HTC Touch2 review
in Smartphones
Verdict
A well-made and usable Windows smartphone - just don't expect the new Windows Mobile to make a massive difference
Review Date: 6 Oct 2009
Reviewed By: Jonathan Bray
Price when reviewed: £260 (£299 inc VAT)
Buy it now for: £218
(see more store prices)
Features & Design
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Value for Money
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Ease of Use
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| Details | |
|---|---|
| Part Code | T3333 |
| Review Date | 6 Oct 2009 |
| Price ex VAT | £260 |
| Price inc VAT | £299 |
| Overall rating |
|
| Ease of Use rating |
|
| Features & Design |
|
| Value for Money |
|
| Battery Life | |
|---|---|
| Talk time, quoted | 6hrs |
| Standby, quoted | 20 days |
| Physical | |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 104 x 55 x 12.9mm (WDH) |
| Weight | 110g |
| Touchscreen |
|
| Primary keyboard | On-screen |
| Core Specifications | |
|---|---|
| RAM capacity | 256MB |
| ROM size | 512MB |
| Camera megapixel rating | 3.2mp |
| Front-facing camera? |
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| Video capture? |
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| Display | |
|---|---|
| Screen size | 2.8in |
| Resolution | 240 x 320 |
| Landscape mode? |
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| Other wireless standards | |
|---|---|
| Bluetooth support |
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| Integrated GPS |
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| Software | |
|---|---|
| OS family | Windows Mobile |
Best Prices
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| Prices, delivery and availability at 1 retailer | Go | |
|
£218 | Go |
From around the web
Details seem incorrect
I'm not sure which release of this phone you are looking at. I am in the states, with an HTC Touch Pro2 from Verizon. My phone has a HUGE 3.6" 480x800 hires screen. The camera DOES has autofocus, plus man extra abilities. It HAS an accelerometer that works great and comes with a game called Teeter that showcases the feature. The orientation switches quickly and automatically.
This phone is really great.
By jdizzy on 6 Oct 2009 ![]()
Correct Details
The details are correct.
This phone is the Touch2 (QVGA Res) not the Touch Pro2 (WVGA Res).
By remarks on 7 Oct 2009 ![]()
Strange Review
I don't get the bit that says "this phone isn't what you'd call cutting edge. The core hardware platform remains the same as every HTC phone over the past year and a half".
This is a budget phone. The phones you refer to were top-of-the-range models costing nearly twice as much. Isn't that what happens in the IT industry. High-end tech trickles down to the low end.
You would never complain that a budget, £300 PC had the same spec as a top-end model from just 12-18 months ago. It would be considered a good thing.
I can accept the complaint that HTC have been slow to update the hardware on their top-end phones (although the HD2 with 1GHz snapdragon has now been officially announced) but that is a criticism for a different product.
It just seems very strange to mark down a budget phone for having an identical spec to most top-end phones. You guys are tough!
By Bassey1976 on 7 Oct 2009 ![]()
Strange Review
I don't get the bit that says "this phone isn't what you'd call cutting edge. The core hardware platform remains the same as every HTC phone over the past year and a half".
This is a budget phone. The phones you refer to were top-of-the-range models costing nearly twice as much. Isn't that what happens in the IT industry. High-end tech trickles down to the low end.
You would never complain that a budget, £300 PC had the same spec as a top-end model from just 12-18 months ago. It would be considered a good thing.
I can accept the complaint that HTC have been slow to update the hardware on their top-end phones (although the HD2 with 1GHz snapdragon has now been officially announced) but that is a criticism for a different product.
It just seems very strange to mark down a budget phone for having an identical spec to most top-end phones. You guys are tough!
By Bassey1976 on 7 Oct 2009 ![]()
Strange Review
I don't get the bit that says "this phone isn't what you'd call cutting edge. The core hardware platform remains the same as every HTC phone over the past year and a half".
This is a budget phone. The phones you refer to were top-of-the-range models costing nearly twice as much. Isn't that what happens in the IT industry. High-end tech trickles down to the low end.
You would never complain that a budget, £300 PC had the same spec as a top-end model from just 12-18 months ago. It would be considered a good thing.
I can accept the complaint that HTC have been slow to update the hardware on their top-end phones (although the HD2 with 1GHz snapdragon has now been officially announced) but that is a criticism for a different product.
It just seems very strange to mark down a budget phone for having an identical spec to most top-end phones. You guys are tough!
By Bassey1976 on 7 Oct 2009 ![]()
Does anyone know
can anyone tell me what the memory is like for music and other applications as I am looking at buying the phone and was wondering if I require a micro sd card
By DudeBoy on 8 Feb 2010 ![]()
Touch 2 A Great Phone
I did quite a bit of research and narrowed it down to a Touch 2 or a Hero. I could afford both and the Hero cost £110 more.
I made my decision on size, features, reviews and costs.
The touch 2 is a great phone that fits well in your pocket, you don,t feel like you have a dinner plate in your hands and after 5 weeks of hard use I have NOT froze it up once.
I work in the building industry so it had to be rugged, with the help of a HTC Pouch it is still in excellent condition.
More then enough features. I am not one for brainless apps so all in all a Perfect phone.
If I was a office dweller I may have choose the Hero, but still a bit big for my liking!
Most reviews are a bot down on this phone read the specs on the HTC site and don't be fooled my people who have a preference to the phone that is in their pocket!
I pay £15 for 11 months (£165) with BT To Go: includes 150 mins 100 Text 510mb Data.
Main use Wifi, Data conection, followed by phone then text.
Touch 2 A Great Phone!
By iowadie on 30 Mar 2010 ![]()
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