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ASUS P565 800MHz WM6.1 smartphone

ASUS have officially announced their P565 smartphone, a Windows Mobile 6.1 Pro device the claim to fame of which is an 800MHz processor.  According to ASUS, the CPU is good for Vsbenchmark scores near double those of rival handsets.  Other specs include a 2.8-inch VGA touchscreen, HSDPA 3.6Mbps, GPS, WiFi b/g and ASUS’ own Glide GUI, an interface similar in concept to HTC’s TouchFLO 3D. 

asus_p565_smartphone_1

The P565 has 256MB RAM and 128MB ROM, with memory expansion via a microSDHC card slot.  It measures 102 mm x 60.5 mm x 16 mm and weighs 120g; runtime from the 1,300mAh Li-Ion battery is rated at 3hrs 3G talktime or 4hrs 2G (or 250-300hrs 3G standby, 200-250hrs 2G standby). 

There’s also a 3-megapixel rear-mounted camera with autofocus, and a front-facing video-call camera.  The P565 is capable of recording MPEG4 video at QVGA 24fps quality, or playing back MPEG4 video at QVGA 30fps (or H.263 at QCIF 30fps).  It supports the usual Exchange push-email and synchronization.

No prices or availability details from ASUS yet.

asus_p565_smartphone_1-150x100 asus_p565_smartphone_2-150x100 asus_p565_smartphone_3-150x100 asus_p565_smartphone_4-150x100

[via wmpoweruser]


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Written by Chris Davies on November 17th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on CPU and GPS and SMARTPHONE and Windows Mobile 6 and archive and asus and wifi.

iGala digital picture frame allows you to check news and weather too

Aequitas Technologies has just released the iGala Wireless Digital Picture Frame. This digital picture frame features an 8” 800 x 600 touchscreen display, Wi-Fi, 1GB of internal memory and connections with Microsoft Windows Live Framelt, Flickr and Google’s Gmail.

igala-digital-picture-frame

This picture frame really gives you a bang for your buck with the Framelt connection and built-in Wi-Fi enabling you to view content such as News, Traffic, and Weather information.  The standard resolution touchscreen allows users to quickly and easily set up email accounts without the need of a PC.

This is the first time we have seen Gmail in a digital picture frame. Now users are able to associate their Gmail account with their iGala picture frame and send photos directly to it from anywhere in the world. You just have to watch which photos you send.  The iGala is looking to be one of the best digital picture frames on the market today. The iGala digital picture frame is on sale right now for $239.

[Via DigitalPictureFrameReview]

igala-back-150x100 igala-digital-picture-frame-150x100 main_menu-150x100

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Written by Shawn Brown on November 14th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Digital Picture Frame and Email and archive and touchscreen and wifi.

Parrot Specchio WiFi/NFC frame: there’s a photo in there among the glare

When we first saw Parrot’s Specchio digital photo frame, designed by Martin Szekely, it looked to be a promising concept: wireless image transfer, slick appearance, what’s not to like, eh?  But this live image of the Specchio in action throws it into a whole new light - or, more accurately, it reflects a whole lot of light from the semi-mirrored glass front-panel and completely washes out the image.

parrot_specchio_martin_szekely_1-480x412

Now I suppose there’s a joke market out there for digital photo frames that badly display images you don’t actually want to look at - interminable holiday snaps from distant family members, perhaps - but that’s probably not what Parrot were aiming for.  Moreover, $500 is a whole lot to pay for a joke.

It’s a shame, because there’s a lot to like about the guts of the Specchio, if not the casing.  Apart from WiFi, which SlashGear reckons should be in every digital photo frame, it also has Bluetooth with support for the new Near Field Communication (NFC) standard.

parrot_specchio_martin_szekely_2-430x480

[via DVICE]


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Written by Chris Davies on November 12th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Digital Picture Frame and archive and bluetooth and design and parrot and wifi.

Eye-Fi 4GB Anniversary Edition WiFi SD card released

eye-fi_anniversary_edition_4gb_wifi_cardEye-Fi have marked their first birthday with the launch of a new, special edition anniversary card.  The new WiFi-enabled SD card now contains 4GB of storage rather than the standard models’ 2GB.  While as standard the new 4GB card does not come with any of Eye-Fi’s more advanced features, such as geotagging or automatic hotspot uploads, these can be subscribed to separately.

