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HTC Radar | A dinky Windows phone for basic users



 HTC Radar
A dinky Windows phone for basic users

The HTC Radar is the latest smartphone to run Windows Phone 7-5, following on from the HTC Titan. With a smooth unibody design, HD video recording and 5MP camera, there’s a lot packed into a compact package.

Unibody - The term given to a device which is made out of a single piece of metal or plastic. Unibody design tends to offer a more solid feel

The Radar, which runs Windows Phone 7.5 (or ‘Mango’ to its friends; see page 62), is a solid little handset. It’s crafted from a single piece of metal and has enough weight (137g) to make it feel sturdy without giving your biceps a workout.

There’s no space for a microSD card (Windows Phone doesn’t allow for memory expansion) and there’s just 8GB storage - reduced to just 6.54GB once the operating system has taken its share; barely enough for some apps, music and photos.

The camera is only 5MP but still produced decent quality images. It’s suitable for those who only need occasional camera use.

Snap happy

As if to make up for the lack of megapixels, HTC spouts specs such as f/2.2 lens and BSI sensor. This may sound like marketing guff but they do help in the overall picture- taking process, and make the end results worthy of a print.
 
HTC’s form for decent cameras hasn’t been forgotten here. Firstly, having a camera button helps. You don’t have to fiddle around with gripping the phone a certain way or digging through menus that may be hard to see on a bright day. Wherever in the Windows Phone 7.5 Mango OS you may be, a long press on the camera button takes you to the camera screen.

The HTC Radar ships with a respectable 1520mAh battery. Remember this isn’t a dual core smartphone, so for a 1GHz processor and average-sized screen, this should see you through a day of
use comfortably. We took it off a charge at 7am and spent about 20 minutes fiddling with various settings and catching up on Twitter. Over the course of the next few hours, we sent more than 30 emails, a couple of texts and made a 21 minute phone call.

Mid-afternoon, we went running for 90 minutes with the RunKeeper app going, and listened to the FM radio for about half an hour in the early evening. The Radar kept going, and even by 10pm it still had about a third of its battery left. We didn’t use it much the following day and it managed to last until lunchtime before conking out.
If it’s a straight choice between the HTC Titan and the HTC Radar, we’d recommend the Radar every time, because it’s so much better in terms of value for money.

That said, it still feels like a work in progress. We know this will upset Windows fans, but we can’t help feeling that it’d be better to wait for the next crop of handsets or updates before committing.

After all, two years is a long time to be tied into a contract and Windows Phone is not a new platform any more, by any stretch of the imagination.

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