HTC Touch Pro2 (Sprint)
Manufacturer: HTC Part number: PPCT7380SP
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- Despite the jaw-dropping price tag, the HTC Touch Pro2 is a powerful smartphone that delivers in performance and features to make it one of the best devices for Sprint's business customers.
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Where to buy
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CNET editors' review
HTC Touch Pro2 (Sprint) price range: $349.99
- Reviewed by: Bonnie Cha
- Reviewed on: 09/08/2009
- Updated on:11/03/2009
The good: The HTC Touch Pro2 for Sprint offers a gorgeous touch screen, a spacious keyboard, and a 3.5 millimeter jack. The Windows Mobile device also features world-roaming capabilities, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and GPS.
The bad: The device is bulky in size and also expensive. GPS acquisition was a bit slow in our tests and ideo streaming wasn't the smoothest.
The bottom line: Despite the jaw-dropping price tag, the HTC Touch Pro2 is a powerful smartphone that delivers in performance and features to make it one of the best devices for Sprint's business customers.
Editors' note: In our original review, we incorrectly reported that the Sprint HTC Touch Pro2 does not support international 3G bands.
Sprint has really filled out its smartphone lineup quite nicely this summer, offering a little something for everyone. The Palm Pre brought a touch-screen smartphone to the masses; the BlackBerry Tour gave mobile professionals an international e-mail machine; and the soon-to-be-released HTC Hero will certainly please tech-savvy gadget lovers. And now, for power business users, there is the HTC Touch Pro2.
Like the T-Mobile version, the Sprint HTC Touch Pro2 features a gorgeous touch screen and one of the best QWERTY keyboards we've seen to date. It's also packed with features like HTC's Straight Talk Technology for conference call management, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and a 3.2-megapixel camera. However, Sprint offers a few more extras on its HTC Touch Pro2 than T-Mobile, such as its various entertainment services, and wait for it...a standard 3.5 millimeter audio jack. Sprint's globetrotting execs will also be pleased to know that it offers world-roaming capabilities. Unfortunately, your wallet will take a hit for all these premium features. The HTC Touch Pro2 costs $349.99 with a two-year contract and after a $100 mail-in rebate, which definitely hurts, but the powerful smartphone is one the best-equipped devices to meet the needs of the most demanding user.
Design
Sprint's version of the HTC Touch Pro2 more closely resembles the unlocked model of the smartphone than T-Mobile's version, which is fine by us. The tapered edges give the smartphone a more streamlined and smoother look and the charcoal gray color is a classic and attractive choice. The Sprint Touch Pro2 is also actually just a hair shorter and lighter (4.56 inches tall by 2.33 inches wide by 0.68 inch thick and 6.3 ounces) than the T-Mobile Touch Pro2 as well, but overall, this is still a very bulky device.

The smartphone features a gorgeous and spacious tilting 3.6-inch WVGA touch screen. It displays 262,000 colors at 480x800 pixels so whether you're viewing Web pages, photos, or reading e-mails, it all looks good on the Touch Pro2's sharp screen. The touch-sensitive zoom bar below the display also makes it easy to zoom in and out of Web pages and photos.
There is a built-in accelerometer that automatically switches the screen orientation when you rotate the phone, but it only works in certain applications, such as the browser, photos, and e-mail. The accelerometer was fairly quick and didn't freeze up at any point during our testing period. Though we would have preferred a capacitive touch screen versus a resistive one, the Touch Pro2's was responsive overall. The one exception was when we were using the Sprint TV app and had a hard time scrolling through the various channels and program guides.
The Windows Mobile device is easy to navigate, however, thanks to HTC's TouchFlo 3D interface. Sprint added several more tabs to provide easy access to its services, including Sprint Navigation, Sprint Music, and Sprint TV, but you can also remove or add more tabs through the Settings menu. Below the display, you also have a few navigation controls, including Talk and End keys, a Start menu shortcut, and a back button.

