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Toshiba TG01 Print E-mail
By Gears

So, the Toshiba TG01. This has been eagerly awaited by many. Toshiba have at last released a Windows Mobile phone and, after glancing at the specifications, they've come up with one hugely powerful device. For a start there's that capacious screen - a massive 4.1" at 400x800 and bigger than the Touch HD we reviewed a while back. Then there's the hugely powerful 1Ghz processor. A 1Ghz processor .. in a phone! Who'dathunkit? I've still got computers in my loft with less power than this phone - and they ran Windows 98! There's a shake control, accelerometer for the auto-screen-rotation, WiFi 802.11b/g, Bluetooth 2.0, aGPS, a 3.1 megapixel camera and 3G HSDPA / HSUPA connectivity.


First impressions? Well, it definitely feels big. Having nothing this large in the Windows Mobile market makes it feel larger than your existing handset but it stops short of feeling silly when you're using it to make calls. Toshiba have done an incredible slimming job on this though. It's probably won some Weight Watchers awards due to the painfully thin frame. Combined with the tallness of the handset it feels a little like monolith from Space Odyssey 2001.


As usual we've recorded a couple of videos. The first is an unboxing and a look at the contents..


The second video is a tour around the software and picture viewer plus some browsing..


So let's take a quick tour of the device. As I mentioned in the video it can be a little difficult to fathom out which way up the device should be. The zoom bar at the bottom is easily confused for the earpiece when you're in a rush and you can end up spinning the unit.


At the bottom there's just three controls which are all touch-sensitive. The Home key, which takes you to the main screen (the Orange or Toshiba one, whichever one you choose), the zoom bar (which helps with browsing etc) and the back button to pop you out of programs and apps. Press that zoom bar and drag onto the screen and you'll get a gesture control system, which lets you move an on-screen mouse pointer around. This is for navigating fiddly websites and clicking on links if you find that zooming and tapping on the screen doesn't do it.


The device itself is mainly black with a thin metal strip around the outer edge and highlighted silver icons on the front. The left strip has the power button (you'll be hitting that a lot to wake the device from it's power-save mode) and the volume controls. Press and hold the volume "up" key to lock the device or tap the keys to control the volume of the device or the in-call volume.



The top and bottom of the handset don't have any buttons or ports, but the right side has a port which acts as a charge point, sync cable hook-up and audio port. This is behind a flap which is a little tricky to remove, mainly using your thumb nail to pop it off and reveal the port. A set of headphones comes in the box with a normal 3.5mm plug on the end. A converter comes to plug the included headphones into the phone or you can use your own if you wish.


Below that is the camera button which, strangely, doesn't activate the camera when you press it quickly. Instead you have to press and hold it to crank up the camera app, which is a bit of a change from most Windows Mobile phones. Once the camera application is running you tap it once to take a photo. My pet peeve re-appears here. From new the camera is set to 640x480 for photos, which is a rubbish resolution. This isn't a dig at Toshiba, lots of handset manufacturers forget to set the camera options and you'll end up taking your first few dozen photos on 640x480 with the "medium quality" setting. You can't use the zoom bar to zoom in either, which is a shame. The on-screen slider needs to be used instead.

Amongst my first impressions the words "thin" and "lightweight" came to mind. However, I was also thinking "Where's the call button? Where's the drop button?" The answer is that they're on the screen, wedged in next to the standard on-screen softkeys. They're given just a few pixels of room, which can make activating them a little tricky if you're on the go, but they do the job well enough.


Around the back the 3.2 megapixel camera sits on the top of the rear panel. No flash here. The majority of the back panel is a detachable battery cover which slides down to reveal the 1000mAh battery, microSD slot and the SIM card slot. Orange have kindly provided a massive 8GB microSD card which is completely blank - loads of space for your movies, MP3's and documents. A nice little present from Orange! The battery cover is actually quite bendy but does have enough give for even the most ham-fisted reviewer.


Notice something missing? Well, if you watched the vids above you'll already know. The stylus is in the box but there's no-where to stash it on the phone. It's too thin for a stylus anyway, but I'm guessing that Toshiba figured that the size of the screen and the on-screen control system is enough for anyone. In truth it is, plus there's a new on-screen keyboard with big keys for quick data entry.



