Motorola Q 9h

By Luke Anderson on 11/09/2007

More Motorola reviews , RRP: AU$799.00

The good:

  • HSDPA
  • Windows Mobile 6 (Standard Edition)
  • Smart, subtle design

The bad:

  • Can't charge via USB
  • Hard reset required on occasion

The bottomline:

If you're looking for an attractive 3.5G PDA-phone with push email, Windows Mobile 6 and a QWERTY keyboard, the Motorola Q 9h is worthy of consideration, so long as you don't need a touch-screen or Wi-Fi.

Buying choices:

Editors' rating:

7.1/10

Users' rating:

7.8/10

Motorola's latest PDA-phone, the Q 9h, combines corporate tools such as Windows Mobile 6 (Standard Edition) and support for push e-mail and Microsoft Exchange Server with a smart, subtle design that should please business and consumer users alike.

Design
The Q 9h sports a conservative matte black and charcoal finish. The front is occupied by a silver four-way directional pad winged by two context-sensitive buttons as well as home, return, e-mail, Web and green and red call buttons. Below this is a QWERTY keyboard which also doubles as the number pad when making calls. The backside is bare, other than a inconspicuous loudspeaker, camera and Vodafone logo. Up, down, select and back buttons sit on the right-hand side of the unit and a microSD slot on the left-hand side.

The Q 9h is on the thin side for a PDA-phone at 11.8mm -- the same as Samsung's BlackJack and thinner than the BlackBerry Curve, BlackBerry Pearl and even the upcoming Motorola RAZR2 V9. You probably won't forget when it's in your pocket, with dimensions of 118 by 66.7 by 11.8mm.

Features
The Q 9h is a quad-band GSM phone as well as a 3G handset with support for HSDPA (3.5G). Our review model came with a Vodafone SIM card and browsing the Internet was speedy using the bundled Opera browser.

A 320 by 240-pixel display occupies a third of the front of the unit, although it'd be nice if it took up the full width of the handset. When browsing, we found the default text size to be slightly on the small side. If you're reading a lot of text, you'll probably want to increase the font size.

While many vendors are adopting touch-based technologies (Apple's iPhone and HTC's Touch, for example), Motorola has chosen to stick with a button-interface for the Q 9h. Perhaps the next model will include a touch-screen and a QWERTY keyboard like Palm's Treo 750.

Bluetooth, microSD, and USB 2.0 are supported but sadly Wi-Fi is not. Setting up push e-mail with a Microsoft Exchange Server was painless and the phone will lead you through the required settings. Both POP3 and IMAP email are supported.

The onboard 2-megapixel camera had pretty average results, especially indoors or in low light conditions. A 3-megapixel camera would not go astray (and is fast becoming commonplace in higher-end phones), but as the Q 9h is catering to a business audience it is understandably omitted.

Performance
We didn't have any problems running applications on the Q 9h. It comes with 95MB of RAM but some users may quickly use up the 256MB of in-built storage. A microSD card up to 4GB can be added easily with the side-loading slot.

Our experience with the Q 9h wasn't completely problem-free, however. We weren't able to charge it using the supplied USB cable and when the battery was completely depleted we weren't able to use it until the battery had charged for a short time -- so don't make any important calls unless you have enough juice in the tank!

The supplied review model also crashed on us a number of times and, after referring to the manual, a hard reset of the unit was performed.

Battery life was decent and you should expect one-and-a-half to two days of use out of 1100 mAh lithium ion battery, with regular use.

A few niggly issues and shortcomings aside, if you're looking for a 3.5G PDA-phone with push e-mail, Windows Mobile 6 and a QWERTY keyboard, the Motorola Q 9h is worthy of consideration and one that you shouldn't be embarrassed to carry in either a suit pocket or jeans.

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nagacheski
nagacheski
11/08/2008, 01:28 PM

rating
9
/10

Nice beautiful phone with great music performance, great battery life, best keys of the kind, just lacks GPS and WI-FI.

Pros: Beauty n performance, slim for a PDA, best keys of its kind, windows mobile, expandable memory.

Cons: Lacks GPS n WI-FI, Poor night mode pictures.

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Tony
15/07/2008, 04:35 PM

rating
6
/10

Am thinking of buying this phone outright, just wondering if anyone has any tips on where the best place to get one might be?

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Q9
08/07/2008, 09:07 AM

rating
8
/10

The functionalities of the phone is excellent. No problems with the speed when loading up programs.

Pros: Large screen
Easy to use keypad
Lots of shortcut keys

Cons: Battery life is a little short, I am averaging about 3 days on minimal to medium usage.

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Scoot
03/07/2008, 03:25 PM

rating
8
/10

Great phone, heaps better than the Samsung Blackjack.

Pros: Good keys, great apps.

Cons: REALLY Bad battery

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Llen
04/05/2008, 08:29 PM

rating
10
/10

I love this phone! its so pretty and texting is so straight forward

Pros: sexilicious, keyboard, design, lighting, thinness, bright display

Cons: people who don't like this phone

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belladog
20/02/2008, 07:53 PM

rating
4
/10

Very disappointed. Battery life (talk) barely 2 hrs. Software very difficult to load. Dont buy if you are a serious phone user.

Pros: Slim and good for short messaging

Cons: (talk) 2hrs!

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Tiger
20/02/2008, 07:14 PM

rating
9
/10

Great Phone-love it. Was comparing with Samsung Blackjack - the software package is a plus

Pros: A very good looking pda phone for the price/performance/features

Cons: I prefer a scroll wheel instead of the buttons

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DieRobotDie
12/02/2008, 01:47 PM

rating
9
/10

The handset fits nice to hand, and gets up and running straight out of the box. It's very well made and designed, overall it's letdown more by teh software than any hardware issues.

Pros: Nice keyboard
Clear bright screen
Runs Google Maps beautifully
Lots of third party software to choose from

Cons: Does not run Gmail in java ... wtf!
Email client is a bit naff
The cut-down Windows Mobile 6 is not as good as Windows Mobile 5 - though hardly Motorola's fault
Not enough customisation available, such as home screen, soft keys etc
Drops 3G connectivity every 30 hours or so, but possibly because I am on Optus and not Telstra

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mark213
06/02/2008, 03:38 PM

rating
4
/10

This ptone is so locked down with Telsta Next G software it is almost unusable.

Pros: Windows Mobile 6
HSPA
Keyboard
Screen
Speakers

Cons: Unable to change Soft Keys assignments.
Lack of accessories available for it.
Takes too many key strokes to do anything

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www.pressdigital.com.au
04/01/2008, 07:49 PM

rating
9
/10

Awesome unit. Works well if you don't need too much battery life! Still prefer my Dopod 838Pro though in the tests we did.

Pros: Great size. Good keyboard

Cons: Battery life if you're a 'poweruser'

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