Derrick
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HTC's follow-up to the TyTN smartphone, the appropriately named TyTN II, packs a punch. The Windows Mobile 6 Professional-based machine has everything you'd expect in a top-end phone
HTC's follow-up to the TyTN smartphone, the appropriately named TyTN II, packs a punch. The Windows Mobile 6 Professional-based machine has everything you'd expect in a top-end phone - including a top-end price. The 190 g device has a 3G HSDPA radio, Wi-Fi for use in wireless hotspots and a GPS receiver for satellite navigation (software and maps sold separately).
There's a 3-megapixel camera on the back and a VGA camera on the front for video calling. Screen real estate - the 2,8-inch TFT-LCD touch-sensitive display serves up 240 x 320 pixels - is noticeably better than the original TyTN's.
The most impressive feature, though, is that one can slide the phone to reveal a full Qwerty keyboard and then, best of all, tilt the screen, effectively turning the TyTN II into a tiny laptop. The keyboard is small but usable and, for executives who detest lugging a PC around, this is an adequate alternative, especially for doing e-mail.
Because it runs Windows Mobile, the phone comes with all the software you'd expect, including Office Mobile - you could conceivably run a PowerPoint presentation from the TyTN II!
HTC's follow-up to the TyTN smartphone, the appropriately named TyTN II, packs a punch. The Windows Mobile 6 Professional-based machine has everything you'd expect in a top-end phone - including a top-end price. The 190 g device has a 3G HSDPA radio, Wi-Fi for use in wireless hotspots and a GPS receiver for satellite navigation (software and maps sold separately).
There's a 3-megapixel camera on the back and a VGA camera on the front for video calling. Screen real estate - the 2,8-inch TFT-LCD touch-sensitive display serves up 240 x 320 pixels - is noticeably better than the original TyTN's.
The most impressive feature, though, is that one can slide the phone to reveal a full Qwerty keyboard and then, best of all, tilt the screen, effectively turning the TyTN II into a tiny laptop. The keyboard is small but usable and, for executives who detest lugging a PC around, this is an adequate alternative, especially for doing e-mail.
Because it runs Windows Mobile, the phone comes with all the software you'd expect, including Office Mobile - you could conceivably run a PowerPoint presentation from the TyTN II!