Review of GSM-handset Haier M600 (Black Pearl)
Sales package:
- Handset
- Battery
- Charger
- Wired headset
- Data cable
- User Guide
The Chinese company going by the name of Haier didn’t
get off to a flying start on the Russian market outright, as the company
seemingly planned on entering the local market with cheap poorly packed
solutions. What the company was really missing? A deep insight into the
reality of the market, implying that conquering a particular region
with such low-end proposals, whose design could barely make a bid for
sympathy, is incredibly hard, especially for a newcomer. The first
Haier-branded handsets were mediocre, to say the least, whereas their
retail price wasn’t much lower than that of more fetching solutions by
other makers. Another defeat came along with the company’s very own
Haier N60, this time on the smartphones market – first up, this smart
handset was running on Linux OS, which made many consider other options
on their shortlists. Second, on the release we got a solution that could
hardly match its own prototype spec-wise, as over the lengthy
development time the fairly admirable specifications that had been
claimed on the N60’s announcement had been altered numerous times, so
eventually it turned to be not as good as everyone expected it to be. On
top of that the price was way too high – 460 USD for a unit, while the
functionality left much to be desired. Frankly speaking, the
manufacturer did his best at presenting the solution as a feature-packed
handset rather than a smartphone, but it didn’t bring along any
benefits. Although, the truth is, the N60 had been popular for some time
with Linux-fans, but all that hype eventually run low due to the
manufacturer concealing the source codes, which left no chances for the
enthusiasts to boost the N60 with self-made applications in view of
missing extra software written by the maker or third-party companies.
So, what should the company be thankful to for
surviving on the Russian market? The answer is as simple as it could
only be – the pen-like model P7 alone has saved the day for Haier.
Overall, only owing to this solution sporting the very unique looks the
company has managed to draw a pinch of attention. It’s remarkable that
at Svyazexpocomm 2006 Haier exhibited an updated version of the P7
coming in a slightly modified casing and with more features onboard,
which went by the name of P8. However for reasons yet unknown, it hasn’t
arrived in the market, and in return a music phone known as the M600 or
the Black Pearl stepped into the market, being remarkable for its
original design, just like the P7 back then.
The Haier M600’s design is a result of an alliance
between the American and Chinese divisions of the company – and to their
credit, the M600 does have something to show off in terms of its looks,
being somewhere in the middle of the line that has Handsets and
MP3-players on its ends respectively. But not only does it retain
familiar curves and shapes of both extremes, it carries some distinctive
features of both gadget types onboard as well. The phone utilizes
candy-bar form-factor with the bottom and top ends rounded off. The
keypad is made in a way to grab one’s eyes instantly and tell you that
after all it’s nothing more but a handset, while the dedicated music
keys, highlighting the M600’s prowess in the music department, double as
standard numeric buttons (2, 5, 8). As for extra details found on the
M600’s casing, they do their best at keeping “low profile”. The entire
casing is made of glass-like glossy plastic, which surely gets soiled in
no time. But having such appealing finishing applied, the M600 looks
much better – and pardon me – many consumers, like magpies, go for the
“shiny-and-sparkling thingies”. And who really benefit from that are the
phone makers – why would they need to exhaust their staff for getting
their next offering look and feel marvelous? Just finish it in
glass-like plastic and place prominent framings – that is about it, you
have got a consumer in your pocket, as he or she won’t pass by such
phone and forget about it in a second or two, on the contrary it will
grab his/her attention and keep popping up in mind even if the handset
itself doesn’t fit them. Undoubtedly, the market has seen numerous
exceptions to this trend, when the glass-finished surface allowed a
top-notch design to show off its curves and edges in a convenient
fashion. Frankly, this holds true for the M600 as well, as such coating
makes it look so much more luxurious. Even after a short period of
usage, when it has already had plenty and the once shiny surface is
soiled, the M600 still manages to seem eye-candy. As the handset’s name
implies (Black Pearl) the only trim available throughout the phone’s
lifespan will be black. We have no gripes with the M600’s build quality
or the plastic used – everything lives up to our expectations. But the
truth is, the glossy coating is a magnet to scratches, however they
won’t pose a real threat to the handset’s smooth looks, as one can see
them only at certain angles.
Measuring 90.6x35.3x18.2 mm, the M600 is a mix of an
MP3-player and a mobile phone, however its weight has a bent for the
former class of devices, as it makes up a mere 64 g. But in spite of its
very compact size, I wouldn’t dare to say the M600 “sinks” in a man’s
hand – on the contrary, it is very easy to manage. Naturally, sporting
such tiny dimensions this handset fits small women’s hands best, and
bluntly speaking, women constitute the main part of the Black Pearl’s
target audience. Nevertheless one peek is worth a hundred of words, so
better take a look at how small the M600 turns out to be compared to
Sony Ericsson K750i (which is not a “monster” itself, in the first
place).
