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Author voq professional Phone
mmsman
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Posted: 2004-03-06 21:08
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Quote:

On 2004-03-06 20:07:58, axxxr wrote:
Old but yet to be released!!...In a couple of months to be exact!!




yeah but you also don't see people announcing z1010 or do you
50Cent
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Posted: 2004-03-06 21:11
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yeah but the Z1010 is too good to miss.
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mmsman
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Posted: 2004-03-06 22:08
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d'oh!
axxxr
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Posted: 2004-06-11 02:41
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Voq wins award




Sierra Wireless Voq Professional Phone™ wins Excellence in Product Innovation Award
British Columbia Technology Industries Association gives the 2004 award for superior innovation to the Voq Professional Phone at annual industry gala.

Vancouver, B.C. - June 9, 2004 - Sierra Wireless (Nasdaq: SWIR; TSX: SW) announced today the Voq Professional Phone was awarded the Excellence in Product Innovation Award from the British Columbia Technology Industries Association (BC TIA), at a ceremony last night in Vancouver. The annual award acknowledges a superior innovation or discovery in advanced technology and demonstrates an alternative solution or a next stage development in technology.

Click Here to read the full release. [addsig]
axxxr
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Posted: 2004-07-07 02:42
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The Voq is now available for sale in NL through the carrier KPN. They are selling for only $120 with a two year contract for voice and data which is quite a deal. I have searched their site high and low and can't find it right now but I would guess it will be there soon or maybe it is just that I can't understand a think that are saying because there is no English version of the KPN site that I could find.

http://www.kpn.com/ [addsig]
axxxr
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Posted: 2004-08-14 14:22
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Product Review:

Quote:

The Voq Professional Phone displays rugged construction. I particularly liked how secure the handset felt when gripped in the palm of one hand. I also discovered that the Voq's onboard joystick made it easy for me to find and select the handset features and functions that I wanted.

Road warriors have long been frustrated by the performance limitations of smartphone products that attempt to serve equally the needs of consumers and business professionals.
Thankfully, some smartphone manufacturers are abandoning the "one-design-fits-all" approach in preference for producing sophisticated new products that specifically target the needs of mobile workers.

The new Voq Professional Phone from Sierra Wireless neatly combines the features of a high-end mobile handset, a PDA and a two-way, multimedia-capable text-messaging device.

Under the Hood

Weighing in at a mere 5 ounces, the Voq Professional Phone is equipped with a 2.2-inch, 64K color display (176 x 220-pixel resolution) as well as a standard 12-key telephone keypad that flips open to reveal a Qwerty-style thumbpad for composing text messages or enabling users to surf the Web.

The handset also has a speedy 200 MHz Intel PXA262 processor under the hood, together with a respectable 48 MB of Flash memory and 32 MB of RAM.

The Voq Professional integrates a tri-band phone that is designed to run on GSM (global system for mobile communication) and GPRS (general packet radio services) networks operating in the 850 MHz (900MHz in Europe), 1800 MHz and 1900 MHz cellular bands.

Earlier this year, the Voq successfully completed network-compatibility testing on the nationwide GSM/GPRS network of AT&T Wireless (NYSE: AWE) .

The Voq Professional Phone also is equipped with a secure digital/multimedia card (SD/MMC) slot that gives the end-user an easy way to add more data-storage capacity. In addition, the handset ships with a 1,100 mA/hour battery that delivers up to 6 hours of talk time or 100 hours of operation in the standby mode.

Enhanced E-Mail Performance

Designed to run on Microsoft's Windows Mobile 2003 operating system, the Voq incorporates a secure, automatically updated e-mail capability that does not require the use of a desktop redirector or a dedicated server.

VoqMail Personal Edition offers support for both ISP and carrier-hosted IMAP4 mail accounts, and is included on all Voq phones at no extra charge. The professional edition of VoqMail supports the delivery of e-mail via Microsoft Exchange 2003, Microsoft Exchange 2000 and Microsoft Exchange 5.5, as well as Lotus Notes and Novell GroupWise.

VoqMail Professional Edition also enables users to program their devices to render audible, visible or vibrating alerts whenever an e-mail arrives from a user-specified e-mail address. Professional Edition users also can program their Voq handsets to provide an alert whenever an incoming e-mail contains specific keywords in the message's subject line.

Messaging and Web-Browsing

The Voq Professional Phone fully supports the short message service (SMS) and multimedia message service (MMS) standards that govern the two-way delivery of text, audio and pictures. An instant messaging (IM) capability is also provided by way of Microsoft MSN Messenger.

The Voq Professional Phone ships with Microsoft Pocket Internet Explorer, which is capable of displaying both Web and WAP pages that are written in HTML or WML (wireless markup language). Microsoft's smartphone browser software also supports the display of Web content that is based on ActiveX, J-script and xHTML.

