By Alex Villafania
INQUIRER.net
TAIWANESE firms are up to the task when it comes t
o personal digital assistants. Take, for example, Dopod and their new owners HT
C, who were both making their own PDA phones before recently tying the knot, so
to speak. Both companies churned out new models against the dominance of HP (i
Paq) and even RIM (Blackberry). Most of the PDA phones that come out of Taiwan
are actually appealing to the mass market. However, there are a few firms that
still have some way to go before cutting the grade in the cutthroat PDA phone m
arket.
One of the new entrants to the PDA manufacturing market is Asus, one of the big
gest PC components manufacturers from Taiwan. They only started coming out with
a PDA a few years back. Their latest is the P735, a mid-level PDA phone that c
ompetes in the same category as Dopod and O2. The P735 boasts of several featur
es not normally seen in the same mid-level model category.
For most buyers of PDAs, it's function over form but usually the design of the
PDA becomes a major giveaway. For the P735, the design is as good as a brick. M
ostly housed in plastic, the P735 is colored brushed silver metal and dark gray
silver in some parts, making it look like it just came out of sheet metal manu
facturing. While the buttons are neatly laid out with their functions engraved
into the metal, it seems as if the designer has yet to do some tweaking with th
e final look of the buttons. Even the front speaker doesn't show as much simple
flair as its other Taiwanse brethren. The P735's speaker is merely a slat on t
op of the screen.
But usually, beauty is just skin-deep and in the case of the P735, it's just th
e cover. Asus may have taken away the design factor but it did stock up the P73
5 with a number of features usually reserved for the elite models of other bran
ds. The P735 is one of the first PDA phones to have Windows Mobile version 6. T
his allows the P735 to function like a real PDA phone as it can connect to a lo
cal cellular provider depending on the SIM card that has been inserted. If the
cellular network provider supports UMTS, the P735 can easily access the Interne
t. It also boasts of WLAN and Bluetooth connectivity, which can be toggled on a
nd off easily through the unit. On the other hand, the model does not support H
SDPA, which is a much faster wireless connectivity. However, the UMTS connectio
n still does the trick. Besides, the only time anyone could appreciate HSDPA is
when they are downloading large files or viewing videos.
Speaking of which, Windows Mobile 6 features its own multimedia player that can
run more common types of videos, such as MPEG and AVI files. Downloading codec
s for the Windows Media Player would allow more users to view other types of vi
deo formats on the P735.
One of the applications present in this model is the Remote Presenter that can
turn the P735 into a remote control for multimedia presentation projected from
a PC or laptop that has Bluetooth. Another application is the My Secrets applic
ation that encrypts certain files to prevent it from being viewed when the PDA
phone is accessed by another person. It also has the WorldCard Mobile applicati
on that captures the content of business cards taken by its digital camera. Ano
ther bundled application is Skype Mobile, which makes the P735 doubly useful as
it can connect to other Skype users through voice over IP.
The P735âs digital camera is also one that it can boast about as it has 2 megap
ixel resolution and also has its own auto-focus and a flash. The camera has a p
reset number of shooting modes corresponding to the need of the photographer an
d the availability of light. Of course, it has its own video recording capabili
ty but the video is limited only to 320 by 240.
Going back to the buttons, the unit has 11 of them. Perhaps the designers did i
ntentionally make the buttons "disappear" into the casing of the unit to give i
t a nice simple look. The front side has six of the buttons, two of which have
a double-purpose. There are the call/end call keys on either side of the unit,
the four-way button, the enter button in the middle, the video call button on t
he left side, the task switcher on the right and two programmable function butt
ons on the upper left and right side. Meanwhile, a volume control button is on
the left side along with a digital shutter button for the camera. The left side
has hold and voice recorder buttons, which are new features in a PDA phone.
The P735 uses an Intel (now Marvell) 520 Mhz processor with 256MB or RAM, a far
cry from the 400Mhz Xscale of Intel and 64MB RAM in some PDAs in its class. Th
is makes the P735 among the fastest PDA phones in the market.
Design-wise, the Asus P735 is as stiff as a brick and its color scheme makes it
seem like a prototype unit that has yet to come up with a proper casing. It is
surprising, though, that with the great big number of Windows Mobile-based PDA
s out there, Asus has yet to come up with one that would turn heads and make pe
ople ask what it is. Still, what it lacks in good looks, it compensates for wit
h great functionality.