The new card is, however, being described as a limited edition, and as such stocks are capped.  Eye-Fi have not made clear how many of the 4GB anniversary cards are available, but they’re on sale now in Costco for $99 (you must be a Costco club member) or $129 from Eye-Fi’s own online store.  There’s no word on when Eye-Fi will be offering a normal 4GB card.

Like the other models in the range, the anniversary Eye-Fi card supports static WEP 40/104/128, WPA-PSK and WPA2-PSK encryption and has a roughly 90 foot outdoor range (45 foot indoor).  The cheapest Eye-Fi option is the 2GB Home model, priced at $79.

Press Release:

EYE-FI UNVEILS THE 4GB EYE-FI ANNIVERSARY EDITION

Eye-Fi Celebrates First Anniversary with 4GB Limited Edition Anniversary
Card and the Win of Popular Science’s Best of What’s New Award

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Nov. 12, 2008 - Today Eye-Fi Inc. (www.eye.fi)
announced a new, limited edition card - the Eye-Fi Anniversary
Edition - to celebrate the one-year anniversary of its first wireless SD
memory card for digital cameras. Eye-Fi also announced it has been
chosen as one of Popular Science’s 2008 “Best of What’s New” award
recipients.

“For the past year, we’ve been reinventing the way people save and
share their digital memories,” said Jef Holove, CEO of Eye-Fi. “From
automatic uploading to geotagging to sharing on the go, we’ve aimed to
help everyday photographers save their memories more often, share them
more quickly, and add more context to their collections.”

Available immediately, the new Eye-Fi Share Anniversary Edition doubles
storage capacity to 4GB and features improved memory speeds. Coupled
with the recently announced wireless performance upgrade, the
Anniversary Edition offers a no-compromises Eye-Fi experience. Like the
original Eye-Fi Share, the Anniversary Edition wirelessly sends photos
from a digital camera to a computer and to one of more than 25 online
photo sharing sites.

The card comes in Eye-Fi’s celebrated, original slide-out package and is
available only at Costco.com for $99 to club members, or on www.eye.fi
for $129, while supplies last. The Eye-Fi Share card can be upgraded
post purchase to include additional features, such as automatic
geotagging and hotspot access.

Since the Eye-Fi Card launched one year ago, millions of photos
have been uploaded to the Web, and users report that they upload and
share photos with family and friends more frequently.

“With the introduction of the digital camera, the photography
industry faced a real challenge - photos trapped on cameras that were
never shared or printed because of the work involved,” said Alan
Bullock, associate director of InfoTrends. “The industry needs pioneers
like Eye-Fi who recognize the bottlenecks, and build innovative
solutions that move the market forward.”

Over the past year, Eye-Fi has given more and more people the ability to
effortlessly share their digital memories and offered a rich, meaningful
experience for users. Eye-Fi has:

* Helped Take Geotagging Mainstream: Geotagging is a fast growing
trend, and through a partnership with Skyhook Wireless, Eye-Fi has
automated the process to make it easier and more compelling for all
consumers. Using the Wi-Fi embedded in its cards, Eye-Fi uses Wi-Fi
positioning to determine where an image was captured and adds a
geographic tag to each photo.

* Pioneered Uploads-on-the-Go to the Top Photo Sharing
Destinations: Now users can upload photos away from home at more than
10,000 Wayport hotspots with their Eye-Fi cards - even without a
computer.

* Introduced the “Eye-Fi Connected” Program: Eye-Fi has launched
the “Eye-Fi Connected” program to help other manufacturers tap into the
benefits of Eye-Fi’s wireless photo sharing ecosystem. Nikon has
released two Eye-Fi connected cameras, the Nikon D60 and D90, both
optimized for Eye-Fi cards. Lexar introduced the co-branded Shoot-n-Sync
Wi-Fi(r) Memory Card that uses Eye-Fi’s patent-pending technology and
online service.

* Integrated Social Networking: Eye-Fi announced integration with
Twitter and the availability of RSS feeds so users can notify their
networks in real time about recent photo uploads, and photos can be
viewed instantly.

* International Expansion: Due to high demand, Eye-Fi plans to
expand into Japan and Canada by the end of the year. Now more people
worldwide will have the ability to enjoy the benefits of Eye-Fi’s
products and services.

Also announced today, the Eye-Fi Explore card was chosen as one of
Popular Science’s “Best of What’s New Award” recipients in the gadgets
category. Each year since 1987, the editors of Popular Science review
thousands of products in search of the top 100 tech innovations of the
year. To win, a product or technology must represent a significant step
forward in its category.

