HTC's Touch mobile touches down in Australia

Mobile device manufacturer High Tech Computing (HTC) unveiled its first branded smartphone for Australia -- the HTC Touch -- in Sydney yesterday.

The Taiwanese-based organisation acquired smartphone maker Dopod, last year, however, the HTC Touch -- a 2.5G (GPRS/EDGE) handset -- is the first device to bear the moniker locally.

With an interface reminiscent of Apple's iPhone, the HTC Touch features TouchFLO, which is a combination of hardware and software that provides a shortcut to tools, contacts and media by swiping a finger across the display. It is one of the first Windows Mobile 6 devices to debut here.

Although it lacks 3G support, the HTC Touch comes with 802.11g, enabling a wireless Internet connection. It also includes Bluetooth, a 1GB microSD card, a 2-megapixel camera and 2.8-inch, 240x320 resolution touchscreen.

HTC started out manufacturing Compaq's first iPAQ PDA in 2000 and a slew of PDAs and smartphones under an original equipment manufacturer (OEM) agreement for i-mate, O2, Dopod, Hewlett-Packard and others.

The manufacturer severed its ties with i-mate and 02 in Asia-Pacific late last year, following its acquisition of smartphone distributor Dopod in June.

It will continue selling current devices under the Dopod brand, with all future products in Australia to be HTC branded. HTC will continue to supply devices to Palm, HP and Dell.

The HTC Touch is available this week from Optus partner Officeworks, as well as distributor Brightpoint, and will cost AU$699.

Talkback 1 comments

    Review here if you want it... Leigh Geary -- 04/07/07

    http://www.coolsmartphone.com/article724.html - Great device. The interface is really innovative. There's videos of it in action here too if you want

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Brad Howarth The key Topik is always money
    One of the big problems of the internet is that is practically impossible to keep up-to-date on preferred topics. You can limit your sources, but this can mean missing a lot of valuable data.
  • Array Google open-sources JavaScript tools
    Google announced overnight the release and open-sourcing of a trio of tools designed to help JavaScript developers.
  • Array Do we need the legislative blackmail?
    Virtually everyone in the telecommunications industry has their say in the Senate Standing Committee's public hearing into the pending legislation to split up Telstra, in this week's Twisted Wire podcast.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured