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HTC Smart review

in Smartphones

Verdict

A poor man’s smartphone, at a mid-range price. Lacks too much to compete with even the cheapest Android handset

Review Date: 11 Jun 2010

Reviewed By: Jonathan Bray

Price when reviewed: Free, on a £25.00 per month, 24 months contract.

Overall Rating
2 stars out of 6

Features & Design
2 stars out of 6

Value for Money
2 stars out of 6

Performance
4 stars out of 6

The budget smartphone market has seen utter domination by Android-based phones of late, but there’s now the whiff of competition in the air. The HTC Smart, in a surprising move for the Taiwanese firm, is based not on Google’s popular mobile OS or Microsoft’s Windows Phone, but on Brew MP, a platform developed by smartphone chipset giant, Qualcomm.

That may sound an exciting development, but take a closer look and it seems the Smart is far from fresh and new. The hardware bears more than a passing resemblance to the HTC Touch2 released last year with its 2.8in 240 x 320 resistive touchscreen; only the control panel, which itself looks to have been borrowed from the Nexus One, is different.

To be fair to HTC, it does feel well knitted together, as did the Touch2, and its chrome-trimmed, soft-touch matte black case looks and feels classy. But it just isn’t that exciting, and as the screen is resistive rather than capacitive, there’s no multitouch support.

HTC Smart

Neither is there much on its list of specifications to get you going. The processor looks positively antediluvian at 300MHz, there’s only 256MB of storage built in (expandable via microSD), no Wi-Fi, a 3-megapixel digital camera and, although you do get HSDPA, it’s of the slower 3.6Mbits/sec variety. The inclusion of an FM tuner is little consolation.

Surely the Brew MP OS offers something new? Alas, it too brings little to the party. HTC has missed the opportunity to step out on a limb, instead offering a cut-down version of its Sense UI plugged into Brew’s underpinnings.

Initially, it’s hard to tell the difference between the Smart and other Sense-based phones: it looks similar to the front end of the excellent Desire and Legend Android handsets (complete with flippy home screen clock), and there are even alternative home screens reached with a quick swipe of the finger left or right.

These other screens play host to HTC’s social networking Friend Stream module, email, contacts, weather, plus SMS messages and a photo gallery. The browser is Opera Mobile, so websites are rendered both accurately and quickly (considering the slow processor). And everything else works as well as you might expect from what is, after all, a pretty mature software environment.

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User comments

Meaningless VFM Statements

PC Pro need to work out how to provide meaningfull Value for Money statements.
Something listed as "free" that works cannot be bad value for money!
The latest PC Pro just in provided a poor VFM rating for a PC 20% cheaper than it's alternates and almost identical spec.

By milliganp on 14 Jun 2010

Value for money ratings for phones

The phone may be free, milliganp, but the contract certainly isn't. As the conclusion explains, the best tariff this cut down smartphone is available on will set you back £25 per month. That, in our view, is poor value for money when superior, full-fat Android phones (such as the Samsung Galaxy Portal) can be had for considerably less.

By JonBray on 14 Jun 2010

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