Hands-on Review: Helio Ocean

Thu May 17, 2007 10:57AM EDT

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Since I first laid eyes on it at CTIA in March, the Helio Ocean has stood out as the clear pretender to the messaging-phone throne—which, to my mind, has been owned by the Sidekick (both II and 3) for a few years now. Despite its aging features, the Sidekick 3 has had a couple of aces up its sleeve: a killer, easy-to-use interface, its swiveling screen and that roomy QWERTY keypad. But with its two-way sliding design—one way for numeric keys, the other for a full keyboard—plus its state-of-the-art data, messaging and multimedia features, the Ocean represents the Sidekick's strongest challenger to date.

Look and feel: There's no question that the Ocean's a big phone: at 4.3 by 2.2 by 0.9 inches and about 5.6 ounces, the Ocean is nearly as big and heavy as my Treo (although it's noticeably smaller than the bulky Sidekick). But while it makes for a tight fit in a jeans pocket, the Ocean's nice curves and rubberized shell felt good in my hands. As for its twin keypads, I'm a bigger fan of the full-QWERTY keypad than of the numeric one. Don't get me wrong—I love the two-way slider concept, which keeps you from having to guess which QWERTY keys are for dialing and which aren't—but the thin, curved rows of numeric keys were tricky to press. The roomy QWERTY keypad was a pleasure, however, and I especially appreciated the dedicated "@" key for composing e-mail messages.

In the box: The Ocean comes with a solid set of accessories, including a wired stereo headset, a USB cable, and an adapter for earphones with standard 3.5mm minijacks—a nice change from the carriers who ship their phones with no accessories at all. There's no included microSD card for memory expansion, but the Ocean's generous 200MB of internal memory (good for a few dozen songs) will tide you over until you get one.

Interface: I've been a fan of Helio's user interfaces in the past, and I'm pleased to report that the Ocean's menu system looks even better now; previously tough-to-use features (like conference calling) are much easier to use now, and I never lost my way through the myriad options. I just wish the whole experience was a bit more unified; there's nothing like the Sidekick's "Jump" button that takes you back to the main menu. Also, a jog dial or trackball would be a welcome addition (my thumb kept reaching for a trackball that wasn't there).

Messaging: Outstanding—I especially liked the Ocean's unified messaging screen, which shows you at a glance the status of your e-mail and instant messaging accounts. You get out-of-the-box support for Yahoo! Mail, AOL Mail, Windows Live Mail and Gmail, along with all their respective IM services (save Google's), and Helio is promising Exchange ActiveSync support for corporate servers later this year. A couple of things are missing, though: the Ocean won't automatically fetch your POP/IMAP messages (you have to collect them manually), and HTML-formatted e-mail messages are stripped of their formatting—then again, my pricey Treo 700p (and the Sidekick 3, for that matter) has the same problem.   

Web browsing: The Ocean's mobile Web browser earns high marks, but it falls just shy of the bar set by Nokia. Web surfing was quite speedy, faster even than on my 3G Treo, and the cool zoom feature instantly zooms text and images up to 200 percent (or down to 50 percent). The browser borrows Nokia's mini-map so you can see your position relative to the rest of the page, which is a nice touch. The Ocean's browser puts HTML pages through Google's mobile optimizer by default; you can scroll to the bottom of a page and click a link to see the full HTML version, but you can't turn the option off altogether, which was a bit annoying. Also, the browser struggled to render full HTML pages correctly; it couldn't display the Yahoo! front page at all, and the IMDB front page looked jumbled (Nokia's Web browser breezed through those tests). Still, I'll take the Ocean's browser over almost any other mobile browser out there, including the Sidekick's.

Music and video: Helio at last has an online storefront where you can buy music, making its service more than competitive with the music and video stores on Sprint and Verizon Wireless. You can also sync your PC-based music and videos using the included USB cable and software, and subscription-based services like Yahoo! Music are supported. The Ocean's music player boasts shuffle and repeat modes, as well as an equalizer with four presets. Music controls along the left spine of the phone let you pause and skip tracks or tweak the volume, even when the Ocean is closed, and you can listen over a stereo Bluetooth headset or your own earbuds thanks to the unobtrusive 3.5mm minijack adapter. Nicely done.

GPS and pictures: The Ocean comes with Helio's cool Buddy Beacon feature, which lets you see the location all your fellow Buddy Beacon pals (you can, of course, disable the GPS locator if you want to travel covertly). The Ocean is also one of the few phones that integrates Google Maps with GPS, making it much easier to find nearby restaurants, ATMs, gas stations and so on. In my tests in Manhattan, the GPS-aided Google Maps pinpointed my location within a couple of doors—not bad at all. Even better, you can send pictures to your buddies embedded with your present GPS coordinates, or upload your photos directly to MySpace with the new HelioUp app. The Ocean's two-megapixel camera represents a major improvement over the carrier's previous camera phones—images looked relatively vivid and sharp, if not up to the standards or a dedicated camera.

