LG Incite CT810 Phone, Silver
Posted by adminSep 3
- Business-oriented smartphone with Windows Mobile 6.1 OS, Wi-Fi networking, and 3-inch touchscreen
- Tri-mode 3G-connectivity; compatible with AT&T Navigator GPS turn-by-turn directions, AT&T Mobile Music, Video Share service, and Mobile Banking
- 3-megapixel camera/camcorder; Bluetooth stereo music streaming; MicroSD expansion to 32 GB; direct push email; access to instant messaging; digital media player
- Up to 8.7 hours of talk time, up to 504 hours ( 21 days) of standby time
- What’s in the Box: handset, battery, charger, USB cable, getting started guide, quick start guide, CD with user guide
Amazon.com Product Description
Blending premium capabilities with ultramodern design, the LG Incite for AT&T features a brilliantly colorful 3-inch touchscreen that offers a choice of on-screen virtual keyboards with haptic keys that provide vibration feedback. Built for business with the power of the updated Windows Mobile 6.1 operating system, you’ll stay easily connected to your business and personal data on the go with support for a wide variety of email accounts as well as the abi… More >>

Wow! The reviews of this item are all love or all hate! I suppose nobody posts a review if they feel just okay about an item. But I thought I’d put something up here that doesn’t sound like a press release and also doesn’t make this sound like it will give you diseases.
This is a perfectly good phone/organizer with which you will be perfectly happy if you don’t set your standards irrationally high. It’s got a load of features and they all work as advertised.
The major complaints seem to be about it being slow and unresponsive. It runs Windows Mobile 6.1. Slow and unresponsive are hallmarks of the Windows brand, what did you expect? But it is fast enough to make your calls and organize your contacts and play your music, which is what you want this phone for. If you want this phone for too much else, you don’t want this phone: you want an iPhone, and you’re going to have to pay for an iPhone.
This is not an iPhone, but it also doesn’t cost nearly as much as an iPhone.
I think a major culprit to the “slow and unresponsive” complaint is the “haptic response.” This is a cool idea that has fallen a little behind in the implementation. The idea is that it runs the vibrator a little when you hit a key. Unfortunately, what it does is it hits the vibrator a little *after* you hit the key. This immediate feedback really makes any little lag hit home. If you turn this feature off, you probably won’t notice the delay at all: it’ll run just like any other of your Windows CE or Windows Mobile devices.
Also, for a speed boost, try deleting some of the Java game demos and parasite-ware that come on it. If you’re not going to pay for the full version of Ms. Pacman or Finance Mobile, wipe them and get that memory back.
The complaint about the full qwerty keyboard being too big is entirely valid. It is really useless. However, it still has the default Windows Mobile full qwerty keyboard available—which is much smaller—and one of the best handwriting recognition tools in the hand-held device market. (If you’re really feeling hackish, try out the Dasher input method!)
There’s a complaint that the interface, beyond the “Today” screen, is standard Windows Mobile fare and requires the silly little stylus fob. True, the stylus fob is really… well… it’s gay. (It’s gay in that way that homosexual people almost never are, if you must know.) On the other hand, the touch screen (slow as it is) is pretty good at working out where the center of your finger is. I’ve got big flat sausage fingers, but I can navigate the Windows menus fine and even play the tiny little game of solitaire without the silly little stylus. So the stylus is a non-issue. (And get yourself one of those pen/pencil/stylus combos from any Wallgreen’s if it is an issue for you.)
Someone had a complaint that the registration was off: when you hit the screen with the stylus, the hit registered off on a diagonal. You need to configure your screen. There’s a little test they give you where you have to chase a cross around the screen with the stylus. They used to do this on first boot and whenever the OS was reset. Now you have to dig a little to find the program that does this, but it’s still there. Under the Start Menu (upper left) hit settings, then hit the “System” tab and hit “Screen.” This is a pain, I know, when your screen is badly misaligned (as it will be out of the box), but the thumb-wheel will help you. You need to run through it three times: once for portrait mode and once for each of the landscape modes.
