<![CDATA[Gizmodo: t-mobile shadow]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: t-mobile shadow]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/tmobileshadow http://gizmodo.com/tag/tmobileshadow <![CDATA[T-Mobile HTC Shadow II Hands On]]> T-Mobile's just launched the Shadow (Shadow II), the successor to the HTC Shadow, which features a customized UI on top of Windows Mobile 6.1. It's quite similar to the original in just about all respects.

The scroll wheel's still there, and the T-Mobile customized UI is still there, the sliding SureType half-QWERTY keyboard is still there and the Windows Mobile Standard (non-touchscreen) edition OS is still there. I can't call this the same phone, but it's pretty damn similar. It does have support for T-Mobile Unlimited HotSpot Calling, which is the calling over Wi-Fi (@ Home) system you can sign up for.

The first thing we've noticed is that the phone is light—we thought the battery was missing at first until it booted right up. The keys are bulged and feel good enough (looks the same as the first), and the scroll wheel flipped between items with only slight lag. There's still Windows Mobile sluggishness throughout, which you'll notice as you're dumped from the T-Mobile customized front screen whenever you're trying to do some task.

The new Shadow doesn't seem to push the bar of Windows Mobile as much as the original Shadow did, but it's not a bad phone—it's just a Windows Mobile phone. It's portable, light, and somewhat solid. It's just too bad that it uses Windows Mobile Standard instead of Professional. This is about as good a WM Smartphone as you're gonna get before Windows Mobile 6.5 hits later this year, which is what you should be waiting for instead of making a purchase now. But if were looking for a phone that's really black, there's a reason why they call this the Shadow. Seriously. Cause it's black. Really black. Ninjas could use this and not be detected.

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<![CDATA[T-Mobile Becomes Less Budget, Increases Price on Data Plans]]> Before T-Mobile customers start cheering for the long-awaited 3G services which began rolling out earlier this year, they might want to stop and think twice as rumors surface that T-Mobile plans to increase their data packages as early as the beginning of November. The cost of supporting the 3G network is now being passed on to consumers.

Some people will not be affected, such as Blackberry users who want unlimited data and unlimited messaging. Included among some of the changes is a data cap for T-Mobile Shadow users, at 50 MB and 100 MB respectively. Current T-Mobile customers who are planning to add data to their existing plans might want to do so now to grandfather the price. [TmoNews]

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<![CDATA[T-Mobile Shadow II Has MyFaves, HotSpot@Home, But Is It Still Made by HTC?]]> The Original T-Mobile HTC Shadow was quite good for a Windows mobile phone because of its non-Windows-Mobile Windows Mobile UI. If this leaked picture really is the Shadow II, then T-Mobile is continuing on the same path of loading a proprietary UI on top of the standard WM facade. There's not much else we can tell from this, but we do see that it has MyFaves and HotSpot@Home compatibility. Is this still made by HTC? Probably, unless T-Mobile defected to i-Mate or something. If you're looking for a HotSpot@Home phone in the near future, you might want to wait to see how this one plays out. [Tmonews]

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<![CDATA[T-Mobile Shadow Official Shots Show Two Suave Color Schemes]]> If you desperately wanted official shots of the T-Mobile Shadow, well, here they are. We have already given you the rundown on what the Windows Mobile smartphone will be toting, but to recap, the main goodies will be the two-letters-per-key SureType keyboard, 128MB on-board RAM and Wi-Fi connectivity. The pictures show two color schemes (jump for a second picture), including silver/charcoal and brown/black varieties. We might add we are particularly partial to the sultry chocolate color scheme, but then again we are particularly partial to anything chocolate. Mmm, chocolate. [Cellphone Signal]


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