The slide-out QWERTY keyboard is largely unchanged, with the exception of some relocated shortcut buttons. It's still a delight to use with its spacious layout and large buttons and remains one of the best keyboards we've used on a smartphone.
While there haven't been too many physical differences among the various versions HTC Touch Pro2, Sprint does offer something the others don't: a 3.5 millimeter headphone jack. Yes, finally! The jack is located on bottom of the device right next to the USB port/power connector, so you're now free to plug in your favorite pair of headphones or earbuds without the hassle of using an audio adapter. There are volume controls on the left side of the device, but if you feel like blasting your music or calls for all to hear, there are dual speakers on back along with a mute button. The camera is also located on back, while the microSD expansion and SIM card slots are behind the battery door.

Sprint packages the HTC Touch Pro2 with an AC adapter, a USB cable, a screen protector, a SIM card, an extra stylus, a software CD, and reference material. For more add-ons, please check our cell phone accessories, ringtones, and help page.
Features
The Sprint HTC Touch Pro2 offers a lot of the same core functionality of the T-Mobile model, including HTC's Straight Talk Technology, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, and Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional Edition. Though Sprint hasn't officially announced it, a company representative did say the smartphone has the hardware and software requirements to support an upgrade to Windows Mobile 6.5 and that it's foreseeable for Sprint to deliver a software upgrade in the near future. For now, you get the usual Mobile Office Suite and e-mail capabilities as well as some extras, including Opera Mobile 9.5, Facebook app with contacts integration.
You can read more about Window Mobile 6.1 and some of the aforementioned features in our full review of the T-Mobile HTC Touch Pro2, but here we'll discuss some of the more Sprint-specific offerings, starting with the world roaming capabilities.
The Touch Pro2 offers dual-mode functionality, which means the handset supports both CDMA and GSM technology to provide seamless international roaming. Domestically, the smartphone works on Sprint's CDMA network, but will then automatically detect and switch to the international GSM bands when you're traveling overseas. The Touch Pro2 comes with a SIM card for international use, and Sprint offers voice coverage in 185 countries and data coverage in 150 countries. Unfortunately, the smartphone does not offer 3G coverage overseas. Also, before you head off on your trip, be sure to check Sprint's international rates, which range from 59 cents to $5.99, so you're not surprised when you receive your phone bill. You can check rates here (PDF).
The HTC Touch Pro2 also supports a number of Sprint services that take advantage of using the carrier's the EV-DO Rev. A network. Sticking with the theme of travel, there's Sprint Navigation, which is powered by TeleNav, and offers 2D and 3D color maps, voice-guided directions, traffic information, and more. For entertainment, the Sprint Music Store offers music downloads and you can watch clips of your favorite TV shows courtesy of Sprint TV or use the phone's dedicated YouTube app. Sports enthusiasts might also enjoy the NFL Mobile Live or NASCAR Sprint Cup Mobile apps.
The camera is the same at 3.2 megapixels. It can shoot images in one of five resolutions and one of four quality settings. Unfortunately, there's no flash but there are white balance and brightness controls. You also get ISO settings, effects, flicker adjustment, panorama mode, and other tools. For videos, the Touch Pro2 can capture clips in H.263, 3GPP2, MEPG4, or H.264 formats in one of three resolutions. The HTC Touch Pro2 offers about 288MB RAM, which is supplemented by the microSD expansion slot, which can accept up to 16GB cards.

Picture quality was OK. While images were sharp and objects were easy to indentify in photos, colors looked bland and somewhat hazy. Videos looked a bit grainy but acceptable if you're in an absolute pinch and need to record something.
Performance
We tested the dual-mode HTC Touch Pro2 in San Francisco using Sprint service, and call quality was excellent on our end. We were happy with how rich and clear voices sounded and with the lack of any background noise. Unfortunately, our callers didn't quite enjoy the same experience. Though they said they could hear us just fine, they mentioned that it sounded as if we were in a tunnel with a bit of echoing. Also, callers reported that parts of our conversation occasionally cut in and out when we were using the speakerphone, but once again, we had no complaints on our side of the call and was wholly impressed the volume and clarity of the speakerphone. Unfortunately, we couldn't test the international capabilities.
