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Showing posts with label T-Mobile Phone Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label T-Mobile Phone Reviews. Show all posts

T-Mobile G1, Google Android phone by HTC Review

Posted quangtao Monday, February 1, 2010 0 Comment

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Editor's note, August 2009: Read our review of T-Mobile's second Android phone, the myTouch 3G.
Reviewed October 20, 2008 by Lisa Gade, Editor in Chief
There's been quite a buzz about the world's first Google Android powered phone, the T-Mobile G1. Android is an open source phone operating system developed by Google, and the OS runs on the Linux 2.6 kernel with Java applications on top. Since the platform is open and customizable by manufacturers and carriers, we expect to see a wide variety of Android phones running the gamut from feature phone to smartphone. The G1 isn't quite your standard smartphone-- it's more like the Sidekick grown up. There are smartphone elements: a serious HTML web browser, syncing (limited) and the ability to install 3rd party applications. However, there's no Office suite, no direct syncing with Outlook or Exchange and no support for VPN or corporate email running on Exchange or BlackBerry Enterprise Server.
T-Mobile G1
Instead, the G1, somewhat like the iPhone, targets the tweeners: those who want customizability, add-on applications, a seriously good web experience and multimedia. Unfortunately, the G1 can't compete with the iPhone in terms of multimedia: there's a basic music player with no desktop syncing or DRM support, and no built-in video player. The G1 does have a YouTube player like the iPhone and HTC Touch Diamond. There's a free MPEG4/3GPP video player available on the Android Market, which improves the G1's multimedia experience, and we're sure more players will launch over time.
What's the Android Market? It's the Google phone counterpart to the App Store in iTunes. You access the store via the phone (no desktop access), and browse applications by category. Apps are ranked by popularity and there's an alternate sort by release date. As of this writing, the G1 isn't even released, yet there are about 50 apps in the Market including a few good games. These are free but commercial apps should show up in the Market by late January 2009.
T-Mobile G1
Again, like the iPhone, you've got to set up and log into an account with the OS maker. You can't use the phone until you've created an online account with Google. We suspect that most folks who purchase an iPhone are already iPod users, and thus have iTunes accounts, making this somewhat less onerous for iPhone buyers (though we're still not thrilled with any phone that makes you create and use an online account). Though Gmail is popular, it doesn't have quite the reach across demographic groups as iTunes and the iPod, and Google's other account-based services, great though they may be, are less popular than Gmail. That said, Google has made it pretty easy to create an account using the G1, or otherwise log in with an existing Google account during initial setup.
There's yet another reminder that you've just signed on to become a part of the Google ecosystem: PIM syncing. The concept here feels similar to the Sidekick, with email (in this case Gmail), contacts and calendar data and syncing to the cloud (Google's servers). Once you log in with your Google account, your Gmail, contacts and calendar are automatically downloaded and thereafter synced with Google's online services. If you don't use Google's contacts or calendar features, you'll need to enter the data via the web interface (likely using a computer), or check out 3rd party services that pipe Outlook and Exchange data to Google. This rules out business users who 1) don't want to store their PIM data on Google's servers, 2) are married to MS Exchange, 3) are married to BlackBerry BES or BIS, 4) prefer to sync to Outlook (or the Mac OS X counterparts) over USB or Bluetooth. For Mac users, there's a Google app that will add your Google calendar to iCal (only items entered into the Google calendar will sync back to Google), and a sync to Google option in the latest version of the Mac OS X address book (this requires syncing to an iPhone or iPod Touch in addition).
T-Mobile G1
Design and Ergonomics
The G1 is manufactured by HTC, a well-known and respected Windows Mobile phone maker, and quality is up to their usual good standards. The G1 has a SideKick-style slide-up keyboard, but there's only one hand grip on the right side. It's easy enough to hold the device without dual grips zones, but the right hand prominence, where the buttons and microSD card slot reside is a bit bulky. The phone's design is both interesting and plain-- it won't win any beauty contests. It's currently available in brown (reminds us of a UPS truck) and black (Editor's note: it's now also available in white with a gray back). The black model is all black while the brown version has a silver keyboard with mid-gray letter masking that's hard to see. The black version's keyboard has white letter masking that offers better contrast.
T-Mobile G1
The brown G1 with silver keyboard.