Eye-Fi’s family of products include the Eye-Fi Home, Share, Share
Anniversary Edition and Explore cards with MSRPs ranging from $79-$129
USD. Eye-Fi cards can be purchased at Apple Retail Stores, Best Buy,
Circuit City and Ritz Camera Center locations nationwide, and at major
online retailers such as Amazon.com, Walmart.com and Costco.com. Eye-Fi
has garnered numerous awards, including PC World’s “The 100 Best
Products of 2008″ and Yahoo! Tech’s “Last Gadget Standing 2008.” For
more information, please visit www.eye.fi.Eye-Fi Celebrates First Anniversary with 4GB Limited Edition Anniversary
Card and the Win of Popular Science’s Best of What’s New Award

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Nov. 12, 2008 - Today Eye-Fi Inc. (www.eye.fi)
announced a new, limited edition card - the Eye-Fi Anniversary
Edition - to celebrate the one-year anniversary of its first wireless SD
memory card for digital cameras. Eye-Fi also announced it has been
chosen as one of Popular Science’s 2008 “Best of What’s New” award
recipients.

“For the past year, we’ve been reinventing the way people save and
share their digital memories,” said Jef Holove, CEO of Eye-Fi. “From
automatic uploading to geotagging to sharing on the go, we’ve aimed to
help everyday photographers save their memories more often, share them
more quickly, and add more context to their collections.”

Available immediately, the new Eye-Fi Share Anniversary Edition doubles
storage capacity to 4GB and features improved memory speeds. Coupled
with the recently announced wireless performance upgrade, the
Anniversary Edition offers a no-compromises Eye-Fi experience. Like the
original Eye-Fi Share, the Anniversary Edition wirelessly sends photos
from a digital camera to a computer and to one of more than 25 online
photo sharing sites.

The card comes in Eye-Fi’s celebrated, original slide-out package and is
available only at Costco.com for $99 to club members, or on www.eye.fi
for $129, while supplies last. The Eye-Fi Share card can be upgraded
post purchase to include additional features, such as automatic
geotagging and hotspot access.

Since the Eye-Fi Card launched one year ago, millions of photos
have been uploaded to the Web, and users report that they upload and
share photos with family and friends more frequently.

“With the introduction of the digital camera, the photography
industry faced a real challenge - photos trapped on cameras that were
never shared or printed because of the work involved,” said Alan
Bullock, associate director of InfoTrends. “The industry needs pioneers
like Eye-Fi who recognize the bottlenecks, and build innovative
solutions that move the market forward.”

Over the past year, Eye-Fi has given more and more people the ability to
effortlessly share their digital memories and offered a rich, meaningful
experience for users. Eye-Fi has:

* Helped Take Geotagging Mainstream: Geotagging is a fast growing
trend, and through a partnership with Skyhook Wireless, Eye-Fi has
automated the process to make it easier and more compelling for all
consumers. Using the Wi-Fi embedded in its cards, Eye-Fi uses Wi-Fi
positioning to determine where an image was captured and adds a
geographic tag to each photo.

* Pioneered Uploads-on-the-Go to the Top Photo Sharing
Destinations: Now users can upload photos away from home at more than
10,000 Wayport hotspots with their Eye-Fi cards - even without a
computer.

* Introduced the “Eye-Fi Connected” Program: Eye-Fi has launched
the “Eye-Fi Connected” program to help other manufacturers tap into the
benefits of Eye-Fi’s wireless photo sharing ecosystem. Nikon has
released two Eye-Fi connected cameras, the Nikon D60 and D90, both
optimized for Eye-Fi cards. Lexar introduced the co-branded Shoot-n-Sync
Wi-Fi(r) Memory Card that uses Eye-Fi’s patent-pending technology and
online service.

* Integrated Social Networking: Eye-Fi announced integration with
Twitter and the availability of RSS feeds so users can notify their
networks in real time about recent photo uploads, and photos can be
viewed instantly.

* International Expansion: Due to high demand, Eye-Fi plans to
expand into Japan and Canada by the end of the year. Now more people
worldwide will have the ability to enjoy the benefits of Eye-Fi’s
products and services.

Also announced today, the Eye-Fi Explore card was chosen as one of
Popular Science’s “Best of What’s New Award” recipients in the gadgets
category. Each year since 1987, the editors of Popular Science review
thousands of products in search of the top 100 tech innovations of the
year. To win, a product or technology must represent a significant step
forward in its category.