On the wide-screen orientation this is even better but we would've loved to have seen some sort of on-board error correction system. There's no on-screen notification telling you which key you're pressing either and, to make matters worse, the space bar has been push over to the left when you're in widescreen mode, yet it's in the normal place when you're in the portait setting. Who thought that was a good idea? Were two different people working on each on-screen keyboard? To add insult to injury it's not even a bar on the widescreen version any more, it's a small key like all the rest. When I did start typing the auto-complete system kicked in and put suggestions over the top of the words I'd written, making reviewing your text a tricky process.




In other respects it's fairly easy to use your finger to do most tasks on the phone, although that's mainly due to the size of the screen and the obvious increase in icon sizes. The stylus itself is a small plastic thing which dangles from a small cord. I'm guessing it's supposed to hang off your key rings or something.


To switch the screen orientation you simply rotate the handset, but I found that the orientation sensor was a little trigger-happy to say the least. After pressing and holding the power button for slightly longer than should be necessary you then don't really know which way the screen is going to decide to show - sometimes it's portrait, sometimes widescreen. This can make dialling a number even trickier as you chase the small "call" key around the screen in some sort of demented game. Think about it - when you press the power "wake up" button you do tend to tilt the device to the right a little so your thumb can hit it. This causes the phone to wake up in widescreen, but sometimes not. This will have you quickly going into the Settings and then "Motion Sensor Settings" to either turn it off or turn on the "shake control" which can be set to enter the phone call screen. I found this a much better method of accessing my dialpad, rather than tapping the small green "call" key.  On the right-hand screenshot below you can see the changes I made...


Making a call is easy enough with the help of the contacts synchronisation - all your Outlook contacts are automaticalluy pushed to the phone of course, as are your appointments, tasks and more. One thing I did find however was that, once in a call, the screen would go blank. If you wanted to end a call - let's say you wanted to end a call quickly - you have to press and hold the power button, then wait for the screen to wake up, then press the call drop key on-screen. This is a slightly annoying process, especially when you just want to end the call and stuff it back in your pocket.


Inside

So many devices arrive at Coolsmartphone towers with the HTC TouchFLO interface. The reason? They're mostly HTC devices :) This obviously isn't, so we're not going to see the TouchFLO interface here. Instead toshiba have plumbed for this stripes system. The system doesn't perhaps have the graphical wow-factor of the TouchFLO system but does instead offer a method of accessing programs and regularly used phone features.


The Toshiba homescreen isn't the only option though, with a second Orange homescreen available with the usual stip down the left side. The Toshiba screen is probably our preference out of the two, which can be customized by altering the stipes, moving them around and changing the colours. The icons on each stripe can be a little tricky to press and are quite a bit smaller than those on the standard Windows Mobile 6.1 programs list.




Ahh yes, Windows Mobile 6.1. It's July 2009 and this device is using Windows Mobile 6.1 still. Although the Toshiba 3D Menu is pretty it's all too easy to drop into the Windows Mobile 6.1 interface.


Let's be honest here, HTC have gone to great lengths to hide the standard 6.1 interface. Why? Because it's ruddy ugly and older than the tree at the bottom of our garden. Sorry Microsoft, but the size of the excellent Toshiba screen makes me think I'm using Pocket PC 2003 again. Look at the screenshots from this M2000 review and see if you can spot a difference. Go on. I dare you.




This isn't Toshiba's fault. I think it's probably our fault. We've got so used to seeing HTC-built phones with a full graphical interface wrapping itself over the old Windows Mobile 6.1 interface. Seeing it again after all this time is like seeing yourself naked in front of the mirror. Eeekk.. It doesn't look as good as it used to. Plus, things aren't all bad. I've already had emails from happy TG01 users who have installed new control systems such as PointUI. One email states...

"Just wanted to say that I have a Toshiba TG01 and have downloaded Pointui to it. What a difference! Wow! Much more responsive, especially with screen
tilting."

This is where third-party apps come to the rescue and it's great to have Windows Mobile in that respect.

The on-board software supplied by Toshiba / Orange is great. Orange have also chucked in that 8GB microSD card too, which is fantastic for putting your videos onto. The CorePlayer software shows a large amount of file formats - MP4 files zoom along in full-screen glory, plus you can grab YouTube videos too. The video viewer is silky smooth and doesn't skip or fragment. As a movie or video viewer it's top-notch



Oh, did I mention YouTube? You can watch YouTube videos in the Internet Explorer browser. The rendering is definitely faster than before too. URL's can be entered with the on-screen keyboard in either orientation and favourites added. The zoom bar is a little hit-and-miss here though, with your thumb flailing around on the silver strip with the browser stubornly refusing to zoom in any direction for the majority of the time. However, the on-screen zoom control can be used instead and there's the usual copy / paste functions. It's still sometimes out-classed by the Opera browser we've seen elsewhere but the large screen makes browsing a joy and, with the WiFi and mobile connectivity it's very quick at grabbing data.



