![]() Mirror image: Like the 3650, the P800 has its camera on the back. |
Reminiscent of Ericsson's R380, the P800 sports a removable flip-down keypad with a spacious, 16-line, 4,096-color touchscreen that's on a par with the Sony Ericsson T68i's but isn't as crisp as the Samsung SPH-A500's. There are other standout design elements, including the dedicated Cam button on the side of the phone, which launches the camera application and acts as a shutter release when the phone is in camera mode. Below that key is a blue button that bears no label but offers one-touch wireless Web access.
![]() Big blue: This isn't the most pocketable mobile available. | ![]() Remember me: The Memory Stick Duo slides in the side of the phone. |
Running the Symbian 7.0 OS and supporting J2ME applications, this phone is easy to customize and can easily be used for business. You can download apps, games, screensavers, polyphonic ring tones, and MPEG-4 movie trailers from the Sony Web site to view with the phone's video application. There are a few of each included in the multimedia CD, and you can even play chess against another P800 user via SMS. As with the Nokia 3650, you can reorder the phone's menu system and select between a list-type or PDA-like graphical user interface.
![]() Picture perfect? The P800 doesn't boast the best image quality. |
![]() Fully loaded: The P800 comes with more extras than most mobiles these days. |
Sony Ericsson includes a USB docking station, as well as PC Suite and multimedia software so that you can sync the phone with your desktop PIMs. Currently, PC Suite supports only Windows 2000, Me, and XP; if you're using Windows 98, you're out of luck. Sony Ericsson is working on a fix, but the company was unable to say when 98 will be supported. You can also sync via the phone's IR or Bluetooth connections (see the Performance section for details). Finally, this mobile sends pictures to other MMS-enabled phones on your network, and it does SMTP, POP3, and IMAP4 e-mail.
You can send and receive corporate e-mail on the P800. However, you'll probably need to contact your IT department to set it up correctly. E-mail is handled via a redirector, so messages are synced either when you connect the P800 with the desktop or launch the Remote Sync application from the phone. Since there's no built-in keyboard as there is with the Treo devices, you'll need to use either the virtual keyboard or the Jotter (Graffiti-like) handwriting program, which is less than ideal.
As advertised, the P800 plays MP3s, but it doesn't handle the task too elegantly. You transfer files to the device by right-clicking the phone icon on the desktop, choosing Explore from the pop-up menu, and dragging MP3s onto the phone's memory and included Memory Stick. In our tests, file transfers over USB were slow at 0.02MB per second. (If you have a dedicated Memory Stick reader, you can circumvent this task.) Once MP3s are loaded on the device, they're easy to find in the menu, and they sound loud and clean. But the stereo headphone connection uses a proprietary jack, so you can't replace the included earbuds with bigger and better headphones.
Also included in the box is a 16MB Memory Stick Duo card, an adapter for older Memory Stick cards, a hand strap, a carrying pouch, and three styli, which is good since it's easy to lose a stylus.
![]() Power hungry: Don't leave the charger at home if you plan on hitting the road for more than a day or two. |
The P800 didn't fare as well in battery-life testing. Talk time was impressive at 6.5 hours in our tests though significantly shorter than Sony Ericsson's claims of up to 13 hours. That said, we were disappointed with the 72 hours of standby time we squeezed out--a far cry from the company's rating of 400 hours.
The P800 will work on GPRS networks and is ready for high-speed wireless data access. In our tests, we were able to connect just fine, and while not stellar, browsing time was noticeably faster than that of 2G phones.
As for other connections, we were able to send and receive files via Bluetooth. In our tests, we paired and sent images to a Nokia 3650 and even the 12-inch Apple PowerBook G4.