Eye-Fi’s family of products include the Eye-Fi Home, Share, Share
Anniversary Edition and Explore cards with MSRPs ranging from $79-$129
USD. Eye-Fi cards can be purchased at Apple Retail Stores, Best Buy,
Circuit City and Ritz Camera Center locations nationwide, and at major
online retailers such as Amazon.com, Walmart.com and Costco.com. Eye-Fi
has garnered numerous awards, including PC World’s “The 100 Best
Products of 2008″ and Yahoo! Tech’s “Last Gadget Standing 2008.” For
more information, please visit www.eye.fi.


Relevant Entries on SlashGear


Written by Chris Davies on November 12th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Eye-Fi and archive and memory and storage and wifi.

UMID MID: WiBro, WiMAX, HSDPA, WiFi & a 4.8-inch touchscreen

UMID have been showing off their new MID (Mobile Internet Device) at the Global Mobile Vision expo, a compact clamshell with a 4.8-inch 1024 x 600 touchscreen and full QWERTY keyboard.  Expected to launch in Korea in 2009, the MID is packed to the rafters with wireless connectivity options: WiBro, WiMAX, HSDPA, WiFi and Bluetooth.  Grunt is courtesy of an Intel Atom 1.1GHz or 1.3GHz processor paired up with 512MB or 1GB of RAM.

umid_mid_1-480x320

Other specs include DMB-T and DVB-T digital TV tuners (which covers both the common Korean and European standards), a range of SSD storage from 8GB to 32GB, and a 1.3-megapixel camera.  The MID also has a microSD slot, USIM card slot (for Korean use) and a single mini-USB 2.0 port.

Windows XP and Vista, together with Linux, are all supported, though it’s unclear which OS UMID will pick for the launch next year.  Still, the amount of technology packed into a 315g package is the real killer here; they’ve been particularly clever with the chromed side-strips that help disguise the MID’s thickness.  No word on price, specific release date nor availability outside of Korea.

umid_mid_1-150x100 umid_mid_2-150x100 umid_mid_3-150x100 umid_mid_4-150x100 umid_mid_5-150x100 umid_mid_6-150x100 umid_mid_7-150x100 umid_mid_8-150x100

[via jkkmobile]


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Written by Chris Davies on November 12th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on MID and QWERTY Keyboard and SSD and WiMAX and Wibro and archive and bluetooth and hsdpa and wifi.

Sony mylo 2 down to $200: due for replacement or retirement?

Is the Sony mylo 2 WiFi communicator due for a replacement or, more simply, the axe?  They’re two obvious possibilities, as Sony scythe a third of the price from the mobile messenger, down from $299.99 to $199.99 at the company’s official store.

sony_mylo_2_price_drop_1

The mylo 2 was officially announced back in January at CES 2008, and with the exception of the widgets download site Sony released in February it’s been a pretty neglected platform since.  Sony positioned the mylo 2 as a contract-free communication and internet browsing device, but strong competition among mobile carriers and falling prices of on-device unlimited cellular data connections meant phones such as the Sidekick kept the limelight.

Sony’s price cut is apparently valid until January 31st, 2009.  That gives them plenty of time to announce a new version - the Sony mylo 3, just as a suggestion - at CES 2009.  With the long-awaited Nokia N810 WiMax Edition finally launching on Sprint’s XOHM network, it’s possible that Sony might follow suit and put high-speed wireless broadband in their mylo replacement.

sony_mylo_2_price_drop_2

[via Pocketables]


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Written by Chris Davies on November 12th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on News and QWERTY Keyboard and Sony and archive and mylo and wifi.

Nokia E63 entry-level smartphone official

Nokia has officially announced the E63 smartphone, which we first saw back in October.  A candybar format handset with full QWERTY keyboard and a 320 x 240 display, the E63 runs the Symbian S60 OS and has quadband GSM/GPRS/EDGE together with WiFi and Bluetooth.  There’s also a 2-megapixel camera capable of QVGA 15fps video recording and a microSD slot to augment the 110MB of internal storage.

nokia_e63-261x480

Whether or not the E63 will have HSDPA is uncertain, however; the initial rumors suggested there would be 3G support, as does this E63 user agent file, but there’s no mention of it in the press release.  What we do know is that there’s one-touch shortcut access to the commonly used productivity features, Microsoft Exchange push-email support, PMP functionality and a web browser.  There’s also a simple way to switch between Work and Personal modes, which among other things shows different categories of upcoming appointments on the homescreen.