Below you can see out site - the first is the normal view whilst the second is zoomed out. Don't forget that all of these screenshots have been HALVED in size to be viewable here. The actual image on the phone screen is a lot clearer and more defined.




YouTube videos can also be uploaded directly from this handset with the VideoEditor software. This is supplied by a company called ArcSoft and lets you edit a variety of video formats, then upload your masterpiece directly to YouTube for viewing in the on-board CorePlayer or Internet Explorer software.



You can also create a storyboard or make a movie from your phone pictures. This is a cool little app which I'd like to see on more handsets. We've seen this software supports MPEG-4, H.263, H.264, AAC, MP3, AMR, and QCELP..



The PhotoBase application is a gallery viewer and again the 1GHZ CPU shines through when you're using apps like this. Photos zoom in and out with speed and smoothness, whilst choosing and loading pictures is a breeze. You can slide your finger to the left or right whilst viewing a picture to hop to the next image, plus you can choose to edit / crop the photo, adjust the brightness, email it or watch all the pictures in a lovely slideshow system.

The device seems to accept screen-switching in all apps, which is good. Even the homescreens work in both orientations however some screen switching is slower than expected and adds to the frustration when you're trying to find the soft-keys or call-keys in a hurry. If you move it to landscape mode you may be forgiven for thinking that it's not doing anything, so you tilt the phone back and press the green "Call" key. It's about now that the 1Ghz CPU suddenly fires into life and switches into landscape mode, fooling you into thinking that you can rotate the device that way again - but no, it's still catching up on your movements and goes straight back into portrait. Agh... I turned this off pretty much straight away.

Other apps like Orange Maps, the Video Editor, PhotoBase and Adobe Reader work with blistering pace and seem to squeeze more performance out of the CPU than the Microsoft on-board apps such as Messaging and Email.

You get the Office Mobile suite, with Excel, OneNote, PowerPoint and Word being more-than-usable on the sizable screen. There's also a handy cable in the box that'll let you stick your USB pen-drive into the TG01, meaning that this instantly sucks documents and other media directly into the device at crazy speeds.

 

Apps can of course be downloaded but currently there's no on-board app-store to get your fix from. The Google Maps app is a good starter and works brilliantly with the on-board GPS - you can snoop around neighbourhoods and zoom into gardens or get directions. This being WinMo also means that you can use your own ringtones, adjust the backdrop, install games and Bluetooth files around easily.

Camera

The camera isn't too bad at all and focuses well. After adjusting the resolution up the maximum resolution we can very nice results in outdoor light but, without any flash, it struggled in low-light. The camera preview screen lets you choose picture style, resolution, focus and so on. You can also hop into the gallery or switch to video mode.


Below are some examples of photos I took. Don't forget that you can click on the images to get the larger version.


Conclusion

Everything good about this phone comes from third-party apps and the hardware Toshiba have on tap. The homescreen is good, CorePlayer is great, the Orange Maps system is great, the PhotoBase application is great. The hardware is fantastic too, but Windows Mobile 6.1 feels old now and it's just not covered up enough. The experience ends up being a little disjointed and I kinda wish that 6.5 was on-board with perhaps a Toshiba GUI which soaks itself into the OS deeper. The phone spec is simply excellent, but a great spec and a delivery to market isn't everything.

What gets me is that this phone and this entire review would be so different if I'd put an illegal ROM onto it from the likes of xda-developers.com. The 6.1 OS just pops it's head into things too much and the out-of-box experience isn't great. The tilt sensor should be disabled or have it's sensitivity adjusted, the OS should be hidden more or updated and there should be some real call / drop keys on the front - if only so I can tell which way up the phone should go. After a few minutes you can suddenly make this phone much better. The addition of the PointUI interface for example will make this seem like a completely different phone.

The Toshiba TG01 is a thin handset with a gorgeous screen, lightening performance, excellent specs but suffers from a strange button implementation and an ageing OS which isn't buried down far enough.

Link - Orange.co.uk (Prices vary depending on contract)
Buy - Toshiba Deals

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