T-Mobile Touch Pro2 review

Followers, fans, and casual observers of HTC alike all know that when the company launches a new landscape QWERTY model, it’s a big deal. In fact, it’s more than a big deal — it’s a Big Deal. Many describe it as the ultimate smartphone form factor, the perfect execution of everything a modern handset is capable of doing — and realistically, no company has as much experience or know-how at making powerhouse landscape QWERTY sliders than HTC does.

That’s why droves of subscribers on virtually every carrier are on the edge of their seats awaiting the Touch Pro2’s release. Whether you love, hate, or feel nothing but pure, unadulterated ambivalence toward Windows Mobile, it’s hard to argue that the Pro2 isn’t a gorgeous smartphone at a distance, and T-Mobile USA’s gently-tweaked version is no exception. Unless you’re desperate for SLR-quality photography (which you’re frankly not going to get regardless of what phone you buy), the spec sheet reads like a dream — an expansive 3.6-inch WVGA display, full QWERTY, tilt-up display, all the 3G and WiFi you could ever want, and HTC’s latest and greatest build of TouchFLO 3D constantly working to make sure that WinMo cleans up nice — but is it true love or just lipstick on a pig? Let’s have a look.


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T-Mobile Touch Pro2 review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Aug 2009 00:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile HTC Touch Pro2 Review: Wait, How Much?

T-Mobile’s take on the HTC Touch Pro2, a 3.6-inch-screened, slide-out-QWERTYed refresh to the company’s flagship Windows Mobile phone.

The price: $349 with a 2-year contract, after instant rebate, making it T-Mobile’s most expensive phone

The conclusion
: A respectable swan song for Windows Mobile 6.1, the Touch Pro2 would be a safe recommendation for diehard Windows Mobile fans, and a cautious “consider it” for business-oriented smartphone shoppers, assuming it was priced at $200 or less. It costs nearly twice that much.

The previous Touch Pro was an impressive piece of kit, but something wasn’t quite right about it. It could’ve been the screen—2.8 lame inches, when the emerging smartphone standard was closer to 3, or 3.2. It could’ve been the battery, which didn’t last much more than a day, and in some situations, not even that. But it was almost definitely the fact that it was literally a brick. It was fat and squat, and felt like a clenched fist in your pocket.
The Pro2 has inherited the excellent 3.6-inch WVGA screen from the HTC Touch HD, meaning that it’s a much broader device than its predecessor, but somehow, it’s actually thinner. Battery life is much improved, stretching to nearly two days with fairly frequent use. And despite being a larger, heavier handset, it feels more like a phone, and less like a chunk of building material.

With the larger footprint comes a revamped keyboard, which is obviously more spacious, but also totally redesigned: instead of the contiguous, plasticky low-profile keys on the Pro, the Pro2’s got rubberized chiclet keys. The original Pro’s keyboard was good; this one is one of the best I’ve ever used. Once you get used to the odd placement of the Delete key (it’s where you’d expect Enter to be), it’s a dream, which is fortunate, since typing on the Pro2’s somewhat squishy resistive screen isn’t a very gratifying experience, with or without the stylus.
The display half of the device is revamped too, with a less prominent chin—chalk that up to the replacement of the circular d-pad/zoom ring with a left/right zoom strip—and different sliding mechanism, which allows the display to be flipped up as well as slid to the side, for easy reading on a table or, had T-Mobile not stripped out the front-facing camera, hands-free video calling.

I’d miss the zoom/scroll circle a bit more on the keyboardless Diamond2, since the strip doesn’t conceal the noticeable input zoom lag as well, and more to the point, you lose the 4-way clicking ability; here, though, it’s fine. So far, so good.

Your first impression of the Pro2 is that it’s an impressive, heavy, well-though-out chunk of handset, but HTC hasn’t done everything right. Like, hey, there’s no 3.5mm jack! Instead we get a giant multifunction Mini-USB adapter that somehow manages to be more cumbersome that the old wire dealy—a fact made doubly annoying by photos of other carriers’ Pro2s with 3.5mm jacks built in. Internal storage is still measurable in megabytes, expandable by means of a MicroSD slot.

