In which Steve realises that your smartphone should always help and never get the way of real life, and muses the fact that there's really no such thing as the perfect mobile device for everybody.
Making its public debut at The Smartphone Show 2005 is Sony Ericssons P990, featuring Symbian OS 9.1, and UIQ 3.0, along with 3G and Wi-Fi support, 2 megapixel camera and a QVGA screen. We've spent some time with this flagship device, and we like what we've seen so far.
Thomas Boys looks at the Nokia 3230 as a replacement for a much loved Sendo X. How does this budget Series 60 phone from Nokia standup? Not bad, but there are some complaints.
It's not big (but it is clever). Sendo start pushing the form factor and the price point with their second Symbian OS device, the X2 Music Phone. Ewan takes a look at where in the market it fits, and the design behind the tiny smartphone.
Rafe takes a first look at Motorola fourth Symbian phone the A1010. Announced at 3GSM it packs a lot of features including WiFi, 3G, and AGPS into a pen driven UIQ tablet form factor. It is a powerful phone and should see wider release than the previous models.
Rafe takes a look at Panasonic's second Series 60 phone the X800. Panasonic officially launched this phone at 3GSM. It features design and multimedia changes from it's predecessor the X700.
The Samsung D720 was officially announced at 3GSM in Cannes. It is the third Series 60 phone from Samsung. Rafe took the opportunity to take a quick look and here are his first impressions.