MetroPCS Launches First 1700 Mhz Smartphone, With $50 Plan

sch-i220.jpg

MetroPCS today launched the Samsung Code SCH-i220, the carrier’s first Windows Mobile smartphone and the first smartphone available to the many MetroPCS customers in major markets like New York City, Philadelphia and Boston.
The Code is the world’s first smartphone with CDMA on 1700 Mhz, the frequency band that Metro and Cricket use in many of their newer cities. It’s a 3G phone, too, running at EVDO Rev 0 speeds. Because 1700 Mhz is a relatively rare band, smartphone manufacturers haven’t been flocking to build phones for that technology. 
Metro’s previous smartphone, the BlackBerry Curve 8330, didn’t have 1700 Mhz and so simply didn’t work in some Metro cities.
T-Mobile also uses 1700 Mhz for their 3G network, and they’ve had more luck getting smartphones on their network for various reasons – they’re bigger, they use the globally-standard UMTS technology, they’re part of a much larger multinational carrier, and their business isn’t as price-oriented as MetroPCS’s is.
The Code is a pretty basic Windows Mobile 6.1 Standard phone with a QWERTY keyboard, 2-megapixel camera, and a 2.4″ 320×240, non-touch screen. Samsung’s “WizPro” interface enhances Windows Mobile by running an icon bar of popular functions across the bottom of the screen, giving you easy access to contacts, settings and multimedia. 
The phone costs $299. Its major selling point, of course, is Metro’s inexpensive $50 unlimited talk, text and data plan, which is much cheaper than competing smartphone plans.
Since there’s no official Microsoft app store for Windows Mobile 6.1 yet, Metro is preloading the Code with their own app store, which is a rebranding of part of Handmark’s Windows Mobile app store. It contains a few hundred apps, with a mix of well-known titles like Zuma and Sim City Metropolis, and Metro-exclusive apps like their MetroNavigator GPS solution. The phone can, of course, download third party apps from other locations as well.

HTC Tilt2 now available on AT&T

Those looking for a slightly more QWERTY-equipped WinMo 6.5 device for AT&T than the HTC Pure need look no further than its stablemate, the Tilt2, now that it’s officially available to all comers. The carrier’s second model to use Microsoft’s latest and greatest cut of Windows Mobile stays pretty true to its Touch Pro2 roots, offering an industrial-strength full duplex speakerphone, 3.2 megapixel cam, WVGA tilt-up display, and of course, that five-row QWERTY keyboard that makes banging out long emails and extended MMS tirades just a little more tolerable. Interest parties should come bearing gifts and plenty of cash, because it’ll run $349.99 on contract before a $50 mail-in rebate.

[Via PhoneDog]

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HTC Tilt2 now available on AT&T originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Oct 2009 02:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC HD2 turns up in purported T-Mobile USA materials

We’ve already had some indication that HTC’s take on Windows Mobile 6.5, the HD2, would be headed to T-Mobile UK, and heard straight from HTC itself that the phone would indeed be headed to the US in next year, but it looks like we may now have one more key piece of the puzzle. If that slide pictured above is authentic as it’s purported to be, it looks like the smartphone will be heading to none other than T-Mobile USA, and presumably sometime in that “early 2010” period HTC mentioned. Of course, this slide noticeably doesn’t make mention of Windows Mobile at all, so the phone in question could also conceivably be HTC’s rumored Android-based Dragon handset — or… not.

[Via Brighthand]

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HTC HD2 turns up in purported T-Mobile USA materials originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Oct 2009 18:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Switched On: Microsoft’s touchy subjects

Ross Rubin (@rossrubin) contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

As CEO of Microsoft, Bill Gates would often talk about his dream of “information at your fingertips.” The company he co-founded, though, is now taking literal steps toward that goal. By the end of the month, Microsoft will have released three new devices or platforms that embrace or extend touchscreen support — but the impact touch will have on each varies significantly by their legacy, usage, and manufacturers.

Windows has long had touchscreen support. Such support, in fact, was the basis of the Tablet Edition of Windows XP, and Tablet PCs were proclaimed to be the future of notebooks. Early iterations were larger and thicker keyboard-lacking slates much like the new Archos 9pctablet. But this was before rampant Web browsing, streaming video, casual games and electronic books — all of which now provide relevance for a new generation of touchscreen PCs as content-consumption devices.

Continue reading Switched On: Microsoft’s touchy subjects

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Switched On: Microsoft’s touchy subjects originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Oct 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Touch Pro2 and Snap among first official WinMo 6.5 updates

HTC promised way back at Mobile World Congress in February that the Touch Pro2 would be fully upgradeable to Windows Mobile 6.5 when the binaries went gold, and… well, here we are. Sure enough, they’re making good on the promise by rolling out official updates for both the Touch Pro2 and the Snap so far, though this is one of those situations where availability for your particular version of the phone is going to depend on carrier branding, locking, and the phase of the moon, among other things — so if the updates don’t work for you, you can wait for your carrier to get in gear or, you know, try your luck over with the always-helpful xda-developers to roll your own update.

[Via Smartphone Thoughts]

Read – HTC Snap
Read – HTC Touch Pro2

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HTC Touch Pro2 and Snap among first official WinMo 6.5 updates originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Phone commercial is confusing for a variety of reasons

Okay, so we understand Microsoft is trying hard to rebrand Windows Mobile as Windows Phone with the launch of WinMo 6.5, but this commercial — labeled with AT&T logos in the US but also running unlabeled worldwide — doesn’t seem to do a good job of pointing out that Windows Phone is a platform and not a device. In fact, if we didn’t know better, we’d think that the HTC Pure is, in fact, the “Windows Phone” — even though the dude in the spot is holding a totally different generic device. See how that could be weird for people? It’s almost confusing enough to distract from the jubilant anthropomorphic app icons in tights. Video after the break.

