Mobile technology introduced latest design cell phones. The phone comes packed with an impressive armory of Smartphone features. Including Exchange ActiveSync and Direct Push support for corporate servers, Bluetooth, the cell phones versions of Windows Media Player and Internet Explorer, a micro SD, memory card enlargement slot, a 2megapixel camera, and a quad-band GSM radio for putting calls on worldwide networks. There is no inherent GPS navigation or 3G, but you can acquire high-speed data over the inherent Wi-Fi receiver decent for anyone with a wireless home or office network.
All well and good but unluckily, my review unit of the mobile technology was slow as molasses. Programs and menus screens often led a few seconds to refresh, and buttons took very long time to respond; on some affairs, I kept clicking on-screen button with the stylus imaging the phone had frozen, only to have menus pop up a few seconds later.
The mobile technology has given one of the first smart phones in the U.S. to ship with Windows Mobile 6, the latest version of Microsoft Operating System. That means to a greater extent editing options in the mobile editions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint, tight integration with outlook for messaging, and finally complete support for HTML-formatted e-mail messages, which functioned like a dream in my tests. Tapping out messages was a piece of cake thanks for the cell phones technology roomy.
The advances made in the new version of Windows Mobiles phones (PDA Phones) can best describe as progression and far from revolutionary. The system grants customers to set up and receive email immediately from Windows outlook and gives users are access to MSN messenger.
Microsoft has also spent a significant time for advancing their current security features to make the service more attracting to corporate users. Those who will buy the mobile phones or PDA Phones are also encouraged to use Vista, so that the consumer can retrieve lost or stolen data.