The smartphone integrates speech recognition software from Advanced Recognition Technologies, which can adapt itself to recognize the unique characteristics of the owner's voice. The Voq Professional Phone also features predictive text-entry software from Zi that is designed to significantly increase the ease, speed and accuracy of message composition.

Highlights and Drawbacks

The Voq Professional Phone displays rugged construction that should enable the handset to survive a fair degree of physical punishment. I particularly liked how secure the handset felt when gripped in the palm of one hand. I also discovered that the Voq's onboard joystick made it easy for me to find and select the handset features and functions that I wanted to run with.

Yet another attraction is that the handset's VoqMail Professional Edition software incorporates an embedded virtual private network (VPN) client developed by Certicom that can provide mobile workers with secure network access to corporate files. The software's built-in VPN capability offers support for the majority of today's VPN gateways, without requiring I.T. shops to place an additional enterprise server behind the corporate firewall.

Flipped-Out Keypad

The Voq's flipped-out, text-entry thumbpad is another unique handset feature that sets the device apart from the rest of the smartphone pack. The unit's numeric phone keypad flips open to the left to reveal a Qwerty-style keyboard. When activating the thumbpad's dome-shaped keys, users receive a tactile response and hear audible feedback that lets them know that each keystroke has been completed successfully.

On the downside, entering a longer text message can be a slow and a rather tedious process when the key strokes are limited to the use of two thumbs. The phone's wedding to GSM/GPRS networks also means that the unit's wireless data transmissions will be appreciably slower than what CDMA-capable smartphones typically achieve.

I also would have been happier if Sierra Wireless had elected to give its customers a Bluetooth option for the phone. In addition, I found the 176 x 220-pixel resolution of the Voq's color screen to be a tad on the low side when it comes to displaying the content of Web pages.



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50Cent
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Posted: 2004-08-14 14:27
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i would expect it to be much more expensive! how come only $120! thats 65.1270 GBP (no i didnt do that in my head, currency converter )

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axxxr
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Posted: 2004-08-14 14:32
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Its a $120 when u sign up to a 2 year voice and data contract..why should it be any more expensive?its a good deal i reckon.
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Posted: 2004-08-14 14:33
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ahh right i missed that 2 year contract bit silly me.

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axxxr
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Posted: 2004-11-19 20:38
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The Register Review

It's the $64m question for smart-phone designers: where do you put the keyboard? Some, like Nokia, have dispensed with it altogether, falling back on the standard texting-centric numeric pad - or fitted it laterally inside the casing, a la the Communicator. Others have stretched their devices to accommodate a larger QWERTY pad, Blackberry-fashion.

When Sierra Wireless began showing off its Voq Pro handset, around about a year ago, it had one of the most novel solutions to this problem that I'd seen so far. The bottom third of the candy bar handset folds open right to left to reveal a rather good hard, calculator-style alphanumeric key lay-out: QWERTY with a separate numeric row above it - no need for a number-shift key here, I'm very pleased to say - and plenty of symbol characters just an Alt-key press away.

There's one major drawback: the keyboard's asymmetrically relative to the screen. With half of the keys poking out beyond the body of the handset, the Voq Pro keyboard isn't a good device for single-finger usage. It's rather uncomfortable to hold in your left hand and type with your right index finger. Swapping the phone from hand to the other is better, but still doesn't feel quite right - typing keys on the left-hand half seems somehow disassociated with what's going on on the screen. It's much better, however, when used for two-thumb typing, and here it almost rivals the various Blackberries and the Treo 600 family.

Having spent some time with a production Voq Pro rather than briefly playing with a prototype a year ago, I found that my impression of the handset's keyboard hadn't changed much. What has changed in the intervening 12 months is the number of alternative keyboard mechanisms that have come out of other handset makers' design departments. Nokia has shipped the 6820 with a more symmetrical keyboard, Sony Ericsson has equipped the P900 series with a small but serviceable QWERTY layout, RIM has its phone-sized 7100 series out and Siemens is about to ship the SK65 with is rotating keyboard.

All of them, like the Voq Pro before them, cram a working QWERTY layout into a standard candy bar form-factor, but they've made a better job of it. In short, the Voq Pro has been out-evolved already.

It's not helped by its retro styling. The Voq Pro is a large handset fashioned from straight lines, angles and a shallow curves. It looks and feels like a handset circa 1994 not 2004, an impression reinforced by the metallised plastic material from which it's made. There's no camera, though the phone ships with MMS software. And while an infrared port is provided in top of the device, the absence of Bluetooth is a big drawback.