We successfully paired the smartphone with the Logitech Mobile Traveller Bluetooth headset and the Motorola S9 Bluetooth Active Headphones, and it was a treat to plug our Bose On Ear Headphones straight into the smartphone without having to fiddle with a cumbersome adapter.
Music playback was rich and loud. Video performance was OK, depending on the format. From our personal library, WMV and AVI files played back smoothly with synchronized audio and images. YouTube clips took a few seconds to buffer, but they also played with no major interruption. Unfortunately, Sprint TV didn't fare well in our tests. There were problems from the get-go and navigating through the various channels and clips was jerky. Also, when playing videos, the picture took a while to render and once again, it would occasionally hiccup and freeze up momentarily--not worth the hassle, we say.
Using Sprint's EV-DO Rev. A network, CNET's full site loaded in a rather zippy 37 seconds, while CNN and ESPN's mobile sites both loaded in 5 seconds. The smartphone's GPS wasn't quite as quick. In fact, it took a little while for the Touch Pro2 to find our location. We weren't in a part of the city that was dominated by tall buildings and it was a clear day, yet we still kept getting this message for about 10 minutes: "GPS signal is weak. Please move to an open are and remain motionless until getting the GPS location." Once locked on though, it tracked our movements accurately and Sprint Navigation provided accurate directions from the Golden Gate Bridge area to CNET's downtown headquarters. Spoken directions were loud and clear, and the app checked for traffic along the way. Route recalculations were also swift and on point when we purposefully missed several turns.
Powered by a 528MHz processor, the HTC Touch Pro2 was a fairly responsive device. We didn't experience any major meltdowns during our testing period, though we did have to exit out of a couple of applications in order to get a video to play. To help with task management, there is a pull-down menu in the upper right corner of the Start screen where you can see all running programs and you can also close out apps now by tapping the X in the upper right-hand corner.
The HTC Touch Pro2 features a 1500mAh lithium ion battery with a rated talk time of 4 hours and up to 14 days of standby time. In our battery drain tests, the smartphone delivered 5.65 hours of continuous talk time. According to FCC radiation tests, the Touch Pro2 has a digital SAR rating of 1.41 watts per kilogram. Finally, the smartphone has a Hearing Aid Compatible rating of M3.
User reviews
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Exceeds Expectations by a Wide Margin
by GaryCoombs on September 17, 2009
Pros: Stunning 480 x 800 screen
Finally a useable keyboard
Improved battery life
superb speakerphone
Opera 9.5 Browser
Much improved touch screen
Touch Flo Interface now highly useableCons: Price, of course, but well worth it.
Camera flashSummary: I've owned the HTC 6700, HTC Touch, HTC Touch Pro, and now the HTC Touch Pro2. There is no argument that there has been a significant upward progression in ...
Summary: I've owned the HTC 6700, HTC Touch, HTC Touch Pro, and now the HTC Touch Pro2. There is no argument that there has been a significant upward progression in all areas. If I could have designed the successor to the Touch Pro I could not have done better. There are countless significant improvements over the Touch Pro.
Here's an addendum on battery usage. There is no question that the TP2 is an improvement. Here is today's data and you get it by going to the information tab under power settings.
Screen size is a show stopping improvement. Even though the TP1 was 480 x 640 the improvement in going from a 2.8" screen to a 3.6" screen with 480 x 800 makes the web pages I use large enough to be functional. I'm a full time equities trader and I can finally use the full size Fidelity home page instead of just the mobile version designed only for phones. The Zoom Bar is a welcome addition to quickly resize an area of interest. 480 x 800 on a 3.6" screen makes for sharply chiseled images. In a word the screen on the TP2 is stunning. Compare side-by-side the lower resolution iPhone 320 x 480 screen with the higher resolution TP2 480 x 800 screen and the difference is dramatic.
