Home   News  Product reviews   Website reviews  Forums  Competitions  Subscribe 
Magazine
Latest issue
Next issue
Subscribe to
Web User
magazine
Renew your
subscription
Find your nearest UK newsagent
  Highlights 
Gadget blog
Play Games
WIN! WIN! WIN!
Top gadgets
Google Earth Fun
Free software
Safety advice
80 webcams!
Shopping Directory
Broadband guide
Daily Online Fun
Award Winners
More...
Vote Now

Will you buy Grand Theft Auto 4?


Shopping directory button
Imaging Home Study Courses
Get the free Web User News Alerts every day- click here for details Web User's daily guide to the latest gadgets - click here
Latest Product Reviews

Product reviews > Hardware > PDAs

T-Mobile Sidekick II


T-Mobile Sidekick II
Price: Free to £50 inc VAT, depending on contract

Features
Performance
Ease of use
Value for money
Overall
Reviewed By: Andy Shaw

This review updated: 23/01/2006
Featured in magazine:
Issue 126
Manufacturer Contacts:
Supplier: T-Mobile
Tel: 01707 315000
Web Address: www.t-mobile.co.uk


Since the first Wap phones, the promise of being able to access the internet from a pocket-sized device has been an attractive proposition, but not always a smooth experience. Unless you've had deep pockets, both to fit in a cumbersome device and pay for the services, the reality of a decent, comprehensive, portable internet service has remained tantalisingly out of reach. The Sidekick II, available exclusively from T-Mobile on its Web 'n' Walk tariff, brings the internet features we use daily into a device that should suit your pocket better.

Features
It'd be easier to list what this device doesn't do. It has a full web browser, complete with T-Mobile's handy portal for Google searching and accessing everyday services, it can manage your POP3 email accounts, and it uses AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) to keep you in touch with your buddies. It has the usual phone features – talk, text and send multimedia messages – and includes basic PDA functions, such as calendar, to-do list, contact book (integrated with phone and email, naturally) and notepad. And don't forget the camera and all the downloadable applications already available from developers in the US , where this device and its predecessor have been extremely hot property.

Performance
Expecting the Sidekick II to be as powerful a web browser as your broadband PC is asking too much, but its email options work as happily as any Blackberry mobile device we've played with, and having AIM in your pocket is great for those with friends on the service. The keyboard is a bit cramped and requires firm pressure to get a letter out, but it's fine for knocking out quick email messages. Current PDA users will find its life-organising functions lacking sophistication though, and you won't be ditching your digital camera for this 0.3 megapixel (640 x 480 pixels) device.

Ease of use
With so many features, ease of use is paramount. Luckily, the Sidekick II could hardly be simpler. The main screen uses the scroll wheel to rotate through the various features, and the scroll wheel goes on to be used throughout the phone. There's a menu button in the top corner that can double up to provide keyboard shortcuts to regularly used options. Navigating the device is a cinch and it reacts sensibly and intuitively to what you're doing: open the browser and start typing, for example, and the address bar will open with the presumption that you're typing in a web address.

Value for money
This device won't cost you any more than £50 on T-Mobile's Web 'n' Walk contracts, the cheapest of which costs £30 with 100 minutes of free talk time and 40MB of data download. Unfortunately, the Sidekick also needs a 'service pack' (£5 per month) to do its clever business of pushing email and AIM messages to you. However, this still makes it the cheapest way at present to get a decent internet experience, complete with keyboard for speeding up communications, and T-Mobile has to be applauded for taking the plunge. It's still expensive by comparison with our home broadband connections but at least it's a step in the right direction.

Verdict
This is a neat device for carrying the internet around in your pocket, like a consumer version of corporate favourite the Blackberry. The device itself is cheap and cheerful but lacks sophistication in its PDA and camera options. But think of it primarily as a web device and you can hardly go wrong.


Want to discuss this review? Voice your opinions about this and other products on our Readers Recommend forum

More PDAs reviews:
  Newsletter 


more details

Quick Links
Subscribe to Web User
Buy digital copies
Free magazine
Tech help forum
Shopping
Contact us
Listen to our podcast
Media contacts
Print photos 5p
Latest News
Kids don't know download laws
Google Translate tool expanded
Yahoo intros SearchMonkey
Noise pollution maps put online
Play.com site relaunched

RSS Feed
Welcome
Welcome to Web User magazine's online home, where you'll find news, reviews and a buzzing forum. For the best websites, practical advice and the latest music and film downloads every fortnight, get Web User, the UK’s best selling internet magazine.
Claire WoffendenClaire Woffenden, Editor

Web User Shopping Directory


Hitwise Top 10 Award Winner - Jan-Mar 2005

About us | Contact us | Link to us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy

Sister sites: Amateur Photographer | House to Home | Trusted Reviews | What Digital Camera

© Copyright IPC Media Limited, All rights reserved






Check out the latest iPod
MP3 Players from Apple

Find also our GPS range. Popular TomTom GPS:
TomTom One New Versions

  Huge range of Flat Screen TV
Make your choice between
 Lcd tvs and Plasma tv
Review our selection of Sony lcd tv and Samsung lcd tv