HTC Touch Pro2

By Joseph Hanlon on 16 July 2009

Those who can afford the Touch Pro2 will be buying a feature-rich smartphone with a unique conference calling feature and a decent suite of business apps.

Editor's rating:7.9 User rating:7.4
  • Good: Super display • Excellent keyboard • Unique conference calling feature • Easy-to-use speakerphone
  • Bad: Infrequent reception bugs • Most expensive smartphone in town
  • Specs: Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, 3G, HSDPA • Slider • 288 MB • QWERTY keyboard, Touchscreen • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$1,499.00
  • Available plans: 6 plans available starting from $64 to $104

Design

HTC walks a fine line with the design of this update when compared to last year's Touch Pro. The body of the Touch Pro2 is almost too large and too heavy, but its sleek metal design saves it from looking industrial or unattractive. The underside of the Touch Pro2 is constructed from stiff plastic with a metal look, and a prominent external speaker adding a pleasing texture. HTC includes a 3-megapixel camera, which is pretty standard, but also a call mute button underneath the camera's lens, an unorthodox touch but a master-stroke you'll discover more on later when we discuss conference calling.

One of the major selling points for the Touch Pro2 is the welcomed return of the sliding and tilting screen over a full-QWERTY keyboard, a combination HTC employed in 2007 with the TyTN II, but left out of last year's Touch Pro. The system is also similar to Nokia's N97 with the difference being that Nokia's phone snaps its screen into a locked position whereas the Touch Pro2 has you tilting the screen manually. This can be handy if you need to tilt the screen to a more subtle angle to cope with glare from overhead lighting.

The Touch Pro2's 3.6-inch touchscreen display seems enormous, even though it's marginally smaller than the 3.8-inch display on the HTC Touch HD. The screen's impressive WVGA resolution is sharp and clear, showing off the clean graphics of HTC's excellent TouchFLO 3D user interface. By default our review unit was set to auto-adjust backlight, which is great for power-saving, but we found the screen hard to read at lower brightness levels (particularly under direct sunlight), so we set the screen to a fixed brightness to compensate. The Touch Pro2 comes with a stylus in case you have difficulty using the screen, but in our experience this stylus will probably go unused.

The exterior of the handset is mostly devoid of sockets and switches. The same socket is used for recharging and headphones on the base of the phone, there's a volume rocker on the left side and a power button on top that you'll also use regularly to set the phone to standby mode. Like the Touch Diamond2, the Touch Pro2 has a nifty zoom panel under the screen, used to zoom in on web pages or in the photo gallery.

Features

Where do we start? This phone has everything and then some. HSDPA, Wi-Fi, A-GPS, Bluetooth and USB connectivity — everything a business professional could expect in a smartphone. Plus Microsoft Mobile Office suite (Word, PowerPoint, Excel and OneNote) an Adobe PDF reader, data encryption and VPN access. It also includes TV-out capabilities making it possible to conduct PowerPoint presentations from the handset, or watch YouTube clips on an external display.

But these features all exist on other smartphones, so how about we take a look at something new. HTC has included a new conference calling feature that it says is easier to use than conference calling on fixed line handsets. To be honest, we're not too au fait with fixed line conference calling, but we can attest to how simple it is to set up a call with several parties on the Touch Pro2. To begin a conference call you simply toggle the feature inside an active call then select the people you want to add from your address book. You can also initiate a conference call from within an email received by several recipients by selecting the feature in the message and checking the boxes for the people you want to speak to.

Another common calling task HTC has simplified is activating the speakerphone. Whereas before you might have had to take the phone from your ear and drilled into a menu of calling options to select speaker, with the Touch Pro2 you simply place the phone on a flat surface with the screen facing down. The speakerphone activates immediately and will continue until you pick the phone up again, at which time it automatically disengages. There's also the mute button we described at the beginning of this review, which is used to silence the audio of a call while the speaker is active.

