O2 Xda II Mini

By Alex Kidman on 23 December 2004

If you want a smartphone but want to avoid unsightly pocket bulges, you could do well to consider O2's slimmed down XDA II Mini.

User rating:8.3
  • Good: Integrated 1.3 megapixel camera • Small form factor
  • Bad: Screen gets grubby really quickly • No scroll selector for PDA functions • Battery life doesn't quite live up to manufacturer claims
  • Specs: Bluetooth • GPRS • 1-megapixel • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$1,199.00
Design
You can't call a phone (or indeed, anything) a "Mini" without it being small, and indeed at 58 by 108 by 18.1 millimetres, the XDA II Mini is a small smart phone, although of course it's still only moderately sized from the phone side of the equation. In visual terms it's not a great departure from the XDA II itself; you've got a directional button at the bottom of the phone, surrounded by four selection buttons (including the two call buttons), and a 2.8-inch display with a total resolution of 240 by 320 pixels. At around 150 grams, it's much lighter than the XDA II or XDA IIs, but you'd expect that from a smaller smart phone.

Features
The XDA II Mini runs Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition for Pocket PC Phone Edition -- try saying that three times fast -- on an Intel PXA 272 processor running at 416MHz. With 64MB of Flash ROM and an equal quantity of RAM, it's heavy on the storage side for a phone, but if you're looking for serious PDA usage, you may want to avail yourself of the SD/MMC card slot that sits atop the phone.

Running a variant of the Pocket PC OS means it's preinstalled with the most common PDA applications from the Pocket PC side of the fence -- Word, Excel, PowerPoint Viewer and so on -- as well as some custom O2 applications. Like the other XDA units, the Mini sports an integrated digital camera, and in keeping with the best that we're seeing in mobile phone cameras at the time of writing, it's a 1.3 megapixel unit, which should put it just into the acceptable and printable category.

As a phone, the XDA II Mini is tri-band GSM and GPRS capable, and as it's a smart phone with visual keyboard facilities, creating and sending SMS and MMS messages is a snap. It's also Bluetooth capable, although that's not the only way to synchronise it with a suitable PC; a USB cable is also provided.

Performance
The first thing we noticed about the XDA II Mini is a common fault with smart phones lacking an integrated keyboard; the screen smudges quickly and often; we'd suggest carrying a cleaning cloth around with you if you're keen to show this phone off to your friends. Aside from that, the display is clear and bright, with the usual adjustments for maximising battery life by dipping screen brightness depending on your situation. As a phone we had few complaints about its performance, aside from one situation where it for some reason it incorrectly grabbed contact details for somebody phoning us -- although to be fair to O2, it does note on the splash screen of our review unit that it's a test unit, so some bugs are probably inevitable.

As a PDA, the XDA II Mini sits well in a competitive category, although there's not too much that really catapults it ahead of the competition per se, and the fact that the rocker on the side of the unit doesn't perform scrolling functions -- it's a volume control for the PDA and phone capabilities -- threw us for a while.

The XDA II Mini's camera is one of the better implementations of a mobile camera we've seen for a while; it's undoubtedly helped by having a rather larger than normal LCD for you to frame shots with, and wisely, there's a focus on fun shots -- including a number of silly shot templates to frame with -- rather than serious photography. Predictably, without a flash, you'll end up with a number of rather dingy looking photos at night, but daytime shots perform well.

O2 claims a battery life of around 180 hours standby and 4-5 hours talk time with the XDA II Mini's 1,200 mAh Lithium Ion battery, although in our testing we'd suggest it's capable of less if you're using the PDA functionality much -- we averaged around 2-3 days before needing to recharge the battery with only moderate usage, and predictably much less if the integrated Bluetooth was switched on.

Topics: handheld, mobile, phone, pda, smartphone, xda, o2, mini, xda ii

Comments (132)

  • Kal gave a review on 29/07/2009 16:45 Report abuse

    • Good: Handly
    • Bad: Battery Dead

    my O2 XdaII Mini is Perfect and full of apps

  • DC gave 7/10 on 09/07/2009 04:36 Report abuse

    • Good: None
    • Bad: Not user friendly

    Had this ageing dinosaur from a sale. To answer your questions

    1. NO need driver for the XDA II, just get activesync from microsoft, transfers mp3, clips, share the net, etc well
    2. WIFI, get SDIO SD card, plugin to the SD slot, bingo
    3. Works with Win 5
    4. .exe & dos games works, if you get the symbian dos emulator to run games & programs. Runs just like a PC.

    I still have an underutilized xdaii mini, if any of u interested, I'm willing to sell cheap + spare batteries.

  • wolf gave a review on 14/04/2009 22:30 Report abuse

    can u run .exe on a wimo phone thanks

  • dodyhuang gave 6/10 on 16/02/2009 01:00 Report abuse

    hii there does any one can help me to upgrade my o2 xda 2 mini from WM 2003 to WM5??

  • rozel gave 6/10 on 20/01/2009 02:26 Report abuse

    hi!can anyone help me how to be connected via WiFi w/ my O2 xda II mini phone?thanks!

  • joan gave 7/10 on 30/11/2008 13:20 Report abuse

    • Good: handy
    • Bad: short battery life

    im really happy with my o2 mini xda II...but it stopped prompting any pc to set up a partnership so i cant install new stuff in it...plus i lost the companion cd..i tried installing activesync 4.5 in my pc and laptop but i cant access my mobile unit coz something is blocking the connection and i cant figure out what,its not the firewall, i checked...help!mail me please...joan_moi_weird@yahoo.com...

  • xLil_Staciieo gave 7/10 on 12/10/2008 22:45 Report abuse

    hey i have one of these phones but i need the drivers for it ... so i can put pictures and music on it... if anyone has the drivers for it would they be able to email me them and tell me how to do it :) it would be really appreciated

  • nicholas danso gave 8/10 on 24/09/2008 19:59 Report abuse

    • Good: very goods phone with clear volume
    • Bad: nost easy getting the battery in Ghana

    my O2 XdaII Mini works well except
    the battries runs down fast

  • helen gave 7/10 on 25/07/2008 13:01 Report abuse

    • Good: great software support
    • Bad: no keyboard

    Hi where can I purchase a new back for my O2Xda mini as all the clips have broken on mine and the phone keeps switching off due to the loose connection. Thanks

  • eden gave 6/10 on 24/07/2008 12:25 Report abuse

    where can i get the computer installer for the 'O2 Xda II mini' ?

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