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HTC Touch Dual

By Joseph Hanlon on 08/02/2008

More HTC reviews , RRP: AU$929.00

The good:

  • Slim, well-designed slider
  • HSDPA data speeds
  • Funky TouchFlo interface

The bad:

  • No Wi-Fi or GPS
  • Interface can be laggy
  • Tiny stylus

The bottomline:

What the Touch Dual lacks in hardware it makes up for with style. If the absence of Wi-Fi and GPS don't turn you away then the Touch Dual will serve as an excellent business assistant.

Editors' rating:

7.6/10

Users' rating:

8.7/10

Design
We've seen several Windows Mobile smartphones in the last couple of weeks, the i-mate Ultimate 6150 and 8150, the 3G update to Palm's Treo 500M, as well as the HTC TyTN II. All of these handsets are larger than average mobile phones ranging from the slightly wider Treo 500 to the almost-enormous i-mates. With the Touch Dual, HTC has managed to trim the design down to a pocket-friendly 107mm long, 55mm wide and a 17mm depth. Also, at a total weight of 120 grams including the battery, the Touch Dual feels noticeably lighter than the competition.

On first impressions, the Touch Dual is really quite an attractive, if unassuming, handset. The large 2.6-inch QVGA touchscreen is framed by a muted black rubber body, with the five-way nav button, side trimming and back-facing camera set in stainless steel. Under the slide the keypad lays flush and consists of well spaced plastic keys. A rather short stainless steel stylus lives in the top right hand corner of the Touch Dual -- and for the sake of nitpicking, we'd love to have seen the stylus extend to twice its size; currently it's only slightly longer than a toothpick.

All inputs, be it for charging, data transfers or headphones, go into the micro USB port on the side of the phone. And while this single input is becoming a standard feature on PDAs, this means you'll have to plan ahead for when you want to charge the phone or use your hands-free because you won't be able to do both at once. On the opposite side of the Dual is a Micro SD card slot for expanding the shared 256MB of internal flash memory. All in all it's a compact and streamlined unit.

Features
Those familiar with HTC's modified Windows Mobile 6 interface will be immediately in their element with the Touch Dual. Similar to the interface seen in the Touch and the TyTN II, the modifications to the standard WM6 include a series of shortcuts on the main standby screen for quick access to messaging, call log, current weather details and a customisable launcher for adding application shortcuts, as well as an overhaul of the visual aesthetic.

Of coarse, these modifications don't affect the usual array of pre-loaded business apps included with Windows Mobile. There's the standard Mobile Office suite (Word, Excel, PowerPoint), calendars, contacts, a world clock, a voice recorder, MSN messenger, and the list goes on. In regards to e-mail the Touch Dual supports all common e-mail protocols and push e-mail for Outlook clients.

Making WM6 cool in any way is a feat of titanic proportions and HTC have managed this, to an extent, with the funky TouchFlo interactive menu system that we first encountered on the HTC Touch. A swipe of your finger from the bottom of the screen to the top launches the "spinning cube" style menu. Once launched a similar sweeping motion across the screen rotates the menu "cube" for access to quick contacts, multimedia galleries, and more applications. Prepare for your colleagues to be begging with you to have a play.

The Touch Dual is a world roaming quad-band 3G GSM device, which is handy for the travelling business-person. Data connections are made with HSDPA compatibility with a 3.6Mbps maximum download speed. Unlike the TyTN II there's no Wi-Fi or GPS built into the Touch Dual but the compensation is, of coarse, its slim profile.

On the back of the handset you'll find the lens of the onboard 2-megapixel CMOS camera that features auto-focus but no flash. The photos we took looked pretty good, bright and colourful, but predictably soft-focused. However, if you reading this review we're guessing an amazing camera is probably not as high on your list of priorities as the Dual's business sensibilities.

Performance
The Touch Dual has double the processing power of the original Touch, with a 400MHz processor and 128MB RAM. Even still, Windows Mobile is a power-hungry resource, and we found the interface to be a little bit laggy in responding to our inputs. This isn't to say we had difficulty using the Touch Dual, just that the processing and rendering performance is slower than we saw in the zippy i-mate Ultimate 6150, another Windows Mobile smartphone.

Web browsing is a joy with HSDPA speed behind it, although, Internet Explorer Mobile is far from the best or fastest Mobile Web browser. Of course, the beauty of Windows Mobile is the ability to hunt down useful applications online and install them as you would on a PC. Once we had Opera Mobile installed we were much happier, and we grabbed Google Maps while we were at it.