Dual speakers have made a huge improvement in audio quality. Placing the TP2 on its face to quickly go to speaker phone is a joy and the audio quality and volume are superb.
A nice feature when using the phone is having the screen automatically go blank when holding the phone against your face. No more inadvertently pressing buttons with your ears or your nose.
The Opera 9.5 browser build 16983 is worlds better than the Windows Mobile Internet Explorer. There are literally hundreds of improvements, not the least of which is speed. You simply have to use Opera to appreciate what you have been missing.
I was concerned at first that I would miss the navigation control button that the TP1 had. You actually needed it with the TP1 because the touch screen wasn't all that useful for scrolling, particularly with the phone directory. After a few minutes with the TP2 you won't miss it at all as scrolling lists by touch now really works like it should. The improvements HTC has made with the Touch Screen are significant. The touch screen is now what it always should have been, highly useable.
How nice it is to be able to rearrange the Touch Flo buttons at the bottom of the home screen. And how nice to be able to simply place a check mark behind the ones you want to display and the ones you leave blank are no longer displayed. For example the stock button is of no use to me as the prices are delayed by 20 minutes. I require real-time data for trading. I don't check it and it's gone.
Having a highly functional keyboard is wonderful. The difference between the square matrix keyboard of the TP1 and the offset desktop arrangement of the keys on the TP2 cannot be overstated. The touch and feel are superb. One session with the new keyboard and you cannot go back to the TP1.
Battery life is much better than the TP1. I can easily get through an entire day with heavy usage where the TP1 required frequent recharges throughout the day. There is even a screen tab on the battery power screen that shows your usage since the last full charge. It shows total standby time, talk time, and device usage. You can really see how you are using your phone and how it effects battery life.
There are countless other improvements you will find as you explore your new TP2. In a nutshell this is by a wide margin the best smart phone I've ever owned. I had the opportunity to play with an iPhone for several hours and I definitely no longer suffer from iPhone envy.
Updated on Sep 18, 2009
I took my TP2 off the overnight charger at 7:18 AM. It is now 6:41 PM. My TP2 has been on battery only the entire day. Here are the stats:
7 hrs 59 min Standby Time
0 hrs 32 min Talk Time
3 hrs 21 min Internet use
It is now 6:41 PM and I still have 25% battery left and I'm about to attach to my computer to update files, email, etc. and of course recharge.
I'm more than pleased with battery life.6 out of 6 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Great phone minor issues on excellent Sprint contract
by Aaron1710 on September 11, 2009
Pros: - Large, tiltable screen with great detail
- Nice custom HTC overlays for so many functions
- Good keyboard
- Sprint's Everything plan
- Wi-fi for at-home high speed
- Windows Mobile 6.5 OS upgrade
- Noice-cancelling speakerphone
- Great soundCons: - The "@" symbol is awkward to get for email addresses ("FN" and "2" are required, but only on same left side)
- Accidental selection of items with finger
- Web page scrolling can take a second or two to redraw new materialSummary: This is the most sophisticated phone available from any carrier as of this day. It is truly a wonderful device in a great many regards. We bought three of them ...
Summary: This is the most sophisticated phone available from any carrier as of this day. It is truly a wonderful device in a great many regards. We bought three of them for our family plan (Everything Data Family), along with two Blackberry phones.
UPDATE: Despite having a 16 GB memory card, the main memory on the phone is very limited and the phone seems to have occasional freeze-ups with several applications open. To help clear out memory and enhance sound quality, among other enhancements, I have installed tweaks from PPCGeeks.com called "Touch Pro 2 Cleanup." Also, some very useful utilities are linked to there to better manage the phone. I highly suggest visiting that thread for help with making the phone work better.
We are still getting acclimated to the phones, but are very impressed. We will be getting some extra memory (it supports MicroSDHC Class 6, 16 GB).
