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Phone Features and Reception The ASUS P527 is a quad band world phone that works on all GSM bands (850/900/1800/1900MHz). This is the first Pocket PC phone that ASUS has offered in North America and it's sold unlocked for use with any GSM carrier (that generally means T-Mobile and AT&T in the US). For data, the ASUS P527 has EDGE/GPRS but lacks 3G, a feature that T-Mobile users could care less about but AT&T customers who are used to 3G’s faster speeds might consider a roadblock. Our DSL reports mobile speed tests averaged 160-180kbit/sec, very respectable for EDGE speed but nowhere near AT&T HSDPA 3G speed that averages 600-800k. WiFi is the ASUS’ saving grace for high-speed data in the office, at home and around Wi-Fi hotspots. Reception is great on the US bands for GSM and EDGE. We had full bars on AT&T throughout the Dallas area, and experienced no dropped calls. The call quality is good with clear audio and good volume. Only heavy thunderstorms affected voice quality a bit in our tests—but the same could be said for our other phones. The speakerphone sounded good in calls as well and voice through the included wired stereo headset was excellent. The ASUS P527 has integrated Bluetooth and supports both Headset and Hands-Free profiles. We tested the smartphone with the Jabra BT8040 and the Plantronics Explorer 330 Bluetooth headsets and it had great performance with both. The voice quality through the Jabra BT8040 was very good with clear and loud sound. It was not as full as a landline voice but the DSP worked wonders: our call recipients could hardly hear any road noise and wind noise. The range was about 20 feet between the smartphone and the headset before we could hear crackling and audio distortion. Voice command and voice dialing worked like a charm via the Jabra Bluetooth headset and the headset automatically reconnected with the P527 after power on/off. While pairing and connecting were just as easy with the Plantronics Explorer 330, the voice quality wasn’t as good as the Jabra. Though sound via the Plantronics was fuller, our call recipients heard a lot more road noise and wind noise. This isn’t entirely the ASUS P527’s fault as other phones had similar performance when working with the Explorer 330. The range between the Plantronics and the ASUS reached only about 10 feet, but voice command over Bluetooth worked very well.
The ASUS P527 has Windows Mobile Professional standard call management features. It offers smart dialing (matching the first few letters in names to provide a list of contacts), speed dialing (press and hold any number key you have assigned as a speed dial), dialing from call history and more. The ASUS also bundles the excellent Cyberon Voice Commander 2.0 software which not only handles dialing by voice but also can read messages out loud, launch applications and announce the date, time, my next appointments, etc., all without any pre-recorded voice tags or voice training. The voice dialing and voice command worked very well in our tests, and also worked via Bluetooth headsets. Horsepower and Performance The TI OMAP850 processor running at 200MHz is an unsuitably slow brain for a richly featured Pocket PC phone, especially when it comes to CPU and memory intensive applications likevideo playback and GPS navigation. Couple the slow processor with limited memory (64MB total and 24MB RAM available at boot) you’ve got a poorly performing machine. We tested the ASUS using TCPMP, a super fast open source free video player that supports MPEG1, DivX, ASF, WMV and AVI files. TCPMP provides benchmarks on video playback, and we used our usual test file “The Chosen” encoded in 370kbps. The result in average speed was 180.32% which is considerably slower than any heavyweight Windows Mobile PDA phones. What’s even more unsettling is that the device seems to have memory leaks which doesn’t help the performance one bit. When you quit applications the device doesn’t free up the expected amount of memory, and only a soft reset will get your memory back. As result, the ASUS not only runs video slowly, it also runs less-power hungry applications like music playback sluggishly as well. We got frequent out of memory messages while running 3-5 applications. The P527 comes with 128MB flash ROM with 29.32 MB free to store programs and files. The ASUS comes with a generous bundle of OEM and third-party applications which use up a good chunk of flash storage. You will likely need a memory card if you install additional software, and the P527 has a microSD card slot that is compatible with SDHC cards. Display, Sound and Multimedia The ASUS P527 has a smaller display than mainstream Pocket PC phones (2.6” vs. 2.8”), but it’s as bright as the LCDs on the Tilt and the Glofiish X800. The ASUS screen can display 65K colors and is in portrait 240 x 320 resolution. Pictures and video clips look good on the screen and you can set the display to landscape mode for easier viewing of documents, spreadsheets and web pages. Like all Windows Mobile Professional phones, the screen is bit hard to see outdoors unless the brightness is turned to max. You will want to turn the brightness to max if you are taking outdoor pictures using the display as a viewfinder or checking out maps while geocaching. The ASUS P527 has a built-in loudspeaker that sounds good in calls (ASUS describes it as “stereo quality”, but there’s only one speaker). The smartphone supports MIDI, WAV and MP3 ringtones and comes with several MIDI classical pieces as ringtones. First time Windows Mobile users should know that unlike many feature phones currently on the market that support AAC files, Windows Media Player Mobile phone still does not support AAC/AAC+ format music files (the default iTunes format). So if you have ripped CDs in iTunes in AAC format, you’ll need to rip them again in Windows Media Player or purchase a 3rd party music player with AAC support. Music playback sounded good via the speaker, and obviously better using the included wired stereo headset. We also tested Bluetooth stereo headphones with the ASUS P527 since it has A2DP/AVRCP support. The ASUS sounded good but not excellent via the Plantronics Pulsar 590A and Motorola S9 Bluetooth stereo headsets, which was a surprise because many of latest phones sounded superb via these headsets. The sound was good with high volume, but wasn’t very full and dynamic.
Given the ASUS P527’s 200MHz processor, this isn’t a video demon. If watching video ripped from DVD is one of your main tasks on a Pocket PC phone, look for faster devices with stronger multimedia like the Glofiish X800 and X650. That said, for QVGA videos encoded at 350kbit/sec or less, the P527 can handle the task. There were no discernable frame drops and audio was in sync with the video when playing QVGA videos encoded at 300 – 350kbps. In addition to Windows Media Player for music and video playback, the ASUS also comes with an FM Radio which seems a popular treat on import smartphones (E-TEN and Nokia S60 come to mind). The FM radio on the ASUS uses the included headset as antenna and got a large number of stations in the Dallas/For Worth area. The radio offers preset list where you can add, delete and change the listing order. The audio quality was good through the headset. GPS Today more and more phones come with aGPS (assisted GPS) that’s tied to carriers or service providers via a subscription service. While aGPS services are often reliable and fast, they do require a monthly fee. The ASUS P527 has the SiRF III GPS chipset that has excellent performance and does not require fees like aGPS services. ASUS also includes its own navigation software called ASUS Go, and if you opt for the map bundle version of the P527, you will also get North America maps with POIs on a 2GB microSD card. To make sure that you take full advantage of the GPS, ASUS even throws in several supporting apps: GPS Catcher, a satellite info updater; Travelog which allows you to record your trips and export the data to Google Earth and create your own POIs; and Location Courier, an application that allows you to send SMS messages with location to up to five numbers. GPS power users who can utilize all GPS tools will have a remarkable experience with the ASUS. The SiRF III chipset offered very good performance with cold start times under a minute and warm/hot starts within half a minute to get a 3D fix. The GPS receiver tracks up to 12 satellites and keeps a solid fix on 4 satellites for the 3D data. The ASUS Go navigation software offers the standard route planning including fastest, shortest distance and avoidance of road conditions (toll road, etc.). The routing was right on target and route recalculation on the fly was quick and accurate. The map has decent zooming and scrolling speeds running off the microSD card and the POI (Point of Interest) database has a large number of entries which are as fresh as those in most other map bundles (some POIs might not be there if they are newer than 6 months). Both the GPS menu and route/voice guidance support several languages. The voice guidance seems to be on target and is very loud through the phone’s built-in speaker. Overall, the GPS experience is excellent on the P527.
