<![CDATA[Gizmodo: 8925]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: 8925]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/8925 http://gizmodo.com/tag/8925 <![CDATA[Want to get an AT&T Tilt? Apparently it's...]]> Want to get an AT&T Tilt? Apparently it's only available (as of right now) on AT&T's business site. That explains why you can't find it normally. [AT&T via Crunchgear]

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<![CDATA[Hands-on With the AT&T Tilt: GPS-Enabled Windows Mobile 6 Smartphone]]> The Gadget: The AT&T Tilt, a Windows Mobile 6 smartphone that has Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, 3G, GPS navigation, a 3-megapixel camera, and Push-to-Talk along with a slide-out/fold-up keyboard and a 2.8-inch touchscreen. It's a Windows Mobile phone, yes, but it's also the Windows Mobile phone with the best GPS package we've seen yet.

The Price: $299 with two-year contract

The Verdict: The 3G, GPS navigation, and Push-to-Talk makes this a much more feature-rich phone than its predecessor, the 8525. However, even though its Qualcomm MSM7200 CPU runs at 400MHz, it's actually noticeably slower than the Sprint Mogul, a similar device that runs a 400MHz MSM7500 CPU. Sliding out the keyboard on the Tilt to switch from portrait to landscape takes about 3.5 seconds, whereas the Mogul only takes a second (the same second as the 8525, running Windows Mobile 5).

This same slowness can be seen when comparing the two's browsing speeds when viewing Gizmodo.com. It took the Tilt more than a minute to download the entire page, whereas the Mogul got everything in about 20. After it was done downloading, the page took forever to scroll up/down/left/right, and was on the verge of being unusable. In comparison, the Mogul scrolled pages just fine without much delay.

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However, we'd be willing to deal with a somewhat sluggish phone thanks to its GPS functionality. The Tilt comes bundled with a copy of TeleNAV, which allows the GPS receiver inside to power an almost standalone-GPS-level of navigation. All the standard vehicle navigation features are there, unlike on the Helio Ocean, and the map is very usable and very responsive when both using directions (it detects when you've veered off course) and just driving around. There's even traffic information that updates in real time as you're redirecting routes. TeleNAV costs $9.99 a month for unlimited trips and $5.99 for ten trips, and requires you to have an active data plan. With the 3G data, it was able to pull down maps and directions at speeds comparable to standalone units.

Push-to-Talk is also there via a dedicated button on the side, and when tested, functioned decently for PTT. However, it's essentially a speakerphone call with the other party where you have to push the button to talk. Fairly useless unless you enjoy PTT.

The 3.0-megapixel camera isn't great (it's on-par with HTC phones), but it's serviceable if you have nothing else. You can push the camera button down a little to focus, and then all the way to take the picture.

All in all it's a standard Windows Mobile 6 phone with a great HTC keyboard, standard HTC functionality and a slightly slow processor—which slows down everything else. However, the added features over the 8525 such as the awesome GPS navigation, flip-up QWERTY and WM6 itself makes this an interesting choice. If you're looking for pure speed, you may want to consider the Mogul on Sprint. [AT&T Tilt]

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<![CDATA[AT&T Tilt is Official]]> The AT&T Tilt (8925) is official. This ship was leakier than a sunken pirate ship, the successor to the 8525 is finally here. The important specs: Windows Mobile 6, Mobile Office, 2.8-inch screen, GPS w/ TeleNav, Push to Talk, standard IM program, slide-out and fold-up keyboard, glorious HTC-style QWERTY keys, Wi-Fi, 3-megapixel camera, Push Email, 3G HSDPA—but no TouchFlo on the top level like the Touch (seems like they're saving that for "Touch" designated phones). $299 with two-year contract starting Friday October 5. [AT&T via Press Release]

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<![CDATA[AT&T Tilt Gets Slightly More Official]]> Tipster Steve just sent this site in to us, showing that the AT&T Tilt is just slightly this side of being officially announced. Check out our previous coverage of the phone to see what's up, but it seems like the Windows Mobile 6 smartphone should be out any day now. [Tilt Your World]

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<![CDATA[AT&T Tilt Gets Further Specs, Price, Launch Frame]]> The AT&T Tilt (also known as HTC Kaiser or AT&T 8925) has further firmed up for a September launch by way of a few leaked details from AT&T. The phone will be $349 with a two-year voice and data plan, push-to-talk, Wi-Fi, 2.8-inch tilting screen, push email, Microsoft Office for WM6, as well as AT&T Mobile Music and Media Net. There will be two versions, the 8925 with camera and the 8900 without camera, but both of them will be sans front video cam, even though AT&T's Video Share video calling service is live. There should be a formal announcement on this soon. [Boy Genius]

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<![CDATA[The HTC Kaiser appeared on their site listed...]]> kaisersmall.jpgThe HTC Kaiser appeared on their site listed as the AT&T Tilt 8925. After a summer of speculation, looks like it's officially coming to AT&T. [Ubergizmo]

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<![CDATA[HTC TyTN II Becomes Official in Europe]]> The phone we've previously known as the HTC Kaiser or the 8925 has just been named the HTC TyTN II for the European market. The Windows Mobile 6 phone will be available under T-Mobile, Orange, Vodafone and Telefonica (includes O2), and will have the standard 3.5G connectivity, Windows Mobile 6, HTC's Home screen, GPS, TomTom Navigator 6, 3-megapixel camera, 802.11b/g, Bluetooth 2.0, microSD card and the flip-up screen. No price was specified, but if the first TyTN was any indication, this will be expensive. [HTC Europe]

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<![CDATA[ HTC's new flagship smartphone, the Kaiser...]]> kaisersmall.jpg HTC's new flagship smartphone, the Kaiser 8925, could be coming to AT&T on September 3rd for $499. [Crunchgear]

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<![CDATA[HTC Kaiser, the possible AT&T 8925, has just...]]> kaisersmall.jpgHTC Kaiser, the possible AT&T 8925, has just cleared the FCC. [PhoneScoop]

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<![CDATA[HTC Kaiser Coming in August as the AT&T 8925?]]> The HTC Kaiser, unboxed here, is supposedly heading to AT&T soon under the 8925 model. This 8925 will replace the current 8525, which has been the go-to Windows Mobile phone since it was released last year. So what's new? Lots of stuff, including a 3-megapixel camera, 128MB RAM, a fold-up design, a GPS (?), a possible front camera for AT&T's Video Share, and preliminary launch date of August, according to the leak.

The leak also reports than the 8525 will be discontinued when the 8925 is released. Also, the price point of $600 sans contract and $300 with two-year agreement from the 8525 seems to be what AT&T is aiming for with the 8925 as well. [Electronista]

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