The OQO Says “BUY ME”
Handtops.com keeps a close eye on ultra pcs. You know, the ones that can fit in your pocket and fully run 32bit operating systems (and their games…and their games!) We love the gaming potential of these micro form factor pcs.
Now, Handtops.com is telling us that you can actually buy a ultra pc in the states. Gasp! Now what will we have to speculate on? Yes, it’s true, the OQO model 1 is for sale along with plenty of launch quality accessories. With a starting price at $1899, you can order the model 1 directly from OQO. For that price point, we can finish paying off our car loan. But, tempt us not gadget devils, the OQO would be a nice way to get a C&C fix while on the road.
Comments
So, this may be one of the worst designed portables since the original NGage?
I wonder if any of those sites with early PSPs want to check it’s heat output….
Robin, thank you for your great comments. We’ll definitely pass on this current offering. Too bad the flipstart isn’t out yet.
dmg, we hope to import a launch PSP. We’ve been on Lik-Sang’s list for a while now. They still haven’t announced shipping information.
Thats thorough.
Gee, I want to burn my hands on something I spent a lot of money on. Yep. Sign me up!
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I have one of these and… What a disappointment!
1) The display setting it comes with is too dim to clearly read. In order to see the screen properly you have to set it at it’s brightest and that *really* impacts battery life.
2) There is no Standby button - you have to go to Start - Shutdown etc… which is annoying when you need it off in a hurry.
3) The wifi is absolutely useless - unless you are within 15 feet of a hotspot forget about it. Every single other laptop I have goes at least 50 feet without too much problem. The main reason I wanted this machine was for using at hotspots - but unless you can get right next to one…
4) The tablet-like pen and software is beyond useless - you can only calibrate top left and bottom right for the central area of the screen. You cannot reliably use any of the outlying 8 or so millimeters. What do OQO say? They suggest you resize all your scrollbars to make them big enough. Oh - and you don’t get MS tablet software or handwriting recognition or anything - the tablet pen is totally useless in my opinion.
5) The heat output of this device is so much as to be unbearably hot - I mean it you practically burn your fingers. Ouch!
6) The display is messed up. It looks like OQO have taken a Pocket PC-type display and rotated it 90 degrees. This means that the left and right eyes see different levels of brightness and it’s very tiring on the eye. Try rotating your laptop screen sideways and you’ll see how bad it is.
7) Speaking of which, there is no facility to rotate the screen and use it in portrait mode - which *would* be much more readable. You *can* flip the screen 180 degrees but guess what? The mouse doesn’t flip so it goes in all the wrong directions.
9) It is impossible to use the OQO in low light. With a laptop enough light comes from the screen to light up the keyboard. The design of the OQO does not allow this. Therefore surfing while watching TV can only be done with a main light on. The keyboard should have had a light built in and used translucent keys.
10) The resolution of the screen really makes it impossible to read most web pages because it is set at an effective 1024 x 768 (well the top half of it anyway) but in such a small unit text size is miniscule. You can improve it a little by installing Microsoft ClearType but the only way I could really use it was to install Mozilla Firefox which *properly* enlarges all browser text at a single key press (MSIE doesn’t really do this very well). But… It does make web pages look very weird and not how they were designed. OQO also preset all Windows system fonts to their largest which sort-of helps - but Microsoft don’t use these settings for important dialog boxes etc so you still have to squint and bring the unit close to your eyes anyway.
11) There is no built-in speaker - not even an itty bitsy one - you can only plug in headphones.
12) Speaking of headphones… I was hoping to be able to use this device like a wifi Ipod but the wifi is so poor you simply CANNOT stream any audio over this device unless you stand still next to the access point. And with only a 20Gb drive, if you have a lot of music you won’t be able to copy much across to the OQO.
13. The Graphic speed of the OQO is appalling. One simple test is to go into Windows Media Player - play an MP3 and try to watch a visualization. You would think you were back on a 286. Or you can place a few photos on the OQO then select the “My Picture Slideshow” screensaver - make sure “Use transition effects between pictures” is enabled. Just watch how pitifully long it takes just to fade between two pictures. I mean it - I was shocked - it’s truly flabbergasting that OQO thought this was acceptable.
In summary. OQO market this as a single PC for work, home and travel. It is NOT. It’s a slightly interesting toy to travel with (better buy another battery for $150 if you want more than 2 hours though) - but as a home or work PC PLEASE do not be fooled you will be totally disappointed and waste your money - it will be the slowest desktop PC you had since your last 286!
I signed up for and paid for one of the very first of these off the factory line because I was so impressed by it’s spec. I have now contacted OQO to return my unit - even though they will charge a 10 percent restocking fee - at least I’ll get 90% of my money back - maybe I’ll save it and buy the Vulcan Flipstart instead when it comes out…