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Is ATT's ogo A Worthy Purchase?

PhosterPharms writes "The ATT Wireless ogo is a new device on the market which allows unlimited instant messaging, e-mail, and SMS for a $99 purchase, $20 activation, and $15-24 a month service fee depending on options. The idea of having access to my e-mail and AIM no matter where I am is very alluring, but the only review I can find seems somewhat negative. The ATT Forums seem mixed. Does anyone have any experience with the ogo or any suggestions for alternatives? I don't need another cell phone, just a cheap e-mail and IM client - the $300-400 that service providers want for Sidekicks and Blackberries (Plus $40 a month) seem a bit too much."

7 of 48 comments (clear)

  1. 2/5 by MBCook · · Score: 2, Informative
    I don't know much about it either. But it was in the newest issue of PC Magazine (which I just happened to get today in the mail). You can read the review here.

    They don't seem too happy either. "The T-Mobile Sidekick II does everything the Ogo does but much better, and it doubles as your phone." and "The Ogo is fairly unique [...]. But we wish the device's shortcomings weren't so glaring."

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    Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    1. Re:2/5 by BrookHarty · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, and reading the article maybe you missed a few things.

      1. Its the cheapest all purpose IM with Email/SMS on the market.
      2. Cingular+ATT merged, you have the largest SMS coverage in the USA.
      3. It's a IM only device, which means its in Data mode all the time. Compare 30+ hours of data mode Sidekicks 4 hours of data time.
      4. PC Magazine states its PERFECT for IM, but not great for Email. Its marketed as an IM device with Email too. So, think of getting email also, not that Email sux0rs.
      5. Bluetooth is turned off, but guess what, they can enable it later.
      6. Its cheap for SMS, cheap as a pager, but its 2way.

      Ive seen the device, its light, works good, nice keypad. Now I would of liked a browser, ssh, IRC and a phone. But then, im sure it wouldnt sell for sub 99 bux with a contract.

      Ya, 2/5 because they rated it against a phone. It's not a phone, not a impressive review.

  2. not worth the purchase. by ForestGrump · · Score: 2

    god damned, i'll admit im an aim junkie but everywhere you go?

    Well i'm not here to judge other slashdotters. so here is my advice and what to do.

    firstly, the cost (100) was what i paid for my dell axim x5 basic. spent snother 70 for a wireless nic and 20 for a 256 sd card. total 200 bucks. (but no activation and monthly fee)

    how do i get my aim anywhere fix? setup imfowarding to your phone.
    http://mymobile.aol.com/portal/im/index.ht ml

    My phone provider allows 300 messqges a month for me. (really old plan before they realized people would pay for sms...which is stipd becaue it takes up *no network resource* compared to phone calls)

    anyway. im fowarding allows me to reply via sms, or i can burn a min or 2 by calling them back.

    Email? If I'm not in my apt, im probably on campus. campus wirelss (see wlan nic) keeps me in touch if i want to check with webmail (but i dont care for email. if its anything important, i'd get a call/aim anyway.) There is a pocketpc aim client by aol.

    I've heard of using gprs data through phones with the pdas. basically setup a bluetooth/cable/ir connection with the phone and do data that way. don't know much about it though (sorry). i don't do gprs because i don't want to pay an extra 36/year for basic "web and internet" services.

    I say get a pocket pc/palm kinda thing. Its a one time cost, no activation, no monthly fee.

    Grump.

    --
    Is it true that more people vote for the winner of American Idol, than vote for the president? -Ali G.
  3. Probably not, compared to the other options by willfe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I did read your whole question, so sorry for recommending what you said you're not eager to do anyway :)

    You're paying $120-ish to get started, then $20 a month for service. Except it's mail, IM, and web only. No phone, SSH, other apps, expandability, etc.

    Take a couple hundred dollars ($300 or so, I think), grab some rebates from amazon.com, and get a Treo 600 (or preorder a 650). It's a cell phone, that also runs PalmOS. It supports two-way SMS chat, web browser, IM clients galore (many of them free), IRC clients, mail clients (including POP3 and IMAP), SSH clients, etc. You can be on a phone call (with a headset or just on the normal stuff, or speakerphone) and still get into the other apps and do other things (phone and data are mutually exclusive, but you can play games, mess with the PDA apps, load cached browser pages, etc., while on a call).

    You're paying more, yes (service starts at $50 a month), but you get a hell of a lot more, too. I think that's at least 300 national minutes on peak, unlimited off-peak and weekends, and data in unmetered. Using the same cable the beast comes with (though they make smaller/more portable ones that both charge and sync via USB -- even handier on the road), you can attach the phone to your desktop or notebook and get internet access at about 4x dialup speeds with better latency.

    Add that you can throw in memory cards to increase storage room, use all its PDA stuff, add software (lots of it free, the rest pretty cheap), and it adds up to a *very* handy device. Use something like Trillian, which proxies your IM messages (on lots of different networks), you can maintain a constant online presence without having to have the client open all the time, etc.

    Essentially it's worth the money. I had a Treo 300 for a year and a half (until a number of personal issues destroyed my ability to, um, pay any bills :) and loved it. The Treos are infinitely hackable, amazingly flexible, do lots and lots of stuff, and they're one of the few examples of really spiffy technology that actually works right and can help make life easier. Oh yeah, the 600 and 650 have one of those goofy cameras built in too.

    So, um, yeah, my input may not be entirely helpful if you're really limited by budget, but if you can afford it, you will officially like the Treos if you give them a shot. I miss mine and intensely wish I still had mine in service or had a 600 :)

    --
    Read my stuff.
  4. I'll buy it. by AtariAmarok · · Score: 2, Funny

    It would be cool to have full rights to that blue death star logo. Wonder why they are selling it off?

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    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  5. Ehh... by Gangis · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Some people may think that it'd appeal to deaf users like me, but from reading up on it, I think the Sidekick II (which I own) is a much better choice. Granted, you pay more (Although if you go here you can purchase the Sidekick II for $139.99 instead of the $479.99 retail price.) but you have the ability to do telnet/SSH (REALLY useful!), upload homebrew games and programs.

    The Ogo, on the other hand, seems to be an entirely closed system. If I was really strapped for cash, I would consider that but overall the Sidekick II is a much better choice for the geek on the go.

    --
    "Black holes are where God divided by zero." - Steve Wright
    1. Re:Ehh... by BrookHarty · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ya, Tmobile side kick is great, but not everything is rosey. The keyboard is smaller than the OGO, its heavier. And a monthly contract will 2x-3x the cost of OGO a month if you just use IM.

      OGO also has bluetooth, turned off now, but ATT wireless said they would turn it on at a later date. Not sure why, prob new devices.

      But yes, SSH is a must for a true mobile client.