Performance

To justify its $1500 price tag you'd expect flawless performance from the HTC Touch Pro2, and for the most part we've experienced this. Call quality is loud and clear, messaging and email is decent, thanks to the awesome keyboard, and overall performance of the platform is mostly good. Same as with the Touch Diamond2, you do have to keep an eye on the memory and make sure you are closing apps you are not using to maintain the maximum performance from this handset. If you're using the phone correctly you should find almost no lag when switching menus while using the TouchFLO interface, and only short pauses when executing programs. Battery life is similar to the Touch Diamond2's results of a day or two between recharging.

One area we did experience some issues was in regards to network reception. We had the benefit of testing the Touch Pro2 with both Vodafone and Telstra SIMs and experienced reception drop-outs on Vodafone. This is quite a common occurrence, and not entirely the fault of the phone, but what did concern us was that the phone didn't automatically re-establish a connection when we found coverage again. Instead we were forced to go into the Communications Manager and manual reset our connection, a job most phones do without your input. Hopefully this is an issue that is sorted out before the Touch Pro2 reaches stores.

We've focused this phone review on the business side, but we shouldn't totally neglect some of the fun things it's capable of too. The handset's 3-megapixel camera is decent, without being outstanding, and takes photos with passable focus but with poor colour reproduction and loads of grain. The huge screen makes it a decent media player, but as with all HTC products it lacks decent media syncing software to make the job of creating a library of media manageable.

Overall

The question with this latest HTC isn't whether it can do what you want it to do; it can, with a few tricks up its sleeve to spare. The real question is whether you're prepared to pay $1500 for the privilege. To put this in perspective, $1500 could also buy an Asus EeePC 1000H netbook and an unlocked 8GB iPhone 3G. Or it could buy you a Nokia N97 and several thousand Tim Tams (your choice). The fact is the Touch Pro2 is considerably more expensive than most smartphones and the additional features won't appeal to the masses. If you would regularly use the conference calling feature then this smartphone has no peer. HTC has confirmed that the Touch Pro2 will be upgradeable to Windows Mobile 6.5 when it's released in a few months, which is another bonus; access to the Microsoft applications market adds value to a handset already packed with features.

Find the best HTC Touch Pro2 plans available.

Topics: touch, phone, mobile phone, htc, pro2

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Comments (27)

  • Ktoznayet gave 3/10 on 23/01/2010 00:07

    • Good: Stylish, cool, featured packed, substantial
    • Bad: Stylish, cool, featured packed, substantial

    My friend asked me why I broke my golden rule of never again buying a phone from a computer company. Well HTC might have tried its best but Windows Mobile 6.1 is a crock and pasting it over with Touch Flo doesn’t help the real user experience.

    Throw in Telstra's heavy handed app and content branding and the whole thing starts to bulge with garbage making it clumsy to use for its intended purpose. Customisation options? Heaps, as long as it doesn’t involve getting rid of the Telstra overhead as that's not possible. Make it pretty and just so, spin the mail envelopes and impress the friends but try using it one handed.... for anything.

    I'm middle aged and not as dextrous as most but I just don't get a touch screen that has large and small areas of contact mixed together... left hand thumb usage becomes a nightmare as we hyper extend joints and fumble for a screen button target measured in millimetres.... again, thanks to the unhappy Windows 6.1 and Touch Flo marriage. Couple with an over sensitive screen also means lots of mistaken call initiations, unwanted open apps and general messing about rather than actual productive use

    So what to do? May be good for some, if you're keen to use with both hands only, keyboard is great but try sliding that one handed.. or getting the stylus out to pin point a 5mm square screen target zone.

    I know I'm not a touch screen person, that’s not HTC’s or Windows fault, but the marriage of the two with Telstra as the broker delivers a usability nightmare and an answer to unasked question. Here’s a real question, how many people on the planet actually need this equivalent of a Pushmi-pullyu?