It would seems that such a portable beauty should
appeal to nearly any woman, but in the case with the M600 it went
neither way, meaning that some loved it instantly and ensured us that
they would definitely go for it, whereas other women we asked told us
that it was too compact and it would readily “disappear” in any
fancy-bag, even the smallest one. However the opinion that the handset
looks truly attractive was shared by both groups.
The left side of the Black Pearl is completely bald,
while the opposite side houses there-way scroll wheel standing for menu
navigation and other actions (like going through playlists or messages)
in standby mode, while in talk mode it doubles as volume control button.
One might rightfully ask why the wheel is located on the right, since
people used to handling their cell phones with the right hand will find
it inconvenient to operate the M600 in this way, and on top of that
those familiar with other wheel-powered handsets (most of which feature
it on the left) won’t be very happy with such layout either. However if
you are out of both groups, then you will seamlessly get along with the
new control type, as it makes playing around with the handset a lot
easier.
The bottom end of the handset sports no controls or
sockets either – in fact, the top rim houses them all, specifically a
flap-covered miniUSB slot and a standard 3.5 mm audio jack for plugging
in a headset/earphones. Generally speaking these two sockets make your
life that much simpler – the 3.5 mm jack allows for using any custom
headphones, while the miniUSB slot simplifies synchronization with PC.
The headset coming in one box with handset is average
quality-wise, but even with this unit plugged in you can clearly hear
that the M600 puts up pretty good performance in the music department,
and the better earphones you use, the better the sound gets, so that
this handset can even match a cheap MP3-player in terms of sound
quality.
The top end also features the holes for a carrying
strap, but to make some use of it you will need to detach the battery
cover first.
The front panel plays host to a tiny OLED-powered
display offering a resolution of 96x96 pixels (20x20 mm) and capable of
65 K colors. All in all for a handset positioned this way, it’s quite
good, but what really disappointed us, was the shield-glass’s mirror
coating, making information almost impossible to read in the sun.
Furthermore, being a finger-print magnet, the display won’t present you
with a crisp and easy-to-read picture if it is soiled.
The numeric keypad, made of plastic, is arranged in two
blocks – the keys in the middle double as dedicated player buttons,
while the rest of the keypad rings this set of keys. Basing on my
experience of handling the M600 I can say that all the keys, despite
being set close to each other and boasting bulky shape, are easy to work
with, but due to measuring slightly below average, people with big
hands will have to go through some difficulties while texting with the
M600. The navigation pad is in fact embedded in the outer ring of
buttons, yet it offers nothing but pick/hang up keys and one function
key.
All keys are evenly lit in light beige, with the
dedicated music buttons being edged with a special glowing line, which
appears to be pretty good-looking.
Almost the entire rear plate of the M600 is taken up by
the battery cover, showing off firm fastening and exposing no gap.
Removing the cover reveals a 730 mAh Li-Ion battery. As the manufacturer
claims, it keeps the handset up and running for 200 hours in standby
mode and provides up to 3 hours of talk time, while in MP3-only mode the
M600 shall last up to 11 hours. In conditions of Moscow networks the
phone worked for about 2 days at 10-15 minutes of calls a day, up to 3
hours of music playback and 1 hour of listening to the radio. The
numbers, put up by the M600 are by no means impressive, so if you are
into music, get ready to recharge your device every day. It takes the
handset about 2.5 hours to charge from empty to full. The good thing
about the Black Pearl, though, is that it can be charged via USB on
connection to a PC.
Under the battery you will find SIM-card slot and
microSD memory cards socket, which are arranged in a way that the SIM
card tops the memory card – strange, isn’t it? Since most users will
swap memory cards much more often than SIM-cards.
Menu
Almost all means of the handset management have
something to do with the scroll wheel. To get to the main menu you
should lean it downwards, while to access your Messages you need to move
it up, pressing the wheel brings about the phonebook. The main menu is
laid out in a way that allows only for one huge animated icon with a
caption to appear on the screen at a time. The sub-menus are arranged in
vertical list. On the whole the menu is quite speedy – you won’t notice
any evident slow-downs or freezes.
As regards the fonts found on the M600, they are not
the best thing this handset bring to the table – people with weak eyes
will have a hard time playing around with the phone, and regrettably
there is no way the fonts can be scaled. The localization job is done
well, no abbreviations or something like that is found on the phone, and
in case the caption doesn’t match the display length-wise it gets
scrolled through.
