The HTC
7 Mozart is going to be half of Orange’s offering for Windows Phone
7 in the UK. It is an exclusive handset, so if you want the
particular features that this phone offers, you’ll have to do it
via Orange. The other Orange handset is the Samsung Omnia 7. We’ve
seen the HTC 7 Mozart before, but only briefly at a group preview
behind closed doors, and we decided to wait until we’d had the
phone in our hands for longer than 10 seconds before passing any sort
of judgement.
HTC has
split its offerings three ways: the HTC 7 Mozart with Orange, the HTC
Trophy with Vodafone and the HTC HD7 with O2. Each operator has
exclusivity, which ultimately means that unless you want to switch to
a new network, you’ll have limited choice when it comes to which
Windows Phone you are going to get.
Of
course, HTC isn’t the only manufacturer, you’ll also get LG and
Samsung in the mix - and eventually Dell - and we wouldn’t be
surprised if more manufacturers appeared later in the year or early
2011. With Microsoft dominating the user experience, technically we
could see a number of handset manufacturers joining the fray.
Being
limited in which handset you get might not make that much difference,
because essentially Microsoft have kept Windows Phone 7 on a tight
leash. Andy Lees, president mobile communications business at
Microsoft, today said that Microsoft wanted to be “accountable for
the total experience”.
That’s
a bold move from a manufacturer that in the past has seen some of the
greatest benefits from the value added features that manufacturers
added. The greatest ever Windows Mobile device was HTC’s HD2,
heavily layered with HTC Sense, obliterating the Windows Mobile 6.5
OS lurking beneath. But that’s history, as Ashley Highfield, MD
consumer and online at Microsoft UK said today that the approach with
Windows Phone 7 is about a, “relentless focus on the consumer”.
The HTC
7 Mozart is every bit an HTC phone, externally, at least. It sees the
aluminium unibody design we’ve seen on the likes of the HTC Desire
and HTC Legend, and more recently the HTC Desire HD. The anodised
finish feels luscious in the hand, every bit as strokeable as the
Desire. The slight oddity, however, lies around the back.
Two
corners of the handset are formed from black textured plastic. This
doesn’t detract from the overall look and feel, but it is slightly
odd. We assume that it is to avoid any sort of signal problem like
you get on the iPhone 4. As a result, we can’t help feeling that
from behind it looks like a pair of metal pants pulled over a black
rubber bottom. Let’s hope that image doesn’t stick in your mind
too long, but take a look at it.
As we’ve
become accustomed to from HTC, the build quality is excellent. The
handset is free from creaks and everything seems tightly put
together. There is no avoiding the fact that it looks and feels like
a premium device, from the body work to the screen, it is a good
looking handset, baring a resemblance to the HTC Desire, which it now
rivals.
Around
the front you get yourself a 3.7-inch, 800 x 480 pixel resolution
display. This is the resolution of all the current Windows Phone 7
handsets, and the experience across handsets is very similar
visually. The Samsung Omnia 7, the other Orange handset, has an
AMOLED display at 4 inches.
Needless
to say it packs a punch. There may be little difference across the
Windows Phone 7 range, but that’s almost a positive thing: all the
handsets look excellent, which was Microsoft’s intention. Across
the bottom of the display are the regulation three buttons: back,
“Start” and search. At first you might find yourself scratching
your head looking for a menu button, as we did, but it takes almost
no time to find your way around.
Of
course this is territory where we’ll reserve judgement until we’ve
had some time to live with a handset and find the real quirks. But
when we dived off to find a Wi-Fi network, we had no problem
navigating to the settings menu, or finding the camera, or browsing
Windows Marketplace. These are encouraging signs from a new operating
system. Microsoft has struggled with ease of use in the past and
things appear to be different with Windows Phone 7.
Windows
Phone 7 was silky smooth to navigate, we found the on-screen keyboard
to be hugely responsive, as responsive as we’ve found on our
favourite Android handsets and the iPhone, but we’ll reserve final
judgement here too: there may be a few oddities hiding in there that
we need to route out.
With
differentiation closely tied down, the HTC 7 Mozart doesn’t have
much scope to stand out from the rest of the bunch. But flip the
handset over and you’ll find an 8-megapixel autofocus camera,
backed by a Xenon flash. This positions the HTC 7 Mozart as more of a
“camera phone” than most of the other handsets. Whether the specs
result in images of notable quality remains to be seen and is
something we’ll look at when we get the phone in for a full review.
We did fire up the camera and found the interface was simple to use
and flipping over to the camcorder offers up 720p video capture,
keeping pace with other smartphones on the market.
With
Microsoft ruling with an iron fist, differentiation also falls into
individual hubs. In this case we have the HTC hub and as soon as you
open it you are greeted with a familiar clock. Within the HTC hub
you’ll be able to get to those applications that HTC is going to
offer you and they all have a familiar feel: 3D super-animated
weather, stocks, notes, amongst others, and a Sound Enhancer App.
With a
name like Mozart, sound has to come up somewhere. The Sound Enhancer
App lets you customise the sound profile, taking advantage of Dolby
Mobile or SRS technologies. Whether that actually makes any
difference or not remains to be seen, but it is in these little
details that you’ll have to decide which Windows Mobile 7 phone is
for you.
Those
who are serious about their music might gripe at he 8GB of storage
and wish for more, but for those in the UK you’ll be seeing the
integration of Zune and with Zune Pass you’ll be able to stream all
the music you like. Of course you also get that Xbox connection too,
although these services will probably grow as Windows Phone 7
matures.
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