Here is the absolute coolest part of this phone: Google.
AT&T has a turn-by-turn GPS map app that they charge you extra to use. But the GPS is built into the phone. If you download Google Maps, it is able to use the GPS data from your phone and track you in real time… for free! (Well, you’re still paying for the data package, but you’re not paying additional for the map service.) Google Sync also works: for this device, Google pretends to be an Exchange Server and you point Active Sync at m.google.com. This syncs your Google Calendar and GMail Contacts to your phone. (These can by synced to your desktop or laptop with other software.) The mail app has IMAP support, so you can use that to sync to your GMail messages or use the mobile version of GMail in either of the two built-in browsers (IE or Access Whoozit, the AT&T browser.)
Google Docs all have mobile versions. There’s a mobile YouTube app if you don’t like the Cingular Video service. Post to your Orkut profile with ease (you have an Orkut profile, right? No? Well, anyway…)
This phone + Google’s mobile apps is really pretty fly!
Here’s the bottom line: if you’ve played with an iPhone and are looking for an iPhone: get an iPhone. This is not an iPhone.
If, on the other hand, you’re looking for an inexpensive organizer/phone with a fair amount of style (stupid little dangly stylus aside), or if you’re upgrading from an older Windows CE device, this is really a solid choice. There’s a lot of value here for the money.
***UPDATE***
The too-large full qwerty keyboard that everybody hates? It has a little arrow in the lower right that makes the control bar at the bottom of the screen go away, giving you another line of input. This doesn’t always make the difference you hope it would, but it makes the full qwerty usable for text messages in particular and for entering searches in the Google Mobile app (not included).
Rating: 4 / 5
Pros: Great phone in terms of features:
1. Windows OS provides lots of features. Windows-based phones are mini-laptops in terms of features. (In addition to normal phone functionality, you have Word/Excel/PDF/etc.)
2. Outlook synchronization works great. (Learned that Microsoft’s sync tools do not sync SMS messages etc. Only the stuff supported by MS Outlook like contacts, tasks, emails, etc.)
3. Wi-fi works great (many users report that it does not work, that is only because default settings on the device are set to connect to the Internet using AT&Ts network. Online search reveals how to change settings…).
4. Looks great in spite of the bland gray body color.
Cons:
1. Touch screen keyboard size occupies almost all the screen in landscape mode (only way to get full keyboard). The text field into which you are typing does not even scroll into view in the remaining space. Result is you cannot see what you type.
2. No arrow keys on the keyboard. Once you make a mistake typing (see 1 above), then you need to retype the whole thing again.
3. Not so good touch-screen. I use my fingers only, not the supplied stylus. Most of the time it works great, but sometimes need to press really hard for it to recognize. Finger-nail works right.
4. Slow response – If I disable screen-tap sounds, it appears that the phone has not recognized your touch (takes so long for it to respond). This is clearly a software issue since some applications respond great!
5. When scrolling contacts, I use gestures (impossibly hard to use thin GUI scroll bar with a thumb). Now it scrolls multiple pages in one shot. Not possible to scroll at just the right speed to see everything – always miss many contacts since it scrolls so many pages.
6. No space to put stylus within the phone. Stylus hangs to the phone like a key-chain. Who gives these people such ideas?
I am trying to find a replacement AT&T phone that has such features (pros only
), yet does not mandate a data plan.
Minor cons:
1. Screen has mirror polish. Who gives these people such ideas. I see screen plus my reflected face on the screen all the time.
Rating: 3 / 5
I have had many phones over the year. usually get one each year; mainly because I like new stuff! However< this phone is by far the best out there! I have had the Iphone which did not have the features that I really wanted (ie. video, picture messging, microsoft word, etc) When I saw this phone was to be released I investigated it thoroughly. I am not sure what the other reviewer was speaking o...I have had the phone for a few weeks no and it truly is the next best thing since sliced bread! I have 2 businesses and since getting this phone< i rarely go near my computer! it takes care of all of my email needs (both personal and isuness) i am able to produce and open power point pojects, word document, spreadsheets and more!! also, he wi-fi feature is great! the touchscreen is wonderfl and the slight vibration feature is great! (let's you know the phone has registered your touch) the phone's response time is quick. as ar as the battry..not sure what the other reviewer was speaking of...i am on my phone constantly with voice, email and internet and the batter i the longest lasting around! also the voice astivation feature is great! I can operate my phone via voie and my appointments are spoen to me when i choose to be alerted! how awesome is hat!
well…i could go on and on about this phone and how wondeful it is, but i actually have to get back to work!
