It may not have as many features as its Sony rival, but the OQO model 2 has one crucial thing the Japanese giants model doesnt -- a useable keyboard. If the ultra-mobile PC concept appeals, this is worth consideration ...
Abstract: When we reviewed the OQO model 01, the original OQO, back in mid-2005, we were impressed with this handheld Windows machines ambition and incredibly small size, However, there were plenty of shortcomings-- the digitizer didnt work well, the machine ...
Abstract: The OQO model e2 is a portable computer that manages to squeeze a full PC specification into a handheld form factor. The device offers the equivalent power of an ultraportable laptop and is the best choice currently available for users seeking a full-b...
Abstract: Starting at $1299, the OQO Model 02 may be more expensive than most are willing to pay for a pint-size PC, but its outstanding thumb keyboard, beautiful design, compact form factor, connectivity options, easy navigation, and respectable performance ma...
Abstract: Government users will be glad to know that the model 02 includes a hardware-based security engine that offers embedded Advanced Encryption Standard protection and a secure hash algorithm. Our review unit came with the $399 docking station, which bo...
Abstract: The UMPC concept has been around for some time now, but in my opinion no company has yet produced a better-designed, more desirable device than OQO. When Riyad saw the company's first miniature PC at CES way back in 2005 he badly wanted to lay his hands o...
Abstract: In October of 1993, I bought what was then my ideal computer. It fit in my pocket, had a full QWERTY keyboard with dedicated numeric keypad, had lots of built-in apps, ran all my DOS programs with ease, had a gorgeous monochrome LCD screen and ran f...