

However, Motorola has retained many of the other features that made the Sidekick unique. You simply slide the screen section upwards. But it is gone, and the new Sidekick Slide has a much more sedate way of getting to its keyboard. This mechanism was one of the things that made the Sidekick what it was.

You pushed at the screen’s top right edge with a finger and it rather boisterously swivelled round 180 degrees to reveal a QWERTY keyboard. All previous Sidekicks have had a ‘flip and swivel’ screen. In the reworking of the Sidekick’s looks it has lost a real wow feature. Unfortunately, the plastic used for the casing is a bit of a fingerprint magnet. A black and blue livery replaces the black and silver of the Sidekick 3. Motorola has taken over the design from Sharp, and this has had a huge effect on look and feel. T-Mobile may be crowing about the Slide being the smallest, slimmest Sidekick yet, but the device is still big for a mobile phone at 60 x 110mm, 17mm thick and a hefty 150g. This means not only can you make diary changes and suchlike without fiddling with the Sidekick Slide itself, but you have a backup if your device gets lost – and one which can be downloaded to a replacement Slide. You can get to this information from any computer, and make edits or changes, which are themselves transferred back down to your Slide.
T mobile sidekick software#
In both software and hardware terms the Sidekick Slide is similar to its predecessors, A key selling point of the Sidekick Slide is the ‘Web portal’.īasically everything you store on the Slide is automatically backed up to a password protected Web site. But T-Mobile clearly is smitten, and now brings the latest version, renamed the Sidekick Slide, over from the US. Too big, too clunky, too mid-range in specs, I always thought.Įarly in 2007 the Sidekick 3 didn’t bowl me over, but then I hadn’t been very impressed by earlier versions of the device, either. I’ve never been convinced by the ‘yoofy’ IM-generation oriented Sidekick.
