Living With the HTC Diamond: Closer but Not Yet an iPhone Killer

June 23rd, 2008 | by Rob Enderle

This last week I’ve been traveling throughout Japan and switching between the HTC Advantage I normally carry and the new HTC Touch Diamond that recently was released in Europe and will soon come to the US. Overall I’m impressed with this phone, but have realized that for me a touchscreen phone that doesn’t have a keyboard for email is simply too painful to use whether it is this new HTC product or the ever-popular Apple iPhone.

But I also concluded that, for me, I actually prefer the HTC Touch Diamond over the iPhone for two simple reasons: It is vastly smaller and it is more exclusive than the iPhone currently is. I doubt, however, that many will toss their iPhone out for it, though I do expect it to sell to folks who don’t yet have an iPhone as an alternative. But it isn’t yet a phone I can live on.

So let’s talk about what makes this phone different and anticipate the coming of the new (and from my perspective better) HTC Touch Pro.

 

Living With the HTC Diamond

One thing you are struck with when you first get the Diamond is that HTC has done a great job with packaging and the physical appearance of this sleek device. It is much smaller than the iPhone and much smaller than the original HTC Touch. It is one of the first Windows Mobile 6.1 phones and is easier to set up to work with Exchange email as a result.

The most compelling feature wasn’t the built in weather monitoring or even the new, more advanced single touch interface, it was the built in marble game which provided physical feedback while the marbles were moving around the phone screen; it actually made it feel like you were balancing real marbles. The game uses the phone’s new motion sensing and orientation technology so that you basically balance the phone as if there were real marbles in it and guide them through ever more difficult maze of holes.

I killed hours just messing with this game and a critical feature of any phone-based game is the ability to play it mindlessly for long periods of time to avoid boredom and this phone game did that.

 

HTC Touch Diamond
Image Courtesy of HTC

 

Mixed and Missed Features

This is a full 3G phone much like the new Apple iPhone will be and web and background sync is much faster. However, I did notice that battery life has decreased a lot since the earlier HTC Touch suggesting that having a spare battery would likely be a good idea with this phone.

Camera use was intuitive and easy, though I would have liked to have had some kind of flash or light source for low light conditions.

One accessory that would have really helped with this phone was my Redfly mobile companion as I often found myself wishing for a keyboard when using it (but unfortunately I didn’t bring it on this trip). The Redfly mobile companion is an accessory that looks like a small notebook and uses Bluetooth to wirelessly connect to a phone transferring the screen image from the phone and keyboard function to the Redfly. With this device you can take something like the HTC Diamond, which isn’t great at email, and turn it into an email machine.

While the phone came to me unlocked and auto configured for the T-Mobile network I used, there was no connection to a back-end service like iTunes and I think this phone would be much better if it was in some way better tied to a web service. I think Microsoft Live Mesh will help this phone and its siblings a lot when it goes gold.

 

Closing the Gap and Eventually Beating the iPhone

If you compare the improvements to the HTC Touch Diamond over the original HTC Touch you immediately see, with some continued shortcomings, a massive improvement. In looking at the new iPhone, while it too is much better, it doesn’t appear to have advanced as much, though I still think it sets the bar when it comes to this kind of phone.

To get ahead of the iPhone I think HTC and others will need a combination of a phone that has the multi-media and touch features the iPhone is famous for, the email capability that defined the RIM Blackberry, and a back-end service like Microsoft Live Mesh or Mobile Me that really turn the device into all that it could be.

I remain really impressed with new HTC phone game and also think that a richer gaming capability should be part of that service. In short, while not yet perfect, the HTC Touch Diamond is a showcase for how much progress HTC has made and they closed the gap with the iPhone significantly with this round. It is actually a good alternative and likely a better one for those who want a smaller phone. Based on my experiences so far however, and coupled with Microsoft Live Mesh, the HTC Touch Pro is the real contender and I can’t wait to try it in a few long weeks.


Post Your Comment...Comments

Attiq on Jun 24th, 2008 at 6:24 AM:

its a very goodlooking phone but touuch pro is still more businesses friendly.

BoredSysAdmin on Jun 24th, 2008 at 1:30 PM:

Hmm, I maybe be wrong here, but while RIM service and Apple's Mobile Me offers similar, Microsoft's Live mesh doesn't mention Push Email, Contacts and Calendar... thou it "could" be part of the deal... It doesn't sound too reassuring for business clients...

James on Jun 25th, 2008 at 9:47 AM:

Are there any reviews of the Diamond out there?

Luiz Beneduzi on Jul 8th, 2008 at 5:45 AM:

I agree with Rob in all, but i'm not satisfy with the battery life, without a spare available yet. The battery recharging in USB is a very good thing.

Luiz Beneduzi

Cas. on Jul 15th, 2008 at 4:53 AM:

Why does every phone with touchscreen need to be compared to the iPhone? It's like everyone thinks it's an iPhone rip, while apple just took the next logical step a few months AFTER the rest. And packed it in a nice defective package, as is usual with apple. Please, please stop comparing EVERYTHING with a touchscreen to the iPhone.

Cas. on Jul 15th, 2008 at 4:53 AM:

Why does every phone with touchscreen need to be compared to the iPhone? It's like everyone thinks it's an iPhone rip, while apple just took the next logical step a few months AFTER the rest. And packed it in a nice defective package, as is usual with apple. Please, please stop comparing EVERYTHING with a touchscreen to the iPhone.

Sanosuke on Jul 16th, 2008 at 7:26 AM:

I too agree with Rob, this is just a review for the other people who haven't have any "high-tech" handphone like PDAs, and wish to compare which phone to buy if they're not experienced like yourself Mr. Cas. Rob is not comparing which one is better, he's just telling us his experience and sharing it with us. Anyway, thanks alot for sharing with us Rob, really having a headache which phone i should buy.

MikeA01 on Aug 16th, 2008 at 8:08 AM:

I have used a Diamond for 3 weeks now - it is such a lousy phone that my Vodacom business SIM is back in the good old companies Nokia 6300.
But it is a decent PDA. I have 3 questions.
1 - where is the business card scanner the sales lady spoke of? 2 - If you insert a Cell-C SIM card how do you get Internet on GPRS/Edge as they dont support 3G, and 3 - when the screen gets scratched how do you fix or replace it ?
Thanks,
Mike

Budgie Burgers on Sep 1st, 2008 at 12:30 AM:

Yes, the battery life sucks and it could do with Non HTC specific usb port. My solar chargers usb conn does not fit the HTC Diamonds.
I do find it a very good Mini Mob PC and all aspects of connectivity is good. The size is impressive and fits in the top pocket. It remains to be seen whether it will physically last the rigours of travel.

I Like it very much. and I have had A Nokia E90 which I drowned a few weeks ago. Not as tough, but appart from the on board GPS of the 90, a bettr phone for me

Quattr on Sep 4th, 2008 at 2:01 AM:

Firstly the diamond uses a standard usb connection, not HTC specific. The battery is on par with my sedna (not overly spectacular then) and as far as comparing it to the iphone... Soooo many more apps and games to play with when your bored. It's not perfect but in 12 months time new contract, newer phone.

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