The 5.6 ounce Google phone is on the large side, but Sidekick and HTC Wing users will feel right at home. The soft plastic back has a subtle soft touch finish that helps it stay safely in hand and the handset feels balanced in both portrait and landscape orientations. There are buttons for call send and end, but the call end button doesn't close applications as it does on most phones; it merely turns the screen off, and if long-pressed turns the phone off (with and additional confirmation dialog). Instead you'll use the Home button or back key to return to the home screen or back out of an application. The left side has volume up/down buttons and the right side has the camera button. The HTC ExtUSB port (same as that used on recent HTC Windows Mobile phones) is at the bottom. This port is used for charging, USB and for the included stereo earbud headset. Alas, there's no 3.5mm standard stereo headphone jack, which is unfortunate since the phone also lacks Bluetooth stereo A2DP support.
T-Mobile G1
To access the SDHC compatible microSD card slot, you must slide open the display to reveal the keyboard, since the display section blocks the edge of the slot cover. You can hot swap cards without using the rooted-in-Linux unmount card option in settings. The phone can also format the card and provide information about free space. The G1's camera application requires that a card is installed before you can take photos. No idea why it won't save images to internal memory.
T-Mobile G1
MicroSD card slot.
Video review
Here's our 10 minute video review of the T-Mobile G1, covering the web browser, maps with GPS, games, Android Market (application downloads) and the user interface.

Phone Features
The T-Mobile G1 is a quad band GSM phone with EDGE and 3G HSDPA on T-Mobile US' 1700/2100MHz bands. The SIM card lives under the back door and the phone is locked to T-Mobile. The G1 has good reception on EDGE/GSM compared to a range of T-Mobile and unlocked GSM phones. HSDPA reception in the Dallas metroplex has been good, though we still have relatively little to compare it to since T-Mobile has few 3G phones given the newness of that network. The phone supports common call features like call waiting, call hold and it even has a voice dialing application. When the keyboard is closed, you'll use a large on-screen dial pad to make calls. When the keyboard is open, you must use the keyboard which has a traditional computer keyboard top number row rather than an embedded phone-style number pad. We're not sure why HTC, Google and T-Mobile decided to kill the on-screen dialer when the keyboard is open.
Texters will likely love the hardware keyboard, and in fact that's the only option-- there's no on-screen keyboard in any application! That may come as a part of the "Cupcake" branch of Android OS updates some time in 2009. Likewise A2DP and video recording might come if and when Cupcake makes it to the G1.
Call quality is excellent on both ends when on 3G and even GSM (3G offers better voice quality than GSM). Call recipients commented that this was one of the loudest, clearest phones they'd heard, even when we were using a Bluetooth headset.
Display, web, messaging and email
The G1's 320 x 480 display is sharp, bright and a pleasure to use. When set to max brightness, the display is as bright as the iPhone's, though this setting will reduce battery life, and half brightness looks plenty good enough. Though the phone has an accelerometer, the OS and built-in applications don't make use of it to set screen orientation. Instead the display is set to portrait mode when the keyboard is closed and landscape when the keyboard is open. The G1 changes screen orientation quickly and graphics are responsive overall. 3rd party applications can make use of the accelerometer: for example we downloaded a free video player that switches to landscape mode when the G1 is turned on its side.
This is one of the few touch screen phones whose screen is viewable outdoors in sunlight-- good going, HTC. It's a capacitive touch screen, which means it needs your touch to work, or at least something organic. That means a finger, elbow or pear will work but not a stylus, pen butt or fingernail. The 3.2" display is large enough to make photo viewing pleasurable and web pages easy to read without zooming. Unlike the iPhone and Nokia S60 webkit based browsers, Google's web browser doesn't rely on page overview mode. Initial web page views are zoomed in to a section of a web page at a readable resolution. When you touch the screen, zoom in and out buttons appear, and you can scroll by dragging the page with your finger or using the excellent jog ball that reminds us of the BlackBerry.
T-Mobile G1 and iPhone 3G
iPhone 3G and the -Mobile G1 Android phone.
The web browser does an excellent job of rendering full HTML web sites, and you get the full version of sites like CNN and the New York Times by default. T-Mobile's 3G network is alive and kicking in our area and web pages downloaded reasonably quickly over their network. We averaged 900kbps on the DSL Reports mobile speed test, which is pretty good, but found that pages didn't download as quickly as they did on the iPhone 3G. This has more to do with the browsers' rendering speeds than the network connection, since the same was true over WiFi.
T-Mobile G1 and iPhone
The iPhone 3G and T-Mobile G1 displaying the New York Times home page.
Google has two email clients on board: one for Gmail and another for POP3 and IMAP email accounts. The Gmail client is lovely, handles HTML email beautifully and it can view Office but not PDF attachments. The other email application can't view the same attachments-- go figure. There is no Office suite on board, something that will likely turn off hardcore smartphone and business users. There's also no support for MS Exchange, BlackBerry email or VPN connections. We love the notification icons and quiet tones that notify you of new Gmail, email and text messages among other things.
HTC Fuze and T-Mobile G1
The T-Mobile G1 and the HTC Fuze.
Like the Sidekick, the G1 is a messaging demon. The included IM application handles Google Talk, Windows Live Messenger, Yahoo and AIM. All the important items are here: friend lists, new message notifications (visual, auditory and vibrate) and the app can run in the background.
GPS
Like the iPhone (we get to say that a lot for this review), the T-Mobile G1 has Google Maps and an internal GPS. By default, the GPS is turned off in settings and the phone instead relies on cell tower triangulation to estimate your location. Turn on the GPS to get an exact location, and you'll see a little symbol in the top menu bar in Google Maps indicating the phone is using its GPS chip. We have two G1 phones in-house for review, both running identical firmware. Oddly, one was quite poor in terms of GPS reception while the other was average compared to other non-SiRF GPS-enabled phones. We'll use the better one for our discussions here and assume something was amiss with the weaker unit. The GPS has a hard time getting a satellite fix indoors, but did a fine job outdoors with clear access to the sky. Cold fix times were ~45 seconds while warm fixes were 20 seconds or less. Google Maps works much like it does on other smartphones and the iPhone. You can tell it to locate you, and it will download a zoom-able map of your area. There are options for text-based and map-based directions (no spoken directions), compass display and several maps views. These include map, satellite, traffic and street view. This is the first time we've seen street view on a phone-- very cool and useful if you're trying to ID landmarks at a new destination. There is no charge for using Google maps, though you must have a T-Mobile data plan to use it when away from a WiFi access point (so it can download maps).
Camera
The T-Mobile G1 has a 3.2 megapixel camera with autofocus lens. Still image quality is similar to HTC's Touch Diamond and HTC Fuze whose cameras have identical specs. Contrast and sharpness are higher on the G1 however, and it loses the ability to shoot video. Likewise gone are camera settings of any kind! The only settings available pertain to saving GPS info with pictures and whether to prompt to save/delete after capture. Thus all JPEG photos are shot and saved at the highest quality setting, which averages between 400 and 800k per image. The camera only saves images to a microSD card, which is unusual. There's no flash, so forget night shots.
sample photo
sample photo
sample photo
WiFi and Bluetooth
The Google phone has WiFi 802.11b/g with support for WEP and WPA encryption. In our tests it made reliable connections with good transfer speeds and good range. Given T-Mobile's small initial 3G footprint, WiFi is an excellent consolation, especially indoors where the 3G signal may not penetrate well since it runs at the high end of the spectrum. WiFi does impact battery life, and the G1 doesn't have the best battery life to start with. In our 3G coverage area, the G1 barely made it through the day with moderate to heavy use and no WiFi. With WiFi on, we had to charge the phone by 4pm. Keep in mind that with light to moderate use, the phone should last the day, even with an hour of WiFi use.
Bluetooth profiles are limited, though Google will likely add more in the future. Right now there's only support for Bluetooth headsets. In our tests with a variety of mono Bluetooth headsets, the G1 had good audio quality and volume (HTC generally does a good job with Bluetooth headset support).
Battery Life
The G1's 1150 mAh Lithium Ion battery has less capacity than the average smartphone battery and it shows. As we mentioned, the phone lasts just a day with light to moderate use, and less than a day with heavy use. WiFi and the GPS really drain the battery fast, so turn those off when you don't need them. Likewise, if you turn of automatic PIM syncing, battery life improves a bit (though you'll have to remember to sync manually to get updated contacts and calendar items from the Google cloud). The battery lives under the back cover and is user-replaceable, but finding a spare seems impossible even several months after the G1's launch.
T-Mobile G1
Conclusion
The T-Mobile is a great start for Google's first Android phone. While it might lack features like video recording, A2DP and a built-in video player, usability is top notch and the core functions work well: phone, web and basic email. The G1 isn't a good fit for business users given its lack of desktop and Exchange syncing and its Gmail, POP3 and IMAP-only email support. But for the casual phone user who wants a good touch interface and more application expandability than a feature phone offers, the G1 is a good choice. It's not the multimedia maven that the iPhone is, but it does have copy and paste and you can add your own ringtones easily wink.
Pro: Fast and responsive, very easy to use, easy to download applications via the Android Market directly to the phone. Very good capacitive display, good camera photo quality and obviously excellent Gmail support. Excellent call quality.
Con: No 3.5mm headphone jack, can't shoot video, no A2DP, keyboard on brown model lacks contrast. On-board multimedia applications are weak other than the good mobile YouTube player. No desktop or Exchange syncing.
Price: $179 with 2 year contract, $299 with a 1 year contract. Also available on FlexPay no-contract plans for full retail $399.



