Since a large number of PPC-6800 buyers will be coming from the PPC-6700, I thought that I would spend some time showing a comparison between the two. The 6800 at 5.6 ounces is noticably lighter than the 6700 at 6.7 ounces according to my postal scale. These weights are with their standard battery and stylus installed. From the front, you immediately notice the difference in styling, lack of stub antenna, and the screen's brightness. The 6800 is about 15-20% brighter to my eye. I've mentioned this several times, and will mention it again here... they styling is greatly improved.
From the back, the stub antenna is an even greater missing feature on the 6800... and we are happy to see it go. Other than giving you a handle for pulling it out of the case, there is no benefit to having the antenna. The back cover on the 6800 has a ribbing on it that helps give you a little bit of grip. I do wish that they had coated the case with a rubberized paint like the Treo 755P and some other devices now have, but it is very easy to hold as it is. Both devices have the camera lens on the back.
Looking at the bottom of the devices, going from left to right, the first two holes are to attach a carrying strap, although it doesn't come with one and I doubt very many people will dangle this thing from a strap. Next is the Infrared port, then the microSD slot. Below the microSD slot is the reset hole and then the USB/headset port. Finally, the last hole on the right is the microphone for using the phone. In comparison to the 6700, we lose a dedicated headset port. With enhanced Bluetooth function, I'm not sure this will be a big problem, but it will likely be a place where we see new accessories. The 6800 comes with a splitter to access a 2.5mm port, but this adds some bulk to a headset, considering that you may also need a 2.5mm-3.5mm adapter depending on what headset you'd be using. The Infrared port and slot are just on different sides of the 6700.
On the left side of the we have a couple of new additions... the Jogdial and OK button are in the black area. These are conviently located so that they can be used with the keyboard open or closed... however the dial works backwards with the keyboard open. Regardless, it is an improvement for non-stylus operation. Next is the voice button, which is replacing the record button on the 6700. Finally, we now have a dedicated on/off button for WiFi. That's nice, but I'd actually rather see a dedicated on/off sound button so that you could easily silence it as the Treos allow. There is no longer a volume control like the 6700 has... the jog dial serves that purpose when you are in applications that need sound adjustment.
On the right side, the first button we find is the camera button and shutter release... in approximately the same location on both devices. Next are the Communications Manager button and then the power button on the 6800. The stylus cradle for the 6800 is on the bottom, while the 6700 is located in the antenna stub.
The top of the 6800 is completely bare... while the 6700 has its miniSD slot and power button there. I think I prefer the power button on the top, but I will reserve judgement on that until I've used the 6800 longer. On the 6700, holding the power button down for a while causes the backlight to turn off. On the 6800, holding down the power button for several seconds will give you a prompt to completely turn it off, which effectively gives you a software reset without fiddling around with the reset hole.
Overall great review and overall phone looks good.
But I have to add to cons:
Does not use standard Mini USB on phone. Now I have to carry that stupid adapter everywhere (Work, Car and Home) or buy 3.
Card slot on bottom, next to other things you push. I can see cards getting popped out and lost. You can't tape over it either like you could on 6700.
I tried a friends GSM HTC Phone with same stylus on bottom, he hated that. Every HTC phone I've ever seen stylus gets loose. But now it's on the bottom !!
I wanted to reply to your concerns. I received my Mogul yesterday and regular Mini usb cables work fine. All of the chargers and sync cables from my Moto Q work fine with it. The only time you will need the adapter is for the headset or aftermarket headphones. Most people that drop the cash for this phone will use Bluetooth headphones and headsets anyway. I don't think anyone will have a problem with it. To answer the second Con, the memory card is on the bottom but tucked under a little bit of a lip and it has a very stong mechanism holding it in. Much stronger than the 6700. To answer the 3rd Con, I agree with the reviewer they made the hole so it can't wear down over time. Unlike the 6700 stylus slot I think they got this one right and it is much easier to access when you need it. I didn't think it would be but it is.
My cons are, too many buttons on the sides, easy to accidentally hit them. No volume control on the side you actually have to use the touch screen to open the volume picker. They do need an on/off switch like the Treos. The scroll wheel only accesses volume while a program is open or you are on the phone. My last is battery life: it is a little better than the 6700, but with light calling, bluetooth, web and email I had to stick it on the charger in the early afternoon. If you are a power user you will definately either need an extended battery or an extra battery and given the flimsyness of the battery cover I might purchase a larger battery when a Sprint extended cover is available. My last gripe echoes the reviewer in that they didn't rubberize the case of the phone. It feels nice in hand but is still a little slick. This phone might need one of those aftermarket rubberized skin from Seidio. Great Review. I will continue to evaluate mine. Thanks.
