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O2 XDA Atom
O2 XDA Atom


General
NetworkGsm 900 / Gsm 1800 / Gsm 1900
Announced2005, November
StatusAvailable
Size
Dimensions102 X 58 X 18.5 Mm
Weight140 G
Display
TypeTft Touchscreen, 256k Colors (65k Effective)
Size240 X 320 Pixels
 - Handwriting Recognition
Ringtones
TypePolyphonic (64 Channels), Mp3, Aac
CustomizationDownload
Vibration Yes
 - Stereo Speakers
Memory
PhonebookIn Shared Memory, Photo Call
Call RecordsYes
Card SlotMinisd,
 - 64mb Ram, 128mb Rom
- Intel Pxa272 416 Mhz Processor
Data
GprsClass 10 (4+1/3+2 Slots), 32 - 48 Kbps
HscsdNo
EdgeClass 10, 236.8 Kbps
3gNo
WlanWi-fi 802.11b
BluetoothYes, V1.2
Infrared PortYes
UsbYes, Miniusb
Features
OsMicrosoft Windows Mobile 5.0 Pocketpc
MessagingSms, Mms, Email, Instant Messaging
BrowserWap 2.0/xhtml, Html (pocketie)
GamesSolitaire And Jawbreaker,
ColorsSilver
Camera2 Mp, 1600x1200 Pixels, Flash, Video
 - Fm Radio
- Pocket Office(word, Excel, Outlook, Media Player)
- Java Midp 2.0
- Video/audio Album
Battery
 Standard Battery, Li-po 1530 Mah
Stand-byUp To 150 H
Talk TimeUp To 5 H 30 Min

O2 - XDA Atom
O2 XDA Atom - Windows Mobile 5.0

Major features
Complete PDA with inbuilt phone
Tri-band GSM 900/1800/1900MHz
2.7 inch 65,536 colour TFT touch-screen LCD, 240 x 320 pixel resolution
Two megapixel digital camera with flash lamp, QVGA video recording
64 tone polyphonics, MIDI, MP3, WMA and WAV file support
FM Radio
Intel Bulverde 416MHz CPU, 64MB RAM/128MB ROM
miniSD memory card slot
Windows Mobile 5.0 Operating System
SMS, MMS, e-mail and instant messaging via MSN Messenger
USB, infra-red, Bluetooth and WiFi 802.11b connectivity
Data synchronisation with PC applications
Pocket Internet Explorer browser with full HTML support over GPRS and EDGE
Java (MIDP 2.0) support
Problems/Issues?
User interface instability, bugs
Included wireless headset sub-standard
No decent ringtones included
Sales package (should contain):
1x O2 XDA Atom handset
1x 1530 mAh Lithium-ion Polymer Battery
1x AC Charger
1x User Manual
1x Quick start guide
1x Product CD-ROM (Microsoft ActiveSync & Outlook 2002)
1x Stereo hands-free earphones
1x USB data cable
1x Spare stylus


Introduction
In their latest PDA entry for the Australian market, O2 has chosen Quanta Computer to create for them the O2 XDA Atom – a PDA phone with an emphasis on multimedia. It’s a PDC the size of the O2 XDA Mini, but sports more advanced features such as a two megapixel camera, FM radio, Bluetooth stereo headphones support and the latest Windows Mobile 5.0 operating system. It aims to be one of the most functional devices around, but with the hardware to back it up as well. Read on for the review.

New/outstanding features
The biggest change is arguably one of direction for O2, which has prided itself on releasing workhorse PDAs made by High Tech Computer (HTC) in Taiwan. Changing over to a model from Quanta Computer has resulted in a compact PDA that isn’t so business focused. O2 see it as a PDA for younger people, with its focus on music playing, an FM radio and two megapixel camera. But having said that, it retains almost all the features of previous PDAs sold by O2, including 802.11b wireless and the Windows operating system, now up to Mobile 5.0 (the successor to the previous standard, Mobile 2003 SE). It’s even smaller than the original O2 XDAII mini, shedding some length and 10 grams of weight.

Physical aspects
The Atom is a compact and light (for its class) PDA and yet is able to house all the hardware that it does. It measures just 102 x 58 x 18.5 millimetres and weighs 140 grams. It’s easily one of the smallest and compact PDAs I have ever used, if not the smallest. It sports a rounded rectangular design with a glossy black paint finish, which is easily dirtied with fingerprints.