Specs:
Display: Color TFT 3.2", 320 x 480 resolution capacitive touch screen that supports both portrait and landscape modes.
Battery: Lithium Ion rechargeable. Battery is user replaceable. 1150 mA. Claimed talk time: 5.8 hours on 3G and 6.76 hours on GSM.
Performance: 528 MHz Qualcomm MSM7201A processor. 192 MB built-in RAM. 256 MB Flash ROM.
Size: 4.60 x 2.16 x 0.62 inches. Weight: 5.6 ounces.
Phone: GSM quad band with EDGE, dual band 3G HSDPA on the 1700/2100MHz bands. Up to 7.2 Mbps download with support for 2.0 Mbps HSUPA uploads. Sold SIM locked to T-Mobile.
GPS: Yes, internal GPS and can use tower triangulation as well.
Camera: 3.2 MP with autofocus lens.
Audio: Built in speaker, mic and HTC ExtUSB stereo headphone jack. Music player included. Ringtone formats supported: AC, AAC+, AMR-NB, MIDI, MP3, WMA, WMV.
Networking: Integrated WiFi 802.11b/g and Bluetooth 2.0 +EDR.
Software: Google Android operating system running on Linux 2.6 kernel (open source). Software included: alarm clock, calendar, contacts, g-mail application, e-mail application (POP3 and IMAP), music player, youtube player, web browser, Google Maps, Android Market, IM client, SMS client, MyFaves, Amazon MP3 store, calculator, voice dialing, photo viewer and settings.
Expansion: 1 microSD card slot, SDHC high capacity card compatible.
In the box: G1 phone, slip case, world charger, stereo earbud headset, strap, getting started guide.
                                                          ( Author :  Lisa Gade, Source : mobiletechreview )

