Unfortunately, the phone's overall construction is about the same. The plastic skin feels cheap in the hand, and we were terrified about dropping it on a hard surface. The phone is compact (3.29 inches by 2.33 inches by 1.65 inch) but it is almost too light (2.33 ounces) in the hand. The hinge is pretty solid, but we still weren't impressed.
The postage stamp external display supports 65,000 colors (128x128 pixels). It shows the date, time, battery life, signal strength, and photo caller ID. The volume rocker, Micro-USB/charger port and 2.5mm headset jack sit on the left spine, while a voice-dialing control and a tiny speaker sit on the right spine. The controls are easy to use, but the USB port's cover is flimsy. Also, we'd prefer a 3.5mm headset jack.
The internal display measures 2 inches diagonally. It's a bit small for the phone's size, but it displays 262,000 colors. You can change the backlighting time, the dialing font size, and the clock format. The display is relatively bright and vibrant--not the greatest we've seen but perfectly fine for a phone of this caliber. You can choose from three menu designs, all of which are relatively intuitive.
The navigation array consists of a four-way toggle with a central OK button, two soft keys, a speakerphone control, a camera shortcut, a clear key, and the Talk and End/power buttons. The array is spacious, but the keys are flat and rather slippery. You can set the toggle to act as a shortcut to four user-defined functions.
The backlit keypad is spacious with large numbers, but the keys are flush and have a cheap feeling when pressed. We didn't have any problems when dialing or texting during our review period, but we'd worry about the keypad's long-term durability.
Features
The Mirage has a 500-contact phone book with room in each entry for five phone numbers and two e-mail addresses. You can save callers to groups and pair them with a photos and one of 11 polyphonic ringtones.
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