TAIWANESE firms are up to the task when it comes t
o personal digital assistants. Take, for example, Dopod and their new owners HT
C, who were both making their own PDA phones before recently tying the knot, so
to speak. Both companies churned out new models against the dominance of HP (i
Paq) and even RIM (Blackberry). Most of the PDA phones that come out of Taiwan
are actually appealing to the mass market. However, there are a few firms that
still have some way to go before cutting the grade in the cutthroat PDA phone m
arket.
One of the new entrants to the PDA manufacturing market is Asus, one of the big
gest PC components manufacturers from Taiwan. They only started coming out with
a PDA a few years back. Their latest is the P735, a mid-level PDA phone that c
ompetes in the same category as Dopod and O2. The P735 boasts of several featur
es not normally seen in the same mid-level model category.
For most buyers of PDAs, it's function over form but usually the design of the
PDA becomes a major giveaway. For the P735, the design is as good as a brick. M
ostly housed in plastic, the P735 is colored brushed silver metal and dark gray
silver in some parts, making it look like it just came out of sheet metal manu
facturing. While the buttons are neatly laid out with their functions engraved
into the metal, it seems as if the designer has yet to do some tweaking with th
e final look of the buttons. Even the front speaker doesn't show as much simple
flair as its other Taiwanse brethren. The P735's speaker is merely a slat on t
op of the screen.
But usually, beauty is just skin-deep and in the case of the P735, it's just th
e cover. Asus may have taken away the design factor but it did stock up the P73
5 with a number of features usually reserved for the elite models of other bran
ds. The P735 is one of the first PDA phones to have Windows Mobile version 6. T
his allows the P735 to function like a real PDA phone as it can connect to a lo
cal cellular provider depending on the SIM card that has been inserted. If the
cellular network provider supports UMTS, the P735 can easily access the Interne
t. It also boasts of WLAN and Bluetooth connectivity, which can be toggled on a
nd off easily through the unit. On the other hand, the model does not support H
SDPA, which is a much faster wireless connectivity. However, the UMTS connectio
n still does the trick. Besides, the only time anyone could appreciate HSDPA is
when they are downloading large files or viewing videos.
Speaking of which, Windows Mobile 6 features its own multimedia player that can
run more common types of videos, such as MPEG and AVI files. Downloading codec
s for the Windows Media Player would allow more users to view other types of vi
deo formats on the P735.
One of the applications present in this model is the Remote Presenter that can
turn the P735 into a remote control for multimedia presentation projected from
a PC or laptop that has Bluetooth. Another application is the My Secrets applic
ation that encrypts certain files to prevent it from being viewed when the PDA
phone is accessed by another person. It also has the WorldCard Mobile applicati
on that captures the content of business cards taken by its digital camera. Ano
ther bundled application is Skype Mobile, which makes the P735 doubly useful as
it can connect to other Skype users through voice over IP.
The P735âs digital camera is also one that it can boast about as it has 2 megap
ixel resolution and also has its own auto-focus and a flash. The camera has a p
reset number of shooting modes corresponding to the need of the photographer an
d the availability of light. Of course, it has its own video recording capabili
ty but the video is limited only to 320 by 240.
Going back to the buttons, the unit has 11 of them. Perhaps the designers did i
ntentionally make the buttons "disappear" into the casing of the unit to give i
t a nice simple look. The front side has six of the buttons, two of which have
a double-purpose. There are the call/end call keys on either side of the unit,
the four-way button, the enter button in the middle, the video call button on t
he left side, the task switcher on the right and two programmable function butt
ons on the upper left and right side. Meanwhile, a volume control button is on
the left side along with a digital shutter button for the camera. The left side
has hold and voice recorder buttons, which are new features in a PDA phone.
The P735 uses an Intel (now Marvell) 520 Mhz processor with 256MB or RAM, a far
cry from the 400Mhz Xscale of Intel and 64MB RAM in some PDAs in its class. Th
is makes the P735 among the fastest PDA phones in the market.
Design-wise, the Asus P735 is as stiff as a brick and its color scheme makes it
seem like a prototype unit that has yet to come up with a proper casing. It is
surprising, though, that with the great big number of Windows Mobile-based PDA
s out there, Asus has yet to come up with one that would turn heads and make pe
ople ask what it is. Still, what it lacks in good looks, it compensates for wit
h great functionality.

Great review!!
However, according to Asus brochures and Wellcom, the P735 is 3.5G/HSDPA ready.
Is this accurate?
Thanks and more power!
Royce