The E63 measures 113 x 59 x 13mm and weighs 126g; it’s rated as good for 660 minutes of talk or 432 hours standby.  Nokia is releasing the E63 sometime in the next few weeks, priced at around €199 ($254) before taxes and subsidies.  That also gets you 1GB of online storage through Nokia’s Files on Ovi system.

nokia_e63-150x100 nokia_e63_1-150x100 nokia_e63_2-150x100 nokia_e63_3-150x100

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Written by Chris Davies on November 12th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Nokia and QWERTY Keyboard and SMARTPHONE and archive and wifi.

HTC Touch HD SlashGear Review: Part 2

In the first part of our HTC Touch HD review, we looked at the physical design, the display, the touchscreen, TouchFLO 3D, messaging and internet browsing.  Now, in the second part of our exclusive SlashGear review, we’ll look at GPS and media performance, camera ability and battery life, together with how the Touch HD performs as a cellphone.  We’ll also tackle the biggest question of them all: is the Touch HD an iPhone killer?

htc_touch_hd_review_03-480x284

htc_touch_hd_review_19Google Maps is preinstalled on the Touch HD, and take excellent advantage of a display larger than that of some standalone satnavs.  As with Opera, zooming in can be triggered by double-tapping the screen (either with finger or stylus) and the page dragged around with a fingertip; unlike Opera, to zoom out you must use the translucent zoom controls in the bottom left-hand corner.  Rendering is fast and, in our experience, dependent more on your connection speed than the smartphone’s processor.

Options include toggling satellite imagery, traffic conditions (for major roads) and directions, which can be either entered on-the-fly or taken from the Touch HD’s address book.  Google Maps will give either driving or public transport instructions, presented on the map itself or in a list.  Use of the integrated GPS receiver is optional; we found initial acquisition times to be slow, certainly in excess of four minutes, though future “warm fixes” were quicker.  In recognition of this, HTC preload an app called QuickGPS which downloads the latest satellite data via your internet connection and speeds up acquisition times.  QuickGPS can be set to update automatically (which happens once a week, when the information becomes outdated) or manually.

The HTC Touch Diamond has been criticised for its GPS performance, which can lag behind actual position when moving at speed.  Hopes were high for the Touch HD to avoid such a fate, but unfortunately that doesn’t appear to be the case.  Whether from the processor (the same 528MHz Qualcomm MSM7201A as in the Diamond) or the GPS receiver itself, when driving the indicated position is always 50-80ft behind.  This makes navigating via the on-screen directions incredibly difficult.  At lower speeds, such as when walking, the Touch HD has no problems, just like the Diamond.  We’re still attempting to get hold of some alternative GPS programs, such as TomTom or Garmin Mobile XT, and will update this review when we’ve had an opportunity to try them out.

Unlike the Touch Diamond, which has 4GB of integrated storage but no way to expand that, the Touch HD has a mere 512MB of built-in memory and uses on microSDHC cards.  An 8GB card will be included in the box; HTC tell us that the Touch HD is fully SD 2.0 compliant, so practically speaking if you can find a 32GB microSDHC card it’ll work on this smartphone.

htc_touch_hd_review_14That’s great news, because the Touch HD plays the part of a mobile media device very well.  Audio is playable directly from the TouchFLO 3D GUI, with AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, AMR-NB, AMR-WB, QCP, MP3, WMA and WAV formats supported.  That means no protected iTunes tracks, but since that’s nothing new outside of the iPhone we can’t criticise HTC too much.  Music can be organized by artist, album, song, genre and composer, with on-device playlists created.  Purchased Windows Media Audio files with DRM can also be displayed, and there’s an FM radio with autoscan.

Sound quality is more a function of the included headset than the Touch HD itself.  It’s the standard HTC wired earbuds (complete with an in-line microphone and answer-button) and while they won’t win any awards they’re nonetheless better than those Apple supply with their iPods.  Thankfully the standard 3.5mm jack meant switching to a set of Sleek Audio SA6 earphones (which we reviewed here) was easy; they made a far better impression, and when we loaded the smartphone with some 320kbps MP3s (and turned off the equalizer) there was an impressive depth to the sound which, subjective as it may be, we’d compare favorably to that of the iPhone.  Needless to say, we’d have with no issue using the Touch HD as our primary audio player. 

