PCMag Digital Network
Seen a hot gadget?  Tell Us   
Subscribe to Gearlog Update
Our FREE email newsletter delivered to your inbox.
Email: 
Format: 
Contact Us  
Sites We Like
Categories:  
touchdiamond.jpgUpdated, 9 AM: The official spec sheet on HTC's site isn't quite what we got in the mail, but it makes a little more sense. Yes, this phone has GSM, but it's the 900/1800/1900 European flavor. Meanwhile, Engadget reports that the browser on board is Opera Mobile and the phone will be exclusive to the European carrier Orange. Zzz. Wake us up when there's some sort of US angle to this story. HTC tends to customize its devices heavily for the US market, like they did with the Touch, so you're not likely to see this exact gadget on our store shelves.

Original post, 7:30 AM: Talk about the kitchen sink. HTC announced the Touch Diamond this morning, their latest Windows Mobile handheld with a flashy touch-screen interface and super-high-end specs.

The Touch Diamond, which looks like a black slab with a big touch screen, has a VGA (640x480) 2.8" screen, 3.2-megapixel camera, 4 GB of memory, Wi-Fi, GPS and a Qualcomm 528 Mhz processor. According to HTC, the device also has a new version of HTC's TouchFLO interface, which puts a finger-friendly skin on Windows Mobile. A newly customized Web browser will let users navigate by swiping with their fingers, and a built-in accelerometer rotates the screen when you rotate the device. HTC has also developed a special YouTube application for the gadget, the company said in a press release.

"The HTC Touch Diamond will make browsing the Web and using Web-enabled applications just as practical and easy to use as making calls," HTC CEO Peter Chou said in a press release.

Questions about this one abound. Has HTC gotten its fingers deep enough into the Windows Mobile interface so TouchFLO no longer feels like a superficial skin? Is this browser not Windows Mobile's standard Pocket Internet Explorer? And how will the Touch Diamond compete against Sony Ericsson's XPERIA X1, which seems to come from very similar thinking?

The bad news for US readers is that the Touch Diamond's cellular radio is so European that it won't work at all in North America - according to the spec sheet, it's a doorstop here with only 900/2100 Mhz UMTS supported and no 2G GSM. That last bit shocked us - no 2G means the device will have some coverage problems - but that's what the spec sheet says.

HTC says they'll come out with an American version in the second half of this year.



| Stumble | Digg | del.icio.us | Slashdot
Posted by: victor
May 21, 2008 5:09 PM

Why does the diamond cost so much the iphonw iz beeter i will buy the phone for 100 blillion if u guys sold it like dat i would buy it not 1.3 million the i phone is so much better


* = required
    Remember Me?
  
Please keep your comments on topic. Intelligent, thoughtful comments and questions are appreciated. Comments that contain personal attacks or profanity may be edited or removed. Comments containing personal information such as phone numbers, credit card numbers, or addresses may be edited or removed. Comments with advertisements will be removed.


 
Lenovo ThinkPad T400
Lenovo ThinkPad W700
Click Here Click Here
         
    Ziff Davis Home | Contact Us | Advertise | Link to Us | Reprints | Magazine Subscriptions | Newsletters | RSS Feeds | Tech Shop | Tech Encyclopedia | PC Downloads | Tech Webcasts | Tech Podcasts | Tech Video | Ziff Davis Media International
AppScout | Cranky Geeks | DigitalLife | DL.TV | ExtremeTech | Filefront | GearLog | GoodCleanTech | PC Magazine | PCMagCasts | Security Watch | Smart Device Central | What's New Now |
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Linking Policy | Contact Us |
Copyright © 1996-2009 Ziff Davis Publishing Holdings Inc. All Rights Reserved. PC Magazine, the PCMag.com logo and Gearlog are registered trademarks of Ziff Davis Publishing Holdings Inc. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of Ziff Davis Media Inc. is prohibited.