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Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/09/19/review_spv_c550/

Orange SPV C550 music phone

By Trusted Reviews
Published Monday 19th September 2005 13:56 GMT

Review In the early days of Windows Mobile smart phones Orange was the UK's leading light, launching the first UK device way back at the tail end of 2002. Since then Orange has been joined by other operators and by operator-agnostic vendors, but the company has kept its own line flowing with a steady range of new entrants. The latest of these is the SPV C550, a blatant attempt to jump on the music bandwagon, but with a few other nice plus points too, writes Sandra Vogel.

In some ways this is a strange device for Orange to have launched. It runs Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition, but Windows Mobile 5.0 is due to make its first appearance in a smart phone before much longer. It's already made its PDA debut in the O2 XDA Exec, for which Orange has a dead ringer, the SPV M5000, coming soon. Smart-phone variants can't be far behind.

Orange SPV C550

On the other hand, the C550 deals with a number of issues its predecessor, the C500, suffered from, and updates some core specifications. In so doing it helps maintain Orange's position as arguably the UK's premier Windows smart-phone provider.

The C550 gives away its music playing pretensions immediately, thanks to four comparatively large buttons that sit above the number pad. From left to right these are marked with icons for back, pause/play, forward and a musical note. Pressing the last of these launches Orange's Music Player, designed to help you download tunes from Orange's online service. You can change the setting so that this button launches Windows Media Player instead, by going to the Settings area, choosing Button Settings and making your tweak. I mention this in detail as Orange doesn't explain the 'how to' in its device manual.

Above this quartet of buttons sit another four, this time very tiny yet surprisingly easy to hit. Two are softmenu keys, one a back button and one a Home key that takes you from whatever you are doing directly back to Orange's Home screen. Beneath the music buttons is the number pad, complete with Start Call and End Call keys and a joystick for navigating around the screen.

The whole button arrangement is a lot neater than it was on the C500, and the loss of the long, narrow navigation bar that provided directional movement on that earlier handset will please many. The joystick is certainly both more responsive and intuitively easier to use.

The C550 is remarkably similar in size and weight to the C500 (its 107g and 10.8 x 4.6 x 1.8cm compare to the C500's 106g and 10.8 x 4.6 x 1.6cm) and in most respects the two share the same arrangement of side-buttons. So, on the left edge there is a volume rocker, on the top infrared port and power button, and on the right edge a button that launches the built in camera. It's all pretty familiar stuff.

There is one newbie button not seen in the C500, though. Above the volume rocker sits a key for Internet Explorer. As a keen mobile Web user I found this very handy indeed.

On the bottom edge sit two connectors, under a single rubber cover. One is the mini USB slot you'll need to use to make a wired link to your PC for data synchronisation. The other is a 2.5mm headphone jack. Putting this jack on the bottom of the handset may make sense from an engineering point of view, but for users it's a real niggle, and having to expose the USB connector to get to it is doubly painful.


There's more to note about the music playing pretensions of the C550, much of it paradoxical. With 64MB of built-in memory there isn't going to be enough space for you to store too many tracks so Orange supplies a Mini SD card to bump this up. But it's only a 128MB card, which isn't anywhere near enough for a music-playing phone, especially one packing Windows Media Player 10 with its ability to synchronise with its desktop version. Also, horror of horrors, as with the C500 the memory card this lives under the battery, so that you need to power the handset down to swap cards – doubly irritating as our C550 took a full 65 seconds to boot to the Orange Home screen.

Sound quality from the provided stereo headset is pretty good, though, and there is more volume than we could comfortably handle through the earbuds, though at the very highest there was some distortion. The handset's speaker is pretty good too. If only someone would include an FM radio in a Windows Mobile smart phone I'd be happy to listen for as long as the battery would allow. Orange's other software addition for musicians, FirePlayer, lets you mix downloaded tracks and produce ringtones. I found several potentially mixable tracks, but at £3.50 each I wasn't greatly tempted.

Orange SPV C550

Actually, all this music capability isn't the best thing about this handset. The screen takes the prize here. It's just 2.2in diagonal, but packs in 240 x 320 pixels whereas the C500 managed a more usual 176 x 220. These extra pixels mean a little more information can be delivered in the screen space - there are now, for example, ten application options listed at once when you press the Start button instead of the previous nine, but more importantly the screen is a lot clearer. It's still only capable of 65,536 colours, though, and so left behind by the increasing number of handsets that offer 262,000.

There is, of course, a camera. Its lens sits on the back of the casing next to a self-portrait mirror. It captures stills at 1280 x 1024, 640 x 480, 320 x 240 and 160 x 120, and video at 176 x 144 and 128 x 96. There is a special mode for shooting MMS video, another for PhotoID shots and another for 'Picture Theme' shot which shove a frame round a 160 x 120 still.

There is a maximum of 4x digital zoom available and shooting modes for daylight, incandescent, fluorescent and nighttime, as well as greyscale, sepia and cool filters. None of this is particularly fancy though, and even the ability to manually adjust the brightness, gamma, hue and saturation settings using the joystick is something I've seen before. What the camera lacks is an LED flash, which would help with short range indoor snaps in gloomy conditions.

Verdict

With tri-band GSM and class 10 GPRS, the SPV C550 should see you through your worldwide travels pretty effectively, and it is a definite improvement on its predecessor thanks to its superior screen, higher memory capacity and the inclusion of a joystick instead of the loathed lozenge for navigation.

But don't be drawn in by its pretensions as a music player. Good sound output and dedicated buttons are not all that a music playing handset needs. Lots of internal memory and easily swappable Flash memory are also important. And how about this for an annoyance? Tunes downloaded with Orange's Music Player are not listed in Windows Media Player, so you can't play from one unified spot, or make playlists incorporating both ripped and downloaded music. Daft.

Review by
TrustedReviews.com (http://www.trustedreviews.com/)

Orange SPV C550
 
Rating 80%
 
Price From £0, depending on monthly tariff chosen
 
More info The Orange SPV C550 site (http://shop.orange.co.uk/shop/show/handset/orange_spv_c550/features)

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