HTC TyTN II

By Joseph Hanlon on 19 February 2008

A decent Windows Mobile PDA-phone with a few extras to please business users. Be prepared to lug the charger around in your briefcase.

Editor's rating:7.2 User rating:7.5
  • Good: HSDPA and Wi-Fi • Excellent QWERTY keypad • Onboard GPS with CoPilot 7 maps
  • Bad: Huge, heavy handset • Slightly sluggish performance • Poor battery life
  • Specs: Bluetooth, 802.11b, Wi-Fi, HSDPA • Slider • 128 MB • QWERTY keyboard, Touchscreen • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$1,299.00

Design
At 112 x 59mm and 19mm deep, the TyTN II is no shrinking violet. There's no denying the weighty TyTN II handset lives up to its name with its somewhat "titanic" proportions, but this is offset to a degree by the muted colour scheme and rounded corners that together make the TyTN II quite a stylish device. Much to the relief of CNET.com.au's resident A/V specialist Ty Pendlebury, only the upper half of the TyTN II's slider form is finished in the fingerprint-loving piano black he loathes so much. The underside of the handset and the QWERTY keyboard are made from a much more finger-friendly matte-black soft-touch plastic.

Although, it's not the piano black finish where fingerprints are going to drive you crazy. The TyTN II sports a large 2.8-inch QVGA (320x240) touchscreen display, which is adequate but not excellent, and smears like crazy. Perhaps we've been spoiled recently, but after using the i-mate Ultimate series VGA (640x 480) resolution displays, we think Windows Mobile devices, more than others mobile phones, require the higher resolution graphics to help navigate the complex user interface. In comparison to the i-mates, the HTC display appears slightly duller and, obviously, less sharp.

One area where the TyTN II excels over the equally hefty i-mate Ultimate series handsets is the inclusion of a full QWERTY keyboard under the slide. Unlike a lot of QWERTY keypads we see on mobile devices, the TyTN II features one that is very easy to use. The soft-touch keys are slightly raised off the surface of the pad providing important definition between the keys and making "two-thumb" typing a breeze. With the slider open the screen can also tilt forward to roughly a 45 degrees angle, turning the TyTN II into a tiny laptop. While this is a nifty touch, we actually found this made the top line of keys harder to access and preferred using the keyboard without tilting the screen.

Features
It seems Windows Mobile PDA-phones are becoming uniformly complete devices. When exploring these smartphones lately we've found ourselves scanning the devices, not to discover what features are available, but to locate which features were missing. The TyTN II runs Windows Mobile 6 and has HSDPA and Wi-Fi for data transfers. It also supports all mobile network frequencies, all popular e-mail protocols, as well as AD2P stereo Bluetooth, and has a built-in 3-megapixel camera. In addition, the TyTN II has an onboard GPS chipset and is apparently bundled with CoPilot 7 navigation software, although our test unit was lacking the software and we had to resort to Google Maps to test some of the GPS functionality.

Similar to other HTC products, the TyTN II features the standard HTC Windows Mobile interface shell and HTC's patented TouchFlo technology. Now while this means the TyTN II's interface looks like the Touch and the Touch Dual, the funky "spinning cube" menu from those phones is notably absent. This won't affect the TyTN's performance, it just means it lacks the "wow-factor" you'd otherwise be able to show off to your mates.

Performance
The TyTN II runs on similar hardware to the HTC Touch Dual; a 400Mhz Qualcomm processor with 128MB of RAM. Predictably, the processing results are very similar to the Touch Dual; which are definitely useable but not outstanding. We found navigating the TyTN II's "Today" menu to be fast and responsive, but once we started to open a few applications or settings menus, and required the device to multitask, we started to see noticeable processing lag.

Web browsing on the TyTN II is a joy with the HSDPA data speeds. A jog-wheel on the side of the TyTN II makes short work of scrolling over long text-based sites , and hyperlinks are easily selected using the touchscreen. Our only criticism of the browsing experience is the mobile Internet Explorer browser itself, although we look forward to this being remedied by the next generation of freeware mobile browsers from Skyfire and Firefox.

Our main concern with the TyTN II is poor battery life. This is a common problem with Windows Mobile handsets at the moment and we noted a similar problem as being a major short-coming of the i-mate smartphones. Given light usage the TyTN II seems capable of a standby battery life of about three days. Any heavier use, about an hour of Web access for example, and the battery barely lasted a day before needing to be charged again. If you imagine using the GPS for turn-by-turn directions while your push e-mail updates frequently, and then add standard calls and messaging, we can foresee the need to carry the charging pack around with the phone.

