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Sony CLIE PEG-TH55

26 Apr 2004 09:07


Despite a few design quirks, Sony's sleek CLIE PEG-TH55 offers a long list of features that will appeal both to business users and those with more playful natures.

Design

At 7.3cm wide by 12.1cm deep by 1.57cm high, the elegant, dark-grey CLIE PEG-TH55 has the solid feel of a serious handheld. The 3.8in., 320 by 480-pixel transflective TFT screen dominates the face of the device. Add in the Virtual Graffiti area, and there's plenty of room to view applications. The TH55 weighs 185g, which isn't bad, considering it includes Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and a built-in camera. Its sturdy exterior feels as if it could endure some rough treatment. However, the translucent-grey plastic protective screen cover doesn't feel nearly as tough. And while it didn't suffer any scratches during our tests, it did show a lot of fingerprints. Plus, it feels like it could easily snap off its hinges if you aren't careful. The nice thing about the see-through cover, however, is that you can tell with a glance which alarm just rang. Sony includes a wrist strap with the device, but does not provide an extra protective case.

Perhaps in an effort to accommodate the protective cover, the scroll wheel typically found below the screen on other CLIEs and handhelds has been relocated to the back of the device, above the digital camera (located at the top), making it difficult to use. We never felt comfortable with the new layout. And if you plan on playing games, steer clear of this handheld in favour of one with a more common directional keypad or joystick. Four traditional shortcut keys line the bottom edge of the device.

On the left side of the TH55 are the headphone jack (which accepts Walkman-style headphones), a Memory Stick slot, a photo-capture button and three identical-feeling switches that control the power, the camera lens cover, and the voice recorder. Unfortunately, it's impossible to tell which switch you are using by touch alone.

The TH55's case was apparently so packed that only a telescoping stylus could fit. Even when fully extended, the stylus is still fairly short, and it frequently collapsed to its miniature length while we were trying to use it.

To keep you in sync and powered up, the TH55 comes with a USB cable and a power cable, both of which connect through the dongle that clips to the bottom of the device. For frequent travellers, this is an ideal setup. Deskbound buyers should go for the optional charging cradle.

Features

The CLIE PEG-TH55 has plenty of features to keep you connected, entertained and organised. With its Wi-Fi radio, you can browse the Web and send email. The included CLIE Mail application is extremely basic, though. Although it allows you to receive attachments, it doesn't handle HTMP or IMAP messages. In Europe (but not in the US), the TH55 is also equipped with Bluetooth for short-range (~10m) wireless cable replacement duties.

A built-in lens cover protects the 310,000-pixel digital camera on the back of the TH55. Like its distant cousin, the PEG-TJ27, the TH55 can save pictures in four sizes, adjust brightness and add effects. Unfortunately, Sony didn't include its Photo Editor application, but the CLIE Organizer application suite takes advantage of the camera. You can easily add photos or voice notes to calendar entries, contacts or notes. We also like the fact that you can write freehand on date book pages. Yet, while we enjoyed CLIE Organizer, we would still prefer Palm's new Contacts and Calendar applications, which sync better with Microsoft Outlook, over Organizer's Address Book and Date Book.

The TH55 has all the multimedia features you'd want in a handheld, including MP3 audio, and AVI, MPEG and QuickTime video. Macromedia's Flash Player is also onboard, but it doesn't work in concert with the browser, so you can't view Flash-based Web sites. All of the TH55's 32MB of internal memory are available for storage, but for multimedia files you'll quickly discover that you need to add a Memory Stick.

Sony has bundled a lot of software with this device, including PicselViewer for viewing (but not editing) PDFs, Microsoft Word and Excel files; Decuma, a cool alternative to Graffiti; and the attractive CLIE Launcher for navigating between applications. One warning about software installation: it takes a long time, requires numerous restarts of the PC, and is far too vague about which files need to be installed, which are extra, and which are only demo versions. Less tech-savvy buyers will likely give up in frustration. There is also no support for Macs.

Performance

The Sony CLIE PEG-TH55 uses Sony's Handheld Engine processor, which runs between 8MHz and 163MHz, with the CPU automatically adjusting the clock speed to optimise battery life. However, with speeds topping out at 163MHz, many programs felt a bit sluggish. The good news is that the TH55 has a graphics accelerator chip, so MPEG movies ran smoothly and MP3s played back just fine. Voice recordings came out nice and clear, and you can even adjust the compression rates.

The Sony processor gives this handheld remarkable battery life. In our battery tests, where we repeatedly play an MPEG movie clip with the unit's screen brightness at 50 percent and wireless turned off, the TH55 lasted an impressive 4 hours and 50 minutes. Even with regular Wi-Fi usage and the backlight cranked up to high, we went several days between charges. Sony rates the TH55 for 15 days of normal use. Still, real road warriors will prefer a handheld with a replaceable battery.

The Wi-Fi radio has a fair range, and it can sniff out available networks and tell you which ones require encryption keys. Whether we were at home or work, connecting to a Wi-Fi network was seamless. We didn't have to change any settings; the TH55 just found the network and logged in with the appropriate key.

Browsing Web pages is slow, as with most handhelds. But this CLIE is, in many ways, more capable than the Palm Tungsten C. For example, we visited Download.com to download new Palm applications as ZIP files. We could then unzip them and use the application without ever syncing with a PC. The NetFront browser also did an admirable job coping with Web pages full of JavaScript and pop-up windows.

The TH55's VGA camera took decent photos. Just make sure to give it plenty of light; otherwise, the pictures come out blurry. The bright and sharp screen was excellent for viewing photos and videos, and the transflective display worked fine in sunlight. Our big gripe is that we couldn't view applications in Landscape mode. Palm's Tungsten T3 has such a feature built in.

Story URL: http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/handhelds/0,1000000735,39152823,00.htm

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