Tue May 6, 2008 11:14AM EDT
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Just unveiled at a lavish event in London, HTC—maker of the sleek Touch for Sprint—has a new touchscreen gem on its hands, although the aptly-named Touch Diamond arrives in the rough that we call Windows Mobile.
First off, the Diamond comes in a sleek, and relatively light (according to the specs, at least) jet-black shell. Measuring 4 by 2 by 0.45 inches, the Diamond is a little shorter, narrower, and a hair thinner than the iPhone, and at 3.9 ounces, it's almost a full ounce lighter.
Then there's the touchscreen: 2.8 inches diagonally and at full VGA resolution, easily beating the iPhone's 480 by 320-pixel resolution. Whether one can appreciate VGA resolution on a 2.8-inch screen is an open question, although initial reports indicate that the Diamond's display is, indeed, dazzling.
And that brings us to the Diamond's TouchFlo interface—a sleek, easy-to-use touch UI that runs on top of Windows Mobile.
On the Touch for Sprint, TouchFlo looked like a 3D cube that you spun around with your finger. On the Diamond, TouchFlo boasts a row of icons at the bottom of the screen (for functions such as messaging, music, weather, photos, and Web browsing)—tap an icon, and the display spins and twirls to the appropriate application. Nice.
The Diamond also looks good in the spec department: HSDPA for 3.5G Web browsing and downloads, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, 4GB of internal memory, a 3.2MP camera, and an accelerometer that turns the display to landscape mode when you turn the Diamond on its side.
For Web browsing, you get Opera for full HTML rendering and zooming in to Web pages, along with a separate YouTube app.
All very enticing, but lurking underneath it all is the professional version of Windows Mobile—and undeniably powerful OS, but tough to use when you're out and about. Indeed, with its intricate menus, the pro version of Windows Mobile is almost impossible to use without a stylus, so let's hope the Diamond has one.
Still, Windows Mobile Professional (the new version 6.1) means full compatibility with corporate Exchange servers, along with Microsoft's mobile Office suite (good for composing and editing Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents).
So, can the Diamond take on the iPhone? On paper, it certainly wins out thanks to its HSDPA and GPS abilities (although the upcoming 3G iPhone will probably draw even come June). And I like the size and weight of the Diamond, plus the sheer capabilities of Windows Mobile (the iPhone has yet to get a true office suite).
But while the TouchFlo interface looks like a pleasure to use, Windows Mobile itself is a bear without a stylus—and with all its tweakable features and options, it's a tough nut to crack for a novice.
In any event, I'll hold off on any final judgments until I see one in person—which may not be for awhile. The Diamond is set to arrive next month in Europe and Asia, but it won't land here in the U.S. until the second half of the year. No word on pricing yet.
So, what do you think? Is the Diamond looking like an iPhone killer? Fire away!
Related:
Web site [HTC]
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Nice product that won't make a dent. It's carrier (Sprint)is in dire financial condition. Simply no one is walking in there doors.Conversely At&t evokes confidence amongst subscribers. Clearly the cache of Apple certainly helps. Lastly the phone is identified with Microsoft. How well is the Zune doing?
No mention of music or video capabilities, yet with only 4 gigs you would be limited to only a few hundred songs and a couple of videos anyway.
Also, I forgot to mention that if you do buy an unlocked version of the Diamond you can use it on the AT&T network or T-Mobile or any SIM based network anywhere in the world as I do with my HTC touch.
This thing doesn't even play movies! If it would it would have to be through the internet instead of already saved on the phone itself for your own leisure.
By the way....who really owns a ZUNE!?!?
The best thing itunes has going for it is brand recognition. It's for all the people that want to say they have the newest, coolest thing. It might be a good thing, but I want to know it for myself. Not have a corp buy its popularity with a lot of glam. I hope the Diamond is going to be available with AT&T. Might be worth checking out.
I actually own an unlocked Diamond and I love it I was never really a big iphone fan so I'm kind of biased but I think its much better than the iphone...
it looks nice but I hate windows moble devices.I've had every possible HTC u can think of.I currently own the htc touch and that thing is so hard to work without the stylus,I hate having to pull it out everytime I want to do something. Also I hate that glossy look the diamond has because all that means is easier scratches and you'll always have to be cleanig your fingerprints off of both the phone and the screen.I say if this htc is like the others it wont be worth all the money you'll be paying.If att's got a $99 everything package like sprint,I'm definitly considering an Iphone.
OMG you guys.It sounds silly i know, but this phone will smack the iPhone around the room. iTunes, first off how hard is drag and drop from music folder to the phone??? Funny. And as for the comment: wait a month and it will have more applications than any other phone in it's class. Ha, yeah right maybe apple waited too long (3-4 years) that WM has been out and building. This will be the best phone for at least a YEAR or TWO.
MS-OS? Did they pay you to write this?
The HTC Diamond is one sleek device. Got mine from CTI Miami 3 days ago can't stop playing with it. Every time I look at it I smile. I own an iphone as well but for business usage this phone is far more usefull.
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426 Posted by npool2001 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:41PM EDT Report Abuse
I think palm should come out with a new phone similar to this. I agree that they have the best operating system compared to Windows Mobile or all the others. Palm could do alot more with the centro concept. This HTC phone does look promising for Sprint though!