Overall
For business users looking specifically for a Windows Mobile device the choice between handsets is much harder than in other areas of mobile phones. Most have the best connectivity options available, most have the most popular input options, including touchscreens, and most are on the wrong side of enormous and suffer poor battery life. Moreover, with the majority of these PDA-phones priced between AU$900 and AU$1,100, the choice may come down to aesthetics alone.

There is quite a lot to like about HTC's TyTN II. The inclusion of GPS should turn a few heads in its direction, although, if you can do without the QWERTY keyboard, you may want to wait for the smaller, GPS-enabled HTC Cruise which is expected to be released in Feb/March 2008.

Topics: mobile phone, htc, TyTN II

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Comments (38)

  • jker gave 10/10 on 30/08/2009 22:20

    • Good: maddest phone
    • Bad: nothing

    best phone would buy one

  • beanbag gave a review on 25/04/2009 09:25

    • Good: Great phone, good features. does everything i want
    • Bad: very slow camera

    I have been using this phone for over a year now. Original battery life is not the best, but I now have a Mugen Power 3000 mAh battery. Definatley worth upgrading. Htc shell gets a bit boring, but now I use Mobile Shell 3.. wow, excellent shell replacement. I've had no problems with this phone (touch wood :-p ). The only real issue I have is the speed of the camera. when taking shots, usually the subject i'm taking a photo of has moved by the time the camera actually takes the photo. but apart from that I recommend bying this phone.. as firmware/software updates are just around the corner.

  • dkc2242gmail.com gave 10/10 on 24/02/2009 20:33

    i bought it today.its nice but i m using nokia from last 6 years so the fn. r difficult 2 understand

  • Jin gave 1/10 on 23/02/2009 02:45

    • Good: nothing
    • Bad: all

    I won't buy is again. It is really terrible. Spec looks really good, but not working at all. I have to wait years for opennig any program.

  • Morgoth Bauglir gave 1/10 on 13/02/2009 00:45

    • Good: Looks nice.
    • Bad: The camera is junk. When using landscape, the wallpaper isn't centered correctly. No reception when close to a UPS. No cradle provided (iPAQ had a cradle that connectd both to the PC and a power outlet). Accessories are low quality. GPS is a joke and looks extremely amateuristic. The additional "Free" software packages were simply unavailable. Front panel is high quality but the back panel is cheap plastic. No "speaker phone" option.

    Big disappointment after all the fuss that people made about it. I bought two last year in the Summer and they didn't survive Autumn.

  • Algernon gave 8/10 on 07/02/2009 08:50

    • Good: WM6.1 wonderful to use when customised with addons. All the features you could want except accelerometer
      Camera quality in good outdoor light rocks.
    • Bad: Keyboard not quite as good as TYTN I
      Battery Life can suffer if you have a weak signal
      Missing Chipset Graphics Drivers.
      Camera quality in poor light sucks

    Had no issues with mine, got it free on Orange contract, easy to use.

  • sundhar gave 8/10 on 07/12/2008 01:09

    • Good: Good specifications
      GPS is really good easy to use
      Stylish qwerty board.
      Never slows down.

    • Bad: Battery life not that good.
      Too big, not too heavy to carry

    I am using this mobile last 9 months. Its user friendly with good style.
    I just love it. It meets all that i want in a mobile phone.

  • BroTown gave 10/10 on 30/11/2008 18:25

    • Good: cool looking
    • Bad: nothing

    looks cool

  • cajd83 gave 9/10 on 24/09/2008 21:00

    • Good: Great Phone
    • Bad: 1 Day battery life, heavy, large-ish

    Ive had this phone for 7 months now, originally hated it, being used to nokias and symbian OS. Now couldn't live with out it. Completely customizable and love the amount of apps and add-ons available fot it. nice solid feel. quality built. Little heavy and on the larger side of things but hey, its practically a mini laptop.

  • Sneddo gave 2/10 on 20/09/2008 11:05

    • Good: Internet, GPS
    • Bad: So painfully slow to do anything.
      Touch screen is no good for finger usage. Windows mobile is painful.
      Easily broken.
      Very Large and heavy

    I used this phone for about 7 months. It is so painfully slow to open programs, to ring people and to send messages. Nothing can be done fast on this phone. Windows mobile is so CRAP! I no longer use this phone and it sits in my bottom draw. I wish I had never bought it. Unless you love using a stylist (i think thats what its called [the little pencil thing for the touch screen]) you cannot type messages or ring people easily. The touch screen is fine however the software buttons etc for dialing or the start menu etc are too small to use your fingers. The keyboard is ok, however my "L" button didn't work straight out of the box. I was just too lazy to get it fixed.

    I strongly recommend against getting this phone. It is so slow and painful and I wish I just had a basic phone with basic phone functions instead.

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