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Palm Pixi Plus review

Verdict:

Smart design and the intuitive webOS interface are let down by awful battery life and a lack of decent apps, and at £30 per month it's also over-priced

Review Date: 7 Jul 2010

Price when reviewed:

Reviewed By: Barry de la Rosa

Our Rating 2 stars out of 5

The new Palm Pixi Plus is a compact smartphone running Palm's innovative webOS. The case is sturdy, with a rubberised back shell, and the front of the phone is edge-to-edge clear plastic, so the screen merges with the glossy black surround. It's not as pretty as the larger Palm Pre, but the design will certainly stand out.

Underneath the screen is a swipe area where you can perform gestures to control webOS, and beneath this is a QWERTY keypad. It's not as precise as a BlackBerry's keyboard, but the clear rubber buttons have a distinct click which provides good feedback.

WebOS is a multi-tasking OS built for touchscreens, and it's intuitive and smooth. A small ribbon at the bottom of the display holds four main shortcuts and the application launcher, and it can be activated at any time by swiping upwards from the area beneath the screen.

Palm has bundled some decent apps to start with - there's a copy of DocView for office documents and a PDF viewer, as well as Google Maps, although without support for turn-by-turn navigation. Palm's App Catalog offers more apps, but the choice is limited and far inferior to Apple's App Store or Android's Market in both quality and quantity.

WebOS's strength however is in social aggregation. The Contacts, Email and Calendar apps integrate data from various accounts including Microsoft Exchange, Google, LinkedIn, Facebook and Yahoo!, and you can merge contacts from these accounts easily.

There's 7GB of usable internal storage (out of 8GB fitted), but no memory card slot. The 2-megapixel camera doesn't take brilliant shots or videos, but at least there's a flash to improve low-light snaps. Battery life is extremely poor, lasting only eight hours in our light usage testing, so you'll need to plug the Pixi in at every opportunity. Most annoyingly, when the battery is too low, you can't turn the phone on without charging it first.

Palm's excellent hardware and clever social aggregation software is undermined by the poor battery life and the lack of decent apps to expand the phone's utility. It's only available on contract with O2 currently, and at £30 per month there are far better phones you can get for your money, such as Samsung's Galaxy Portal.

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