Can you comment on the IP sharing/DUN capabilities and the resulting charges? I notice that Sprint is piece mealing the "Unlimited Data Plan for Phone as Modem" plan now. Is this like the 6700 where they can't really tell and as long as you have a Vision plan you are covered?
Crusty, the screen is the small 2.8 like on the 6700. That is the big reason I never upgraded either from the 6600, I also do not like the sideways sliding key board.
I've upgraded from the 6700 to the 6800 and so far I'm reasonably happy with the 6800 over the 6700.
Pros
The screen colors and brightness are pretty good.
The speaker is a little better than the 6700
The reception is as good as the 6700 which is better than the Treo's
It runs WM6 so it can display HTML formatted e-mail from an Exchange 2007 server, and you can flag e-mails as well as search your exchange 2007 server for anything throughout your entire mailbox not just what is downloaded to your phone.
The keyboard is easier for me to type on than the smaller Treo keyboard.
The display is larger than the treo display so I can see more calendar events and other information on my today screen and browse the web easier.
The construction seems reasonably good although since it is a little slimmer than the old 6700, the weight difference may give people the impression it isn't as sturdy but I think it is - however the rear battery cover is very flimsy - I imagine HTC will have to sell a lot of replacements to customers.
The larger Lithium Polymer battery helps give you about 20% more life than the previous battery in my opinion. Haven't done an in depth comparison but I'd say that is reasonably accurate.
Comes with 512MB microSD storage in addition to the greater storage capacity build in memory. I think this is a good touch.
Browsing the web is improved as it now supports java natively.
So far no "Dark Screen of Death/DSOD" that was common with the 6700 - required you to remove your storage for the display to turn on (unless you upgraded to AKU 3.5 which wasn't available from Sprint.
CONS
The Bluetooth STILL is bad - blame microsoft -their BT stack isn't as good as widcoms - unfortunately the BT doesn't perform as well as the WM5 AKU3.5(not supplied by Sprint) firmware you could get for the 6700.
The GPS on the phone is A-GPS - assisted GPS - not a full GPS so if you look at the Sprint sales link - it says something like GPS enabled - that means if you pay Sprint a monthly fee you can use their software - you can't use any other ones like google maps or live search or even paid programs like TomTom or iGuidance without buying a BT GPS receiver to communicate with your phone - seems silly not to include a real SirfIII chip when they cost about the same - wouldn't increase the size and wouldn't have us running up our monthly fees with Sprint. Other phones such as the x800 come with a full GPS chip and are slimmer than the 6800.
Voice Command 1.6 has an issue with voice dialing confirmation - so you say call Mary at home and it will say "call Mary at home?" no matter how many times or how loud you say yes, it will timeout and not place the call - you have to turn confirmation off and hope it recognized the name you wanted to call.
It does not come with a car charger - you have to buy that seperately - I still think this is a rip off - not sure how many people use mobile phones don't want a charger for the car?
Still comes with fannypack style case - if I'm going to look like a geek with a big honkin phone -I'd like to at least project a somewhat heterosexual image.
Still comes with Sprint crapware like audibles. I'd really love it if it asked you before installing the junk however until someone posts the iota and other sprint specific items you do want to load, you'll have to manually remove the junk after it installs.
For some reason, while this unit has plenty of hard buttons, you can't reassign them like you can on the 6700 some can be but only about half of them.
The gap in the slider makes the unit feel flimsy as you press on the screen.
The vibration doesn't seem as strong as the 6700's did to me.
Status Quo
If you are using the latest sprint rom 2.2 on your 6700 you'll see a slight improvement in speed, if you are using an unsanctioned but better rom AKU 3.5 from other sources, you'll see a slight drop in performance when opening apps, files etc.
Things to consider -
I prefer a larger screen over the front keypad like the treo or the q or blackjack however some people will want one handed typing and they would be better served by another phone - get the phone that serves you best not what serves others best. I would suggest waiting for WM6 on whatever phone you get if possible as many new WM6 should be out by the end of the year.
I really wish this unit was still a bit slimmer although it is better than the 6700 (which is like saying our 75 floor skyscraper is shorter than the empire state building - that is still a TALL building) - I think it will have to decrease at least 5 more mm before I'd say it was reasonably "slim"
I really think ALL the WM6 phones Sprint offers next year will have to be VGA resolution - I don't see how they intend to compete considering there are about 15 VGA WM6 phones being released this year and the 6800 a brand new phone is still only QVGA 240x320 - one fourth the resolution of those other phones.
