

Hands-On Toshiba Portege G910 Review
Toshiba Portege G910 Overview
The Toshiba Portege G910 is a smartphone that Toshiba would like you to think of as a mini-laptop. It looks good, with a kind of dull silver and faux-leather exterior, and it's extremely light (just 183g). Lighter, in fact, than the Nokia E90, which I'll be using as a reference point throughout this review. It's also smaller than the E90, but as you'll see later, this isn't necessarily a good thing.
The Toshiba Portege G910's main features
We used to call smartphones PDAs, but since they've added the ability to make calls, they've suddenly become smartphones. Given that the Toshiba G910 has tri-band GMS, HSDPA, Bluetooth 2.0, USB and Infra-Red connectivity, I think we can definitely make the case that it's a smartphone, as it should connect to virtually anything!

internal GPS receiver,
2 megapixel camera with auto-focus,
MP3 player,
video recorder and player,
Windows Pocket Office
800 x 480 pixels (Wide-VGA), 65k colour TFT screen
Biometric fingerprint scanner.
In short, this is one meaty smartphone that should - in theory - be capable of doing pretty much anything. Question is, can it live up to its specification?
Toshiba Portege G910 Review - Exterior
The Portege G910's Keyboard
First up is the keyboard. Open the device, and the QWERTY keys are revealed, together with the large WVGA screen. The keys on the keyboard are big enough, and typing messages is nice and straightforward. However, it does take a bit of getting used to, particularly after using the E90's keyboard. With the E90, each key is smaller, but that provides more space for adding extra keys, such as those for numbers, space, cap-lock and tab - in other words, just like you'd expect from a normal keyboard.
With the G910, though, you only get the QWERTY keys and one or two extras - numbers, colons, semi-colons, dashes, etc., must all be accessed by holding down the function key at the bottom left of the keyboard. I'm sure you'd get used to this after time, but I found it almost claustrophobic.

Worse, the exclamation mark and question mark are so close to the function key that needs to be pressed to use them, you need fingers as long and as dextrous as a concert-pianist's (or a 12-year old PlayStation-playing yoof!) in order to use them as speedily as you like. Not so bad for emails, perhaps, but annoyingly inconvenient for Instant Messaging.
Eventually I gave up and carried on the conversation on my PC. Like I say, this could be just because I'm not used to the G910's keyboard yet, but even after this limited use, I do find the E90's keyboard to be much easier to use.
The G910's Screen

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