Pros & Cons
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- Easy to use.
- Speedy EV-DO networking.
- Great balance of features and applications.
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- No voice dialing over Bluetooth.
- Slow Bluetooth modem speeds.Watch the Palm Treo 700p Video Review!
Palm Treo 700p Specs
| Screen Size | 2.5 |
Palm's new Treo 700p may look like older Treos, but it is loaded with internal improvements that Treo fans have been waiting for. The 700p, available in two versions (for Verizon and Sprint; we tested the latter), adds high-speed EV-DO networking, a better camera, and updated software to our Editors' Choice
The Treo 700p looks just like its Windows Mobile cousin, the
The advances in the Treo 700p are in software. It takes the 700w's advantages—fast EV-DO networking and a 1.3-megapixel camera—and marries them to the latest in easy-to-use Palm OS software. Yes, the Palm OS is getting old; most notably, it doesn't support multitasking, which is annoying when you're downloading e-mail and want to do something else. But it's still tremendously responsive and requires relatively few keypresses or stylus taps to do what you want.
DataViz's DocumentsToGo 8.0, included on the 700p, reads and edits Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents with aplomb. Its PDF support is okay, but a little wobbly. It can open even extremely graphical PDFs (a big step forward for any handheld PDF reader), but the fonts appear oddly sized and spaced.
The 700p is also the first smartphone to access
Because DocumentsToGo is burned into ROM, the 700p has 60MB of memory available. That's not much in the Microsoft Windows world, but it's plenty for smaller Palm apps. You can add an SD card for more storage. The 700p supports the FAT32 file system, so it should work with current SD cards up to 4GB, but not with next-generation SD cards that use the SDHC (Secure Digital High Capacity) standard.
Although the Treo syncs easily with both Macs (with iSync or Palm Desktop) and PCs (with Palm Desktop or Microsoft Outlook), Mac users don't get the ultimate prize—the ability to use the Treo as a USB modem on Sprint's EV-DO network. With it hooked up to a PC using Sprint's Connection Manager, I got excellent speeds of 900 to 1,100 Kbps. That's awesome. But when I connected to a Mac using Bluetooth, speeds slowed down to about 200 to 300 Kbps. The problem is the Treo's Bluetooth 1.2 stack, which is just too slow to handle the full speed of EV-DO.
You won't get that full speed in Palm's Blazer browser, either. Blazer's not-so-fast rendering engine kept effective speeds on bandwidth-test Web sites down to about 200 Kbps. But the device as a whole feels very responsive, and it's fast enough to play music or stream video. (Streaming media appears in a customized version of Kinoma's media player, which can handle MP3, WMA, WMV, and MPEG4 streams.) In both processor and video benchmarking tests, the 700p came out slightly faster than both the Treo 650 and the
The 700p has plenty of messaging options. The simple VersaMail POP3/IMAP mail client now syncs e-mail and contacts with Microsoft Exchange 2003 servers, remembers recently used addresses, and hooks into DocumentsToGo for attachment reading. There are also hooks on board for
Also on board are a file manager, the popular Bejeweled game, and a basic version of the Pocket Tunes MP3 player, which you can upgrade for $24.95 to support WMA files, music purchased from Microsoft-compatible stores, and streaming radio stations. Palm also includes the Avvenu remote-file-access service (check PCMag.com soon for our review of Avvenu).
As a phone, the Treo 700p is fine but not great. Sound through the earpiece in a noisy location was a little wobbly, and transmissions were clear but a bit tinny. There's no in-ear voice feedback or noise cancellation. The Treo paired well with my Plantronics Bluetooth headset (though I've heard Treos have some trouble with Motorola headsets), and the speakerphone is loud and powerful. Battery life is its one standout strength: The beefy battery gives it 5 hours 16 minutes of talk time. That's especially impressive considering that the screen no longer completely turns off when you're in a call. A new "ignore with text" feature lets you send a quick SMS to someone calling you if, for example, you're in a meeting. And that the phone vibrates when you hit its mute switch is a nice touch.
The 1.3MP camera takes sharp photos, although there is a slight reddish cast. The camcorder mode teases you with 352-by-288 videos at 13 frames per second (which you can save to the length of whatever memory you have), but they come out hideously blocky.
Three features jump out as missing: There's no Wi-Fi support, no stereo Bluetooth audio, and no built-in voice dialing. Although you can buy VoiceSignal's voice dialing package for $19.95, you still won't be able to initiate voice dialing over a Bluetooth headset, making the app a lot less useful.
The Treo 700p's competition is stiff. High-end Microsoft-powered handhelds such as the
The Treo 700p offers an excellent balance of phone functions, PIM, media, and high-speed Internet access. It's a joy to use and will satisfy all but the geekiest feature hounds. For that, it's a worthy Editors' Choice.
Benchmark Test Results
Continuous talk time: 5 hours 16 minutes
Video
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Final Thoughts
Palm Treo 700p
An upgrade to a classic, the Palm Treo 700p is the most well-rounded PDA/phone available today.