Sun, Dec 26, 2004 - Page 19 News List

Life-altering gadgets made 2004

By David Momphard  /  STAFF REPORTER

A feature like that would come in handy if you dropped your NT$16,065 Treo 650, my pick for the phone of year. Though it's not a popular model in Taiwan, it's manufactured here by a company called High Tech Computer. In other parts of the world, though, it's taken the bull by the horns, combining a personal digital assistant, telephone, camera and more. The 650, which runs on a Palm operating system, is the upgrade of the Treo 600. But as upgrades go, the 650 is twice the phone the 600 was: twice the screen resolution (320 x 320 from 160 x 160), twice the speed (312Mhz from 144Mhz), and more than twice the photo resolution (1.2 megapixels from 0.3 megapixels).

The 650 also incorporates Bluetooth to make it a truer networking device, though Wi-Fi is noticeably absent. Still, it raises the bar on PDA-cellphone technology, setting the standard by which other manufacturers will inevitably compare their own products.

Already not far behind is another Taiwan-manufactured phone, Benq's P50, which, because it's lighter and smaller than the Treo and foregoes the nubby antenna, would win on style points. But the phone is still too new and untested to give it top honors here.

While it may not be a great feat of technology, it remains a milestone: Wal-Mart Corp has begun offering the Balance Notebook computer, a Linux-based laptop selling at NT$16,000. For that price you get a 14.1" LCD screen, VIA C3 processor, 128MB of RAM, a 30GB hard drive and CD-ROM. No bells and whistles, to be sure, but enough to run most productivity software, Web browsing, e-mail and the like. Kudos to Wal-Mart for saving consumers NT$3,213 by installing Linux.

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