So too is the memory card slot. While the opportunity to boost the Voq Pro's 32MB internal memory - just under 25MB of which is available to the user for both RAM and storage - is clearly a good thing, the design of the card slot leaves a lot to be desired. Located on the left-hand side of the handset, the slot sits amid a tight curve between the narrowest part of the handset and the thickest. The result is you've got only half the width of the card to push against. Worse, you have to push the card so far in before it engages the locking mechanism, it takes an age to get in or to release it for removal. Indeed, I had to push my card in with a flat-bladed screwdriver to extract it.

Given the slot's proximity to the battery hatch, heaven only knows why Sierra didn't just put the memory card connector under the power pack, next to the SIM slot, the way everyone else does. The battery itself is moulded onto the hatch and is easy to remove. It's a 1050mAh job and yields a decent smart phone-standard charge duration. No complaints there.

Inside the phone is a 200MHz Intel XScale PXA262 processor. It's getting a little long in the tooth, this chip, but the Voq Pro didn't feel sluggish. My recent review of HTC's 'Blue Angel' PocketPC phone was criticised in one quarter for failing to point out that the machine's use of a 400MHz PXA263 processor rather than more up to date PXA270 was a major drawback. I disagree, and I don't think the Voq Pro needs a significantly faster CPU either. Sure, they'd be nice to have, no question, but do they need them? They do not.

The Voq Pro's software goes a long way to compensate you for the failings and idiosyncrasies of the hardware. The Voq Pro runs Windows Mobile 2003 for Smartphone, first edition rather than second. But it still provides the crucial personal information management and phone tools that the more recent version offers. To the standard Inbox, Internet Explorer and MSN Messenger comms applications, Sierra has added an MMS client, jMMS Messaging; and it's bundled Westtek's ClearVue Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint, image and PDF document readers, ready to cope with email attachments.

Opening up the keyboard or pressing the blue tick button beneath the phone's navigation joystick and between the usual Home, back and call make and break buttons activates the MyVoq utility. It's essentially a smart search system that simultaneously compares what you're typing - numbers or words - against your contacts, notes, Internet Explorer Favourites and the results of previous searches. As you type, MyVoq lists matching database entries on the screen, pruning the list as you enter extra characters to narrow the search. It's a very fast way of getting to the right information without knowing, say, someone's full name. It's also got a built in calculator.

There are flaws: MyVoq doesn't search on all the fields of the contacts database, alas, so you can't search by email address or phone number, for example. And it's not smart enough to check against contacts stored on your SIM card. Nor does it peek into your calendar to help you quickly find that meeting you've got with your boss, but you can't quite remember when it is. It doesn't scan emails either, at least not the ones grabbed via the OS' own Inbox app.

Alongside MyVoq, Sierra has installed VoqMail, its corporate-oriented push-style email service that requires an IMAP4 mail server rather than POP3. The handset ships with the personal version of VoqMail, though some corporate-oriented VoqMail Pro will run for a short period, in a demo mode. VoqMail in either form is geared to deliver email continuously, push-fashion, and to minimise bandwidth at the same time, limiting not only how much you spend in GPRS fees but reducing the how long the radio is running for, thus conserving battery life.

VoqMail neatly tied into MyVoq, which can be used as a quick email composer, but since I was using a generic POP3 account, which VoqMail doesn't support, I couldn't use MyVoq for writing one-line emails either. Despite MyVoq's lack of integration with Inbox, that's nevertheless where you read mail coming in via VoqMail.

Verdict
I tried to like the Voq Pro, but while the handset won my applause for its keyboard, VoqMail and to a lesser extend MyVoq, its clunky, crude look and feel as a phone - it's as if Sierra ran out of time and had to ship the prototype rather than the refined handset it hoped to offer - raised a veritable chorus of disapproval. The lack of a camera doesn't bother me much, but the missing Bluetooth is certainly a deal-breaker.

If you particularly want a phone the offers a keyboard and a candy bar form-factor, the Sony Ericsson P910i, Siemens SK65 and Nokia 6820 offer better-designed handsets and, bought through a mobile phone network, at a much better price. If it's just the form-factor you like, try the Nokia's 6600 or the Orange SPV c500/i-mate SP3 - both compensate for the lack of a QWERTY keypad with Bluetooth.

The Voq Pro is flawed, but it's not a terrible product. The trouble is, as these examples show, it's too little, too late. ®

Sierra Wireless Voq Pro

Rating 60%

Pros — Good keyboard with separate numeric row; quick, cross-application searching system; bandwidth and power efficient email software

Cons — Crude, retrograde handset design; no Bluetooth support; no camera; limited memory


Price £360/$600 without connection

More info The Voq website: www.voq.com

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axxxr
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Posted: 2005-06-08 19:53
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Voq smartphone is dead [addsig]
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