The screen is beautiful and can show webpages in full resolution, to 800 pixel of width. Of course, this can be quite small and hard to read, but HTC reserved a place to the side of the screen that allows near instant zooming and expansion. The touchscreen allows easy scrolling, left and right, up and down. HTC programmed many functions to behave as though the image is on a rolling wheel. This allows you to push content larger than the screen in a motion that keeps rolling by until it stops. Very cool and useful.
Both the microphone and the ear speaker are of great quality. The speakerphone does a wonderful job, too. Really great plusses.
We would not have five smartphones if we had stayed with Verizon, from which we just moved. Getting 3000 minutes, free roaming, unlimited nav, data, messaging costs over $410 a month on Verizon (before corporate discounts). On Sprint, it costs us $240 (including the $10 6 PM evening start for the plan, before corporate discounts). Verizon has Friends and Family for 10 people, but Sprint has a 7 PM evening start and 7 AM day start, and now, unlimited calling to and from all carriers' mobile phones. WIthout a doubt, Sprint makes buying this phone so attractive that we couldn't pass it up.
FYI, if you happen to belong to a credit union, you get an extra 10% off your monthly plan.
We are looking forward to our time with Sprint and these new phones!
Updated on Nov 3, 2009
We have found that it is easy to accidentally call someone when you think you are pressing on a contact's name to get their information. Also, we have found that a free screen saver utility, S2U2, can reduce some of these accidental calls by locking the screen, simply needing a swipe of your finger to unlock.
I will update this as needed.
Updated on Nov 3, 2009We were pleasantly surprised when we contacted Sprint for details on international roaming for a trip for my wife. If you have an Everything Data plan of some sort, you have free unlimited text messaging in any country you visit, as long as texts are to/from the US (assuming any roaming text messaging is allowed in that country). Also, we found out Sprint PRORATES the $40 unlimited international roaming data charge. For instance, if you take your Touch Pro 2 to Central America for a week, you only pay $10 if you have Sprint turn it on as you leave and off when you return? My wife will be taking advantage of these Sprint perks, along with Skype Mobile 3.0 for free calls back to the States, on her trip. By the way, Sprint's version of the HTC Touch Pro 2 is the only version from any carrier that does not have the SIM chip locked, meaning you can buy and install a SIM chip for your destination country and have in-country calls for the price that locals might pay.
Thanks Sprint!6 out of 6 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Good looking phone with some great perks but.....lol
by gtskyrider on September 22, 2009
Pros: Great phone, I love the speaker phone option when you put the phone face down! this phone was very well built with some great ideas in mind. I also love the integration with the phone.
Cons: First off...I'm on my second phone already...lol But I didn't give up, just though might be a bad phone which it was. I don't like when you put the phone to your ear the screen goes black, then you have to go through menus to get to where you were.
Summary: Great phone minus a few things such as stronger battery for such an action packed phone, stronger GPS, and also fix the back and forth thing when the screen goes ...
Summary: Great phone minus a few things such as stronger battery for such an action packed phone, stronger GPS, and also fix the back and forth thing when the screen goes black...other than that ...EXCELLENT!
3 out of 4 users found this user opinion helpful.
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It's all about the keyboard...
by gottdownunder on November 8, 2009
Pros: Did I mention the keyboard? Its the saving grace for this phone. Great large clear and vibrant screen. Tilting keyboard is useful. Speaker phone is high quality (although a bit of a delay).
Cons: Don't confuse touch screen on an apple product with that of a WINMO/Touch Flo. Light years apart. I find the screen to be not as responsive as I would like, and sometimes, too responsive. Very confusing interface (hard to find things)
Summary: Overall, it's a keeper...I suspect with time, I'll get familiar with where certain options are hidden (coming off a Treo 700 model). What a HUGE difference in ...
