Tuesday, December 9, 2008

HTC FUZE Smartphone

Get down to business and stay close to all your most vital contacts and documents whilst on the go with the HTC FUZE Smartphone for ATT, which mixes a slide-out QWERTY keyboard coupled with HTC's intuitive, graphic-rich TouchFLO 3D touchscreen user interface.

The Fuze's TouchFLO 3D user interface replies completely to your finger gestures when scrolling thru contacts, browsing the net, and launching media--all vividly displayed as photographs and design on the 2.8-inch screen powered by the 3D graphics processor. And with the power of the updated Windows Mobile 6.1 operating system, you can stay simply hooked up to your business and private information on the go with support for a wide selection of e-mail accounts and the facility to edit Microsoft Office documents.

Customer's review

"Let me prologue this review by saying I was upgrading from a Verizon Treo 700w, which had a measly 32 MB of RAM and an unreliable docking connector. Windows Mobile telephones are right now the most flexible telephones in that they have thousands of software titles written for them.

Also, HTC telephones have the smashing benefit of having the myriad resources of "xda-developers" to provide new ROMs with bugs fixed and added capacities. Also, Android may be absolutely running on this telephone in the following year as a consequence.

I favor the default black HTC color range. Call quality is great, though the spokesperson might be a little louder. There's a built-in application for making the spokesperson and speakerphone louder.

Some of the ATT-included software is great : a Java emulator for games and third party apps, best-in-class Opera browser, a YouTube app available in the Windows Directory, Music ID based primarily on the famous "Shazam" iPhone version, and Google Maps and TomTom Navigator ( GPS software ) can simply be added.

There's also a Java-based Wikipedia spectator, which is amazingly functional. If you would like a faster taste of Windows Mobile, go for the Treo Pro with its more basic interface and front keyboard. An eight GB Class six MicroSDHC card means I have GPS maps for all of Europe, US, Canada, Mexico, Australia, New Zealand in my pocket at any given moment.

I have push IMAP email thru 7's Beta, ( my school does not support BlackBerry or Exchange, which are way easier to put up with ATT's BlackBerry Connect or the default OTA ActiveSync ) and FM radio, wonderful looking web on one of six great browsers, full YouTube access, and the facility to stream live TV from my media center free through a zero-configuration VPN called Hamachi and a plug in for my Windows Media Center PC called WebGuide. I need to admit, if I could use Exchange I'd possibly buy a Mac and an iPhone, and if I could only use BlackBerry, I'd possibly purchase a Bold. "

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