» ROAD HandyPC S101 / S101K
(August 2006)

At first glance, the ROAD S101 looks like a new
version of the Nokia 9500, but it isn't. In fact,
the S101 is a Linux powered device from a German
startup called ROAD GmbH (ROAD stands for Remote
Office Access Devices).
ROAD are marketing the 210 gram S101 as a tiny
pocket based PC rather than a phone, and it
certainly has impressive credentials.
Inside the S101 is a 620x240 pixel display, which
(unlike the Nokia 9500) is touch sensitive. There's
a full keyboard which looks a little more usable
that the 9500, plus it comes with WiFi, quad-band
GSM, GPRS and EDGE support (but not 3G).
The interface on the S101 is Qtopia, which is
specifically designed for handheld Linux devices
(there's a development environment called Qtopia
Greenphone to help developers create and port
applications). Out of the box, the ROAD S101 is
bundled with a web browser, email client, Microsoft
Office viewer, drawing application, MP3 player and a
set of PIM functions.
The ROAD S101 is based around the pretty standard
Intel Xscale PXA 263 processor running at 400MHz. It
has 64Mb of RAM, plus 64MB Flash and the internal
storage can be expanded with SD cards. The S101
scores well in connectivity too, with Bluetooth,
infra-red and USB 2.0 connections. Talktime is
quoted as 4 hours when in use as a phone, with up to
10 days standby. In "PC mode", the S101 has 5 hours
of operation plus up to 30 days standby time. We
understand that there's an optional 2 megapixel
camera too. The S101K adds added "encryption" to the
standard S101.
Inevitably, the ROAD S101 will be compared with the
Nokia 9500 Communicator. In many ways, the S101 is
pretty similar to the 9500 - both pitched at a
mobile computing market rather than a mobile phone
market. The S101 has an edge in hardware terms over
the 9500, but then the 9500 was announced back in
February 2004.
Crucially though, the Nokia 9500 (and the 9300 and
9300i) were never huge successes for Nokia, and as a
result Nokia ceased development of the Symbian
Series 80 platform on which those phones are based.
But then, out of the blue, Nokia produced the Linux
based Nokia 770 device. It's not hard to image that
the next generation 9000 series Communicator would
be something very similar the the ROAD S101.
So, this is an interesting and capable device that's
pitching to what it currently a pretty small market.
Perhaps the ROAD S101 will be good enough to
persuade people to ditch their laptops and go with
an ultra-portable Linux device. If not, then ROAD
have a larger version of the S101 called the L101
under development which might appeal more to
notebook users.
|
ROAD HandyPC
S101 / S101K at a glance |
|
Available:
|
Soon |
|
Network: |
Quad-band GSM |
|
Data: |
GPRS + EDGE + WiFi |
|
Screen: |
640x240 pixels |
|
Camera: |
2 megapixels (option) |
| Size: |
Large PDA-style device
128x60x25mm / 210 grams |
| Bluetooth: |
Yes |
| Memory card: |
SD |
| Infra-red: |
Yes |
| Polyphonic: |
Yes |
| Java: |
Yes |
| Battery life: |
4 hours talk / 10 days standby |
Reference:
mobilegazette