Introduction, packaging
HTC is not one of those companies who are giving away their products at a really low price, but looking at their price/quality ratio one might find them quite reasonable. About half a year ago they launched, however, a palm, whose price wasn’t really in concordance with its features. As all of you have possibly guessed, this was the phone which is now the subject of our review, the Panda.
The device codenamed P6300 is sold by the manufacturer as a business product. What does this mean in case of a handset running a Pocket PC operating system? Neither the high quality exterior, nor the high-speed data transfer technologies, as most of us would think, or at least HTC doesn’t think so. Panda cannot be proud of such features, it is better than its brothers in only one category: it has a larger display. Well it’s not as large as similar phones’ a couple of years ago: it has a 3.5” diagonal, but it still surpasses the combo handsets of other manufacturers, which usually have a 2.8” screen. A few years ago the situation was different, as back then there was a demand for simple PDAs, lacking phone functions, which had a display with a size around 4 inches. Of course times do change and from all large manufacturers practically only HP has still to offer such a device and that is that.
The gadget, getting his name from a mammal from the family of bears, came in the usual HTC box, whose size nicely demonstrated to the happy owner the size of his phone too. The list of accessories is the usual: in addition to the sync cable and the charger we find a stereo headset, a leather case, a display protector foil and of course inevitable CD and handbook. I think a cradle would also have been due to the business phone.
A cikk még nem ért véget, kérlek, lapozz!