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OQO Model 01 review

6.7

Editors' Rating

Good

OQO Model 01

Rafe Needleman CNET

Published: 14 Oct 2004

Bigger than a handheld but smaller than an ultraportable notebook, the OQO Model 01 is an ultra-small Windows XP computer that will appeal primarily to businesspeople who need applications with them when they're out of the office. With a US price of nearly $2,000, OQO will require these businesspeople to pay an arm and a leg for the very cool palmtop form factor. The OQO is available in the UK from Expansys, at a princely £1,614.95 (inc. VAT).

The OQO Model 01 has a built-in keyboard and a TrakStik -- a small, rubbery joystick that controls the cursor -- neatly hidden under a slide-up screen. Although the keys are quite small, the OQO's keyboard is easy to use. You won't be able to type with both hands, as you would with a normal-size keyboard, but thumb typing on it isn't too hard, and there's even a numeric keypad -- something you don't see on most tiny keyboards. The TrakStik is placed to the right of the keyboard, with buttons for left- and right-clicking on the left-hand side; switching between typing and mousing is easy. There's also a handy wheel on the bottom of the unit to scroll through Web pages or to switch applications. When the screen is slid down, you can still use the machine by navigating the screen with the included stylus.

The device is based on a 1GHz Transmeta processor and has a 20GB hard disk. This setup offers enough power for most business applications, but it's at the very low end of the general computing performance scale and will probably frustrate people who are expecting desktop-level responsiveness and storage capacity. The built-in 5in. transflective screen has an 800 by 480 native resolution -- again, impressive in a device this size but insufficient for most serious computing tasks. If you're using the OQO Model 01 at your desk, you'd be better off using the included dock with an external keyboard, monitor and speakers (the machine has no external speaker, just a headphone jack). The docking solution uses an unusual cable with a handful of ports (Ethernet, FireWire, video, USB, audio and AC power input) spaced out along it.

The OQO Model 01 weighs 397g -- more than any handheld and rather too much to carry in a pocket. You'd need big pockets, besides, as the device measures 12.4cm wide, 8.6cm deep and 2.29cm high. Its size and weight feel good in your hands, but it runs hot, which makes it uncomfortable to hold after a few minutes.

When you close the OQO, its keyboard recesses behind the screen. You can still use the included small stylus on the screen, but because it's capacitive -- not touch-sensitive -- you can't use your finger or another pointing device on it. In our early production model, we couldn't get the stylus to calibrate accurately. In some areas of the screen, the pen simply wouldn't correctly register where we were pointing. We expect that OQO will fix this issue in production models, but we suspect that the distracting water-drop effect you get from touching the pen to the screen will not go away.

Although the OQO Model 01 is a stylus-based machine, the included operating system is the original edition of Windows XP Professional, not the Tablet PC Edition. This is unfortunate, because XP Tablet has both impressive handwriting recognition capabilities and support for Portrait-mode operation; with the OQO Model 01, there's no way to rotate the interface.

The OQO Model 01 has full wireless capabilities, both Wi-Fi (802.11b) and Bluetooth. There's one FireWire and one USB port on the unit (sadly, it's USB 1.1 only, not the faster USB 2.0) and another of each on the docking cable. There's no video-out on the unit itself, but, again, there is on the docking cable, so it's not a good portable PowerPoint machine. There's also no speaker on the device, although there is a jack for headphones. If you're thinking about using the OQO as a media player, be advised that the battery might not last through a single movie; in our tests it ran for only 135 minutes before shutting down.

OQO backs the Model 01 with a one-year warranty -- a little short for a new product from an unproven vendor. We were unable to test the quality or the availability of OQO's tech support at the time of this review. The included documentation was adequate for getting started, but it offered very little help beyond that.

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Member Opinion

6.3

Average Member Rating

Good

5 Members have reviewed this product

View Opinions by: Date Posted | Rating | Most Useful

Anonymous

Anonymous

can put it in your pocket

Read more

8.5

Excellent


Anonymous

Anonymous

Disappointed with my new unit

Read more

4.0

Mediocre


Anonymous

Anonymous

Too little too late

Read more

4.0

Mediocre


Anonymous

Anonymous

replaces my laptop & PDA

Read more

9.5

Spectacular


Read all the member opinions

Overview

OQO Model 01

Editors rating
Rating: 6.7
Verdict

A full Windows XP PC that's barely bigger than a handheld, the OQO Model 01 is incredibly cool but makes too many compromises.

Typical price

£ 1615

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