LG Viewty reviewed. iPhone killer? Nope.

Hardware — Joe Anderson @ 9:06 pm Sunday 25 November 2007

LG Viewty

I have recently got an LG Viewty (aka LG KU990), courtesy of Outside Line, to review and keep.

The main features of this HSDPA (3G) mobile is the touchscreen and on-screen QWERTY keyboard. In addition to this, it boasts a 5MP camera with a proper flash and a low light setting up to ISO 800.

The phone comes with a USB lead, headphones and charger.

Dimensions and stylus: small and lipstick-like stylus


Viewty Stylus

The Viewty is fairly small, much smaller than my current XDA Exec, measuring roughly 105mm x 55mm x 15mm yet it still manages to boast a 3″ screen!

I’m guessing it’s aimed at a female target audience due to it’s lipstick-like expanding stylus (to control its touchscreen). There’s no obvious place to insert the stylus in the phone so I attached via a hook on the phone. This is far from perfect… I’d rather have storage for the stylus built into the phone’s shell.

Input: an ineffective keyboard but effective touchscreen

Input can be made through the stylus, mentioned above, or through fingers on the touchscreen. There are also buttons to aid in taking photos, unlocking, quickly answering calls and quickly hanging up.

Navigating through menus, textual and numerical input is completed through the touchscreen. A variety of methods of textual input methods are provided such as standard mobile phone way (three 2 in sequence make a C), handwriting (which isn’t good for me as I form my letters irregularly) and in some circumstances a QWERTY keyboard (hence its name)

Much to my annoyance, you can only use the QWERTY keyboard in landscape mode making it impossible to do things such as enter a URL into its browser. This is a major flaw, in my opinion, and I hope LG update their firmware to allow keyboard input to be offered wherever possible.

I am impressed by the ease of locking and unlocking the phone. It requires you to press one button on the side of the phone and that’s it! This, in my opinion, is much nicer than holding * down!

The phone also vibrates when touched, but only lightly, providing nice sensual feedback. Whilst it is slightly disconcerting at first, you soon grow to love it.

Scrolling is achieved by moving the stylus up, down and across the screen. You move the stylus in the opposite direction to the one in which you wish to move… as if you’re pulling it.

Surrounding the camera lens there is a jog wheel which is used to control music, zoom in and out of photos and webpages.

I do find my hardware keyboard in my XDA Exec much quicker to type on than this one which requires lots of tapping. However, for the average Joe they won’t want to carry about such bulk!

Connectivity: fast 3G!

The phone is armed with 3G (HSDPA allowing speeds up to 3.6Mbps… faster than my DSL!) and although I live in an area of marginal 3G coverage it will often pick up the signal. 3G allows you to do all sorts and I’ve been enjoying T-Mobile’s ability to watch live TV for only £1/daily. Obviously, 3G coverage needs to rapidly be expanded inside the United Kingdom.

Also, it has Bluetooth which was very quick and easy to set-up with my Mac. The phone also comes with a USB connectivity cable and driver disc for Windows; neither LG or iSync support the Viewty on OS X :( . I’m not sure about Linux but if LG are like most companies, Linux support is their last priority.

The phone doesn’t possess infrared.

Phone’s OS/software: Simple interface, lots of tools

The phone has an email client, which I admit I haven’t used, a browser which despite my initial concerns is actually very good – perfectly rendering this blog. My only complaint with the browser is the one I mentioned above… that URLs cannot be inputted via QWERTY.

The menu is very well designed with shortcuts on the standby screen (ie the screen with the wallpaper etc) to messaging, phone, the main menu and contacts. The main menu is split into four sub-categories: a phone menu (with contacts, logs, dialling & messaging), media (‘my stuff’ (a file browser), camera, MuVee studio (a primitive video editor), music, video playlists, voice recorder, FM radio and Games & Apps), an organiser menu (browser, organiser, alarms, memo, tools and USIM services) and then settings.

One interesting feature is that the phone supports Flash and can open some SWFs, but they have to be very small in terms of filesize. It can also handle Java applications.

Dialing in the ViewtyViewty's menu Viewty standby screen

Camera and video: 5MP and DivX

One of the phone’s main features is its 5MP camera which has a proper flash (not a lousy LED like my old phone’s camera). You can also use the phone’s front camera which is normally used for video calling to do photos, but these are at a much lower resolution.

The main flaw of this camera, in my opinion, is the lack of an optical zoom (effectively ruling it out as a fully blown replacement to my digital camera) and the fact that there’s no lens cover of any sort. This might make the lens susceptible to damage.

The phone can ‘achieve’ low-light up to ISO 800, has a macro mode and allows images to manually focused.

The phone takes good quality photographs but it won’t replace my S3 IS any time soon!

The camera can also record videos straight as a DivX or 3GP at a rate of up to 120FPS. The fact that files are DivXs saves a lot of effort if you want to share them, especially online, as most people now probably have the codecs on their computers if not DVD players!

Conclusion

Whilst the lack of Macintosh support and the inconsistency of where the keyboard can and cannot be used grows annoying, the phone has a supreme camera and good 3G ability.

