LG InTouch Max GW620 review
Verdict:
A good first effort from LG, but the GW620 is already out of date thanks to Android 1.5, and the comfortable keyboard can't make up for its poor performance.
Review Date: 4 Feb 2010
Price when reviewed: £270
Supplier: http://www.play.com
Our Rating
User Rating
The InTouch Max GW620 is LG's first Android phone, and has a large slide-out QWERTY keyboard and a customised user interface, although you do have the choice of switching between this and the standard Android home screen. LG's interface differs only slightly at first glance, adding a small toolbar across the bottom of the home screen that matches the toolbar found on other LG phones.
Instead of Android's application screen, accessed by dragging a handle from the bottom of the home screen, you press a button to take you to LG's application screen, which is conveniently split into categories. When you hold an application icon, you can drag it to a different category, or drag it to the home screen by hovering over an area at the bottom of the screen.
LG has also changed the behaviour of the home screen. Android splits the home screen into three panes, and you can swipe side-to-side to choose a pane. LG's home screen wraps around, so that you can keep swiping to cycle through all the panes. LG has also included a few non-standard applications, such as the QuickOffice document viewer, and its own social aggregation features with what it calls Linkbook.
This isn't actually a separate application, but integrated into the address book. Once you've imported your Google contacts and added Facebook, Bebo or Twitter accounts, you can then link each Google contact with contacts in the other services. Note however that this process isn't automatic - you have to manually merge your contacts - and it only supports the three services mentioned above. It's really no match for HTC's Sense or Motorola's Motoblur software.
In fact, we were disappointed to find out that the GW620 uses Android 1.5 rather than the more recent 2.0 or 2.1 (although the latter is only on Google's own Nexus One for now). Not only does it miss out on the built-in social aggregation features of Android 2.0, such as support for multiple online accounts, but it also lacks multi-touch, and misses out on updates to the web browser and camera application. LG won't say whether they will offer a free update to a newer version of Android in the future.
Android 1.5 only supports screen sizes up to 320x480, which might explain why the GW620 doesn't have a larger touchscreen. Despite this, its screen is bright and has vibrant colours. It uses a resistive touchscreen which is very responsive - we assumed at first it was capacitive as the merest fingertip touch activated it - but it's not as smooth as the screens on the HTC Hero or Apple iPhone.
This is partly due to the poor performance of the GW620. LG doesn't specify what processor it uses, but it's rumoured to be the same 528MHz Qualcomm chip found in HTC's Hero. We criticised the early version of the Hero for being slow, but HTC subsequently brought out an update which sped things up dramatically. It remains to be seen whether LG will do the same, but in its current state the GW620 can prove sluggish.
The slide-out keyboard has five rows of keys, with the top row reserved for number keys so you don't have to use key combinations. The keys are large and far enough apart to make hitting them easy, but they are rather stiff. The screen only switches to landscape mode when you slide out the keyboard, overriding Android's settings. LG has replaced the standard Android virtual keyboard with its own version, which isn't half as good, so you're better off using the actual keyboard for all text entry.
LG has opted for a non-standard button layout on the face of the phone. There are touch-sensitive buttons for Home and Back commands, and the large central button is the Menu key, which we found rather unintuitive, although it also acts as the screen unlock button. There's no dedicated Search key such as you'll find on other Android handsets.
User Reviews
Independent customer reviews from Reevoo.com
InTouch Max GW620 scored:
7.7 out of 10
The 2 most helpful reviews based on 70 reviews:
Jon, Letchworth
9- Good Points
- Have found this to be a great phone. I was originally planning on popping it on eBay and putting the money towards an N900 but I opened up the box to give it a try and haven't looked back. Best bits are the keyboard, which is about as close to perfection as I've used on a mobile device (and I've owned around 10 qwerty devices), the general operating system Android which is a real step forward from even the latest version of Windows Mobile, and the sheer number of features. I also like the resistive screen (I dont really like capacitive as I'm a fan of using a stylus [not supplied with this phone]) which is bright, responsive and with a good resolution. The use of standard ports (i.e. standard 3.5mm headphone and micro usb) is also really handy, and the camera, GPS and web browser are all suprisingly capable.
- Bad Points
- I have a small gripe with the design- the two capacitive buttons on the front of the device. Its very easy to hit these by mistake since they only require a very light brush (not a 'press') to take you back to the homescreen from whatever you were in the middle of. Quite annoying. It lacks a few features/capabilities i'd expect e.g. sharing 3G over WiFi, bluetooth HID capability, and a few bits which should have come in the OS but which third party apps can fix (e.g. decent RSS, a usable task manager). The most significant negative aspect however has got to be the lack of an obvious upgrade path to a newer version of Android. That said, if this is your first android handset, version 1.5 probably wont dissapoint. Oh and I personally think since it is a resistive screen, they could have fitted a stylus in somewhere, just makes hitting those small text links in the browser that much easier :-)
brian, sunderland
8- Good Points
- great camera great value full keyboard great features
- Bad Points
- crashed a few times keep hitting the home key ( to sensitive)
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