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June 5, 2007 4:00 AM PDT

HTC Touch launches; first impressions and thoughts as an iPhone rival

by Bonnie Cha
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HTC Touch

Click to start HTC Touch slide show

(Credit: HTC )

HTC, the company behind many of today's most popular Windows Mobile smart phones, is known for offering a broad range of devices. It has done petite, thin, and powerful, and it's even gone above and beyond traditional smart phones, as we saw at CTIA 2007 with the introduction of the HTC Shift and HTC Advantage. And now here's the company's latest twist: the HTC Touch.

The details:
Announced today for the United Kingdom (foiled again!), the HTC Touch features a technology called TouchFLO that allows you to operate the smart phone just by swiping your finger on the device's 2.8-inch, 65,536-color touch screen. The motions are preprogrammed to perform certain actions. For example, swiping your thumb in an upward motion launches a page where you can access contacts, media, or applications; sweeping left to right rotates through the various functions; while you can close out of apps by swiping downward. In addition, the screen knows the difference between the touch of a stylus and your finger and will act accordingly, and there's a new HTC-designed home screen where you can get one-touch access to your messages, calendar, contacts, and weather conditions.

Aside from the advanced touch screen, the HTC Touch looks different than any other smart phone we've seen from the company. Known as the HTC Elf in some circles, the Touch is certainly petite at 3.9 inches long by 2.3 inches wide by 0.5 inch thick and weighing 3.9 ounces. One observer said it resembled the Rio Carbon MP3 player, and I'd say that's a fair comparison. It actually also kind of reminded me of a Tamagotchi toy--is that bad? HTC says the Touch is targeted more toward consumers who want to make the leap from a regular cell phone to a smart phone. Oh yes, this is a full-blown smart phone. It runs Windows Mobile 6 Professional Edition and has support for push e-mail, integrated Bluetooth 2.0 (A2DP supported) and Wi-Fi, a microSD slot, and 128MB ROM/64MB RAM. It's also equipped with a 2-megapixel camera and is rated for 5 hours of talk time and up to 8 days of standby time. While today's announcement was for the U.K., the HTC Touch is expected to cross the pond and ship in the United States during the second half of the year, though pricing and carrier have not yet been determined.

First impressions:
Fellow Craver Nicole Lee and I actually got some brief hands-on time with the HTC Touch, as the company paid us a visit last week. Personally speaking, I have my doubts about the smart phone. First, using the touch screen was a frustrating experience. I could never get it to work right. Swiping left to right didn't do much, and I couldn't really close out of apps by using the downward motion. I also noticed the screen held a lot of smudges, which bugged me. That said, I'm sure I could learn to use the Touch with more time. The HTC reps had a good handle on the workings of the touch technology (but one would hope so, since it is their product), and there's always a bit of a learning curve when you get a new device. No, my biggest gripe is there isn't an easy way to enter text. Given the compact design, a full QWERTY keyboard is clearly out, but are you telling me I'm left to peck out messages with a stylus and tiny virtual keyboard? I understand it's not a machine for the power business user, so composing e-mail isn't the issue here. But what about text messages or IMs? The phone may be great and the multimedia capabilities top-notch, but I'm a huge texter and if this is my only method of sending messages, I'll have to pass. BUT this is all after spending maybe 20 minutes with the device, so I'm not passing any final judgment yet. HTC is throwing an event tomorrow here in San Francisco for the global launch of the HTC Touch, and I should be getting one of my very own to test, and I'll give it a fair shake. So be sure to check back Thursday for our full review.

iPhone competitor:
Of course, with its touch screen capability, some are bound to wonder if the HTC Touch will rival the Apple iPhone. Come on, you know the comparison is bound to happen. So will it give the iPhone a run for its money? I don't know, and we won't know till the iPhone comes out at the end of the month. As far as HTC is concerned, the company said the Touch was in development long before the Apple announcement and it welcomes the competition and attention it brings to the smart phone space. How's that for a safe answer?

What are your initial impressions of the HTC Touch?

The following product mentioned is available.

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Originally posted at Crave
Bonnie Cha is a senior editor for CNET, covering smartphones and GPS. When she's not testing the latest gadgets, you can find her chasing after her crazy lab or surfing in the chilly waters of Northern California. E-mail Bonnie.
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Rival? Please.
by mongoos150 June 5, 2007 9:51 AM PDT
The pure fact that the media is comparing every new touch device to the iPhone - a product that has not even been released - practically secures its popularity and dominance in this market. What other device has received SO much hype and attention *months* before release? Its unique interface, it's amazingly streamlined performance (from what we have seen in demos and commercials), and the way all its apps are seamlessly integrated with one another (say, that reminds me of... OS X!) will secure the iPhone's success as the everyday person's smart phone.
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Put the crack pipe DOWN fool....
by Wolfie2k5 June 6, 2007 3:01 AM PDT
[b]...will secure the iPhone's success as the everyday person's smart phone. [/b]

You DO realize that MOST of the "everday person's" you mention can't afford $500 for a phone. There's little obstacles in the way - things like rent... Food... Gas for the car... Everyday life.

Secondly... The interface isn't all THAT unique. It's a touchscreen. LOTS of phones have 'em. My Motorola A1200 has a touch screen. It also runs Linux. It also does MP3 files (and even DRM free AAC files). It's got most everything the iPhone has and stuff NO other phone has. Not even the iPhone. It's got a business card scanner that automatically reads the data from a business card and imports it into the phone's address book. No data entry (beyond the occasional spelling correction) required.

It also has features MOST phones have today that the iPhone is lacking - an end user replacable battery and a transflash slot to name two.

You Mac freaks really need to chill. Sure... it's probably a nice phone - but that's all it is.. a bloody PHONE.
iPhone? Whatever...
by drsparks June 5, 2007 10:51 AM PDT
It's apples and oranges. Get it? HA! Anyways, how's the weather in Cupertino, Mongoos15? I think the point I am trying to make is WHO CARES? The iPhone is for those people who bought iPods for the hipster effect unlike the rest of us who actually use our devices for more than trying to look cool (like working...what? work?!?! OMG!)
Reply to this comment
just got data plan. what to download
by BillyDonovan June 5, 2007 11:36 AM PDT
I just figured out how to get adult movies on my phone. So, easy mac, the clap on, "Baywatch" reruns, and "Jerry Springer" uncensored aside -Sex on Cell TV is bound to be a new American staple. It's the portable sex that is quite possibly the wave of the future. I just pointed my phone to http://sexoncell.com for adult mobile movies.
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