Showing posts with label windows mobile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label windows mobile. Show all posts

HTC Merge





Touch screen. Keyboard. Why choose?
Interact with your favorite Web site on a gorgeous 3.8-inch touch screen. Type and text on a slide-out keyboard. With the HTC Merge, you get both. The keyboard has punctuation and navigation keys for easier typing. A customizable Quick Key lets you jump straight to apps, Web sites or even a contact.



Capture life in Hi-def.
Video quality so real, when you play it back you feel like you're there. Easily share your videos with your friends on YouTube™.



Be your own Portable Wi-Fi Hotspot.
Your phone becomes a Wi-Fi hotspot for up to eight other Wi-Fi-enabled devices— making you the most popular person in the airport. You can choose who joins, and a new widget lets you quickly turn your hotspot on or off.



Get more from your phone with HTC Sense™.
HTC Sense makes your smartphone even smarter with apps like Friend Stream, Weather, People, and Messages. Stay more connected than ever with one-touch app sharing and enhanced caller ID that displays your friends' Facebook® status updates, tweets and birthdays.

Enhanced Internet experience.
 
Forget the "mobile Internet"—this is the real thing. Now with Adobe® Flash® Player 10.1, you can play games, watch videos, and experience the Web as it was meant to be seen.

Go where life takes you.Whether you are a road warrior or taking the family to see the pyramids in Egypt, you can always stay in touch with the HTC Merge™, HTC’s Global Ready Android phone.

Stay close, however you like.
Friend Stream™ is a smarter way to socialize. It lets you view and update Facebook®, Twitter™, and Flickr™ in one place. Now you can share your jam-packed life by posting videos as you live it.






HTC Touch HD





Performance
In the realms of technology, bigger doesn't necessarily translate to better, however, this is certainly true when comparing the Touch HD to its predecessor. Supporting the huge screen is a 528MHz Qualcomm processor and 288MB RAM, a significant increase in memory from the Diamond, and this results in the best performance we've seen for TouchFlo 3D to date. After an agonisingly long boot time, the Touch HD runs smoothly. Swiping from menu to menu is fluid and there is only a few instances, like starting and ending calls, which always tend to lag the interface.

Battery life is also light years better than the Diamond. Putting a 900mAh battery in the Diamond was a huge mistake by HTC, but this 50 per cent larger battery pays dividends, giving us at least three days between charges with moderate use. HTC rates the battery life at a whopping seven hours of talk-time.

As a media player, the Touch HD passes with flying colours, but still lacks the intuitive interface of the iPhone. YouTube videos look great and music sounds great, with thanks in part to HTC wisely including a 3.5mm headphone socket. Its finger-swiping media menus are definitely attractive, but switching between artists and albums can become tedious with the amount of input required to perform what is a simple task.

Its 5-megapixel camera also falls just short of the mark. Its interface is exactly as the iPhone's should be, with access to changing the white balance and image size, etc. Users can manually focus elements in the image by touching on the subject in the touchscreen viewfinder — a very cool touch — though this has little effect on the sharpness of the pictures this camera takes. Overall, the 5-megapixel camera takes mediocre pictures that lack natural colour and appear slightly blurry.

Design
Considering the announcement of the Palm Pre and the leaked images of the HTC road map, 2009 looks like the year everyone tries to out-play Apple with iPhone look-alikes. Last year, we saw touchscreens from Samsung, HTC and LG try to vary the formula, but with limited success compared to the front-runner. HTC has reconsidered its approach and the Touch HD is a fitting start to the year — it's shaped like an iPhone, but bigger.

Its 3.8-inch display is the biggest in this field and its WVGA (480x800) resolution is amongst the sharpest. Together these aspects add to make HTC's fantastic TouchFlo 3D interface look its best. With a screen this large and clear even some of the smallest areas of the interface are now finger-friendly. HTC includes a stylus with the handset, sheathed on the bottom right of the phone, but we've had no occasion to whip it out during our tests.

The Touch HD feels fantastic to hold. Though its 12mm depth is identical to the iPhone 3G, its design is slightly boxier, which helps make the Touch HD feel much less likely to slip from your grip. The front is a single piece of glass covering both the touch-active screen and four touch-sensitive keys below the screen, for dialling and exiting applications to the home screen.

