclusion of Bluetooth makes it stand out from the other two devices here, though not lots of others on the market such as the SonyEricsson P800 and P900, as does a now removable battery.

Why didn’t Handspring include Bluetooth in the Treo 600? “We had to ship it at some stage,” a senior executive told me just after its launch, clearly happy with all the other goodies included.

Of the three, the xda II has the best quality and biggest screen, though it is also too large to be a straightforward cellphone substitute, fine for a business meeting but probably a complement to a mobile used socially.

I found the xda II to be a gradual upgrade to the xda, a device already full of features. But would it in itself make end users want to move to O2? Again, I doubt it.

A key aspect of all these devices – and smart phones in general – is their data communications ability. For all in Europe, this generally means how they connect to WAP sites and corporate and POP3 email servers using GPRS.

I found a lot in common with all three. Dealing with the same telecoms/IT department in each trial, it was obvious that buy-in from the head of IT is necessary to warrant settings, security and so on being configured properly to synchronise wirelessly with otherwise desktop-bound email.

This is clearly most of the point for the BlackBerry, with RIM likely to move increasingly to server software licensing, but all three also have the option of connecting to various POP3 accounts or out-of-the-box set up of email from O2, Orange or T-Mobile, which a surprising number of end users seem to be doing.

The cost of sending and receiving messages using GPRS means a minefield of tariffs across all the operators but, at the end of the day, relatively similar and expensive across the board. And beware GPRS roaming costs.

GPRS also remains painfully slow most of the time. That’s not a huge problem for email but any internet-based browsing services take – no matter what the ads might say – painfully longer than dial-up over 56Kbps modems, for example. Roll on EDGE and 3G networks.

Texting with a keyboard-based device, however, is liberating and a real boon.

Battery life varied depending on usage though the BlackBerry seemed to come out best, easily lasting for over a week.

The verdict
For its design, its openness and being based on the reliable and easy-to-use Palm OS, the Treo 600 gets the nod from me today. However, this comparison over the past three months or so, while showing the right device, marketed the right way can drive smart phone adoption forward, also leads me on to red flags for any organisation.

Set up for synchronised email must be easier. Per megabyte costs must be more transparent and lower, and the overall benefits in terms of increased productivity to an individual or organisation must be easier to calculate.

Microsoft-based smart phones will continue to get better – witness the latest Orange SPV E200 – and there will be sharply increasing numbers of phones based on the Symbian OS, and not just from Nokia or in Europe.

But there are still two aspects of this market. Though it is now finding its feet, it is no certainty who will walk off the winner, in terms of operators, handset makers, software vendors – and indeed user organisations.

Comments

There are 11 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. anonymous

    it is possible to mobilise email PIM information now on all kinds of phones and the smart phone has proved a true replacement of Blackberry. I don't know many who would go back to the Blackberry as an email device as this is all you get but with the smart phone you can deploy real business apps such as sales, engineering, etc etc this is progress, farewell RIM!

  2. 2. Constantine

    You missed to review the best smartphone out there. the Sony Ericsson P900 is by far the best phone. It is a phone and also a PDA with full functionality. Also, I prefer grafiti any day than typing with the miniature Treo keyboard.

  3. 3. anonymous

    At a very small company or consumer level, the Treo is tempting. But, the BlackBerry is much more "BigCo" oriented with its server.

    Besides, a 7230 feels about half the size and weight of either the XDA2 or the Treo - and feels like it might just survive a trip to a carpeted floor. Its also a fraction of the cost.

    If email is 80% of your need, the BB is still a good choice. Would I choose the same in 12-18 months...don't know.

  4. 4. anonymous

    The search for business users is a priority for all operators, and as such there is no "one device" that will fit all users. (If I remember rightly Microsoft licenced 19 different manufacturers of their OS for PDA/Smartphones alone).

    Blackberry has proved to be a fantastic marketing company, but are they really a devie manufacturer or an application vendor, only time (or 12 months!) will tell.

    The complexity of mobile products and their adoption will be dependent on Operators creating the right price for the right package, be it consumer or business, where the device is the enabler for the service that the business or consunmer cannot live without.

  5. 5. David Clark-Bell

    I still believe you must find the business case for using this technology. In most case when pressed staff (and Bosses) will not enter data into a smart phone whilst their away from the office. So why send ALL their email to the handset. We use a combination of PDA (Palms) plus (smart-ish phones) for all of our needs. The phone can carry your contact details plus four weeks of appointments. The Palm can allow you to carry a complete copy of your desktops data and it is quite easy to entry data whilst out on site. But I still do see the phone manufactures and the networks working towards phone 2 phone sharing of data via GPRS. I want to "update" my office or my wife's handset via a vCal event via the GPRS, so far only the SonyEriccson P900 does this but there is not PC Desktop version to integrate the "updates" into your messaging systems unless you're willing to part with lots of £££. What is needed is simple desktop or home phone that can update the family's office staff calendar. So a small firm of 5 mobile workers can get updates on a 6th handset at the office (seeing all staff's events)

  6. 6. John L

    I don't think so.
    For for this to happen the hardware providers and mobile operators need to collaborate on standards for management of remote devices. No IT department worth its salt would increase it cost to manage with idependant PDA's.
    That's where RIM and Blackberry wins and will continue to win.

  7. 7. steve

    Would agree the P900 is a great piece of kit

  8. 8. wayne brawner

    I got a treo 600 the battery half charges I call palm one within the warranty time frame and they are not going to replace it with a new one. I even have emails stating that they would replace it with a new one as well. And have 4 corp. people stating I will get a new phone. All they want too do is send me a rebuilt phone. Which I have got 4 rebuilt phones thinking they were new and none of them worked

  9. 9. Nick

    Just a shame that the backup & service from SE for the P900 isnt as good as the phone

  10. 10. Wayne Brawner

    well it took me over 8 months to get palm one to get off there ego and send me a new phone. it is pretty funny that i was sent 4 phone rebuilt everytime i called. why because the phone was to be a new one. I got a new one back in july of 2004. the screan went bad . i went through the same mess as before. tech cannot help palm one corp cannot help . no one wanted too be responsiable! they wanted to blam me. heheheheheheheh
    cannot blame me for poor quality.

    i feel that they need to less than create a new 650. when they have no support or have intergity about what they give as far as CS!

  11. 11. David Clark-Bell

    Two years on and I believe we are going to experience a boom in mobile email via new SM mobile 2005 handsets and exchange 2003 server SP2. The standards setup by Microsoft will dominate the industry in the year 2006 and everyone will be offering hosted services for your mobile regardless of the brand. The only losers could be Blackberry (but they still might be best of breed) and Palm because they will have the mobile 2005 and their own system competing against each other.

    As far as support I wish Palm One would wake up and provide better support. Our firm has used Palms for two years and in 2006 we will migrate over to smart phones-PDA and leave the Palm line forever.

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