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XDA Pocket PC Phone Edition

Written by Derek Mitchell  [author's bio]  [read 54381 times]
Edited by Derek

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The beginning

Just before my trip to the MS Mobility Developers Conference last month I read Steve's article entitled One Piece or Two? I recall thinking that there was no doubt in my mind that I was a one piece guy - not that I would be able to test that theory any time soon - or so I thought! Wrong - just before the conference I received an email from Steve and Beth Goza (Microsoft) asking whether I would be interested in using the O2 XDA Pocket PC Phone Edition at the conference. Needless to say my response was enthuisiastic, blackmail and extortion were not required.

Two Pieces?

The area I live in has recently joined the 21st century and the rest of the world enjoying the benefits of GSM and GPRS coverage. Finally I can SMS my friends and family! I leapt at the opportunity to couple my Compaq IPAQ with a GSM/GPRS phone. I bought the Ericsson T39 since it is a tri-band GSM phone, meaning it can work in Europe, Africa and the US. Best of all it is Bluetooth enabled. I could now use the T39 with my bluetooth enabled iPAQ 3875 and all would be happiness and joy in the land of Pocket PC communications nirvana? Well not exactly. One of the challenges of being an early aopter of these type of technologies is that you often have to tread upon the razor sharp edge of the leading edge. It took almost 3 days of calling my local carrier's support and no end of troubleshooting persisitence on my part to get the T39 functioning properly using GPRS and this is before you begin to experience some of the other inevitable "challenges" of integrating device services using Bluetooth. [As a side note I must add that I have recently started using my HP 568 and Socket Bluetooth card with my T39 - and many of the headaches that plagued me with my iPAQ 3875 are gone. Most of the configuration problems were related to my cellular carrier not providing me the correct config details.]

There must be an easier way

As a developer I find the marriage of highspeed cellular communications and the power and functionality of the Pocket PC interface a very compelling solution for mobile enterprise applications. As compelling as this is I cannot however in good conscience recommend a two device setup as a usable solution for the "average" corporate end-user. The support overhead is too high and this is only compounded by the vagaries and quirks of the Connection Manager interface - it just isn't a practical solution yet for all but the most dedicated user embarking upon the road less travelled. Then there is the one-piece solution. The XDA from mmO2. Picture a fairly regular sized Pocket PC - but it has a built in GSM/GPRS phone. What follows is my perspective on using the device for a day - if you're looking for detailed specifications check the following XDA page.

As you can see from the picture above the form factor will be familiar to Pocket PC users.

The XDA has an extended life battery rated at 15 hrs Pocket PC time and about 3.5 hrs talk time. I'm guessing that I used the phone for about 4 hours over the course of the day including the evening and I was fairly impressed with the battery life. The battery life was at about 60% at the end of the day. The caveat would be that I didn't make that many calls. I did do a fair amount of email and surfing.

The stylus silo is located on the right hand side of the device sliding into the top of the foreshortened antenna. The XDA comes with an SD slot located at the bottom of the device and the SIM card is inserted on the right side of the device.

The screen resolutions is OK - 4096 colors. It isn't the brightest I have seen but I guess this is a brightness verses battery life compromise.

 

The first thing that I did when I got the device was to flip through the screens to see just how they differed and whether the communication integration was there. I wasn't disappointed.

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