The phone supports predicative T9 text input system for both Russian and English languages.
In standby mode pressing hang up button activates the
key lock, while the pick up key servers for accessing the Call record,
pushing the only available function key calls up the user-manageable
Shortcut menu, which can accommodate only 4 items, though.
The M600 carries about 64 Mb of dynamic memory onboard,
which can be expanded with microSD memory cards, topping out at 1 Gb
today. On PC connection, both the internal and external storages are
recognized as removable disk that doesn’t require you to install any
special drives. Though the data connection speed with its USB 1.1
protocol won’t be very impressive.
Phonebook. The M600’s menu layout
might confuse you a little, as it doesn’t house such items as phonebook,
call record, messages and service – but worry not, all of them are
found in “Communication” folder, basically it isn’t much of a hassle,
since they can be easily accessed from the standby screen.
The phonebook embedded in the handset accommodates up
to 500 contacts with up to 3 manageable phone numbers per entry
(Cellular, home, work or fax) that can be added to one of the groups.
Search here can be conducted by the first letters,
which is not very handy, taking account of the fact that you are unable
to change language, in other words if you started typing in Russian,
then you will have to go ahead without being able to switch to English.
The contact list in the M600 displays entries stored in built-in memory
and on the SIM-card.
There are five groups at your disposal, yet you can do
only a few things to them, like setting a personal ringtone. Group
filter is onboard, as well as group blacklisting. Fast dial is also
enabled on the M600, allowing you to set up to 8 phone numbers.
All contacts can be saved onto a memory card or the
handset’s memory in vCard (*.vcf) format, but nothing prohibits from
uploading contacts utilizing the same extension onto the phone.
Messages. The handset lacks support
for MMS-messaged due to being a GPRS-disabled device; EMS and long
messages are also missing on the Black Pearl.
The text messages editor cannot boast any sophisticated
features – in the top left corner you will see amount of symbols typed.
We were slightly disappointed with caps, though – to get capital
letters you have to go through a cyclic menu with the help of “#” key.
To put it simply, if you started typing with caps, then turned them off
and now want to get them back, you will have to scroll through the
entire list. The handset offers the function of sending a message to
multiple contacts.
Call record. Here you will find
standard lists of incoming, outgoing and missed calls, with each being
capable of holding up to 20 entries. Calls made to or came to/from the
same number may be merged (having chosen a number you will see full
details on latest calls involving this phone number with date and time)
or not – it is up to you to decide and then choose an appropriate option
in the settings. You can also check out total duration of calls,
however you will be offered only information on the last call and
summary.
Services. Network settings are stored here, specifically divert, barring and call waiting.
Settings. You are free to pick one out
of four highlight bar colors available, wallpaper, color of input (one-
or multi- color) and display brightness (7 grades), as well as
backlighting timeout.
The Shortcut menu can be set up here, but as we mentioned about, only 4 items can be put on the list.
The Flight mode cuts the handset off the network; auto
turning on/off allows setting exact time when the phone will either
automatically switch on or off.
Profiles. The handset plays host to 6
fully user-manageable profiles, where you can pick any tune – be it MP3
or not – and set it as ringtone. The silent alert can trigger off
simultaneously with the tune or separately.
File manager. Some kind of a file
manager, but all you can do it check out amount of free memory of the
phone or memory card, format memory or playback all music files.
Organizer. The M600 presents you with 5
independent alarm clocks that can be set to trigger off on certain
date, weekly or on workdays only. Though you can’t pick any tune you
want, as the choice is limited to 5 pre-installed alerts.
Calendar. The calendar found in the handset offers only
Month view without arming you with capabilities other than just
viewing.
Memo. You can always write a few lines in a memo and
set notification to go off on certain date and time. The dates stated in
memos have nothing to do with the calendar, even though it is calendar,
where you choose date for a notification.
The World Time feature allows getting current time in the world’s biggest cities on a world map.
Tools. Here you will find a Voice
recorder that can be activated during a call; all clips can be stored
either in the handset’s memory or in the memory card, at that clip’s
length is limited only to the amount of free memory available on your
phone. Also you are at liberty to record a personal ringtone.
Synchronization with PC. This item requires prior
activation before letting you handle memory of the handset or the memory
card, on USB connection, yet you don’t have to browse through the menus
to switch the corresponding option on, as once you plug in the cable
you will be offered to activate connection.
This section houses an unsophisticated calculator and a stop-watch with two intermediate values.
Bluetooth. The
handset sports Bluetooth 2.0 connectivity with the following profiles
being supported: Headset, HandFree, Object Push, Serial Port, File
Transfer, A2DP and AVRCP. On the whole we have no gripes with Bluetooth
performance as it does its job well.
