Tags: hack, qwerty, tech

Reviews

  • Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 mini pro

    The Xperia X10 mini pro will take up less space in your pant's pockets than the big daddy X10, but the addition of a full-QWERTY keyboard should attract texters to this pint-sized marvel.

  • Samsung B3310

    The Samsung B3310 is simple and fuss-free, and is suited to those who need a phone for making calls and the occasional web surfing or social networking.

  • Motorola Backflip

    The Motorola Backflip serves up Google's Android with a few intriguing design twists. It sports a full QWERTY keyboard housed on the underside of the phone and a touch-sensitive trackpad positioned behind the screen.

  • Motorola Milestone

    The Milestone handles online tasks as well as any other smartphone and its excellent performance makes it a pleasure to use.

  • LG GW620

    LG's first foray in the world of Google's Android appears to have a few hits and misses. The QWERTY keyboard is nice and DivX compatibility is welcome, but the older version of the OS will turn many away.

  • Nokia 6760 Slide

    Awkward design choices spoil an otherwise excellent phone for people who rate messaging features over calling or web browsing.

  • HTC Snap

    The Snap will appeal to a specific segment of business-minded road warriors who need good messaging but don't want to pay for extras like media or social networking.

  • LG Xenon

    Matching a touchscreen with a full-QWERTY keyboard at this price point is fantastic. Anyone looking to make their cyber-life mobile should check out the Xenon.

  • Nokia E63

    Like its older brother, the E71, the E63 will make an excellent messaging phone, but is for people who need to be connected without the tech trimmings.

  • Microsoft Xbox 360 Messenger Kit

    The Xbox 360 Messenger Kit makes for the best text-entry option for chatting and messaging on the Xbox 360.

  • LG KS360 (WebSlider)

    With touchscreen numeric input, a full QWERTY keyboard and super-cheap price tag, there's no better phone for teens that love to message.

  • Kogan Agora Pro

    The much-hyped Google Android phone operating system will hit Australia on 29 January 2009, in the form of the Kogan Agora and Agora Pro. At first glance, this looks to be one of the most exciting products of the year.

  • HTC S740

    HTC took the Touch Diamond's glossy black frame, stripped away the touchscreen, added a QWERTY keyboard and called it the S740. This latest Windows Mobile smartphone should deliver the same business messaging punch as the popular Diamond.

  • Samsung SGH-i780

    With two batteries and a separate charger, the SGH-i780 could be a wise choice for the mobile professional, although it's a bit bulky and the screen is a touch small for some applications

  • Samsung Widescreen

    The wow-factor of mobile TV aside; the Samsung Widescreen is an underachiever that sacrifices basic phone functions for all the glamour Telstra's Next G network has to offer.

  • Sony Ericsson P1i

    The P1i has most of the bells and whistles a business user could want, but the user interface is a little quirky.

  • BlackBerry 8800

    A very slick high-end handset with GPS support and BlackBerry's trademark push technology that's let-down by a lack of features now standard in most smartphones.

  • Shadowrun

    Shadowrun is an online FPS combining a mixture of magic and technology. It is also one of the first games to allow PC players to face-off against Xbox 360 players.

  • Genji: Days of the Blade

    While this action adventure game flexes a bit of the PlayStation 3's graphical muscle with its mythical Japanese scenery, its rather shallow, derivative gameplay makes it difficult to recommend.

  • Palm Treo 750

    A bevy of OS enhancements and access to Telstra's Next G mobile broadband network easily make the Treo 750 the best Windows Mobile device we've ever used.

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