Video playback had mixed results.  We had high hopes for the Touch HD’s 480 x 800 display, and indeed it’s richly colored, bright and shows decent, if a little murky, black levels.  Playback of 720p high-definition WMV files proved a literal non-starter; we then tried a 1000kbps, 25fps, 768 x 576 WMV file, the audio of which was no problem but the picture stuttered.  A 650kbps, 29fps, 320 x 240 video played with no problems at all, but a 740kbps 640 x 480 file suffered jerky video.  Scaled down to 545kbps 640 x 480 the video was reasonable.

DivX and XviD proved more flexible; we converted the same 740kbps WMV that proved unwatchable into a 1248kbps 640 x 480 25fps DivX file that ran with no problems at all.  After testing out a number of different codecs we’d recommend serious video users consider converting into DivX for the best viewing experience on the Touch HD.

htc_touch_hd_review_09The standalone YouTube application (which you can see in our demo video) offers access to the top rated, featured and most viewed videos across all of the media site’s categories (sports, music, etc.)  The only setting on offer is the choice between high quality or fast download (or an auto-select option which switches based on connection speed).  There’s also access to bookmarks and history, as well as the ability to search videos.

Select a clip and the screen automatically rotates to landscape and it begins downloading.  Alternatively, hit “i” and there’s an overview page, with text summary, upload details and star rating.  While there’s no way to rate the video on the Touch HD itself (in fact you can’t log into your YouTube account at all) you can add them to the handset’s bookmarks, add the channel to your program guide, or send the link by email, MMS or SMS message.  The info page also shows thumbnails of three related videos and three further videos from the same channel.

We found the YouTube client slower to load than the version on the iPhone, but once started and updated it was quick to move between screens.  The Touch HD’s impressive display is really the clincher here; video plays smoothly and with better resolution than on the Apple device.

The Touch HD has a 5-megapixel camera with autofocus, though sadly not even an LED flash, never mind a Xenon one.  It’s capable of stills and video recording, with reasonable quality in both.  Camera options include a choice of resolutions - from ‘M’ (320 x 240) up to full 5-megapixel - and white-balance settings - auto, day, night, incandescent and fluorescent - together with adjustable brightness.  The whole display is used as a viewfinder, while focus points can set by tapping any point; an on-screen shutter release replaces a hardware key.

Among the advanced settings are image effects - grayscale, sepia and negative - the option to switch metering mode between the center and the overall average, flicker adjustment (auto, 50Hz and 60Hz) and an optional on-screen grid.  A preset menu lets you change between normal still images, normal video, photo panoramas, MMS-quality video, contact-size images and “fun” frames (such as fake magazine covers).  There’s no optical zoom, but the Touch HD does have a digital zoom (that, as always, sacrifices quality for close-up).

htc_touch_hd_review_29-480x279

Video can be shot for as long as there’s memory (either internal or microSDHC card) in MPEG4 or H.263 format.  Sound can be toggled on and off, and there’s the same metering mode, effects and flicker adjustment as in still captures.  Both have a self-timer with adjustable delay.

As could be expected, indoor and nighttime shots and footage aren’t as impressive as their daytime counterparts.  The autofocus is relatively quick to lock on, but several users commented that the preview image looked somehow crisper than the end result.  While the “shutter release” requires only a soft tap to trigger, it can be difficult to do so without wobbling the handset forward slightly.  Nonetheless all the controls are easy to press with a finger, and don’t demand you pull out the stylus; in fact, we know of many digital cameras which could do with learning from the Touch HD’s straightforward menus.

Natively, the Touch HD lacks general screen rotation; the option is only available in the Opera browser, together with when the camera is being used or photos being viewed.  We tried third-party app GSen (which is freeware), which uses the accelerometer to track orientation and extend that functionality to other apps; it works well, particularly when messaging.  Rotating the phone closes the on-screen keyboard, but when re-opened it automatically changes to the horizontal layout as seen in the browser.  GSen’s developers suggest that certain apps won’t play nicely with the software, but so far it’s only been TouchFLO 3D and the YouTube client that have refused to rotate.  It does, however, screw up the YouTube video rotation; if you use GSen, you’ll need to add “#window(youtube)” into the app’s config file (instructions are included with the program).

htc_touch_hd_review_37-480x276

As a phone, the Touch HD performs well.  We tested it both in metropolitan areas and more residential, where we’ve found the HSDPA connection generally more tenuous, and the handset rarely lost a signal.  Moreover, even with just one or two bars (a subjective measure, yes, but what most users will go by) calls were clear and loud on both ends, with no noticeable artifacts.  We didn’t experience a single dropped call in our time with the handset; bear in mind, however, that our Touch HD was supplied by HTC themselves, not Orange (who have an exclusive on the smartphone for the first two months) and as such we weren’t always using the Orange network.