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What's hot: Very nice camera with fast autofocus. Large and bright screen. 3G!
What's not: Battery life isn’t very good. Pricy.
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Reviewed June 4, 2009 by Tong Zhang, Senior Editor
T-Mobile quietly released the Sidekick LX 2009 in May, and thanks to its unexplainable desire to re-use product names, the new Sidekick LX didn’t make a big splash at launch. But those who looked closer at the new Sidekick LX discovered that there are important changes: 3G for fast data, a 3.2 megapixel camera with autofocus lens and video capabilities, a large 3.2-inch display and GPS-enabled Live Search. What’s more is the new Sidekick LX has a roomier keyboard, a slimmer and slicker body and it comes in two colors: orchid and carbon. It has the new Sidekick software and UI that debuted on the Sidekick 2008 and it comes with a 128MB microSD card. If you have an older Sidekick and want an updated device, the Sidekick LX 2009 is a very strong contender.
Sidekick LX
We say “the new Sidekick LX” because this isn’t the first time T-Mobile used that product name. The first Sidekick LX came out in 2007, and then there was the Sidekick LX Tony Hawk edition which is a different model from the new Sidekick LX 2009. The new Sidekick LX is available exclusively from T-Mobile and it’s a quad band GSM phone with dual band T-Mobile 3G.
Design and Ergonomics
The thinner Sidekick LX looks classier and less plasticky than previous Sidekick phones. Measuring 5.1 x 2.4 x 0.6 inches, the new Sidekick LX has the same control buttons, d-pad and trackball as the Sidekick 2008, but pushes them more to the edges of the device. Why? This gives the phone more space for a larger display and a roomier keyboard with a dedicated number row. Very nice! The side buttons remain the same as well, but are now sitting on chrome strips that give the device a slicker look and the buttons themselves are fashioned in chrome as well. With mobile music in mind, the new Sidekick LX has a standard 3.5mm stereo audio jack and the phone’s package includes a stereo headset.
Sidekick LX
The back of the Sidekick LX is smooth and has grooves that make it more comfortable in hand. Both the SIM card slot and microSD card slot are under the battery cover; you only need to remove the battery to access the SIM card slot. You need not remove the battery to access the spring-loaded microSD card slot.
Messaging and Web
The new Sidekick LX is a GSM quad band world phone with UMTS/HSDPA dual band T-Mobile 3G (AWS Band IV and Band I, 1700/2100MHz). The phone has good reception and it gets full signal strength in well-covered areas and at least 2-3 bars in midling coverage areas. The voice quality is good and the speakerphone is very loud. Like the Sidekick 2008, the new Sidekick LX has an address book that can store a maximum of 2000 entries and each entry can store 10 numbers, 5 email addresses, 3 street address, caller ID picture and much more. The phone also supports T-Mobile’s MyFaves.
As a messaging phone with a nice QWERTY keyboard, the new Sidekick LX has the usual set of IM clients including AIM, Windows Live and Yahoo! Messenger as well as POP3 mail with future support for MS Exchange. This is a big deal for enterprise users and opens up the device to those who prefer saving and syncing personal data to Exchange, all thanks to the fact that Danger, the maker of the Sidekick OS, is now owned by Microsoft. Mobile users who not only want IM and email but also access to social networks, will be happy to hear that the new Sidekick LX includes Facebook, MySpace and Twitter applications in which you can login and add updates quickly.
Sidekick LX
Now that the device has 3G, Internet access is speedier and the built-in web browser can handle full HTML pages with images. Web pages load a lot faster compared to non-3G Sidekick phones and the browser keeps the page formats mostly intact. It only has trouble with dHTML javascript like pull-down menus, but the web surfing experience has definitely improved.
Sidekick LX

Multimedia
The new Sidekick LX is a good music phone thanks to the loud speakerphone, 3.5mm stereo audio jack and a powerful media player that can play music in MP3, M4A, WMA, WAV, AAC and RMF formats. If you have tunes (non-copy-protected) in iTunes, Windows Media Player or in MP3 format, you can transfer them to the phone and play them on the Sidekick LX. The media player can also play streaming audio over the Internet as well as video. The music playback quality is good over the speakerphone but sounds fuller over the wired stereo headphones included with the Sidekick LX. The phone also supports A2DP Bluetooth stereo headphones and the music sounded great via the Samsung SBH-500 BT stereo headset.

