|
|||
| Home | News | Reviews | Features | Tips | Mobile Product Watch | Forums | |||
WindowsMobileToday > Hardware Reviews > Review: Voq Professional Phone – Sierra Wireless Answers BlackBerry Review: Voq Professional Phone – Sierra Wireless Answers BlackBerry
By Gerry Blackwell
Software This device doesn't, for fairly obvious reasons, come with Pocket versions of Word and Excel as Pocket PC Phones do, but it does come with the other familiar Windows-like Pocket PC apps, including Internet Explorer, Inbox (POP3 e-mail), Windows Media Player, MSN Messenger and almost identical Contacts, Calendar and ToDo applets that can by synchronized with Outlook using the also included Microsoft ActiveSync.
The applications Sierra Wireless adds to the mix are part of what makes the Voq worth considering. The VoqMail Professional software lets you automatically pull messages from a corporate IMAP-compatible (Internet Message Access Protocol) e-mail account. It works efficiently enough, according to SierraWireless, that it can in effect replicate the Blackberry always-there e-mail experience. Unlike Blackberry, however, it doesn't require any server-side hardware or software. We were unable to test this feature. You can set up the smartphone's Inbox program to pull e-mail off a POP server but only at timed intervals, the shortest being 15 minutes, and doing so will naturally increase cellular carrier connect charges. MyVoq is intelligent search software that lets you look for different types of data on the device with a single search. Once you find it, then you decide what to do—dial a number, send an e-mail, SMS or IR transmission, etc. You can access MyVoq anytime by pressing the button below the joy stick. The program uses automatic fill-in features to make searching easier and faster. While it can be a powerful tool, MyVoq is not always the most intuitive program. It definitely requires a little learning.
Voice Dialing The program prompts you to speak one of the four commands: Calendar, Call, Contacts, Dial. Calendar and Contacts simply launch applets. If you say Call, the program prompts for a name. It must be one you have previously recorded as a "voice tag" attached to a Contacts record. If you say Dial, it prompts you for a number. You don't have to "train" the speech recognition engine in SmARTspeaking to understand how you say numerals. In that respect, it's speaker independent. If you press and release the Record button, incidentally, it brings up a Voice Notes recorder applet. Press and release again and it starts recording.
Interface I wondered first of all if the screen was big enough for the handheld applications and screen interface. It is, but just barely. The Home screen features a top bar with icons showing the status of the network connection and battery charge. Below it is a scrollable horizontal toolbar with icons for the most-used applets, the most recently used appearing first.
Below this are sections with appointment reminders and selected set-up options. At the very bottom of the screen—whichever application is running—there are two context sensitive soft buttons. On the Home screen, the left soft button is the Start key, which brings up the familiar Microsoft Start menu.
Navigation Also on either side of the joystick are the Start and End call buttons with green and red phone icons. Below them on the left side is a Home key and on the right, a back arrow key. One of my quibbles is with the way the back arrow key works. In most cases, it moves you back, browser-style, through previously viewed screens. But in MyVoq for some reason it functions as a backspace key instead, which is confusing.
Keyboard The keyboard is also a little wide and the keys come too close to the right edge to make it easy to curl your thumb in to hit them. Part of the problem is also the way it works with some of the software - you often find yourself having to move from keyboard to joy stick to soft buttons.
Music The trouble is, the Voq phone has a 2.55 mm jack. Most stereo headphones use a larger plug. I was unable to properly test the music play-back functions. High-bitrate files played skip free, but they sounded terrible on the supplied headset, not surprisingly. Conclusion If you like the idea of combining PDA and phone but you've tried a Pocket PC Phone and found it too clunky and awkward, the Voq Professional Phone may be the solution. The screen and the interface impressed me, but the screen is a bit small, and the interface is not as easy or intuitive as standard touch screen PDA interfaces. In other words, there are, as usual, trade-offs to be made.
Related Links:
| |||||||||||||||