As is expected for a PDA, the front of the device is taken up by the large 2.7 inch LCD. Above it is the phone speaker and three indicator lights, while below the screen is a small set of buttons to make using the Atom easier. There’s a four direction arrow pad with confirm key, dial and hang up keys and shortcuts to load the Start button menu and O2’s Media Plus application. On the left hand side is the volume rocker switch for adjustment, while on the right are two buttons for recording a voice note and loading the camera, as well as the infra-red port. The top of the phone conceals the miniSD card slot and power button, while on the bottom is the miniUSB connector for recharging and connecting the Atom to a PC. You’ll also find a 2.5mm headset jack, the microphone and a pen-size reset button on the bottom. Finally on the back you’ll see the small camera lens and its assist LED. The battery cover beneath can be removed to reveal the large battery, and underneath that is the SIM card slot.

User Interface & display

Take a closer look!

The display used here is a 2.7 inch TFT LCD capable of displaying 262,144 colours (although Windows itself only displays 65,536) and has a resolution of 240x320 pixels. Brightness of the screen can be adjusted across a large range, and with brightness set to maximum the screen becomes legible in outdoor light, although it could be brighter.

The user interface has changed slightly in the upgrade to Windows Mobile 5.0, although users of the previous OS will find that it resembles it a lot and may wonder just what has changed at all. The standby screen now has a soft-key bar at the bottom instead of status icons, other than this it appears the same. Unfortunately there aren’t actually any physical soft-keys, so you’ll need to tap them with the stylus to use them. The arrow pad now works in a lot more situations as well.

As with all Windows Mobile PDA versions, you can list and customise a number of lines of information to appear on the standby screen. O2 has also included a useful application that displays even more information, such as exact battery and free space levels on the standby screen.

Making and receiving calls
Phone calls are made either through the handset itself, through a wired handsfree device or through Bluetooth wireless ones. In order to dial out you load the phone application by pressing the dial key, and it will bring up a virtual number keypad to dial your number on screen. You can also direct dial from the contact list. Talking through the Atom itself was generally problem free and worked well. A few times I had crackly call quality, but on the whole reception is on par with other handsets available.

The included stereo handsfree can also be used for calls, and it provides slightly clearer audio quality than the Atom’s own speaker. However the earphones themselves are really uncomfortable to wear, and there’s no clip to attach the handsfree to your clothes, meaning the handsfree is heavy and wants to fall out of your ears (making it even more uncomfortable). Using a Bluetooth headset solves both problems, and my HS801 worked fine with the Atom.

As with previous PDAs, the phone book system in the Atom mimicks the one in Microsoft Outlook on a PC, and will allow you to store as many entries as the PDA’s shared memory will allow. It supports a large amount of different fields within each entry, and these include standard things from name and address to particulars like birthday and office addresses.

Unfortunately the ringtone situation hasn’t changed with the Atom. The included sounds are very basic indeed and don’t use the full set of 64 tones the Atom is capable of. Having said that you can add your own ringtones, so this isn’t too much of a problem.

Messaging


If you’ve owned a PDA before then you probably know that messaging isn’t a very fun application. Without a keypad or keyboard you are only left with typing letters from a virtual keyboard with the stylus or by handwriting on the screen directly. I found both methods to be sluggish, although O2 has included third-party recognition software that is much better than the default Windows one. There is predictive text support that will attempt to complete words for you as you type them, and this helps alleviate the slowness of text input. Having said that the Atom is quick to input text and won’t slow down as you input a large amount of words.

There is full support for SMS, MMS and email. Long SMS can be composed so you aren’t limited to just 160 characters. MMS support works up to 100 kilobytes per message and can have pictures, sounds and videos attached. You can create slides and add even more files this way. The messaging program also supports email of the POP3 and IMAP4 variety. All in all the messaging application remains unchanged from previous Pocket PCs (there are slight cosmetic differences but it works the same), so take a look at one of our previous PDA reviews for more details on messaging.

Connectivity
As expected with PDAs the connectivity level of the Atom is one of the best with a large variety of methods to connect to local and wide area networks. There is a tri-band GSM radio, able to connect through the 900, 1800 and 1900 MHz bands. GPRS enables 48kbps download speed, while EDGE support triples that to nearly 150kbps. Unfortunately there are no EDGE networks in Australia right now, although Telstra is upgrading its network to support it. If you’re in range of a wireless hotspot, you can connect to it at 11mbps, thanks to 802.11b wireless support (or WiFi).

