The first thing I
noticed about the 3.5-inch portrait-oriented touchscreen is its sharpness and
color resolution, which is better than I’ve seen before on a handheld. One
shouldn’t have to squint (or pull out reading glasses) to operate an LCD remote,
but even fine point, single pixel width type is clearly visible on the T3’s
screen. The screen’s color depth is also better than I’m used to seeing, and
even tiny logos embedded within button icons for sources such as DirecTV and XM
satellite radio are faithfully reproduced and easily recognizable despite their
diminutive image size.
The T3’s screen layout, button sizes, and other visual
characteristics can be customized to any look the user prefers. The remote
itself is shipped “bare,” and the programming software (available only to
dealers) includes a variety of colorful predesigned desktop templates and a
plethora of button icons in various shapes, sizes, colors, and shadings for
equipment functions, touchpad layouts, and cursor/menu keypads. It also offers
logo-accurate buttons for literally hundreds of TV, cable, and basic and premium
satellite channels—including digital radio and HDTV.
 | Dedicated hard keys feature a comfy, rubberized texture with easy-to-see amber
backlighting that activates (with the screen) when you pick up the remote. This
makes common tasks such as changing channels easy. |
The programmer’s PDF
manual is 100 plus pages, but as I’m a masochist, I ignored it from the outset
and instead launched the program to see how far I could get before I had to
“RTFM.” Within an hour or two of fiddling around, I’d gotten the T3
configured to operate my entire home theater system. I didn’t bother to create
new icons or desktop graphics as the programming software provides all the
custom button icons that one needs for a setup like mine, and I was happy with
the seven supplied desktop styles. Even button click sounds can be customized
via imported WAV files, if one wants to go that far.
The software has
extensive help capability and a macro programming wizard. For gearheads, the
program displays the actual IR waveform, the carrier frequency, and even the
hexadecimal control code, which allows you to make precise modifications to IR
codes, if you’re into that sort of thing.