The back of the Touch HD houses an auto-focusing 5-megapixel camera that sadly lacks a flash. A second front-facing camera lives above the large touchscreen and is used for video-calling. Under the battery cover we find a 1350mAh Li-on battery and the microSD card slot — an 8GB microSD is included with the phone. Also, HTC has included a 3.5mm headphone socket along with a separate USB port.

Features
The increase in size and improved camera module may give the false impression that the Touch HD is a vastly different smartphone experience to HTC's previously released Touch Diamond, but side by side these phone's aren't significantly different under the hood. Both phones run Windows Mobile 6.1 and feature a nearly identical suite of applications including Pocket Office supporting MS Office documents, ActivSync, a PDF reader, RSS feeder, a business card reader and a snazzy YouTube client.

The Touch HD also makes use of the same excellent Opera Mini web browser that we saw in the Diamond. While this browser may not feature the multi-touch "pinch and pull" zoom navigation of the iPhone's Safari browser, it has a decent alternative and renders full-sized web pages extremely well.

Like all smartphones in this segment, the Touch HD includes HSDPA technology for fast web browsing, Wi-Fi for accessing local networks and a built-in GPS receiver. Our review unit did not come with navigation software pre-installed, which is a shame considering the screen size. When its released exclusively with Telstra we won't see any dedicated nav-software installed; however, Telstra has confirmed that its WhereIs Navigator client will be available to download to the Touch HD in March.
Overall
Windows Mobile is still a less-than-perfect OS, but issues with WiMo are fewer than in previous HTC releases, and the Touch HD has certainly been a pleasure to review. Fashion-conscious business people who want a sexy phone that pulls its weight with business-focused features would be wise to check this one out.

Of course, you'll need to be a fashionable business person to pay the hefty AU$1,499 price tag, or to meet the AU$150 monthly contract payments with Telstra. These large, high-res screens don't come cheap, and we feel this pricing will sadly put the Touch HD out of the price range of many.








Toshiba K01





Japanese carrier AU/KDDI just announced that the Toshiba IS02 (aka Toshiba K01) will launch in June although no pricing info was revealed. The K01 also passed the FCC certification yesterday which means that it will probably be globally available this summer. For more K01 info head over here.

The Toshiba K01 has just passed the FCC. The full sliding-qwerty brother of the TG02 and TG01 looks to be headed to AT&T or T-Mobile thanks to the 850/900/1800/1900 GSM/EDGE frequencies support (and also Europe and Asia: UMTS Bands I and VIII). The K01 also features a 4.1″ AMOLED capacitive touchscreen (the TG02 is LCD-TFT) and runs Windows Mobile 6.5.3 with SPB Mobile Shell slapped on top of it. Check out my hands-on here & here.

Here’s a couple of size comparison picture of the Toshiba TG02 & Toshiba K01 vs the HTC HD2. As you can see the HD2 is a tiny bit wider than the other two handsets but slimmer than the TG02 (the K01 beeing the thickest one of the bunch). Remember that the HD2 also has a bigger screen at 4.3″ compared to 4.1″ on the Toshiba handsets.

Toshiba officially unveiled the K01 this week at MWC. At first glance you would think that it’s just a TG02 but upon closer inspection you will find out that this thing features a 4 row sliding qwerty keyboard. Similar in design to the TG02 the Toshiba K01 will also feature an AMOLED display (instead of LCD). As you can see in the pictures, the handset is really slim. Internally it’s speced exactly like the TG02 and like its keyboard brother doesn’t feature a 3.5mm Jack and camera flash.

Android smartphone smart book as Au IS01 IS02 was announced with the Toshiba Windows phone was. Abroad has already been announced as the K01, TG01 / X02T / T is available from Softbank / DoCoMo as large flat-screen Windows phone-like model with a sliding QWERTY keyboard to 1A. The basic specification 4.1 inches organic EL display 480 x 800, Snapdragon processor, 802.11b / g WiFi, Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR, 322-megapixel camera with AF, and microSD slot.

Users more familiar with the touch screen for the first time, such as iPhone / iPod touch "I'll break it?" Resistive the TG01 was often said (I used up a nail or the stylus), the electrostatic reaction pat capacity has been changed to an expression. As a brand is a Windows phone, OS platform have been filed recently announced Windows Phone 7 instead of the Series, the latest 6.5.3 version of the current Windows Mobile.In addition to standard support services such as Windows Mobile My Phone cloud sync and ActiveSync, the au mobile phone service as e-mail correspondence C (under investigation). Since launch in early June. The gallery below are those of K01.





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