Thanks to the bright and color saturated display, the Sidekick LX is also a pleasant video player. The built-in media player can play 3GP and MP4 simple profile videos which aren’t a lot of formats, and mobile YouTube videos playback was reasonably smooth.
Sidekick LX
GPS and Live Search
The new Sidekick LX has a built-in GPS that gets a good signal and accurate position fixes. Since Microsoft now owns Danger, you get Microsoft’s Live Search with maps and POIs on the Sidekick LX. The GPS software offers searching for POIs, getting turn-by-turn directions and maps. The navigation software doesn’t have voice guidance nor does it follow you on the map in real time like TeleNav does. But the navigation software offers Track Me mode which pinpoints your locations. The Live Search POI data is reasonably up-to-date and searches are fairly quick. You can send directions to friends via email or messaging.
Sidekick LX
Camera
The Sidekick LX 2009 has a 3.2 megapixel camera with autofocus and an LED flash, a significant upgrade from the Tony Hawk LX’s1.3 megapixel camera and the Sidekick 2008’s 2 megapixel fixed focus camera with no flash. The photo quality is on par with other 3.2 megapixel camera phones including the Nokia E75. The new Sidekick LX takes sharp pictures with noticeable oversharpening and saturated colors. The images have good color balance and the autofocus lens is very fast at finding focus. The large 3.2-inch display is very nice for viewing pictures and is viewable outdoors. The camera software has options for image resolution, white balance, effects and picture quality.
The camera phone can also take video with audio. You can record videos in either high quality for saving or low quality for sending as messages. The video quality is decent with good colors and playback is reasonably smooth. Though the camera phone can compete in still photo quality against Nokias, the video quality can’t compete with the Nokia E75 that captures VGA video.
Sidekick LX
Battery Life
With faster 3G speed comes shorter battery life. The new Sidekick LX increased its battery capacity to 1250 mAh (4.7Wh) from the Sidekick 2008’s 1030 mAh, but the talk time on 3G shrank to 3 hours and 6 days of standby. If you are currently not in a T-Mobile 3G coverage area, you will see talk time of 5.5 hours with 8 days of standby. Other than talking, accessing the web and playing video certainly use up the battery fast. But playing music doesn’t accelerate battery drain.
Conclusion
The new Sidekick LX is indeed the next generation Sidekick phone and should be the upgrade path for owners of older Sidekick models. The much improved 3G speed with IM and social network clients, modern 3.2 megapixel autofocus camera and strong music features will please longtime Sidekick fans. With built in Bluetooth A2DP support, microSD card expansion and a 3.2-inch large display, the new Sidekick LX can compete with today’s high-end feature phones offered by T-Mobile and other carriers. The biggest obstacle for the Sidekick LX is the high price, especially in today’s economy.
Pro: Very good music phone, improved camera and video capturing. Large display.
Con: We’d like to see more video encoding supported for playback. Battery life isn’t very good.

Price: $249.99 with 2-year contract after mail-in rebate and discount. $449.99 without contract.



Specs:
Display: 3.2” F-WVGA 65K color TFT screen. Resolution: 854 x 480 pixels.
Battery: Lithium Ion rechargeable battery, 1250 mAh, user replaceable. Claimed talk time: up to 3 hours on 3G, 5.5 hours on 2G. Claimed standby time: up to 6 days on 3G, 8 days on 2G.
Performance: Phone book can store 2000 entries. Each entry can store 10 phone numbers, 5 email addresses, 3 URLs, 5 IM addresses, 3 street addresses and 1 note. Caller ID for up to 50 contacts.
Size: 5.2 x 2.4 x 0.6 inches. Weight: 5.8 oz.
Phone: Quad band GSM world phone. 850/900/1800/1900MHz. UMTS/HSDPA dual band T-Mobile 3G (AWS Band IV and Band I) for data.
Camera: 3.22 megapixel autofocus camera with flash. Can take video with audio.
Audio: Media Player onboard to play music in MIDI, MP3, M4A, WMA, WAV, AAC and RMF formats. 3.5 mm stereo audio jack. Supports vibration alert.
Networking: Bluetooth v2.0 with headset, hands-free, A2DP and file transfer profile support. USB 2.0.
Software: Danger OS v5.0. Supports myFaves. HTML browser, web-based IM and social network clients onboard. PIM tools include Address Book, Calendar, To Do List and Notes. Bob’s journey: Lake of Doom! game included.
Expansion: 1 microSD card slot. Supports SDHC cards.
                                                                   ( Author : Tong Zhang, Source : mobiletechreview )