The last word: The Ocean is clearly Helio's strongest phone to date—it's a quantum leap over last year's Hero and Kickflip, and I'd have to say it easily leapfrogs all the other consumer-oriented messaging phones out there, including the Sidekick 3, LG's enV, and Samsung's dual-flip SCH-u740. At $300 with service, the Ocean isn't cheap, but you're getting a truckload of features for the cash. If you're a messaging addict who wants plenty of multimedia on the road, then this is your phone.

Comments on Hands-on Review: Helio Ocean

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  • 46 Posted by jinxnray98 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    I just purchased my Ocean from 3G Wireless (a Helio authorized retailer) for $199.99 That is $96 less than what Helio.com is offering for new users. I posted a comment about a week ago saying this review helped me make my decision between the Ocean and Sidekick and I am happy to report that my Ocean should be in my hands by tomorrow! Happy texting!

  • 47 Posted by dobranf on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    It looks great and all, but I'm holding out for the iPhone. It's simply amazing.

  • 48 Posted by oneworldgift on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    for more information check out www.cellulartraders.com

  • 49 Posted by racheljeferson on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    The Helio sounds whack according to this article. Even though it has a couple-maybe a few- differences that are better than a cell phone a cell hone still has them beat by many! Sincerely, Rachel E. Jefferson racheljeferson@yahoo.com

  • 50 Posted by oneworldgift on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    check out cellulartraders for more information on all brand phones

  • 51 Posted by concerned_and_14 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:28PM EDT Report Abuse

    who cares. why do you need all these extra features for a phone? i mean IM and internet ya, but what other crap are you paying for other than that? your regular phones can do that. I'ev seen regular phones with the same thing sidekicks have and they are so much cheaper.

  • 54 Posted by ezmoneyturner on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    "I love the design. It appears to be similiar to a Slider Remix and a Sidekick in one combination."

  • 56 Posted by uwannaplay91 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    I would like to say that Helio does have good devices but there services sucks as a employee, i think its my duty to warn you about your mins. Why people go over so much is that there systems do mess up and when most of you know you should have 300mins lefted and then you find out you have like 200mins and you call about it we will say I am sorry "are systems are updating right now and everything will go back to normal" it is not true basically u ara sol out. Helio maybe new but they are getting people and that is partly why we had that march campgain where if you got hotlined we would wave half of your bill. So I warn before taking on Helio devices. Because more and likely u will have overage charges a lot!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • 57 Posted by armandor22 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    Are you able to use it with T-Moble services?

  • 58 Posted by jinxnray98 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    I just purchased my Ocean from 3G Wireless (an authorized Helio retailer) for $200. That is $95 less than what Helio.com is selling it for, for new customers. I posted a comment last week saying this review helped me solidfy my decision to buy the Ocean and I am happy to say it should be in my hands by tomorrow. Happy texting!

  • 60 Posted by mlharr163 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is impressive because of the GPS feature. However, I just love my Cingular 8125..there is a newer version out now that has a 3 megapixel camera..mine is only 1.3megapixels.

  • 61 Posted by im_on_line15 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    Good Gadget! I think it would be best among perfects for me if it provide SD card slot. Because I must say if it provide atleast 2 GB memory it should be in my hand.

  • 62 Posted by beowolf72 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:05PM EDT Report Abuse

    Helio is not a SIM based phone. And in my opinion, Helio is a great phone company. I've had no problems with them, and I've been with them for just about a year. I am able to switch my minutes from one all-in plan to another by going on their website, and there is no charge for it, nor is there a contract extension. I will say this though. Every company is going ot have its 'horror' stories. It happens. I am planning on getting the Ocean here in the next month or so.

  • 63 Posted by uwannaplay91 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    these people are scams and they do get you in the 30days half to people do not get money back even though they say they will. THEY WILL NOT MOST LIKELY GIVE BACK TO YOU!

  • 65 Posted by withouthim_notso_well on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    I work At a Store that Sells Helio And They Are Just so amazing. You Forgot To Mention That they Have all Access To Myspace, which is Becoming Quite Popular. You Said Something about the price Being A Bit much but If you Look At The Razor, which Is Not Half As Good As the Helio Phones. the Razor Is almost $400 At most Stores. Anywas just wanted to Say That these Phones are so Amazing

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