WiFi and Bluetooth The ASUS P527 has both WiFi 802.11b/g and Bluetooth v2.0 +EDR, which competes well with the also unlock E-TEN Glofiish smartphones. The P527 has a wireless manager that you can use to turn on or off any or all of the triple wireless radios (cell, Bluetooth and WiFi) on one screen. Both WiFi and Bluetooth have their own manager where you can find and connect to access point in WiFi or pair with Bluetooth partners in Bluetooth Manager. The ASUS P527 has integrated Bluetooth v2.0 with EDR support, and in addition to the headset, hands-free, A2DP and AVRCP support, it also support ActiveSync over Bluetooth, FTP/OBEX as well as PAN and serial port profiles. The Bluetooth manager can search for and pair with discoverable computers, headsets and other devices, and the P527 had no trouble pairing with all the Bluetooth devices we tested.
The WiFi manager on the ASUS can find nearby access points and offers 6 types of authentication (Open, WPA2-PSK, WPA, etc.) and AES and TKIP data encryption. We connected the ASUS to our D-Link 802.11n router in G mode using WPA2-PSK, and the P527 worked well with the WiFi router and range was good by Windows Mobile Professional phone standards. Battery Life The ASUS P527 comes with a 1300 mAh 3.7V Lithium Ion battery (model number SBP-06) which is a good capacity considering the device has only a 200 MHz processor. The claimed talk time is 4 hours and claimed standby time is 4-8 days. In our tests, the claimed standby time was on target but talk time was shorter than the claimed time at 3 hours. Having all three wireless radios turned on will drain the battery more quickly, and if you are using EDGE and the GPS receiver frequently along with moderate phone calls, PIM access and some MS Office work you will need to charge the ASUS daily. There were some bugs on our test unit – it launched GPS applications on its own, which drained battery life unnecessarily. We hope that these problems will get ironed out with firmware updates. Software The ASUS P527 comes with the standard Windows Mobile Professional applications including a mobile version of MS Office (Word, Excel and a PowerPoint viewer), Internet Explorer, Outlook (Messaging) with email, calendar, contacts, notes and tasks that sync to Windows desktops and MS Exchange, MSN Messenger and Windows Live, Windows Media Player 10, Pictures and Videos viewer, calculator, File Explorer and two games (Solitaire and Bubble Breaker). ASUS adds a large number of value-added software titles. In addition to the GPS applications, the P527 also comes with several business-oriented applications (on CD) including Remote Presenter (controls PowerPoint on laptop/desktop remotely via Bluetooth, Business Card Scanner and Meeting Time Planner (different time zones- this one is on the device). Other software include NewStation (RSS newsfeed), a Java runtime, Streaming Player and ASUS Zip (compression tool). Conclusion With the relative lack of PPC phone design variety in the US, unlocked PDA phones are a breath of fresh air for those who want different form factors, different software bundles and no contract extension. The ASUS P527 certainly has a slim look by Window Mobile Professional phone standards and it offers a good software bundle. The integrated SiRF III GPS chip is a big bonus and the 2-megapixel camera gives HTC and E-TEN PPC phones a run for the money. Is there any reason you wouldn’t want to plunge down $500-$600 on this baby? With a lowly 200 MHz processor, you are not getting a speed demon; and the 64MB RAM hurts more in this case. No 3G also will steer away AT&T customers in 3G coverage areas. If you want something faster, for $100 more you can get the E-TEN Glofiish X800 with US 3G, a VGA display and a faster CPU or the Glofiish X650 sans 3G. But if you’re sold on that candy bar design and number pad, ASUS is the only on that’s got you covered. And that US warranty is comforting compared to imports. Con: Slow performance, memory leaks in our test unit. Not a multimedia powerhouse. Has some bugs that need to be fixed. Price: $499 sold unlocked; $599 option comes with North America Map bundle on 2GB microSD card and CD. Web site: www.asus.com Warranty: 1 year US warranty
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