In addition, the camera’s the same underwhelming 3.2-megapixel unit as HTC’s been using for years, and the core hardware—processor and RAM included—are essentially unchanged (though software tweaks make the whole handset feel faster anyway—more on that later). Lastly, the backplate doesn’t feel all that sturdy or well-secured—more than once I flicked it off by accident, though it never fell off in my pocket. Given enough time though, I’m pretty comfortable that it would, which is disconcerting, and feels out of place on such a pricey piece of hardware. (This seems to be a problem across carriers. The stock Euro HTC Touch Pro2 has a different backplate, as you can see in the gallery, but it was even more prone to flying off at the slightest push.)

The software package is actually a pleasant surprise, for what it is. HTC has done a fantastic job gussying up Windows Mobile over the years, and their newest version of TouchFlo 3D is, given WinMo 6.1 almost-over lifecycle, the best this OS will ever look or feel. HTC has reached down as far as they can, so you rarely see 6.1’s embarrassing, Windows 3.1-like guts. Even when you do, they’ve been given modernizing treatments: the tiny, finger-dodging contextual menus have been replaced with larger, HTC-skinned ones, and everything from emails and text messages to system folders and Mobile IE has been given proper inertial scrolling, like in Windows Mobile 6.5. HTC has even gotten a little assertive this time around, adding a Sense-like contacts system to the mix, which lets you flip between contacts’ call lists, text messages, and Facebook updates in a single screen, and a thorough email setup wizard, which beats the hell out of Microsoft’s default tools. The whole TouchFlo system has been heavily optimized over the years, such that the Pro2 feels like it’s been stuffed full of much more powerful hardware, even if it hasn’t. And one last thing: there’s finally a full landscape mode, instead of that cop-out icon grid. T-Mobile’s yanked out two features that were standard on the Pro2—a panel-based Start Menu replacement and HTC’s iconic flip-clock homescreen—though you won’t miss either too much. Sat side by side with Windows Mobile 6.5—which this handset could eventually be upgraded to for free, if T-Mobile so chooses—HTC’s take on 6.1 shows they’ve done nearly as much to keep this OS relevant as Microsoft has. For HTC, that’s admirable. For Microsoft? More sad than anything else.

The stock software bundle leaves a few gaps, but nothing you can’t download in a few minutes. Opera Mobile is included, and it’s as good as ever. Google Maps and Skyfire weren’t, but these free apps worked a treat once installed.

In so many ways, this feels like a tribute to a class of luxury handset that is getting less relevant by the day. Remember the original Sony Xperia? It too had a huge screen, pretty hardware, a fantastic keyboard, a deeply-modified version of Windows Mobile 6.1, and an astronomical pricetag. Now think: have you ever actually seen one in the wild? Smartphones have changed a lot in the last two years, to put it lightly; not only have they gotten smarter, but they’ve gotten cheaper. The Pro2 is standing alone at the end of a path laid out years ago, that smartphone manufacturers—including HTC, with their Android handsets—have been trying to split off from, and with good reason.

If you really want this handset, you’ve probably known so since it was announced, and you shouldn’t be deterred by anything except this ridiculous price. The handset is fine. But just know this: for $349, you can have virtually anything else on the market today. Putting the Pro2 at this price point means that every prospective buyer will have to compare it to the Pres, the iPhones, the MyTouch 3Gs, the Heroes (soon), and the BlackBerry Bolds of the world, all of which will cost less, and for most people, offer more, and ask themselves: This? Really? [T-Mobile]

Screen is huge

Keyboard is wonderful, even for giant banana thumbs

TouchFlo 3D does an admirable job sprucing up Windows Mobile 6.1

Dude, Windows Mobile 6.1, in August of 2009

The backplate feels like it’s going to fly off half the time

No headphone jack, and a stupid adapter

THREE-HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS

Nokia and Microsoft to announce an “alliance” tomorrow — what? Update: Office on Nokia phones

We’re not sure what to make of this, but we were just invited to a joint Microsoft / Nokia teleconference during which the two companies will announce an “alliance.” Yeah, there are some pretty wild possibilities there — Nokia going WinMo? Redmond going Symbian? The creation of MaeWinMo? — but considering the featured speakers are Stephen Elop, president of Microsoft’s business division, and Kai Öistämö, Nokia’s EVP for devices, we’re guessing the real announcement will be something more pedestrian, like native Exchange support on Symbian or possibly that upcoming Atom netbook running Windows 7. Otherwise, hell — Nokia would be supporting three different mobile OSs, and that seems just a little too crazy, even for Espoo. We’ll see — it all goes down tomorrow at 11AM Eastern.