Summary: Overall, it's a keeper...I suspect with time, I'll get familiar with where certain options are hidden (coming off a Treo 700 model). What a HUGE difference in screen resolution and size which is nice. Keyboard is EXCELLENT (i'm not a fan of the iphone touch keyboard - prefer a physical model and this is the best one my fingers have been on). That being said, I miss the responsiveness and smothness of my ipod touch's screen. So much more fluid and well laid out. Time will tell on battery life (just got the phone yesterday) and whether or not my cheek will disconnect calls since I have not been able to find something that de-activates the touch screen while on a call (something my treo had) - I suppose I have some googling to do. The interface is very confusing (whether on WINMO or touch flo) - I find myself forgetting where options are burried - again, something time should fix (but this is not a phone that you just pick up and run - and ps, I'm fairly savy on electronic gadgets before you assume I'm a novice). The iphone interface is far more intuitive and responsive to touch (very smooth scrolling based on finger motions). I am inclined to keep the phone as I'm not sure what other WinMo phone could compete on functionality (my company requires winmo to connect to network)...
1 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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The best phone to date.
by jack247bauer on December 8, 2009
Pros: huge screen. massive keyboard. fast operating system. great usability. tilting screen is perfect
Cons: if anything it would be the price
Summary: I have had the touch pro 2 for a few months now and i love it. it does everything i need and more
Summary: I have had the touch pro 2 for a few months now and i love it. it does everything i need and more
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Great PDA phone.
by happyjme on December 7, 2009
Pros: KEYBOARD! finally i can type without pressing the wrong letters.
i can actually see the pdf files along with all microsoft office files.
big screen
Overall good...Cons: ring tone doesn't work so i have to turn it off/on
when dialed wrong number it doesn't hang up fast enough.
sometimes the screen doesn't tilt to landscape. i have to shake it a bit
too bulky
battery life could be longer.Summary: so the bottom-line is... i like it better than samsung instict i had with sprint. it's a good phone for business people. i bought extra battery and i carry ...
Summary: so the bottom-line is... i like it better than samsung instict i had with sprint. it's a good phone for business people. i bought extra battery and i carry it with me all the time. i wish it was a bit more slimmer.
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its definitely not worth what it cost.
by dicerol458 on December 5, 2009
Pros: Lots of futures and looks and feels like expensive phone
Cons: touch sensitive is very sensitive sometime it makes call on its own. Its too hard navigate with touch screen because its too sensitive there is no adjustable for the touch sensitiveness.
Summary: Botton line its too much for the phone compare to iphone but sevice is cheaper than At&t. The battery life is very very short. If your surfining the ...
Summary: Botton line its too much for the phone compare to iphone but sevice is cheaper than At&t. The battery life is very very short. If your surfining the web, for get it you have to charge your phone twice a day.
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Good piece of hardware, horrible OS and battery
by joeunity on November 17, 2009
Pros: The phone itself (outside of the battery) is a powerful well built piece of hardware with lots of capabilities.
Cons: Windows 6 is abysmal and the battery life is horrendous.
Summary: Until the windows 6.5 upgrade is available STAY AWAY!!!
You'll need multiple batteries as well. My NEW battery lasted an average of 8 hrs with limited phone use....Summary: Until the windows 6.5 upgrade is available STAY AWAY!!!
You'll need multiple batteries as well. My NEW battery lasted an average of 8 hrs with limited phone use.
Windows 6 shortcomings:
- the worst thing is that there is almost no ability to customize the phone menus, home screen or functions
-takes multiple steps to do normal functions that make the phone very inefficient
-Cannot remove needless software that comes with the phone (e.g. NASCAR, NFL Live)
-Almost impossible to get Google Sync to work properly
-Windows mobile 6.5 upgrade is currently unavailable
-aftermarket User interfaces and fixes create bugs, severe slow down -
Great phone, just getting used to it
by smokeyd123 on November 10, 2009
Pros: I am coming from a Moto q, a WM 5.0 phone without the HTC Touch. This new phone is really a great improvement. Most of my friends have the iphone, but I wanted to stay with sprint and my existing Friends and Family plan so abandoned my android hunt
Cons: Like I said, still getting used to the phone, so won't comment on the minuses yet, since any I find now could be because of my inexperience. with the touch screen.
