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The A630 doesn't really compete with the MPx or MPx100, so if that is any part of T-Mobile's reasoning, I think it would be a huge mistake. I doubt that's what's going on, though.
The only real competition for the A630 is Nokia's 6820. These are both standard cell phones, with QWERTY keyboards added. They're not smartphones or PDA phones. The A630 is based on the triplets platform (V600, etc.), just like the 6820 is based on Nokia's Series 40 platform.
I'm not at all surprised about the memory. With no MP3 player and only a VGA camera, 5MB is about right. Same as the V600. IM, SMS, and e-mail do not consume much memory, and that's what this device is designed to do. No, not document viewers, AFAIK.
As for the Sidekick... The A630 is a smaller, but less capable device. The Sidekick is still the device for people who want serious web browsing and serious e-mail. The A630 is about SMS and IM primarily, not web, and only partly e-mail.
But back to T-Mobile... I think one possible reason for hesitation on Smartphones may simply be support costs. There's a significant cost for each new platform they add to their lineup. T-Mobile already offer Series 60, Pocket PC, and Palm OS... Adding MS Smartphone may be one platform too many for them, especially considering that T-Mobile USA is a much smaller carrier than Cingular, Sprint, etc.
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