Things I'd recommend for any WM6 phone
Acrobat reader for mobile - free
flash player for mobile - free
Micosoft Live Search - free (information searching, GPS/NAV display)
MS Voice Command - let's you dial by name or number anyone in your contacts without having to train for each person's name.
SPB Pocket PLus - let's you customize your today screen - put frequently used app shortcuts, document shortcuts etc on your today screen AND it has a very good battery indicator - better than the native battery indicator.
w/my ppc-6700, I turned off "activsynch," turned on "wireless
modem," then used the sprint 6700 dialer on my laptop to
connect the phone as a modem on my laptop for unlimited
connectivity. With the 6800, I am unable to figure out how
to connect my 6800 to my laptop as a modem? I've tried
the "Internet Sharing" feature but it didn't work and there
is no phone dialer on my laptop or "wireless modem" feature
on the 6800? Anyone have some info on this? Thanks.
I also have the ppc6800 and am having the same problem with voice command 1.6. I spent quite some time with sprint dealing with this. They have no clue how to deal with the problem. call Microsoft was the suggestion. However, when ever you need to submit a trouble report etc, get out your wallet. I am at a loss as to turn to now. Does anyone have any suggestions.
One other issue- the service rep, when I asked her about Rev A, said that it is automatic when you are in a coverage age that has Rev. A. This is the opposite to what I have been reading. I was told that it a download is required. I travel a lot, and will be going to a rev A area next week (Dallas & Vegas) both of which are listed as having Rev A already.
As to the bad BT in the new mogul, I just spoke to tech support at HTC - 866-449-8358 - first they asked me if I tried other devices, resetting the device. Then I asked if there was a patch or anything possible for this - they said it he's gotten a lot of calls about this same issue so they are aware of it.
I'd suggest you call 866-449-8358, not to bug them but to let them know if you are having this issue to try and make sure they get enough notification so that the patch comes out sooner than later.
Hopefully the patch for the BT will come out soon but I would imagine they won't hop on it as a priority unless a few people call them to notify them of the issue.
As to the bad BT in the new mogul, I just spoke to tech support at HTC - 866-449-8358 - first they asked me if I tried other devices, resetting the device. Then I asked if there was a patch or anything possible for this - they said it he's gotten a lot of calls about this same issue so they are aware of it.
I'd suggest you call 866-449-8358, not to bug them but to let them know if you are having this issue to try and make sure they get enough notification so that the patch comes out sooner than later.
Hopefully the patch for the BT will come out soon but I would imagine they won't hop on it as a priority unless a few people call them to notify them of the issue.
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As you suggested, I called HTC yesterday. After a fairly lengthy chat, I got the impression that the support person (Tatiana) was not familiar with the problem. She kept referring to the built-in voice speed dialer. When we were bath on the same track, it came down to the fact that it is 3rd party software (voice command) and they do not support it. I kept emphasizing that WM6 was built in, and that it might be the cause of the problem, since VC worked ok on WM5. She said that she would check around, and if she found something, she would call me. Doesn't seem like we are getting anywhere. She kept saying to call Microsoft, and I don't feel like having to pay Microsoft to tell them about their own problem. I was hoping (and I suggested) that perhaps because of their close work with Microsoft, that they could get the ball rolling. I am keeping a watch on Microsoft's Voice Command web site to see if anything pops up there.
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As you suggested, I called HTC yesterday. After a fairly lengthy chat, I got the impression that the support person (Tatiana) was not familiar with the problem.
Sorry if my post wasn't clear - HTC is clear on the issue of the BT stack causing choppy phone calls - not at your end but at your callers end - they sound fine to you but you side like doodoo to them. I haven't called HTC about the VC issue because HTC doesn't support VC. The BT issue is between HTC and Microsoft and we know unless someone here has one of those unlimited MS support contracts, there is no way to get MS's attention on this so we'll have to make sure every tech rep for HTC gets enough phone calls that they are well aware of the issue and work with MS to get the stack issue resolved.
Okay ... with all the problems with volume on the 6700 ... I can't believe no one has commented on this with the 6800 ... I'm not gonna buy one until I'm sure there is volume like say the treo's, Q, or even the I730 ... anyone care to comment on this ... I'm talking in call volume as well as say playing music via the speaker while soaking in the spa .. hehehehe ... inquiring minds want to know ...