There is something very Japanese about Lenovo's new P60 handset. From the mute, metallic and pastel-colour shell, to the sharp rectangular contours of the clamshell, the P60 just screams Tokyo style. Like many Japanese phones, the clean lines are added to by more geometric lines - found in the square lens of the camera, and the frame that surrounds the lens, as well as the number keys and control pads. But that's about all that is Japanese about the Lenovo P60. The P60 only supports dual-band GSM connections, which won't work in Japan since you need 3G to roam there. Then there is the 2-megapixel digital camera, which doesn't cut it for most cameras in Hong Kong, let alone those in Japan. It's not even that thin, at 14.4mm, and not exactly light at 118 grams. What it does offer is a pretty large 2.4-inch, 260,000-colour TFT display. Yes, it's not Oled or Amoled, but it should offer good colour and brightness in most light levels and for most applications. There are also plenty of games, an MP3 and video player, and Java support for application downloads. The P60 has one more trick up its sleeve. It supports not one, but two, SIM cards - this means you can have two phone numbers operating inside a single P60 at the same time. Buttons let you select which card to use, or which number to answer calls from, a feature that will come in handy for avoiding those high roaming fees. The Lenovo P60 sells for HK$1,480. Pros: dual SIM, dual standby for using two numbers at the same time Cons: no 3G, low-resolution camera, single display