O2 Xda Atom

By Alex Kidman on 30 November 2005

O2's redefined micro-smartphone has been improved, and while it's not the cheapest option around, it's certainly eye-catching and fun to use.

User rating:7.5
  • Good: Tiny smartphone • Integrated media centre-like functions • 2-megapixel camera • Stylish layout
  • Bad: Possibly too small for some business uses • MiniSD card rather than full-sized SD
  • Specs: GPRS, EDGE • Bluetooth, 802.11b • Windows Mobile • 2-megapixel • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$1,229.00
Design
O2's Xda II Mini has been one of the most popular phones here at CNET.com.au, so we were especially keen to get our hands on its successor, the O2 Xda Atom. At first, visually speaking, it's hard to obviously tell the two apart, save for the obvious switch from a silver style scheme to an all-black one. The Atom is marginally smaller than the Xda II Mini at 102 x 58 x 18.5mm versus the Mini's 108 x 58 x 18.1mm, but that's more of a paper measurement -- we'd challenge anyone picking up both phones to intuitively feel the size difference without putting them side to side.

Physical features are pretty much as per O2's standard take on smartphones, which means that you've got a small five way selector at the base of the phone, surrounded by call accept and decline buttons and dedicated buttons for the program Start function and the integrated O2 Media Plus application. The small stylus slots neatly into the top right of the phone, which also houses a MiniSD memory card slot and the phone's power button. The rear of the phone houses the Atom's 2-megapixel CMOS camera, as well as a strobe flash. The Atom's display is a 2.7" TFT LCD touchscreen with a top resolution of 240 x 320 pixels.

Features
If you can't connect to something with the Xda Atom, you're really not trying. For a start, it's a tri-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE (GSM900/1800/1900) phone. Moving beyond simple mobile telephony, it's also Bluetooth capable and Wi-Fi capable, albeit only to 802.11b speeds. For the true relics amongst us, it's even IrDA compatible, although we're not sure anyone's using infrared to send anything via mobile in this day and age. There's an obvious battery hit to take into consideration for each and every one of these technology inclusions, they're still good to have as individual connection options.

On the PDA side, the Atom runs on the Microsoft Windows Mobile 5.0 platform, which offers the usual suite of office compatibility tied into a PC running the ActiveSync application. Beyond spreadsheets and documents, the Atom also ships with O2's MediaPlus application, which gives an integrated approach to viewing multimedia content with a very distinct Windows Media Center-type feel; it'll play back music and video, display pictures and run the phone's inbuilt FM radio application from a simple tappable interface.

Performance
O2 warned us that the unit they were sending us for evaluation was a pre-production sample -- and we could hardly miss the splash screen that warned us of this fact every time we powered the phone up. This puts us in a tricky position to accurately gauge the Atom's true performance, as it's hard to say that any particular issue might not be solved via a future ROM upgrade. Still, many of our observations of the Atom's performance had less to do with issues that might be resolved with ROM changes, and more to do with the phone itself.

As with the Xda Mini, the biggest hit against the Atom is also the unit's biggest area of appeal, in that it's a very small smartphone, and you won't feel like you're holding a brick up against your ear every time you make a call. The downside of miniturisation in this case is that everything else -- interfaces, screen sizes and virtual keyboards -- is smaller too, making it a more challenging PDA than its fuller-sized cousins. It's less of an issue for jotting small notes, but if you need to send a long e-mailed response to a business query in a hurry, you may find yourself struggling.

The MediaPlus application is a smooth bit of software design -- or, if you're the conspiracy theory type, a neat bit of interface thievery -- but you'll either have to load files in via ActiveSync or via MiniSD card. The MiniSD card inclusion is a touch disappointing, as there's plenty of SD users out there, but many fewer with MiniSD cards outside of the mobile world.

O2 rates the Xda Atom as having a battery life of 150 hours standby and 5.5 hours talktime, although that's almost certainly a figure achieved with Bluetooth silenced and Wi-Fi switched off. In our testing we found the battery lasted around four days of moderate usage, although how much that was affected by the pre-production ROM in our test unit is impossible to say -- we did experience a few crashes in that time that could have preserved or even drained additional power.

The Xda II Mini was certainly a hit amongst CNET.com.au's audience as it dominated the early months of the year when it came to choosing our top mobiles, and given that the Atom is essentially just a feature set upgrade and a coat of black paint on the same basic design, we see no reason why the Atom won't fare as well. If you're after a small smartphone, the Atom is a solid, albeit not exactly inexpensive choice.

Topics: handheld, 3g, 5.0, quanda, o2, xda, pda, phone, windows, mobile, atom

Comments (205)

  • sanjeewansb gave a review on 10/12/2009 17:53

    • Good: good

    i love it

  • roj gave a review on 17/04/2009 09:07

    ohh very bad i wana get rid of it every thi8ng top to botttom is bad

  • PDA lover gave 3/10 on 03/01/2009 21:22

    • Good: it looks great, and as a pda, has many features
    • Bad: signal not strong - sms cannot send a lot of time - calls cannot be made, OS hang frequently (I am using Mobile 5), battery last 1 day if not in use, 1-2 hr if in use, not user-friendly - difficult to type sms

    not as good compared to my old nokia phones, in terms of user-friendliness, battery life, OS hang, strong signal

  • loveya.priyanshu gave 10/10 on 10/12/2008 03:43

    you can use the speaker phone by holding down the green button

  • kelubi gave 3/10 on 02/12/2008 01:36

    I just use for about 8 month. Now I cant use O2 atom pda anymore. I,ve to use it together the handfree set coz without the handfree set, i cant hear any sound from the speaker.

  • yashrey gave 10/10 on 22/11/2008 16:00

    • Good: very good loking and a perfect phone
    • Bad: there's no "SPEAKER" option when using "PHONE"

    i've been using this phone since 1 year and still there's no problem faced.

  • ChrisT1 gave a review on 14/12/2009 22:20

    No speakerphone settings - there is.

    In regards to the O2 Atom; Speakerphone can be engaged during a call by holding down the 'call button (green). To revert back to the normal speaker, just hold down the call button again.

  • scushn gave 9/10 on 18/10/2008 16:29

    • Good: Multi-purpose - phone, ipod, browser, calculator, calendar, pretty much anything else you want.
      No rubbish sms buttons - use letter recogniser instead, the only way to sms
      Very reliable
    • Bad: hard to see the screen in broad daylight

    I have had my phone for about 2 years and I love it.

  • ChrisT1 gave a review on 14/12/2009 22:22

    Just remember you can change the brightness of the screen.

    >Start >Settings >System >Backlight

    Select the brightness you wish to have when on Batt or AC Power.

    But, you're battery life may be reduced overall.

  • o2 xda atom life gave 7/10 on 11/06/2008 15:14

    • Good: Small form factor.
      Gorgeous color.
      Decent talk time.
      Large screen.
      Very light.
    • Bad: Nothing.

    Great look digital hand set introduced by O2 specially for business usage. I like this hand set because of its good battery timing. I am actually always on business tours so its battery timing is enough for me.

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