Summary: I would be on an Android phone if Sprint would have allowed it on my existing play. Right now after 2 hours of use, I am not regretting getting this ...
Summary: I would be on an Android phone if Sprint would have allowed it on my existing play. Right now after 2 hours of use, I am not regretting getting this real nice WM 6.1 with HTC touch. As others have mentioned, the keyboard is great, the sound quality is good, the 3.5 mm jack is welcome. So far so good, next to test is the wifi, possible tether, getting the sd card going, along with that updating music library. I may put on itunes if media player doesn't wow. Could be so long laptop, that is how good this thing is.
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Better than HTC Touch Pro
by JerylCook on November 10, 2009
Pros: Battery life is better, not sluggish!
Cons: bulky size
Summary: I recommend an upgrade to this for users who had a HTC Touch pro, the only complaint i have so far is the bulk-size it feel like a treo! But ...
Summary: I recommend an upgrade to this for users who had a HTC Touch pro, the only complaint i have so far is the bulk-size it feel like a treo! But other than that it is sweet , very smooth NOT sluggish like the older HTC Touch Pro...and the battery makes it through the day on high usage...great screen as well..
Specifications
- Manufacturer: HTC
- Part number: PPCT7380SP
- Description: The Touch Pro2 provides the entire spectrum of powerful communication tools to get your point across... so that you are always at your best. With gleaming design, the Touch Pro2 radiates the level of professionalism to match your career in every way. Business success depends on human interaction. You can often get more done with a quick phone call or a face to face meeting than you can in strings of emails. So why do all business phones seem to ignore the importance of calls? The Touch Pro2 treats your calls with as much care and attention as your messages.
General
- Product Type Smartphone
- Service Provider Sprint Nextel
- Width 2.3 in
- Depth 0.7 in
- Height 4.6 in
- Weight 6.3 oz
Cellular
- Technology CDMA2000 1X
- Band CDMA2000 1X 1900/800
- Phone Design Slider
- Vibrating Alert Yes
- Polyphonic Ringer Yes
- Call Timer Yes
- Conference Call Capability Yes
- Voice Recorder Yes
- Speakerphone Yes
- Wireless Interface IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g, Bluetooth 2.1 EDR
- Additional Features TTY compatible, TouchFLO 3D touch-screen
Communicator Features
- Operating System Microsoft Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional
Messaging & Data Services
- Mobile Email Yes
- Internet Browser Yes
- Included Services Sprint TV
- EV-DO (Evolution-Data Optimized) Yes
Digital Camera
- Camera highlights With a resolution of 3.2 megapixels, this camera phone will give you higher quality pictures than other phones.
- Sensor Resolution 3.2 megapixels
- Focus Adjustment Automatic
- Camera Light Source Flash
- Features Video recording
GPS System
- GPS Navigation GPS receiver
Organizer
- Alarm Clock Yes
- Calendar Yes
- Reminder Yes
- Calculator Basic
Display
- Type LCD display
- Technology TFT
- Display Resolution 800 x 480 pixels
- Diagonal Size 3.6 in
Digital Player (Recorder)
- Supported Digital Audio Standards AAC, AMR, MP3, WAV, WMA, MIDI, AAC +
Connections
- Connector Type 1 x Data port - 11 pin HTC ExtUSB
Miscellaneous
- Hearing Aid Compatible Yes
- Included Accessories Stylus, Screen protection film
- Cables Included USB cable
Power
- Type Power adapter
Battery
- Technology - Lithium ion
- Capacity 1500 mAh
- Talk Time 240 min
- Standby Time 336 h
Manufacturer info
- HTC
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse HTC products on Shopper.com
-
- Website: http://www.htc.com/
- Address:
13920 SE Eastgate Way, Bellevue, WA 98005 - Phone: (425) 861-9174
- Email: info@htcamerica.net
- Fax: (425) 861-1715