Update: This is probably unrelated, but Microsoft’s Mac BU just called its own presser for Thursday, so if you’re looking to spend the night weaving wild nonsensical conspiracy theories, we’d say all the pieces are in place.

Update 2: Told you it was nothing too out there — the Wall Street Journal says Microsoft will announce it’s working on a version of Office for Nokia phones. Anyone surprised? Didn’t think so.

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Nokia and Microsoft to announce an “alliance” tomorrow — what? Update: Office on Nokia phones originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Aug 2009 18:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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WinMo 6.5 build 23022 caught on video, in all its finger-friendly glory

It’s been a hot minute since we first laid eyes on those WinMo screen grabs featuring big ol’ buttons at the bottom of the display — signaling, we hoped, an all-around effort to minimize stylus use in the mobile OS — and now we have a video for you that seems to further make the case. While WinMo 6.5 build 23022 is still pretty clumsy, those finger-friendly (well, at least, “finger-friendlier,” or maybe “not as finger-hostile”) buttons grace the bottom of the display, and there is an iPhone-esque magnifying glass option for zooming in on and editing text. Technical details for this build are available at the read link — but first, make sure you peep the thing in action at the break.

[Via SlashGear]

Continue reading WinMo 6.5 build 23022 caught on video, in all its finger-friendly glory

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WinMo 6.5 build 23022 caught on video, in all its finger-friendly glory originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 10 Aug 2009 13:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Touch Pro2 spotted again, this time with AT&T branding — to be called Tilt 2?

Alright, listen up: we’re going to play a little game we like to call, “what carrier isn’t getting the Touch Pro2?” Sound easy? Not so fast, partner — this bad boy gets around like a record, if you know what we’re saying. In fact, the beefy, all-business WinMo superphone is well on its way to becoming the first handset carried by every top-tier North American carrier in we-don’t-know-how-long (granted, we don’t have solid intel on Bell or Rogers, but we wouldn’t be surprised to see them coming). We suspected AT&T was signed up for it some time ago, and now we’ve got it snapped in the flesh, complete with an AT&T logo conveniently assigned as the function on the down key. We don’t know when this’ll be available, but seeing how all notions of exclusivity appear to be out of the window on this one, we could see an announcement any day now. Better list that Fuze on eBay now, ladies and gentlemen.

[Thanks, Ahres]

Update: It’d stand to reason that this is going to be branded Tilt 2 in light of the screen shot posted earlier; kinda strange that AT&T would return to the Tilt branding, but… you know, marketing departments work in mysterious ways that we’ll never understand.

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HTC Touch Pro2 spotted again, this time with AT&T branding — to be called Tilt 2? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 10 Aug 2009 00:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon’s HTC Whitestone leaks out, along with the HTC Mega and Tachi

We’ve been hearing about Verizon’s upcoming HTC Whitestone for a while now, and it looks like a new pic and specs for the upcoming dual-mode CDMA / GSM Touch Diamond2 variant have leaked out. Seems like a mixed bag — the revised case with a larger 3.6-inch WVGA display is impressive, but inside you’re looking at Windows Mobile 6.1 running on a 528MHz Qualcomm processor with 256MB of RAM, so you’ve certainly lived through this experience before. That’s pretty much the same case with the HTC Mega, which also leaked today: although it’ll ship with WinMo 6.5 and that hot new version of TouchFLO 2D, it’s a lower-end device with a 2.8-inch QVGA display, a three megapixel camera and yet another 528MHz Qualcomm proc with 256MB of RAM running the show. Oh, and just to round things out, there’s a pic of the Dopod-branded HTC Tachi, which probably means this one’s headed for China. Always nice to put a face to a name, though isn’t it? Pics of the Mega and Tachi at the read link.