Games. The M600 brings to the table two games Horo bump and Angel cube. Java support is missing in the phone, though.
Radio. The radio can be started up
only on a headset/headphones plugged in. Both auto and manual tuning
options are onboard, or you can just type the frequency of the desired
station. The handset provides memory slots for 14 nameable stations. The
radio can be minimized, which is a big plus, but if you will just quit,
the application will be terminated, so instead you need to call up the
menu and pick “Background play” – such implementation isn’t quite handy,
for it forces you to make one extra action. Another shortcoming lies in
the fact that in minimized mode the radio keeps low profile and
displays only a tiny thumbnail on the screen, indicating that it is
still “alive” – regrettably, Haier hasn’t made use of other
manufacturers’ experience and didn’t equip its radio with the capability
to display additional information like name and frequency of current
station.
MP3-player. The M600
deals only with MP3 files (maximum bitrate - 320 Kbit/s) or AMR, at that
you can playback tunes via headset or the loudspeaker. The handset
offers you only a single user-manageable play-list and an option to play
back all available tracks (stored in both the handset’s memory and on
the memory card). During playback, using “#” key you can change playback
mode, while “*” stands for switching equalizer modes: standard, rock,
pop, bas and jazz. Frankly, the equalizer does make all the difference
here, but regrettably the presets are few and manual tuning is disabled.
On top of all that you can pick one out of four skins for the music
player.
Similarly to the radio, the M600’s MP3-player can be
minimized, yet in the same fashion – via the menu. Apart from that, the
on-screen thumbnail letting you know that the player is on is no bigger
than the radio’s one and current track’s title and duration can be found
out only in the player’s window. The dedicated music keys doubling as
standard numeric keys work only when at the player’s window, so that
while you are in standby mode they get back to being nothing more but
numeric keys without allowing you to manage player.
Impressions
The handset delivers good reception quality, the
loudspeaker’s volume, as well as the microphones sensitivity prove to be
enough to enable noise-free calls in almost any environments. The M600
plays host to a 64-chord polyphony showing off pretty much average
sounding, but things get better if you set an MP3 track as a ringtone.
Overall alerts volume is quite high, yet the quality is not cutting-edge
here – it seems that such tiny casing could not possibly retain a
better speaker. As for the silent alert, it is average strength-wise.
Haier M600 is the most brilliant offering in the
Chinese company’s range – its developers have managed to come up with a
very balanced solution boasting both a handset’s and an MP3-player’s
features. Speaking about its attractions, portable size, smooth-looking
design, 3.5 mm audio jack and standard miniUSB socket are among the
M600’s best specs. The navigation relying on the scroll wheel brings
about no problems either and adds some points to the Black Pearl’s bank,
as well as fair music playback quality via headphones, which is a rare
attribute for relatively cheap handsets.
However as any other handset, the M600 has some things
that hold it back a little, specifically the finishing, exposed to wear
and tear, various shortcomings found in the music player, support for
only two music formats, flaws in the interface layout, missing
possibility to switch language while searching through the phonebook and
somewhat unhandy caps on/off mode. Lack of fonts scaling feature might
make some consumers revise they shortlist in favor of other options.
Some will definitely hate the M600 for not offering GPRS-support and
consequently a WAP-browser and MMS-messaging.
But all in all Haier M600 is worth looking at,
especially in light of the fact that it is nearly beyond competition.
Naturally, you may object and say that Samsung X830 can rival the Black
Pearl, but at the end of the day it sports other form-factor and more
feature-packed interface, meaning that its retail price is much higher
than that of the M600. By the way, a few words on the price, which is
the very decisive thing for this very model – Haier has set the
recommended price on the level of 220 USD, making the M600 a truly
appealing proposal on the market and letting us believe that vendors
will retail not for about 250 USD or so. The handset arrives the market
approximately in the end of December, 2006 or a few days of the New Year
(in 2007)
Everything we have got left to do is try to predict
what Haier’s actions will be this time, since the previous failures have
greatly affected the brand’s image on the market. And even though the
maker has managed to present us with a “pearl” in the form ofHaier M600
(Black Pearl), it is unclear whether it will be able to get it to the
consumer’s line of sight in a convenient fashion so as to boost their
attitude towards the company.
P.S. Haier Black Pearl will come in Batman
phone edition as well – unlike the original model, this one will boast
Batman’s logo on the casing and proper pre-installed content utilizing
the style of the world-wide known superhero. But to get their hands on
the Batman phone, the fans will have to call at the phone-shops in Hong
Kong, which is the only region where this handset will be distributed
in.
Photos Batman phone from PhoneDaily.
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