Bluetooth performance was strong, with PC connections possible even when the phone is in a bag or coat pocket across the room.  We tested with several Bluetooth headsets, including both cheap entry-level models and more expensive versions, and experienced no noticeable difference in sound quality over holding the phone direct.  As well as the handsfree and headset profiles, the Touch HD also supports the A2DP Wireless Stereo, PAN (Personal Area Networking), SPP (Serial Port), HID (Human Interface Device), OPP (Object Push), BPP (Basic Printing), SAP (SIM Access), AVRCP (Audio/Video Remote Control), DUN (Dial-up Networking), PBAP (Phonebook Access) and SDAP (Service Discovery Application) profiles.

One obvious omission, however, is the lack of a proximity sensor.  In other touchscreen cellphones that has been used to good effect, automatically turning the display back on when you take the phone away from your face.  The Touch HD requires you to press one of the touch-sensitive keys in order to wake the display again mid-call; alternatively, pulling out the stylus does the same thing and, optionally, brings up the notepad for you to scribble down a number or address.  It’s neat, but we’d like to have seen it coupled with a sensor.

A device like this lives and dies, though, by the quality of its touchscreen; ironically, this is the toughest aspect to convey in words or even video.  The obvious comparison is with the iPhone and no, by picking resistive over capacitive, the finger-touch sensitivity of the Touch HD isn’t as good.  However, the difference between them is absolutely tiny: the Touch HD has the best resistive touchscreen on a cellphone that we’ve tried.  At times you could trick yourself into believing it to be capacitive, there’s so little screen-flex.  Dragging and scrolling requires moderate pressure, but not unduly so; similarly, the resistive layer on top of the display is so thin you still get a reassuring hard ‘tap’ as you stab at buttons.

Perhaps the most telling statistic is how often you feel the need to pull out the stylus.  Sadly the Touch HD doesn’t keep track of that (now there’s an opportunity for third-party developers) but from our own use over the past week it’s a rare occurrence.  As the text-input video demo in the first half of this review showed, typing on the Touch HD is perfectly manageable using only your fingers.  Browsing is also finger-friendly, as is any aspect of the GUI which HTC have fettled.  In fact the only real stylus-demanding moments are Windows Mobile’s tiny little up/down buttons, used to set alarm times and the like; yes, a well-aimed fingernail can hit them, but it’s easier to whip out the stylus. 

Battery life with a 3.8-inch display could have been measured in minutes, not hours, if HTC hadn’t made a sensible powerpack choice, and thankfully they squeezed a capacious 1,350mAh unit inside.  It takes up a little less than half the length of the phone and, together with the Touch HD’s 12mm depth, makes you realize why features like a camera flash simply couldn’t be fitted in.  HTC claim the battery is good for up to 420 minutes of 3G talktime or 680 hours of 3G standby (non-3G talktime is estimated an hour higher, standby a full 240 hours less).

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We tracked everyday use of the Touch HD, allowing the phone to latch onto a 3G network when it could (which was pretty much all of the time).  With WiFi turned on, push email active, and with a few short calls, the occasional SMS message and some web browsing, we managed a full day and a half of use before the battery warning popped up.  Turn off WiFi (which is straightforward with the HTC Communications Manager) and that’s easily extended to two days. 

Users happy to trigger their own email checks, rather than receive them as they arrive, will be able to stretch that out even further, which we think impressive for a smartphone.  Certainly, on the iPhone 3G we were recharging at least every night under conditions similar to the first scenario.  The Touch HD’s battery is user-replaceable, too, so you could feasibly carry a second pack around; alternatively, it seems relatively unfussy as to which powered USB port it sucks from, so a standard USB to mini-USB cable can top it up from any available Mac or PC. 

In doing so, we noticed that the option to set the handset to display as either an external drive or as a smartphone to be synchronized would not let us choose the former option without a microSD card in place.  However, plugging the Touch HD into a PC did first bring up the standard Vista dialog offering the choice to browse the handset’s storage or run the photo transfer wizard.

htc_touch_hd_05-384x480With the Touch HD performing so well as a PMP, media playback battery times are also key.  Our criteria for testing were that the Touch HD should continue to operate as a phone despite its media functionality; that given, we switched off WiFi and push email but left the cellular radio (in an area with 3G service) turned on.  Volume was set to its highest level and, in the case of the audio player, the screen turned off.