Locally you can use USB, infra-red or Bluetooth. USB is for connecting to a PC and you can recharge the phone this way, as well as synchronise core applications and transfer data between the Atom and a PC. Infra-red is used for transferring data to other handheld devices while Bluetooth can be used for data transfer, wireless headsets and wireless headphones to listen to music as well.

Build quality
The build quality was satisfactory. I couldn’t find any moving or loose parts, nor could I get the PDA to creak or groan by bending or twisting it, so I was impressed. My only complaint is that the battery cover can come off with very little pressure, so the clip fastening it should have been a bit stronger.

Battery life
With 1530 mAh of battery capacity, the XDA Atom is capable of lasting 150 hours on standby and 5 hours 30 minutes while talking. In practice I was able to gain three days of mixed, albeit light usage – talking, messaging, internet browsing and the occasional Solitaire game. However there were two cases where I lost battery power in huge pieces, and I’m not sure why. More details in the problems section.

saging via MSN Messenger

Text messages support is present with long SMS capability. MMS allows for slideshows with pictures, sounds and videos, while email support for POP3 and IMAP4 email addresses is included too. Pocket MSN allows access to the MSN Messenger IM service for chatting, and will allow you to access users connected through a PC as well.

USB, infra-red, Bluetooth and WiFi 802.11b connectivity

The miniUSB socket allows for connecting to a PC via USB port. This connection will recharge the Atom and allow data transfer between it and the PC as well. Infra-red can be used for data transfer between the Atom and other devices, while Bluetooth does that, holds phone calls with wireless headsets and can stream music to wireless headphones as well.

Data synchronisation with PC applications

As just mentioned, the USB cable allows the Atom to connect to a PC using a USB port while also allowing you to recharge the device. Synchronisation occurs with Outlook on a PC, and involves contacts, messages and the calendar.

Pocket Internet Explorer browser with full HTML support over GPRS and EDGE

The portable version of the Internet Explorer web browser can load full HTML web pages, although don’t be fooled, it doesn’t support for advanced functionality such as Flash. Pages retain their layout, so you can scroll horizontally and vertically to view the full page. Webpages load at dialup speed when going through GPRS, but will obviously load much faster if done through EDGE or a WiFi connection.

Java (MIDP 2.0) support

Java support for MIDP 2.0 games and programs is included, so a large range of applications and games obtainable from the internet can be used on the Atom.

Problems/Issues?



User interface instability, bugs

The hallmark of a PDA is its instability, as much as it may sadden me to say that. There are bugs in the Atom, affecting many places as I discovered during my testing. One was with the battery, and there were two problems here, both involving sudden loss of power for no apparent reason. The first situation saw me recharge the phone overnight, only to have the Atom tell me it was shutting off only halfway through the next day. I had barely made a phone call or two and was using the camera when this occurred. The second was while it was sitting on standby with 20% of power left. I had left it for ten minutes and came back to find the Atom off. After reconnecting it to the charger cable, it reported that the battery was empty. The Atom seems to be chewing through power for no apparent reason, although the behaviour is erratic and very random in nature.

The other problem I discovered was in the camera application. If you try to use night mode and the flash together, attempting to take a picture will result in the PDA freezing while attempting to save the picture. A hard reset (removing and reinserting the battery) was the only option.

If only PDAs could be as stable as their phone counterparts…

Included wireless headset sub-standard

I wasn’t impressed with the included stereo earphones/handsfree. Instead of using a fabric cover to encase the earpieces, they have a rubber casing on the outside that does the job of sticking to your ears, but does it really painfully. Add to this the lack of a clip to hold the handsfree to your clothes, and the accessory’s weight wants to pull it out of your ears, even though the rubber of the earpieces holds it in. What does this mean? Even more pain for your ears.

Needless to say, O2 and Quanta Computer need to work on a better handsfree.

No decent ringtones included

While users are able to add their own ringtones to the Atom, it would be nice if there was a decent amount of ringtones included for selection. Many people, including me, don’t like to go to the trouble of finding ringtones for their devices and prefer to have a good selection to choose from straight out of the box.

In Summary

The O2 XDA Atom is a powerful device that combines business applications with multimedia, thanks to Windows Mobile 5.0 and the inbuilt hardware features that characterise the Atom. It does have its share of bugs, like any Windows device, but combining a two megapixel camera with an FM radio, music player, stereo speakers and full PDA functionality, the triband GSM-capable Atom is up there in the list of all-in-one devices available in the market today.

The Atom is available in Australia from electronics and phone retailers for around $1200 and ships with a one year warranty.

Common misspellings on this brand: 0o2


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