Continue reading Windows Phone commercial is confusing for a variety of reasons

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Windows Phone commercial is confusing for a variety of reasons originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 11 Oct 2009 22:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC’s HD2 gets sized up to the competition

We’ve already seen (and written) plenty on the HD2, and we’ve enjoyed our initial experiences with the device — but now someone has finally sized up the massive, Windows Mobile 6.5 smartphone with its touchscreen contemporaries… and the differences are downright shocking. Just take a look at this beast next to Apple’s iPod touch (above) or the company’s own Hero — the displays on the older devices seem dwarfed by the HD2’s 4.3-inch, 800 x 480 WVGA screen. There are lots of other revealing pictures in the writeup, but it’s the side-by-side shots that seem most telling to us — this is certainly the direction we’re headed in for mobile devices. Hit the read link and take a full look for yourself.

[Via SlashGear]

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HTC’s HD2 gets sized up to the competition originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 11 Oct 2009 04:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung’s WinMo 6.5-powered Armani smartphone gets previewed

Got a cool grand to drop on a Windows Phone? Oh, yeah? Then have a gander at Samsung’s latest fashion piece, the Armani-branded M7500. The cool cats over at PhoneArena managed to get their paws around a unit, and as predicted, they didn’t hesitate to bust out the camera and give us all a good look. They also took the chance to give us a brief overview of how the handset handled, calling it “bulky even for a WinMo smartphone,” though praising the high-res display and well-spaced keyboard. Feel free to hit the read link if you’re interested in more, but don’t be shocked to hear more than a little criticism.

[Via MobileTechWorld, thanks Arnaud]

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Samsung’s WinMo 6.5-powered Armani smartphone gets previewed originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 10 Oct 2009 04:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Mobile 7 aiming for Spring 2010 RTM?

Purported release dates for the first crop of WIndows Mobile 7 phones have varied in a surprisingly tight range over the past year, slipping from late ’09 to the latest we’ve heard, late 2010, and the latest info we’ve got here dovetails nicely with that. What you’re looking at up above is allegedly a slide out of an Office 2010 deck presented to Microsoft partners, where an updated Office Mobile suite is mentioned in passing alongside a WinMo 7 RTM date of Spring 2010. As Mary Jo Foley points out in a comment on the original post, that would put phones on shelves several months later at the earliest, which leads us back to the fact that this actually fits in very well with the Q4 2010 window we’ve been getting from other sources in recent memory. Though the screenshots on the slide are seemingly new, they match perfectly with the UI paradigm set by those purported WinMo 7 shots we saw nearly two flippin’ years ago, which leads us to the obvious question: is the UI basically finalized? And if so, is it going to feel stale by the time it’s released some three years after it first leaked?

[Via Windows Phone Mix]

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Windows Mobile 7 aiming for Spring 2010 RTM? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 17:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget Podcast 166 – 10.09.2009

With the crazy week of news we’ve had, never has the ever-insightful, industry-encompassing commentary of the Engadget Podcast been so necessary, so vital, so… vigorous. Sure, you could try to make your way through the launch of Windows Mobile 6.5 and an onslaught of Android news all by yourself, but then you’d just be alone and sad. And who would be there to comfort and hold you and tell you how terribly overpriced the VAIO X is and how little Dell revealed about its new Adamo this week? Nobody, that’s who. Don’t be another statistic, slip on some relatively comfortable earbuds and come on over to the Podcast side.

Hosts: Joshua Topolsky, Nilay Patel, Paul Miller
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Song: Cyberdelic – Such Great Heights

Hear the podcast

00:02:30 – HTC HD2 hands-on and impressions… on video!
00:03:02 – Entelligence: The HTC HD2 and the future of Windows Mobile
00:05:00 – HTC HD2 to arrive Stateside in early 2010 — huzzah!
00:08:00 – Windows Mobile 6.5 review
00:15:00 – Robbie Bach sits down for a roundtable discussion, Engadget is there
00:31:40 – Windows Mobile 6.5: a family portrait
00:40:00 – Microsoft’s Windows Mobile 6.5 update guide: no, no, maybe
00:43:05 – Verizon plans to support Google Voice, will launch two ‘game-changing’ Android devices in coming weeks
00:45:08 – Second Verizon Android phone to be an HTC, Motorola Sholes makes an appearance
00:45:35 – Verizon Motorola Sholes not running MOTOBLUR?
00:47:00 – Motorola Sholes to launch by holidays, along with the BlackBerry Storm 2 and Nokia Booklet 3G
00:49:31 – Samsung Behold II marries Android, TouchWiz for T-Mobile
00:50:30 – Samsung Behold II caught behind glass
00:52:05 – Samsung Moment for Sprint first hands-on!
00:55:00 – Samsung Moment slider coming to Sprint, packing Android (update: official, $179)
00:59:29 – AT&T now allowing iPhone VoIP calls over 3G
00:59:35 – VAIO X spotted in champagne, propped up by extended battery, ripped apart
01:00:00 – Sony VAIO X announced, starts at $1,299
01:03:33 – HP Mini 311 reviewed with earnest, ION-enhanced affection
01:06:45 – Dell reveals new Adamo XPS, gives no details
01:19:50 – The next Engadget Show tapes live October 22nd — with Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer!

Subscribe to the podcast

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Download the podcast

LISTEN (MP3)
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Contact the podcast

1-888-ENGADGET or podcast (at) engadget (dot) com.

Twitter: @joshuatopolsky @futurepaul @reckless @engadget

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Engadget Podcast 166 – 10.09.2009 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Oct 2009 14:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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