Typical price: £300
What is it: Windows Mobile handheld with built-in sat-nav
What we think: Its sat-nav features are all up-to-date but it lacks a mobile phone
Mio P560 Review
Reviewed on: 22 January 2008
Mio produced the first Pocket PC handheld with a built-in GPS receiver back in 2004, and has delivered some solid phone and GPS-equipped Pocket PCs since then. The company is also established as a provider of mid-range standalone sat-nav devices. Mio's parent company Mitac bought navigation specialist Navman early this year, and the new combination has a strong share of the GPS market in Europe.
The new Mio P560 is a GPS-equipped handheld that can be purchased for around £300 with or without the company's own Mio Map navigation software.
Design
In
these days of pocket-friendly handhelds, the P560 seems like something
of a throwback. It's large and relatively heavy, measuring 72 by 115 by 18mm thick and weighing 170g.
The P560's size does provide room for a big 89mm (3.5-inch) screen, which dominates the front of the device. Its 240x320-pixel resolution is therefore something of a disappointment: surely VGA (480x640 pixels) would be more appropriate?
The on-screen touch icons are also relatively large. If you've tried smaller Windows Mobile handhelds and found your hands too chunky to cope well with the screen, you'll appreciate this.
Windows Mobile Pocket PCs are often button heavy, but Mio has taken a minimalist approach by locating just two buttons on the front of the device. These are built into a silver strip beneath the screen that runs around the back of the casing, breaking up an otherwise entirely black finish. One of these buttons opens the Windows Mobile Contacts application, while the other accesses the device's GPS receiver.
Between the buttons is a mini-joystick for cursor control. This sits in a hollow and when used is illuminated by an orange light. Both are nice design features, but we found the mini-joystick itself awkward to use. Its tip is level with the rest of the fascia, which made it difficult to get much purchase with a finger or thumb in order to push it around. When trying for left, right, up and down movement we often pressed in by mistake, selecting menu options we didn't really want.
As a result, we generally resorted to prodding the screen, using either a fingertip or the stylus. The latter sits in a slot on the back, at the bottom of the left-hand side. It's long as styli go at 10cm, but rather too lightweight for our liking.
Features
One
of the reasons the Mio P560 is not button heavy is that it lacks some
features we'd expect to see in a modern handheld. There's no camera,
which is unusual for any kind of Pocket PC. Nor is there a built-in phone, hence no need for Call and End buttons.
The absence of SIM card support is a rarity these days, and it means that many people will want to carry a separate mobile phone. Clearly Mio believes there's enough of a market to make the P560 a viable product, and it does have a couple of leading-edge features to help bolster its appeal.
For a start, there's a huge amount of memory: our review sample had no less than 4GB of flash storage, and with Windows Mobile Pocket PCs generally maxing out at 128MB or 256MB, this is an extremely generous allocation. After a hard reset our P560 reported 394MB of available 'flash disk' storage.
There's also an SD card reader on the right-hand side that's SDHC compliant. This means it can accommodate high-capacity SDHC SD cards. These currently top out at 8GB, but higher capacities are anticipated in due course.
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