Rating: 5 / 5
LG INCITE CT810 Phone, Silver (AT&T)
I am an early adopter…I’ve owned every major smartphone OS: Treo 270, Hitachi G1000 (Windows Mobile), multiple Blackberrys (8100, Curve), Treo 650s – and I’ve upgraded, tinkered with all of them to watch feature length movies, do remote server access behind firewalls, etc…in other words a PDA geek. I was a millimeter away from buying an iPhone in 2008 – when I was talked out of it and into my BB Curve. I have every SW synchronization running on my laptop – Palm OS, BMS, Win Mo 6.1 — the LG CT810 is by far the smoothest, slickest device I have come across. I migrated my contacts from BB through Outlook, my iTunes converts into Win Mo Mediaplayer, I’ll upgrade the data management S/W to utilize the OS/processor interface so it will be even smoother…I don’t understand others complaints about this phone. It does have idiosyncrisies…no embedded stylus…landscape typing leaves a small view of text…color vibrancy is not equal to iPhone; however, this device has more connectivity options than an iPhone [HSPDA, UMTS tri-band, Edge, 3G, GPRS, GSM quad-band, satellite connectivity, WiFi + FM radio receiver] …all of which I tested and am impressed by. Watching CNN, Superbowl commercials and music videos, viewing Facebook in full – For $0.01 – I think I just found true smartphone love.
Rating: 4 / 5
I chose this phone recently when I started a wireless contract with AT&T. It had a history of problems (noted in many past reviews online)with the touchscreen accuracy and system stability, but it seems that LG had a recall (at least at the AT&T stores) and the one I purchased is the newer one which is only sans the famous bugs.
I want to start off by saying this phone is jampacked with powerful productivity/ multimedia features, definitely enough to run alongside the iPhone in that regard. What brought me to this phone was having WM 6.1, its ability to connect Wifi, and GPS without any additional equipment which seems to be the norm for most of the higher end 3G smartphones nowadays. It’s also a pretty sleek phone, simple yet almost effective design.
However, any Incite owner (or frustrated former owner) will tell you that its biggest shortcoming is the screen size versus the virtual keyboard; an ideal ratio between using the keyboard and seeing what you’re typing just isn’t there for this size of a screen. Instead of at least half and half, the keyboard occludes about 70% of the screen during texts, and 80% while inputting fields on a browser. It’s tolerable when you text, but not when you’re browsing. I wonder how the think tank at LG could get so close to making one of the best Windows Mobile competitors against the iPhone and come short by making such a basic flaw as having the screen too small to comfortably touch-navigate the phone without the stylus, which by the way is not embedded into the phone’s frame.
Shotcoming aside, I do really like what this phone has to offer feature-wise; most of the other phones compared to it are on the high end, so I’m going to try to find some 3rd party software that might make its crutch tolerable. Avid texters need not apply.
UPDATE: I never felt 100% about keeping this phone and I gave it try for a week and decided to take it back within the 30 day limit. I remade this review to give it its proper rating which is definitely a 1. An important feature of any phone is to effectively receive input from the user (i.e. texting, phone dialing.) This phone clearly cannot deliver that to its owner without possible 3rd party mod or an accessory which is simply unacceptable. I was enamored with the bold features (that came cheaper than the Fuze) at first, but now not being able to see what I type is getting old quickly. What I was looking for was between this phone and the HTC Fuze and I decided to put out a little more cash and grab the Fuze, a phone I know I’ll be happier with in the long term– BUYER BEWARE! It’s cheap because it sucks, simply put.
Rating: 1 / 5