What is it: Affordable touchscreen phone
What we think: Attractive and relatively cheap, but too feature-deficient to be an iPhone killer
LG Cookie KP500 Review
Reviewed on: 13 January 2009
Making sure that everyone gets a chance to buy a touchscreen phone, LG has come up with the sub-£100 KP500 Cookie.
Here we find out if there's more to it than just a fancy interface.
You can buy a KP500 from Carphone Warehouse on a pay-as-you-go deal or get it free on a monthly contract.
Design
Pitched as LG's most affordable touchscreen phone yet, the KP500 is also one of its most attractive. A slim, matte black casing houses a large touchscreen and a discreet 3-megapixel camera, on the back. It's understated and smart-looking -- more VW than BMW.
The touchscreen isn't made of glass, which is a shame, and uses resistive technology rather than capacitive, which means that you have to apply pressure in order for it to register what you're doing. That said, the screen is more responsive than we expected and, although a little slow at times, works well enough for texting and dialling.
Unlike the iPhone 3G, which has only one mechanical button underneath its screen, the KP500 has three: a send key, an end-call key and a shortcut key that gives access to your favourite apps. Above the end-call key, there's a small, orange LED, but we're not sure what it does besides glowing orange.

If you need a little more accuracy when drawing or using hand-writing recognition, for example, then the KP500 has a stylus tucked inside at the bottom right. You don't need to use it, but it does come in handy. Further up from where the stylus is hidden, on the top right-hand side, is a microSD slot so that you can add extra memory.
Features
At around £100, the KP500 is far cheaper than an iPhone or T-Mobile G1 but, as a consequence, it doesn't have as many features as a high-end smart phone -- there's no 3G, no Wi-Fi and no GPS. If you're looking for an iPhone killer, steer clear, because this isn't it. That doesn't mean to say, however, that the KP500 doesn't do anything.
In an effort to make things easier for your fingers, the KP500's homescreen displays widgets including a calendar, a clock, a shortcut to your pictures and a shortcut to the music player. You can move the widgets around with your finger and put them where they are most useful.
In addition to having a few widgets to play around with, you can also flick the screen left or right, like with HTC's TouchFLO 3D interface, and access another homepage that displays contacts in a thumbnail format so that you can quickly call them. It's a useful concept and makes calling using a touchscreen much easier.
The KP500's menu is similar to that of the Viewty or Renoir, and displays a series of finger-friendly icons that you tap to access. Our only niggle with the menu is that scrolling isn't always smooth and, depending on what you're used to, you might find it annoying.
Texting-wise, there are several options, including a standard keypad layout that you can use with predictive text, a full on-screen Qwerty keypad that we preferred to anything else, and hand-writing recognition. The hand-writing recognition wasn't as fast as we'd hoped, and we found it more frustrating to use than any of the other options.
The KP500's 3-megapixel camera offers a much faster experience. It takes acceptable video and still shots in daylight for MMS and Facebook photos, but, with no LED photo light or flash, don't expect great shots at night. Unlike the Viewty, the KP500 can't shoot slow-motion videos.
Bizarrely, one of the KP500's best features is its photo viewer, which uses a motion sensor to make sure pictures are always the right way up, and lets you flick through them by simply brushing your finger across the screen. There's no pinch-to-zoom functionality, but you can edit pics, adding text and a few effects.
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