Orange Lisbon
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Portugal's nice this time of year -- the beaches, the climate, hoa tam giác mạch the orange sun. Speaking of Orange, the company's curiously named Lisbon handset is testament to how little it knows about [ phone] design, as it's possibly the most unusable handset ever.
The Lisbon is available direct from Orange for £30 on a pay as you go plan.
Every word for infuriating
The Lisbon is a decent-looking phone, resembling the small [/reviews/palm-pre-uk-version-review/ Palm Pre], but its good looks come at the expense of functional design. The screen itself is rather small and doesn't lend itself well to touch sensitivity. The on-screen keyboard (there's no physical one) has to be alphanumeric as a result. Even though it dominates most of the screen, making it hard to see what you're typing, the keys themselves are still insufferably small. The touchscreen is frustratingly unresponsive and only registered our presses about half of the time. As a result, composing text messages is practically impossible.
Orange has tried to remedy these issues by including directional buttons on the front of the phone, but, given that there are no physical selection buttons or keyboard, using the directional buttons requires constantly alternating between button and screen, which is just frustrating. There are substantial gaps between the screen and the buttons on the front of the handset. We feel this space could've been put to better use, kynghidongduong.vn perhaps by adding select buttons to accompany the directional buttons and allowing the user to feasibly forgo the touchscreen entirely.
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