With continuous audio playback, the Touch HD lasted around fifteen hours before playback ended.  With continuous full-screen WMV video playback the handset lasted roughly seven hours.  Obviously switching off the phone component of the Touch HD will stretch out the battery life, just as turning on WiFi and/or push email will reduce it.  We should also point out that this is a brand new battery; after several charge/discharge cycles its capacity is likely to increase.

HTC have now confirmed to us what will be included in the final retail package.  This is the bundle sold by Orange; contents could change when their two-month exclusivity agreement ends. Until then, Touch HD buyers will get:

So, have HTC managed the nigh-on impossible and snatched the cellphone crown from the Apple iPhone 3G?  Predictably, the answer is “maybe”, and it all hinges on what you want from your mobile.  The Touch HD is a true smartphone and Windows Mobile 6.1 a truly flexible OS: there’s a wealth of applications out there spanning the breadth from business through to games, built upon a software ecosystem that’s been in development for years.  Microsoft and/or HTC really need to step up and deliver a straightforward way for new users to plow through that back-catalog, because otherwise they’re wasting its potential.  If you’re an enterprise user, or simply someone with an Exchange account, Windows Mobile is still a more stable and straightforward way to access that, compared to our experience with Exchange on the iPhone.

What the Touch HD does well, it does very well.  The camera may lack a flash but photos and video are both decent (easily besting those taken by other smartphones), media playback, with a few tweaks, is great, and the internet experience on the huge 3.8-inch display is addictive.  Once Flash compatibility, in one shape or another, reaches the Touch HD we’ll be able to wholeheartedly recommend its online prowess; until then, it’s two qualified thumbs up.  Opera does the best it can with a resistive, multitouch-lacking touchscreen, cleverly rendering to make the most of space and not, in all the time we’ve been using it, crashing once.

Which brings us, of course, to the touchscreen, and what will likely be the whipping point for most geeks considering the Touch HD.  If you’re starting from the point of view that a capacitive screen is the pinnacle of interfaces (and trust us, many would disagree on this point) then no, a resistive touchscreen is never going to match up.  That said, we stand by our assertion that this HTC handset has the best resistive panel we’ve used on a mobile device; firm, responsive, and capable both of precise taps with the stylus and bold gestures with fingers.

For many, though, having the ability to use both stylus and finger is a benefit, rather than the sign of a lesser technology.  If you find yourself in that camp then run, don’t walk, to your nearest Touch HD stockist; it has 97-percent of the feel of a capacitive display - no squish, no sluggish drag - coupled with not only a stylus but the ability to use it wearing gloves.

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There are undoubtedly disappointments - the lazy GPS, for one - but the biggest issue comes down to Windows Mobile.  HTC have done a great job with TouchFLO 3D in hiding the underlying OS, but as long as there are menus and settings pages where you’re dumped into basic Windows Mobile territory then it’s simply not enough.  A good example of this is the alarm: tap the clock on the TouchFLO 3D homepage to change what time you’d like to wake up, and you’re faced with a 3/4-inch line-drawn clock face adrift in white space.  A single tap from the homepage and TouchFLO 3D is behind you.

You could argue that’s Microsoft’s fault, for having an ugly OS.  Or perhaps it’s HTC’s fault, for not extending their GUI far enough.  In the end, though, the consumer isn’t going to care who’s to blame: they’re just going to look at the interface failings and compare them to Apple’s consistent, slick design, and you know which will come out on top.

The HTC Touch HD has the potential for greatness.  Connectivity options are both fast and plentiful, the physical design is attractive, even battery life - which you’d assume would be first victim to the glorious display - surprises with its longevity.  Without TouchFLO 3D it would be a washout, however; with it, many will be able to look past the Microsoft flaws.  We’d love to see the Touch HD running Google’s Android OS, or even the next-gen version of Windows Mobile which, if the talk is to be believed, will bring with it an overhaul in usability and design.  Right now, it’s not as consistently intuitive as the iPhone, and that will cost it some customers; those who stick with it, though, will be rewarded by an overall brilliant smartphone.

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Written by Chris Davies on November 7th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Feature and GPS and HTC and HTC Touch HD and PMP and Review and SMARTPHONE and SlashGear Reviews and Windows Mobile 6 and archive and touchscreen and wifi.

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