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Fujitsu Siemens Pocket LOOX 610 BT/WLAN
When we reviewed Fujitsu Siemens’ first handheld, the <A href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/handhelds/0,39023880,10001512,00.htm">Pocket LOOX 600</A>, we thought it was a serviceable device, but didn’t find anything especially outstanding. This time around, with the LOOX 610 BT/WLAN, Fujitsu Siemens has pulled out most of the stops in terms of specifications, and has come up with a good-value alternative to HP’s high-end iPAQs. However, moderate battery life and lack of SDIO support let the side down.
20 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Mobility
Logitech QuickCam Sphere
The success of instant messaging has spurred Logitech to add a range of IM-friendly features to its latest Webcam. The QuickCam Sphere, which costs £79.99 (inc. VAT) from Amazon, delivers plenty of features and applications: a Webcam with an integrated microphone and mechanical pan and tilt ability should have wide appeal; add a face tracking capability that allows the camera to automatically follow you around, plus ‘one’click’ video email, and you’ve got a very attractive package.
20 years ago
by
Andrew Swinton
in
Hardware
Mitac Mio 339
The Mio 339 is the second Pocket PC to hit the UK from Taiwan-based company Mitac, following its entry level <A href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/handhelds/0,39023880,10003117,00.htm">Mio 338</A>. This is the first Pocket PC we’ve seen that incorporates a digital stills/video camera, and it has one or two other nice features too. But it enters a crowded market where there’s lots of similarly priced competition: so is the camera enough to make the Mio 339 a viable choice?
20 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Mobility
Olympus DS-660
Tapes are out for dictation machines these days, as manufacturers and users cross the digital divide into the world of flash-memory-based devices. Much of this has been prompted by the lowering of flash memory prices over the past few years, and now pretty much any dictation machine comes with enough memory to store the equivalent of a sack-full of tapes. Memory is so abundant now that many devices double up as disk storage, with some even adding an MP3 player for good measure.
20 years ago
by
Matt Loney
in
Hardware
LaCie Ethernet Disk
LaCie is best known for its external storage options, and the company recently expanded its portfolio to include a Network Attached Storage (NAS) range, the Ethernet Disk. Designed to run ‘headless’ in a rack, the Ethernet Disk can also serve as a PC if required. Its target is the small workgroup market, and this file and print server supports between 10 and 25 users. Several capacities are available, ranging from an entry-level 80GB (£329, ex. VAT, reviewed here) right up to 500GB (£999 ex. VAT). As NAS kit goes, the Ethernet Disk range carries relatively low price tags, and so offers good value for money.
20 years ago
by
Roger Gann
in
Storage
Logitech io Personal Digital Pen
The io Personal Digital Pen from Logitech, which looks like a futuristically designed marker-pen, incorporates an optical sensor that captures your keystrokes. Software inside the pen digitises these, turning them into information a PC can understand and display. For the pen to work in this way, you have to write on special ‘digital paper’, although its ordinary ink cartridges allow you to write on standard paper too. The digital paper incorporates an irregular grid of tiny dots, and it’s these that allow the optical sensor in the pen to do its job.
20 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Hardware
Nokia Wireless Car Kit
Driving while using a handheld mobile phone is to become illegal in the UK from 1 December 2003. With on-the-spot fines of £30, rising to a maximum £1,000 fine if you are taken to court, the case for evaluating hands-free car kits becomes more topical by the day. There are several reasonably priced wireless hands-free devices available. Nokia’s Bluetooth-based Wireless Car Kit is compatible with the company’s 3650, 6310, 6310i, 6650, 8910 and 8910i handsets, as well as other Bluetooth 1.1 phones that support the Handsfree profile.
20 years ago
by
Andrew Swinton
in
Hardware
Sony Ericsson GC79
Unveiled back in the spring at CeBIT, Sony Ericsson’s new GC79 wireless PC Card has finally seen the light of day. But the wait has been worth it: the GC79 adds wireless LAN functionality to the feature set of the card it supersedes, the GC75, a tri-band GSM/GPRS PC Card. Plug the GC79 in to your notebook, and you now get the best of both wireless worlds -- fast Internet access when you’re in a Wi-Fi hotspot and decent (but not quite so fast) Internet access when you’re elsewhere.
20 years ago
by
Roger Gann
in
Hardware
Sony Ericsson P900
Sony Ericsson has released the P900 smartphone, an update to the well-regarded <A href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/mobilephones/0,39023925,10002616,00.htm">P800</A>. The size has been reduced slightly, the screen improved, the appearance tidied up and some more software added. If you're looking for a big leap forward from the P800, the P900 isn't it. However, as with the P800, it's a well-featured and capable smartphone that should be high on your list of options.
20 years ago
by
Jonathan Bennett
in
Smartphones
Axis 205 Network Camera
USB Webcams are ten a penny these days, but they generally suffer from moderate image quality, low frame rates and lack flexibility (these are ‘dumb’ devices that must be tethered to a PC running the requisite software). By contrast, even an entry-level network camera such as the £139 (ex. VAT) Axis 205 delivers good resolution and decent frame rates; also, thanks to its built-in Linux OS and Web server software, it can operate independently anywhere there’s a network connection. If you want to monitor your home or your business remotely, or stream live video onto your Web site, the Axis 205 Network Camera is an excellent starting point.
20 years ago
by
Charles McLellan
in
Hardware
Xerox Phaser 6250DT
Xerox has pushed the speed limits of colour printing back even further with the launch of the 26 page per minute (ppm) Phaser 6250 range. This one-pass colour laser produces richly coloured, double-sided documents very quickly. The networked printing support is also excellent. However, some qualities of the printer's output make it more suitable for general office work than high-quality graphics printing, such as colour proofing.
20 years ago
by
Jonathan Bennett
in
Printers
Add-ons for your handheld
Want to customise your handheld with some nifty accessories? Check out our guide to the latest add-ons for Pocket PC and Palm devices.
20 years ago
by
Rob Beattie
in
Mobility
Sharp Actius MV1214
Sharp isn’t as synonymous with notebooks as Toshiba, IBM, HP Compaq or even Dell, but that hasn’t stopped it throwing down a challenge to the establishment in the form of the Actius MV1214. And not just any old notebook either. In fact the Actius MV1214 is a rather slick-looking system weighing just 1.9kg (plus 250g for the power supply), with a fairly standard footprint of 28.2cm wide by 23.5mm deep.
20 years ago
by
Dominic Bucknall
in
Laptops
O2 xda II
O2 made quite a splash last year with the original <A href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/handhelds/0,39023880,10001359,00.htm">xda</A>, and now it’s the turn of the all-new xda II to make waves in the PDA pond. O2 has learned a lot from its xda experience, and the new model -- which is available at £349 (inc. VAT, with a 12-month contract) -- has plenty to offer anyone seeking an integrated, connected Pocket PC handheld.
20 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Smartphones
TEAC Vendotto Wall NS-80
Networked Attached Storage (NAS) has never been more popular. Based on embedded thin server OSs, NAS boxes make it very easy to add additional storage to over-stretched file servers on small networks. TEAC, best known for its optical drives and audio tape decks of yore, has launched a range of ‘microservers’ under the Vendotto brand. And to make the Vendotto range stand out from the crowd, it has laden them with features, hoping to turn them in to multifunction ‘all-in-one’ solutions.
20 years ago
by
Roger Gann
in
Storage
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