Gilbo, my phone is the
PalmOne Treo 650. It's a 3rd or 4th generation convergence device with a current-gen Palm OS PDA & phone (CDMA or GSM) put together. As such, you get the capabilities / performance of a modern cel phone combined with the usefulness and expandability of a PDA. What the Treo does better than others is the integration of the two. Now, some of the advanced functions take third party apps, and some of those aren't free, but they are all relatively inexpensive and at least the capability to extend the platform is there.
As for cel phone reviews, I don't think I've had any better luck than you have. I think there are fundamental problems when comparing phones unless you get very specific in feature-sets. Comparing based on price doesn't do much good as some phones are pricier than others yet lack some of the features. Motorola's Razor, for instance, is a fashion statement more than anything else. Decent phone, but it's formfactor does not allow for a sufficient battery and some other features are missing from what many would expect from a $500ish device.
When cel phone feature expansion, by and large SD is the slot of choice. I'm sure it's due to the physical size more than anything else. 1GB SD cards are very common for well under $100 and 2GB cards are days away from hitting the market (priced in the $160-225 range to start). 3-4GB cards are possible, although most cards are formatted FAT16 so to break the 2GB barrier on the card may pose compatability problems for devices that can't handle FAT32 (or whatever filesystem it uses).
Here's how my Treo is loaded:
- Service provider: SprintPCS (CDMA), $10/month unlimited data (grandfathered; new subscribers pay $15). Data speed is 80-120Kbps. I also have 600 day minutes + unlimited night/weekend. Total with taxes & data plan is under $70 a month.
- Sprint Business Connection Enterprise Edition email/calendar/contacts syncronizes over the air with our corporate Exchange servers. Also supports regular POP3 email.
- VersaMail comes with the unit free and can be used for POP3 and I think IMAP mail. Can be used with GMail.
- RealPlayer comes built-in, but I added PocketTunes as it's a better product and I hate RealAnything. PocketTunes supports WMA, MP3, OGG, etc. and also supports ShoutCast, which lets me stream audio from a ShoutCast server, which can be my home PC.
- Ringo Pro lets me play MP3s (via PocketTunes) as my phone's ringer.
- SMS: built-in
- Productivity: DataViz Docs to Go lets me view/create/edit Word, Excel, PowerPoint docs on the Treo.
- HotSync backs the unit up to my PC.
- ZLauncher: Replacement application launcher & file manager, skinnable, lots of features.
- Mergic VPN for connecting to the corporate VPN
- Mochasoft TN5250 for Telnetting into my AS/400s.
- MobileTS for establishing Terminal Services sessions on the corporate Windows machines. From the phone.
- 138000 word dictionary
- Zip file processor
- World Clock for the time anywhere & figuring time zone differences.
- Calculator w/scientific mode, calendar, addess book, etc.
- Address book is integrated with the phone. Go to Contacts, find the person (type their initials), hit the green button. For that matter, find a phone number on a web site and click it to dial.
- BackupMan Backs the unit up to SD card. Handy for regular scheduled backups and I can restore the device w/o being connected to my PC if necessary.
- Blazer web browser, javascript-capable, supports Favorites, etc.
- SplashID: AES encrypted password manager
- Card Export II to use the Treo's SD card as a USB Flash Drive
- Games: lots
- BlueTooth for wireless HotSyncing, network access (sharing file on my laptop), printing, and most important, a wireless headset (Cardo Scala 500). Very nice for taking calls while driving as it's a true hands-free solution.
- Camera: VGA res camera w/2x digital zoom. OK in low light conditions. Nothing fancy but useful for quick-n-dirty pics. Has a mirror next to the lense so you can face the cam towards you and see yourself to center the shot. No flash. Records to RAM or SD.
- Camcorder: 176x144 or 320x240, 15FPS, records straight to RAM or SD. Duration limited to storage available. Uses the phone's mic for audio.
- GrxView image viewer
- Adobe PDF for Palm. Crappy product as it requires PDFs be 'converted' for the Palm platform.
- SD slot: 1GB PQI card that holds MP3s and low-use applications
- Infrared port for syncing, printing, beaming contact info or apps, or using as a TV remote control.
- QWERTY keyboard, 5-way nav, etc. Really, go to Best Buy or a phone store and try it out.
- 320x320x65K color touch screen.
- Removeable battery so if your runtime still isn't long enough you can buy extra batteries for $30 per.
Stuff I haven't loaded on yet:
- JVM (IBM WebSphere Micro Edition)
- NES Emulator for even more games
- PDANet to use the Treo as a wireless modem for my laptop
- Kinoma or MMPlayer for video playback. Plenty of folks are ripping DVDs or TV episodes to fit the screen size. Seems like a decent way to pass a lunch hour.
I'm sure there's stuff I've forgotten, but there is just a ton of functionality in the product. For Orange network users in the UK, the phone is Push-to-talk capable a la Nextel. Sprint should be enabling that in the US sometime. The phone should run the BlackBerry for Palm app once PalmSource (not PalmOne) gets off their lazy butt and releases it.