It’d be amazing if the phone auto-rotated like the iPhone but I wonder if the K990 has the necessary hardware to ever facilitate such a feature (if I’m not mistaken, the Nokia N95 now auto-rotates).

In essence, the phone still very much feels like a phone despite its touchscreen. I’ve grown unaccustomed to phones and this mobile is right in between a ‘phone’ and a ’smartphone’. Smartphones aren’t practical for everyone and I have a feeling that this phone’s style and pricetag (£350 on T-Mobile as PAYG, free on O2 with a contract; compare that with the £280 for the iPhone on contract) will lure in quite a big audience.

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Wiimotes intefere with TV senders

Hardware — Joe Anderson @ 9:43 pm Thursday 5 April 2007

I have observed a strange problem regarding my Wiimote and a TV sender in our household. Whenever the Wiimote is in use, on the TV sender reduces there is interference. I suspect this is because the TV sender runs at frequencies of around 2.4GHz, as does Bluetooth and incidentally so does 802.11x (aka: WiFi). When doing a tiny bit of research, I’ve discovered wireless telephones and microwaves also do for legal reasons in the United States.

For those who don’t know, the Nintendo Wiimote utilises a mixture of Bluetooth and I.R. . This allows for one to easily hack the Wiimote to act as a human interface device of some description for a computer. For example, I connected my Wiimote to my computer via. Bluetooth and used RMX Automation to make it into a remote control for Winamp and a mouse. You also use a similar method, but this time using GlovePIE, to transfer Miis (Wii => Wiimote => Computer).

Even though it’s very unlikely, it would appear the Wiimote and TV sender are running at exactly, or nearly exactly, the same frequency. This is, of course, growing annoying as family may not watch television whilst I’m playing on my Nintendo Wii (therefore reducing my Wii play time :( ).

Has anyone else experienced this?

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The Death of the Floppy Disk

Hardware — Joe Anderson @ 10:30 pm Tuesday 30 January 2007

Today, leading UK computer retailer PC World announced they will stop selling floppy disks. Most news sites seem to think this is a good step forward to new methods of data storage. I disagree, though.

Floppy disks are remarkably important. For example, most operating systems don’t have my RAID drivers; so in order for me to install them I must insert a floppy disk with the correct drivers on. The same goes for setting up old computers; you need a floppy disk in order to boot to CD.

Interestingly, software giant Microsoft seems to be keeping the flame alight for the floppy.

I wonder why! I remember my RC1 of Vista required RAID drivers on a floppy! On that note, I’m not planning on buying Vista any time soon.

I’m sure floppy disks will be available for many years to come across the Internet, though, so there’s no need to panic! :P

Sorry for making just a brief (non Web 2.0 related!) post today, however, I’ve been pretty busy.

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DS Clocked to 100 MHz!

Hardware — Joe Anderson @ 5:04 pm Thursday 16 March 2006

Kotaku has reported that someone has clocked (don’t think it’s other cloked as the DS has two CPUs, one 67 MHz and one 33Mhz) a Nintendo DS (not a DS Lite, despite appearances) to 100 MHz. The DS was then slowed down to 50 MHz and 25 MHz. This allowed Mario Kart to be ran at dizzy speeds! Details of this are scarce, but it appears to be done using an operation clock which can be changed at a flick of a switch. The original source of this was one a Japanese blog, New Akiba, and if you can read Japanese you can read their scoop here.

A YouTube video is available of this below:

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So That’s What Origami is…

Hardware — Joe Anderson @ 7:09 pm Thursday 9 March 2006

Technorati Chart for posts containing Origami.
There’s been a lot of hype in the blogosphere over a product Microsoft are going to launch codenamed Origami. Today, MS have released many more details on the, what we now know to be, the Ultra-Mobile PC.

The UMPC is a cross between a handheld and tablet computer. It will run Windows XP Tablet PC Edition 2005, and later Windows Vista. The UMPC has a 7″ screen, and will weigh less than a kilo. It will be able to run at a 800×680 res, which is rather higher for such a small screen.

It’s battery life will be about the same as my laptop, 2 and a half hours, and it will have WiFi, Ethernet and Bluetooth connectivity. Also, it will have a hard disk ranging from 30GB to 60GB. It will support Cerelon M, Pentium M or C7-M processors (no AMD :( ). You will be able to add GPS, webcams, biometric scanners, card readers and TV tuners.

The UMPC will be preinstalled with special software, called Microsoft Touch Pack, which optimises XP for touch screen computing. Just one interesting feature is that it will include a new game, Microsoft Sudoku. Also, it will include a new Windows Media Player skin. It will also come with an improved on-screen-keyboard, don’t worry though, as you can connect a standard keyboard via. USB or Bluetooth.

Microsoft won’t be manufacturing the UMPC. Currently both Samsung and Asus are making them; the Samsung model looks better.

Good Morning Silicon Valley doesn’t think of the UMPC as highly as me. Though I agree that it’s too large to replace a PDA and not powerful enough to replace a notebook; I think it’s useful for those who just casually want to walk around doing simple tasks or for those who lie in bed reading Webby’s World.

A Microsoft press release is available here.

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