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Orange Treo 600 Review
Thu Oct 30, 2003 - 10:11 AM EST - By Edward Green
Table of Contents
Overview The Inside > The Software Conclusion
The Software The Treo 600 is loaded with Handsprings own
variation of Palm OS 5. This means that it includes the slightly enhanced
version of Datebook that Handspring have been using since the Visor, and a full
function calculator. The Contacts software is now part of the Phone application,
and includes the ability to look up a number with just three letters pressed on
the keyboard. The five way pad and keyboard are fully integrated into the
operating system, with all the inbuilt applications there is no real need to
remove the stylus and use the touch screen at all. Using the function and Alt
keys a wide range of punctuation and international letters can be entered, and
the menu button gives you easy access to cut and paste. This version of PalmOS
really does feel like it was designed for use in a Smartphone, rather than being
a handheld operating system with a tacked on data connection.
The Phone Application, Dialer and Favorites views
The first of the hard buttons brings up the
Phone application, which gives you easy access to four applications and, by
pressing the center select button, a call log. These four applications are
customizable, and the wallpaper background can be user defined or replaced with
a touch keypad. The menu key also gives you access to a huge amount of phone
based options, like settings for answer phone and call waiting. This application
also gives you easy access to Contacts and a Favorites menu. The 50 Favorites
can be defined as web pages, contacts (either call or message) or applications.
Each one can be assigned a hot key that when pressed in the phone application
launches the favorite. Contact Favorites can be allocated a picture from the
camera application so that image pops up on the screen when that person calls.
Camera Application
The camera application takes 640x480 pictures,
and I will be honest, the picture quality is poor, however the software is
capable, allowing you to downsize the images and store them either in the phone
or on an SD card. Images can be emailed or sent via MMS. When viewing the
pictures however there is no option to zoom in or see them full screen. To do
this you will need to save them to the SD card and view them with an third party
application like Acid Image
which works well with the Treo 600.
Pressing the first hard key with the option
button on the keyboard launches the Blazer web browser. This new version of
Blazer is proxy less, downloading all the information and formatting it on the
device, rather than relying on a server to do this for it. This means that you
can either view pages re-formatted for the Treo 600's small screen, or as they
would appear in a desktop browser
.
Wide Page and Optimized Mode in Blazer
Unlike previous versions of Blazer it does not
render text before images, however images can be turned off. The new version of
Blazer supports cookies, Java Script, animated GIFs and some CSS. For browsing
non PDA optimized sites I found Blazer slow. PalmOne's latest WebPro browser
offers you the option of either browsing with a Proxy - which strips out large
content unsuitable for a handheld device, or without in full page mode. It is a
shame that Handspring does not offer the same facility, particularly as Blazer
pioneered this approach. Having said that, for browsing Palm sized sites Blazer
is superb, and it's bookmark approach is very user friendly.
The second hard key takes you to the Datebook
application (now known as Calendar), and with the option key Memo Pad is brought
up. Apart from Calendar's added views, and full support for the five way
navigator these are similar to on other Palm Powered handheld's. The third hard
button launches the SMS application:
Chat SMS
For many people SMS is the most
cost effective method of communicating with their mobile phone, and Handspring's
Chat application is superb. Messages are grouped together in threads similar to
a desktop messaging application. Quick texts can be defined (such as "Sorry will
be late") and Emoticons are easily selectable. Sadly there is no MSM style
Messaging client included with the Treo 600, but PDAApps have confirmed to me
that a GPRS version of
Verichat will soon be available to purchase that supports MSM, AOL and other
systems: watch this space for a full review. Option and hard button three
launches the mail software. This is a very capable Pop3 mail application and I
found it very easy to set up. It can handle attachments and these can be viewed
or launched by helper applications, like the included Documents to Go viewer
software.
Mail and Word View
Sadly the viewer software only works with
attachments, so you will have to email them to yourself if you want to view lots
of Office documents on your Treo, or upgrade to the full professional versions
of Documents to Go. Handily, Mail can download messages manually or be set to
check at a regular interval. Mail does not synchronize with your desktop email
application, to do this you will need a third party application like PalmOne's
Versamail which
offers considerably more features.
The fourth hard key on the Treo 600 allows you
to turn of the screen or key lock the Treo 600. All four hard keys can be
programmed in Preferences, which also allows you to modify ring tones, color
themes and network preferences. A Home icon key by the space bar launches the
standard Palm OS launcher which gives access to all applications, including some
network utilities - Orange offers a back up suite (via GPRS) an application for
downloading software updates and a SIM card address book reader.
Orange Applications and some of the preferences available
Other applications included with the Treo 600
are the Pocket Tunes Ogg and Mp3 player, which is available as a download after
registering with Handspring. Pocket Tunes offers good sound quality and
background play as well as customizable skins. Zap 2016 is also on the CD, which
has been updated with sample sound effects and support for the five way pad.
Other games are already beginning to offer support for the Treo 600, but we will
save that for a later article. City time, another Handspring favorite is useful
for those who work across time zones. There is not a video application bundled
with the Treo 600, however Kinoma works
extremely well, and the latest producer software has a handy quick setting for
the device. For those who are confident to resize and encode their own video
with third party tools MMPlayer works
with a low density skin installed.
Pocket Tunes, City Time and Kinoma
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