  • grungysquash gave a review on 09/01/2010 09:05

    • Good: call clarity, email, threaded text messages, interface**
    • Bad: reconnecting when shutting down from airport

    Purchased this from Telstra outright, did not want to go on any plan.

    First complaint was telstra's interface - complete rubbish phone was laggy (when compared to HTC TyTn II running 6.1 cooked rom) and incredibly hard to set up. Pretty much zapped the telstra rom within the first 24 hours was running win mo 6.1.

    Since replacing this with cooked win mo 6.5 (touch 3D interface using energy rom - 16 Dec) and has made a world of difference, the interface is now snappy and battery life is around 2 days. Love the ability to have this act as a wireless router is great for work when you have a few laptops that need internet access. Conference ability is useful have used this a few times in meetings when ringing a person at last minute whist in a meeting for them all to hear a specific point.

    Have tomtom 7.916 installed using 840.2561 maps and this makes it a very useful device covering all areas needed for navigation, calls, emails etc. Opens word, excel and powerpoint files + acrobat so opening attachments is no problem. Once open however expect to only read them, while the screen is excellent 3.3inch is just two small to do any meaning full work.

    opera works well with the slide easily increasing and decreasing the text size. Have used this for online banking and it has worked flawlessly.

    ** Have stared the interface as this really needs to be fixed by flashing a new rom - for instructions google xda-developers it's not for the faint hearted but will allow the true possibilities of the phone to be utilized.

    I have given this a 9 only because of the telstra rom - replace this and it is a 10.

  • W gave 9/10 on 30/12/2009 09:11

    Forgot to give a rating! See previous post for the rest.... please update your review re pricing CNET!

  • W gave a review on 30/12/2009 09:08

    • Good: Excellent screen, brilliant 5 row keyboard
    • Bad: No 3.5mm stereo output, requiring special connections

    I've had a Dopod (HTC) 838 Pro (The TyTn in other markets), TyTnII, Touch Pro and now the Touch Pro2. Extremely happy with this phone. MAYBE it's time CNET reviewed the value equation now that Organiser World and Calculator King are selling it for $849 with freebies thrown in!

  • maloney gave a review on 29/10/2009 12:21

    • Good: loads of fetures
    • Bad: nothing

    great phone plus alot different to the iphone masses..

  • ` miikaelaa . gave a review on 25/10/2009 20:17

    i want this phonee . hha ;D ive been readinq all th reviews online & lookinq at th vids on YouTubee & its pretty good ! where can i get it ? hha (: it looks awesome & is awesome ;O chyeah (Y)

  • Depeche gave 8/10 on 24/10/2009 20:00

    • Good: Features/Design/Functionalilty
    • Bad: Nothing at the moment

    Love this phone. I only got it because my other phone was stolen but im happy with it. It has everything i need and more. I wasnt a massive fan of HTC's before i got this phone but its changed my mind

  • George gave a review on 23/10/2009 18:41

    • Good: nice phone
    • Bad: if you buy it from Electronic Bazaar

    I have just purchased the HTC Pro 2 phone. It has excellent audibility when used hands free. But watch out if you deal with Electronic Bazaar - the package I received was in Dutch with only a photocopy of the English users manual!

  • Mewsik gave 10/10 on 12/09/2009 19:21

    • Good: Screen Size, Userbility. Its got the lot!!
    • Bad: 5 mpx camera with flash.

    This is the phone with the lot. Its worth spending the money to get this phone. Screen clarity and menu system is quick and easy to use. Slide out keyboard is easy to use and well laid out for clumbsy thumbs.

    October 6 sees the free release for WM 6.5 for this phone.

  • Adelco gave 10/10 on 31/08/2009 21:16

    • Good: Very nice piece, has everything,
    • Bad: no thing at this time

    very nice phone , i have it for 2 weeks , its just lettel bulky but no proplem (it have to since there is keyboard). n97 NO

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