T-Mobile Tap Review

Posted quangtao 0 Comment

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Carrier: T-Mobile
Manufacturer: Made by Huawei for T-Mobile
Discuss this product
Where to Buy (blue)
What's hot: GPS works very well with Google Maps and TeleNav. Good mobile YouTube streaming.
What's not: Camera takes terrible pictures. Small, low resolution display.
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Reviewed December 20, 2009 by Tong Zhang, Senior Editor
These are bargain hunting times, so T-Mobile has introduced a more affordable touch screen phone, the T-Mobile Tap, made by Huawei. It's basically a lower-priced Samsung TouchWiz clone that's superficially similar to the Samsung Highlight. The T-Mobile Tap is a quad band GSM phone with T-Mobile US 3G, and it has a built-in aGPS, a 2 megapixel camera with video capture, Bluetooth with A2DP, an SDHC microSD card slot, a full HTML web browser and a music player. It also supports widgets and has a widget bar. For the launch price of $79.99 with a 2-year contract, the T-Mobile Tap has good specs and touch screen phone features. The GPS performance is strong on the T-Mobile Tap, but the camera leaves much to be desired.
T-Mobile 
Tap
Design
The T-Mobile Tap isn’t a bad looking phone, though it looks plasticky compared to the more robustly built Samsung Highlight. The phone has a very nice soft back that also frames the front touch screen, and it comes in either reddish berry or midnight blue. The mirror-like display shows fingerprints and hand grease like crazy, and is very reflective and hard to see outdoors in the sun. The touch screen looks bright with moderately saturated colors, and it has haptic feedback when you touch it.  That said, the display isn’t quite as sharp as higher end touch screen phones. You can turn on or off the haptic feedback or change the level of the vibration. The dedicated call send and end buttons live below the touch screen flanking a 5-way d-pad. The d-pad and the call control buttons are backlit.
The T-Mobile Tap has a Samsung TouchWiz-like user interface. There is a Widget bar on the left side that resembles the one on Samsung’s TouchWiz phones, and the T-Mobile Tap has 4 shortcut buttons on the bottom. You can launch any application on the widget bar by tapping on the app’s icon, but you can't download new widgets. Most applications on the phone have an icon on the widget bar including the web browser, TeleNav, messaging, weather, MyFaves, Google Search and Google Maps, picture viewer, FM radio, games, calendar, clock and more. The T-Mobile Tap has an accelerometer that works in most apps like the web browser, messaging, video playback and more. The on-screen keyboard switches to QWERTY when the screen turns landscape and is responsive.
The T-Mobile Tap has minimal side buttons that include volume controls, screen lock and camera launch/shutter key. The power on and off button lives on top right next to the charging port/headset jack/accessory connector. The 2 megapixel camera lives on the back, and under the battery door, you will find the SIM card next to the battery and the microSD card slot. The SIM card slot requires removal of the battery for access while the microSD card slot does not.
T-Mobile Tap
Phone
The T-Mobile Tap is a GSM quad band world phone with T-Mobile US 3G bands. The Tap doesn’t get a very strong signal and can lose the 3G connection in weak coverage areas. The phone has an on-screen dialer that includes a number pad and touch buttons to Contacts and call log. The touch number pad should be large enough for most people. The T-Mobile Tap supports most call management features including caller ID, call waiting and call forwarding. The Contacts database can store up to 1000 contact entries and 8 speed dial numbers. Voice quality is decent on both the incoming and outgoing ends, and the phone has voice dialing.
For messaging, the T-Mobile Tap supports SMS, MMS, IM and web based POP3 and IMAP email accounts. The phone also comes with the Netfront HTML web browser that can display both WAP sites and full HTML sites. WAP sites load quickly but full HTML sites load slowly even over T-Mobile 3G. The web browser renders pages pretty close to the desktop layout with images intact and it has a full screen mode where you can browse web pages using a virtual mouse cursor. Mobile YouTube videos look quite good on the T-Mobile Tap and the player supports landscape playback. Streaming speeds over T-Mobile 3G are good when playing YouTube mobile videos and audio is in sync with video.

Music and Radio
The T-Mobile Tap is a decent music phone. It has a built-in music player that can play files in MP3, AAC, AAC+. eAAC+, MPEG4, WAV and MIDI formats. The phone’s speaker is loud and quite sharp when playing music, but it’s a little tinny. The T-Mobile Tap has a proprietary blade style connector for headsets instead of a 3.5mm audio jack, but thankfully it comes with a stereo headset that has good bass, but is lacking in treble and clarity. We tested tunes ripped from CD using iTunes (AAC) and Windows Media Player (MP3), and all played fine on the Tap. The touch screen phone has an SDHC microSD card slot that we tested with an 8 gig card, and it has built-in Bluetooth with A2DP wireless stereo support.
T-Mobile Tap
The T-Mobile Tap also has an FM Radio that uses the included headset as the antenna. The phone can scan for stations automatically and it gets a large number of stations in major metro areas. Audio sounds clear and loud when playing FM radio stations and you can listen to the radio either through the headset or through the speakerphone (but you must leave the headset connected since it’s the antenna).
GPS, TeleNav and Google Maps
The T-Mobile Tap has a built-in aGPS and works very well with Google Maps (free) and TeleNav (paid service), both pre-loaded on the phone. The GPS gets a strong signal and accurate position fixes. When working with TeleNav, the T-Mobile Tap was speedy at real time navigation, and turn-by-turn directions were right on target. Routing and re-routing were also speedy, and traffic info was mostly accurate. TeleNav offers 2D and 3D maps and they look good on the T-Mobile Tap, as long as the screen isn’t in strong sunlight. The phone’s speaker isn’t super loud but is good enough for voice directions over moderate road noise.
Google Maps loads at a decent speed though not super fast, and the satellite view takes a bit of time to download. Unlike TeleNav, Google Maps is free. While it doesn’t offer real time navigation, it does give you a satellite view of locations, on-screen directions and traffic info.
T-Mobile Tap
Camera
The T-Mobile Tap has a built-in 2 megapixel camera that can also shoot video with audio. The camera phone can take still photos in 5 resolutions and three quality levels. It offers white balance options, three color effects (normal, black & white and sepia), night shooting mode and a self timer. Perhaps the phone needs a camera software update because it takes bad photos even by 2 megapixel camera phone standards. The camera phone has problems with focus in some cases, and pictures look murky and lack sharpness and colors. Videos also look a little out of focus, but audio is in sync with video. The camera phone can take video in either QVGA or 176 x 144 resolution.
Battery
The T-Mobile Tap has a rechargeable Lithium Ion battery that’s 1150 mAh in capacity. The battery is good for up to 5 hours of talk time and 10 days of standby. Real time navigation using TeleNav and streaming video over the web accelerated the battery drain in our tests.
Conclusion
The T-Mobile Tap is a decent alternative to more expensive touch screen phones from Samsung and LG. It has many of the features found on higher end phones including a built-in aGPS, full HTML browser, Widget UI and an SDHC microSD card slot. If you don’t care about the camera quality or the hard-to-see screen in outdoor sunlight conditions, then the T-Mobile Tap can get you the goods at a cheaper price. But for those who do care about the camera performance and want a more solidly built touch screen phone, look for deals on the Samsung Highlight.
Pro: GPS works very well with Google Maps and TeleNav. Good mobile YouTube streaming.
Con: Camera takes terrible pictures. Screen is hard to see outdoors in the sun.

Price: $79.99 with a 2-year contract after discount and mail-in rebate.
Web sites: www.t-mobile.com



Specs:
Display: 2.8-inch touch screen, 240 x 320 resolution, 262K color TFT display.
Battery: Lithium Ion rechargeable. Battery is user replaceable. 1150 mAh. Claimed talk time: up to 5 hours; claimed standby time: up to 10 days.
Performance: Contacts can store up to 1000 entries.
Size: 2.2 x 4.2 x 0.5 inches. Weight: 3.7 ounces.
Phone: GSM quad band 850/900/1800/1900MHz world phone with 3G HSDPA on T-Mobile's US bands: 1700/2100MHz.
Camera: 2 MP with video capturing capability. Still image resolutions: 1600 x 1200, 1024 x 768, 800 x 600, 640 x 480 and 320 x 240 pixels. Night mode and self timer.
GPS: Works with Google Maps and TeleNav (TeleNav requires a $10/month subscription).
Audio: Built in speaker, mic and blade style proprietary audio jack. A stereo headset is included with the phone. Music Player onboard for your MP3 pleasure, and can play music in MP3, AAC, AAC+. eAAC+, MPEG4, WAV and MIDI formats. FM Radio. Has vibrate alert and silent mode.
Networking: Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR. Supported profiles: Headset profile, Hands-free profile, A2DP, AVRCP, FTP and Serial port profile. USB 2.0.
Software: Widget-based UI and T-Mobile icon menu as well as T-Mobile MyFaves. Netfront HTML web browser and music player included. PIM tools include Contacts, Calendar, Alarm, Calculator, Converter, World Time, Stopwatch and Timer.
Expansion: 1 SDHC microSD card slot. Tested with up to 8 gig cards.
In the box: the T-Mobile Tap phone with standard battery, an AC charger, stereo headset, USB cable and printed manual.
                                     ( Author : Tong Zhang, Source : mobiletechreview )