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Verizon’s HTC Whitestone leaks out, along with the HTC Mega and Tachi originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Aug 2009 11:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Garmin-Asus nuvifone finally coming to America in Q4 (or so they say)

With Garmin-Asus’ nüvifone G60 already on sale in Asia, it makes sense to hear that said smartphone will soon make its way over to North American soil. Of course, it also made sense to think that this thing would be launching on AT&T about forever and a day ago, so we’re not holding our collective breath just yet. At any rate, Garmin recently made abundantly clear on a quarter-end conference call that the GPS-infused handset is in the final testing stages with an undisclosed amount of US carriers, and if all goes well, it’ll hit the streets in Q4. What’s crazy is that every last specification remains unchanged from when it was announced back in January of 2008; meanwhile, Apple has shipped two new iterations of its iPhone, Android has blown up significantly and even Motorola and Palm have seemingly resurrected themselves from the grave. Knowing all that, will anyone even bother to show up to snag one in “just a few months?”

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Garmin-Asus nuvifone finally coming to America in Q4 (or so they say) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Aug 2009 04:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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T-Mobile’s TouchPro2 spotted in the wild, $299 contract price bandied about

Well, would you look at that? With just five days to go before T-Mobile becomes the first carrier here in the States to offer up HTC’s Windows Mobile-equipped Touch Pro2, it seems the handset has found its way underneath an undiscriminating camera. There’s also a shot or two in the gallery that portrays the tilting / sliding handset alongside Samsung’s Behold, so be sure to give ’em all a good look as you look for spare pennies in the run-up to August 12th. Oh, speaking of which, we’ve also got good reason to believe that it’ll launch for $299 on contract and $599 with no strings attached, so we hope you’re kosher with sizable premiums.

[Thanks, Anonymous]

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T-Mobile’s TouchPro2 spotted in the wild, $299 contract price bandied about originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Aug 2009 03:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC support site reveals Hero for Sprint, Snap for Alltel

We’ve been asked not to reveal the URLs, but we can assure you we’ve seen this official support screen pictured above with our own two eyes, which means that the HTC Hero is all but confirmed in a juicy CDMA blend for Sprint. How (or if) that’ll affect the availability of the US 3G version unlocked or on any carrier is unclear, but given Hesse’s huffy language regarding Pre exclusivity, we wouldn’t be surprised if they’ve got this one locked down for a while as well. We’ve seen a similar support page for an Alltel-branded Snap, so if you’re still tied up in one of the carrier’s legacy divested markets and you’ve been pining after the Snap (and Ozone) on Sprint and Verizon, fear not — your own version is on the way. We’ll admit, if you had asked us a few months back what American carrier would get HTC’s highest-end Android phone to date, Sprint wouldn’t have been our first guess — but hey, good for them. If you can’t win the coverage battle against the Big Red juggernaut, may as well try to win the exclusive hardware battle, right?

[Thanks, Adam]

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HTC support site reveals Hero for Sprint, Snap for Alltel originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Aug 2009 17:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Mobile 7 to be a premium, multitouch beast of a platform

Seeing the gold build of Windows Mobile 6.5 in action was pretty nifty, but Inquirer‘s recent video actually managed to unveil a few juicy tidbits about version 7 as well — a platform that’s shaping up to be that massive, ground-up rewrite of WinMo we’ve all been hoping for for years (as far as we can tell). The lack of multitouch is a sore point for some in 6.5 — not just because of the goodness of the multitouch gestures themselves, but because it’s indicative of a broader failure on Microsoft’s part to recognize that touch-based mobile UIs have been wholly reinvented since the days of Windows Mobile 2003. Redmond looks to be cognizant of that, though with a mention in the video that 7 will “exploit the hardware” and “introduce multitouch,” going on to say that it’ll be able to go toe-to-toe with “competitor devices” — ostensibly a reference to some combination of webOS, Android, and the iPhone. The video also mentions that 6.5 will end up being a “breadth play” while 7 branches out into the premium end of the market — at least to start — and over time, 7 will become Microsoft’s mainstream mobile platform as future versions are released. In other words, Microsoft looks like it could be setting itself up for a two-version cadence going forward — one for the unwashed masses, one for the gadget fiends. You know which category we fall into — and we suspect we know yours, dear readers.

[Via Unwired View]

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Windows Mobile 7 to be a premium, multitouch beast of a platform originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Aug 2009 16:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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