Reviews of Latest T-Mobile Mobile Phones
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CNET UK > Reviews > Mobile Phones and Apps > Mobile Phones
T-Mobile G1 review
We finally got our hands on the Google's first stab at a mobile phone, and it was a good experience indeed. We were impressed by the G1's Web browser, which came closest to the iPhone's than any we've seen, and by the combination of features that make this phone a very competent messaging device Read more
16 October 2008 by Bonnie Cha and Nicole Lee
CNET UK > Reviews > Mobile Phones and Apps > Mobile Phones
T-Mobile Sidekick Slide review
The T-Mobile Sidekick Slide is a messenger handset aimed at the younger market. It's slim and has a Qwerty keyboard which makes texting and emailing easy. The menu looks good and is simple to navigate, you can fetch mail from different email accounts and read Word and PDF attachments Read more
16 November 2007 by Frank Lewis
CNET UK > Reviews > Mobile Phones and Apps > Mobile Phones
T-Mobile MDA Vario III review
For instant access to email and a Qwerty keypad that sits up like a mini-laptop, T-Mobile's MDA Vario III could be the perfect business phone. With its new hard-hitting features including GPS and a satellite navigation device, plus the network's HSDPA, this smart phone packs a major punch Read more
9 November 2007 by Andrew Lim
CNET UK > Reviews > Mobile Phones and Apps > Mobile Phones
T-Mobile Sidekick 3 review
T-Mobile's Sidekick 3 is hugely popular stateside and its Qwerty keyboard does make firing off texts and emails a breeze, but this is one chunky handset, and its multimedia features are nothing short of a joke Read more
27 February 2007 by Mark Harris
CNET UK > Reviews > Mobile Phones and Apps > Mobile Phones
T-Mobile Sidekick II review
A real one-off, the Sidekick II is like nothing we've come across before -- it's a phone with PDA pretensions, but it can't share information directly with a desktop computer or play music. It's got a keyboard hidden away, and it's more about messaging than about phone calls -- a niche product, if ever we saw one Read more
19 December 2005 by Sandra Vogel
