
We've
been champing at the bit for our new iMate Kjam to arrive and at
last it has, Lordpercy uses an original iMate Jam as his day to day
phone and the thought of getting that kind of functionality with a
full Qwerty keyboard made us all quite excited.Opening the iMate
packaging we got our first sight of a Kjam and on the face of it,
basically you get a restyled Jam but just a bit thicker. Then the
debate started was the extra thickness too much? would this make the
phone a little to cumbersome to sit in a pocket comfortably?
Measuring 108 x 58 x 23.7mm its' certainly a little chubby compared
to the standard IMate Jam but the Kjam has a killer feature in the
shape of a sliding backlit Qwerty keyboard.
While it has the appearance of a small PDA the Kjam is in fact a
fully featured Quad band mobile phone with the expected quick dials
and a rather effective speakerphone, but also in this shell is a
Texas Instruments OMAP 200Mhz processor endowing the Kjam with
enough processing power to do much more than make calls.
With 128MB ROM and 64 RAM the iMate is
equipped to run some fairly beefy applications and unlike it's baby
brother iMate have blessed this version with inbuilt wireless
802.11g allowing it to connect to WiFi networks and hotspots making
the best use of it's inbuilt browser. We hooked the Kjam up to the
office network using its WEP encryption and switched the browser to
landscape mode, it's only when using the keyboard to use web based
email or fill in details that you really appreciate having the full
keypad rather then playing with a stylus. There was a great deal of
concern that the processor wouldn't be up to the task of running
enough applications as demanded by today's mobiles users, we can
happily report to having pocket word and excel both running while
browsing and playing an Mp3 track, probably more than most users
will want?
Connectivity is just about spot on, the
802.11g wireless seems very capable and held onto signals well,
there is Bluetooth 1.1 for attaching a wireless headset and like all
IMate's there is a mini USB socket to connect up to any suitably
equipped PC. We quickly had contacts and email synchronised with a
host PC using both USB and active sync plus managed to use this over
the air with both Bluetooth and WiFi. The cut down Outlook is ideal
for collecting email on the go and offers a very familiar interface
that is easily used even with the keyboard stowed away.
All of the connectivity options can be
configured through the "comms manager" application which is bundled
with the phone, this is a very handy application that allows easy
set-up of complicated networks and can access all the comms methods.
We even managed to test out Skype with moderate success, meaning
free VOIP calls when within our office network, however this was
slightly erratic as the signal seemed to drop off rapidly the more
walls we asked the WiFi to go through.
The software that is shipped with the
Kjam is what you'd expect of a windows mobile device, the today
screen can be skinned and shows the key information like the number
of unread texts and emails plus open tasks. Typing on the keyboard
is good for two fingered types like us, ouch typing is out of the
question as the keypad is far too small for that but we managed to
type at a fair speed and its a vast improvement on using an iMate
with the screen keyboard and stylus.
Multimedia
applications work well we tried both MP3 tracks and also a few short
video clips, perhaps the 240 x 320 pixel VGA screen could do with an
upgrade as it doesn't really do the Kjam justice but for fun clips
(and not whole movies) the quality seems acceptable. The
camera is the same poor 1.3 mega pixel affair found on the smaller
and older models which is a shame as the photo gallery application
is half decent.
Anyone with a PDA or Smartphone will
know how important battery life is and the early iMate Jam was a
thirsty little chap, this version with its keyboard and WiFi can
also drink for England, if you leave WiFi and Bluetooth switched on
you'll be lucky to see the day out. Switch off WiFi and maybe 2 days
on standby with light telephone use. For our standard consumption
(around 1 hours of talk time, a bit of WiFi and Bluetooth) we can
almost manage 2 days before the battery warnings appear. Whatever
you do make sure you top up at this point as letting the battery run
flat will lose applications stored in the volatile memory.
Overall our few days with the Kjam
showed it to be very similar to the newer iMate jam with 128mb of
memory, the standard WiFi beats having to use the SD card slot for
an external WiFi card and allowed us to add 512mb of extra memory
instead. Plus the keyboard is undoubtedly a useful tool making the
Kjam better than the Nokia communicator and we'd prefer this to the
rather bulky Treo 650.
However the thicker iMate Kjam weights
160 grams and just feels too think to be comfortable and for us
that's a big issue, it has all the features we wanted and a nice
keyboard but its just a bit too fat to get a whole hearted
recommendation. if you are looking for a powerful smartphone with a
full keyboard go and try the Kjam out, if you don't mind the size it
makes a great phone, but do hold one before you buy!

Published - 23/10/2005
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