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HTC HD mini review: Smart pup

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Gsmarena have posted their review of the HTC HD mini. Here are the phones key features, main disadvantages and their final impression.

Key features:
* 3.2" 65K-color HVGA capacitive touchscreen with multi-touch input
* Compact body and bold industrial design
* Windows Mobile 6.5.3 Professional OS with Sense UI
* Qualcomm MSM7227 600 MHz CPU and 384MB RAM
* Quad-band GSM support with dual-band HSDPA 7.2Mbps and HSUPA 2 Mbps
* Wi-Fi connectivity
* Built-in GPS receiver with A-GPS support
* 5 MP autofocus camera with touch focus
* CIF video recording at 25fps
* microSD card slot
* Standard microUSB port and Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP
* Standard 3.5mm audio jack
* Stereo FM radio with RDS
* MS Office Mobile document editor
* Opera 9.5 web browser
* YouTube client, Facebook and Twitter integration
* Very good audio output quality
* Excellent loudspeaker performance

Main disadvantages:
* Poor display sunlight legibility
* Poor camera performance and sub-par video recording
* No dedicated camera key and no lens cover
* Card slot under the battery cover
* No DivX/XviD video support out-of-the-box
* Preloaded CoPilot Live navigation software is a trial version only
* No secondary video-call camera
* No voice dialing
* No handwriting recognition
* Unreliable Flash support in IE Mobile

The HTC HD mini is pretty much what a modern-day smartphone should be all about. We are not talking the ultimate of technology, a ridiculously expensive piece of gear to flash around and impress everyone around. We mean a handy working tool that can also keep you entertained.

Much more pocket-friendly than the HTC HD2, the HD mini offers a comparable (although admittedly inferior) performance at a lower price. It’s the ultimate speed and power against the friendly appearance and cheery attitude. It’s a matter of priorities of course, but the HD mini can be a pretty good deal.

Sense UI has done well to cover the WinMo user interface shortcomings and the capacitive multi-touch display adds value to the whole package. The youthful design (just not as childish as we’ve seen XpressMusic get) seems well suited to the target audience too.

The thing is, yet again, pricing is just steeper than most of the competing smartphone platforms out there.

The HTC Hero will gladly deliver for far less cash, while the HTC Legend will throw in AMOLED for the same asking price. The Galaxy Spica is also a comparable package within the same price range.

The Nokia X6 16 GB has had its price tag duly corrected and 16 gigs of internal memory do sound tempting. The Symbian touch user interface is nowhere near the Sense UI standards though, and the X6 CPU and RAM are less impressive. The Finn offers higher screen resolution and the audio quality to go with the XpressMusic background.

Within the very same PocketPC ranks, the HTC Touch Diamond2 will tempt you with WVGA resolution if you can live without the multi-touch capacitive screen. It comes with an earlier version of the OS and the Sense UI.

The Samsung Omnia II will take this offer to the next step by adding a much larger 3.7” AMOLED display, D1 video and faster CPU. Sorry for stating the obvious but the Omnia II will give you much more bang for your buck. It’s fair to note though, these two are not competing for the same kind of users.

So, the HTC HD mini is a great idea overall, and it has the advantage of packing the latest software available. The disadvantage is having to compete with too many equal (and stronger) rivals in the same price bracket.

Value for money is not its strongest point, and it doesn’t get any better when you put WinPho 7 in the picture. What we now know as Windows Mobile 6.5 will become Windows Phone Starter edition. No need to tell you Windows Phone 7 will be the pet project and the starter edition will be the entry-level alternative. We can only guess what the implications will be for the level of support – and we cannot say Microsoft are doing such a good job of it even now.

So, with that bit of warning, is the HTC HD mini good to go? We’d still say yes. Not because we did our job and it’s your responsibility henceforth. There’s just something about this kiddo.



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