HTC has employed an impressive 1,350 mAh battery in the Touch Dual and have estimate 4.5 hours continuous talk time and approximately 13 days standby. During our tests we saw just over four days during charge cycles with moderate use of calls, messaging and Web browsing.

Overall
While the Touch Dual looks and feels like a consumer handset, the strengths and weaknesses of its various features points it directly at the business sector. The Dual can take pictures and play media but the current incarnation of Windows Mobile is way too dull to attract a wider market, even with TouchFlo to spice it up.

The Touch Dual is the perfect smartphone for a business person who can do without features like GPS and Wi-Fi but still wants the strong business functionality of Windows Mobile. It makes a great alternative for people looking at the BlackBerry Pearl 8120 but who were turned off by the less-than-ideal 2.5G data speeds.

hp ipaq 514
10/06/2008, 03:39 PM

rating
8
/10

Are we talk about double touch feature > ? like in PC's double click. Sounds good. I like to buy this cell phone but this is very costly. Although its all features are great and efficient.

Pros: Decent talk time.
Solid construction.
User-friendly interface.

Cons: Nothing.

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Owen
02/06/2008, 10:12 AM

rating
9
/10

My first smartphone, and i find it very intuitive to use.

Pros: Not too big and bulky. Good interface

Cons: No WiFi, Crashes occasionally

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Mat
28/04/2008, 01:13 PM

rating
9
/10

Was looking for a phone to replace my Motorla v3x (sms'ing is CRAP n this phone). Work bought one of these and I've had a play. I really like it. The actual model I'm getting is the 850 from telstra, it has the qwerty keyboard, awesome for texting.

Pros: WM6, texting is fast, touch screen is fun and useful. Since to ms server will be usefull as I stopped carrying my PDA coz it was clunky. Now I'll have both.

Cons: Video usage is lagy, everything else looks perfect and the photos are great.

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jimy dowile
02/04/2008, 09:13 PM

rating
10
/10

v.good smartphone indeed

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tony
25/03/2008, 12:19 AM

rating
6
/10

Nice Phone with great style

Pros: Nice distribution Packaging, has Touch interface, has 3.5G, GPRS, GSM, EDGE, has SD mini port, it also comes with a 1 Gb SD mini card, Bluetooth, has a 16 or 20 button QWERTY on screen keypad, has 2 Mpixel Camera, can do Video calls, Better than iPhone in many ways, Like I can change the battery when it needs to be changed, can choose my own provider, has the SD card,

Cons: No Linux OS to personalize settings and configuration. Cant connect to Linux or Mac OS, HTC Assumes everyone has Windoze, Has No WiFi, Battery lasts only about 2 hours when on Internet, about 2 days for normal phone use. Useless slide out analog keyboard, I never use it. Internet Exploder is useless for viewing webpages Needs better browser like Skyfire, When talking on phone my ear selects the start menu and starts several programs, After hanging up I am caught closing several programs my ear selected during my conversation on the phone.

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british_eh
21/02/2008, 05:30 PM

rating
8
/10

How about the NEW HTC withWiFI, 3 meg Camera, and tom tom 6 GPS

Pros: Looks good

Cons: Not sure

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jerkajenkins
01/02/2008, 11:56 PM

rating
10
/10

Best smart phone I've owned. Love the interface. Easy to set up

Pros: Excellent screen and touch interface. Nice loud ear speaker, slide keys, size, weight, interface, speed, everything ! ! !

Cons: I'd like another couple of hard buttons (to close screens and start menu)

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ntn001
ntn001
14/01/2008, 02:22 PM

rating
9
/10

Great phone - bit ideosyncratic but best quasi-pda on the market. love touch flo but getting to some programs is a challenge. predictive text learns well and quickly. overall love it though.

Pros: touch flo, stylish - great to show off at BBQs and client meetings, slide out keyboard plus touch screen options

Cons: camera, location of camera button means i accidentally hit it too often, finding some programs could be more straight forward, no wifi.

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David
15/12/2007, 02:07 PM

rating
9
/10

Best smartphone compromise of function and style I have owned

Pros: Stylish
Touchflo
Keypad

Cons: No wifi

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eslam
30/11/2007, 04:54 PM

rating
9
/10

hi it's a very nice mobile it's wupport every thing you need and it's so fast i like it very much

Pros: very fast prossesor and fantastecc touch flo like iphone

Cons: screen it's only 2.6'' little small and no wifi connectivity.. :(

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