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BenQ A500
BenQ A520
BenQ M100
BenQ M220
BenQ M300
BenQ M315
BenQ M350
BenQ M580
BenQ M775C
BenQ P30
BenQ P31
BenQ P50
BenQ S660C
BenQ S670C
BenQ S680C
BenQ S700
BenQ S80
BenQ U700
BenQ Z2
BenQ S700
BenQ S700


General
NetworkGsm 900 / Gsm 1800 / Gsm 1900
Announced2004, 1q
StatusAvailable
Size
Dimensions82 X 41x 21mm
Weight90 G
Display
TypeTft, 256k Colors
Size128 X 160 Pixels, 29 X 35 Mm
 - Second Cstn Display (96 X 64 Pixels), 4096 Colors
- Animated Wallpapers
- Downloadable Pictures
Ringtones
TypePolyphonic (64 Channels)
CustomizationComposer, Download,
Vibration Yes
Memory
Phonebook500 Entries, Photo Call
Call Records30 Dialed, 30 Received, 30 Missed Calls
Card SlotMinisd,
 - 15 Mb Shared Memory
Data
GprsClass 10 (4+1/3+2 Slots), 32 - 48 Kbps
HscsdNo
EdgeNo
3gNo
WlanNo
BluetoothNo
Infrared PortYes
UsbYes
Features
MessagingSms, Ems, Mms
BrowserWap 2.0/xhtml
Games4 + Downloadable,
Colors3 - Mysterious Black, Classic Silver, Progressive Blue
Camera1.3 Mp, 1280x960 Pixels, Video, Flash
 - Java Midp 2.0
- Mp3/mpeg-4 Player
- Itap(t9)
- Stereo Handsfree
- Calendar
Battery
 Standard Battery, Li-ion
Stand-byUp To 100 H
Talk TimeUp To 3 H

BenQ - S700
BenQ S700

Build quality: 9/10
Applications: 7/10
Interface: 6/10
Value-for-money: 6/10
Overall rating: 7/10
+ Memory Expansion
+ 1.3 MP camera
+ Video up to 2 hours
- No Bluetooth
- SMS keys not ergonomic
- Battery life is short



The Benq brand is from Taiwan, and they make all sorts of things, such as the occasional phone that happened to be with us right now. But then again, very few phone makers outside of the big four players seem give a damn about getting reviewed, as they hope to make it solely on their pricing strategy alone, while avoiding being the target of reviewers who can catch many errors in the product.

The S700 looked pretty cool when I took it out of the box. The manual is in Chinese, so it looks like the market might be a little limited here. Surely it is not too expensive to get the manual translated into proper English?

The make of the device
First of all, the device seems to have a problem reading the SIM card. Every time the phone was restarted, it took nearly a minute for the phone to detect the SIM card. Yet, there does not seem to be a provision for saving SMS messages to the phone. Instead, error messages keep popping up when the inbox is full, and I still have not figured out where my missed SMS messages have gone.

The blue backlight for the keys was a little bright to me, and may be one of the reasons why the battery life on this phone is really bad. The battery indicator is not a linear indicator, and it shows you full strength for most of the day, and then suddenly goes to one bar of power remaining. And then, when it does run out of juice, the phone just goes off without any warning tones to indicate that it is shutting down.

Using the product
Fortunately, the screen is a saving grace for the S700 as it does display images quite nicely. The menu is found by pressing the tiny OK button in the middle of the control keys, and a nice 9-icon menu layout is shown.

It appears to be a common feature in phones nowadays that the first level of the menu tree is presented to the user as a group of nine icons. Many say that this is a feature that first originated in Sony Ericsson phones. I am not too sure about that, but I remember that one of the first times it was so effectively used was in the Nokia 7650.

Anyway, I noticed that there was a curious delay from the time you hit the dial key to the time the ringing tone starts in your earpiece. I haven’t noticed this in any other phone, and I would venture a guess that the processor is a little slow, or the software instructions were not written in a concise manner. However, there was very little noticeable delay in SMS typing.
Editor's Opinion

My suggestion is that if you want to import a phone into Malaysia, try to have some consideration for the local users. Spend some money to translate the manual into the local languages, and then make sure that the keys also have proper alphabets on them for English SMS typing.

As it is, although the Benq S700 boasts a 1.3 Mega Pixel camera with support to and from a mini SD card, it has a few characteristics that cause one to wonder exactly what kind of power plant is under the hood.

The RM 1,599 that Benq asks for it is a little expensive, in my opinion. My pick for the worst feature of the product is the disappearing SMS caused by the S700 not storing SMS messages in its memory. The best feature would probably be the 1.3 Mega pixel camera and flash, coupled with expansion capacity in the form of a mini SD card.

Common misspellings on this brand: bednq , bernq


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