AIGURU_SV1 Skype Video Phone
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| List Price: | $434.34 |
| Price: | $279.99 |
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Ships from and sold by BESTSELLER21
2 new or used available from $279.99
Average customer review:Product Description
With the ASUS Eee Videophone AirGuru SV1 youll be able to enjoy free Skype-to-Skype video and voice calls to friends and family all around the world. You wont need a computer to get connected and its simplicity itself to set up, enter your Skype Name and password and start calling.
Product Details
- Brand: Asus
- Model: AIGURUSV1
- Dimensions: 3.00 pounds
Features
- ASUS Skype Video phone, HNT1A
- Voip-telephones
- Net Talk USB SKYPE Phone
Customer Reviews
Great video phone, could be a little better
I bought this video phone in February, after waiting for about a month for it to become available on Amazon.com. It seems to be always out of stock. Overall, I'm very satisfied with it so far and have used it to view relatives overseas and parents out of state.
Pros:
1) The video phone is always online without having to use a computer.
2) The video camera on the Skype phone transmits a video picture as clear or clearer than any of the computer based webcams I've seen, included the highly rated Logitech 9000.
3) When doing a voice only call, the speaker phone is amazingly clear. It sounds better than my cordless speakerphone. With the video calling, the sound quality degrades somewhat, but I believe it is due to intranet bandwidth limits more than phone hardware limitations.
4) The video phone is relatively easy to use. If I call someone who is using Skype on their computer, we often waste a lot of time trying to get their computer webcam or microphone working, whereas my videophone never has to be fiddled with.
5) The phone uses 20 watts of power when plugged in and waiting to receive calls. This is cheaper on the electric bill than leaving on our desktop (120 watts) or a laptop (45 watts) for 24 hours a day to receive Skype calls. I wish it could run on less power though (like 5 watts) when it is waiting to receive calls.
6) The phone setup was not too hard. The trickiest part was getting connected to the internet. I couldn't figure out what the PPPoe user name and password was for a direct LAN cable connection to our router, but I was able to set up the wireless connection after entering (very tedious) a long wireless network password using the on screen keyboard.
Cons:
1) The video screen is not as clear as what I've seen on my laptop's Skype video screen. However, the frame rate is much better than Yahoo Messenger's video calls, so overall I'm satisfied.
2) Battery life is only rated about 20 minutes. Wish it could last for at least 90 minutes, which would cover most calls. At least it is enough time to take the phone for a quick tour of the house or backyard and then find another outlet to plug in.
3) The video phone lacks a number keypad, so it takes a while to enter a phone number in using their on screen number pad.
4) When making a local phone call to a phone number, I still have to type in the country code and city code, as if I am making an international call. The phone doesn't default to a home country or area code.
Update (6.13.2009): It does allow me to enter just the area code and phone number now when dialing a local phone number. It must know which country I'm calling from.
5) The phone is not meant for carrying around and conversing like a cordless phone due to its size. You have to set it down somewhere. I think the base has some weight in it so that it doesn't topple over easily.
6) The phone can tilt up to view the ceiling but not towards the ground to view stuff on the table top.
7) I haven't found a way to change the ring tone for different callers.
a few issues
the thing works very well but has a couple of issues and a few catastrophic design flaws:
- no keypad, so it is difficult to dial phone numbers (a touchpanel would be a great fit for this device)
- power button very hard to reach, but sometimes you press it accidentally if you carry the device around
- it rings on the headphones, as the headphone connector is on the back you want to leave them plugged in all the time, but then you won't notice any incoming calls, as you don't hear it ringing when you don't wear the headphones (oh man! what a big design flaw)
- If someone send you a text-message you do not see it (no problem) , but the other person does not know this and assumes you are ignoring the text message. People sending text-messages should receive an automated answer "this account cannot receive text-messages".
- no real buddy list, just a big name-sorted address-book (it has a screensaver which is trying to mimic that)
- silly boot and power-off images (sun and moon), just does not look very professional
- one ringtone for all contacts
- you cannot remove "Echo / Sound Test" from your contacts. (they should move that to audio-preferences, contact list is not a very good place for sound test)
- the device is a little bit too big and too heavy (it weights much more than my netbook with 6cell battery, which has more than enough power to do skype calls)
- it should have a dedicated mute button on the front
- power save mode still consumes too much power, you cannot change any of the screensaver or display-off-timeout values (when I am at my desk I want to see a buddy list all the time, when I leave a easily reachable sleep-button would be nice)
- if you change volume there is no feedback how loud the setting actually is
it looks like they did not test the device with real users, or the release deadline was already near.
I tested the device with software 1.0.0.23 (which is now 6 months old), it looks that this is their latest release
I did not test skype-in skype-out and answering-machine
I hope they fix all of the software-only "bugs" soon
Perfect for grandparents
My grandmother is 87 years old, and she has three grandchildren living abroad. Obviously, she misses us and would like to see us more often than just when we visit. But she does not feel confident using a computer.
We bought the Aiguru SV1 for her, and she uses it with wired internet, since that is easier. She has become a very eager user. She is concerned about the fact that it gets warm, and insists on turning it off whenever the probability of getting a call is low.
There is only one thing that could have been made easier, and that is turning it off. Now you have to press the on/off button on the back, and then a yes/no window pops up and you have to choose yes by using the arrows. It would have been easier to just turn it off by pressing the on/off button. It is not so easily accessible, so there does not seem to be a great danger of turning off the phone by mistake.
This is not a videophone that I would buy for myself, since I have my computer on all the time. But this is definitely ideal for grandparents, and there are many who would love it. It is not available worldwide. I am just glad I found out about it and was able to buy it. I recommend it wholeheartedly as the perfect gift for grandparents.



