HTC Magic review

So much anticipation, excitement and fervour surrounded its launch that, in hindsight, it was hardly surprising the first Google phone didn’t quite come up to scratch. But it didn’t do itself any favours: the G1 lacked the glamour the first Android phone ought to have had, and poor battery life sealed its fate.

More than six months after its first outing, Android at last has a phone to be proud of. The HTC Magic, this time peddled in an exclusive deal with Vodafone in the UK, may be the second Android phone but it’s the first worth considering.

The main reason for this, but by no means the only one, is that it’s a much sleeker, slimmer affair. It measures 113 x 56 x 14mm – around half a centimetre narrower and a few millimetres thicker than an iPhone – and slips in the pocket much easier than the G1.

It’s not as beautifully engineered as Apple’s finest, and annoyingly Vodafone has chosen only to make the phone available in white, but it does feel very well put-together and sits in the hand nicely.

The flipside to this smaller size is that there’s no longer a hardware keyboard to make typing easy, but with Android version 1.5 on board (the so-called “Cupcake” update) there’s now an on-screen keyboard for entering text. Here, you get a Qwerty keyboard that can be used in either portrait or landscape mode – thanks to the phone’s built-in accelerometer it flicks between the two automatically – and it can be set to make an audible click, or vibrate when a key is pressed.

As with the iPhone it’s not comfortable or accurate enough for writing long emails or memos, but after a bit of practise it’s about as good as you’d expect of an onscreen keyboard. The new predictive text facility works well to help you correct mistakes too – you can mangle your words quite badly, even omitting punctuation such as apostrophes, and the list of suggestions usually comes up with what you originally meant to type.

it_photo_27998Elsewhere the phone is a pleasure to use. Like the iPhone and G1 before it, the Magic has a capacitive touchscreen (3.2in in size, 320 x 480 in resolution), so the merest stroke of a finger is required to activate it.

Couple this with Android’s delightfully straightforward mode of operation, and its excellent web browser and you have one easy to use handset.

In fact, you hardly need the hardware controls mounted on the chin of the phone. Four small buttons for Home, Menu, Back and Search facilities sit in a row above pick-up and hang-up keys and an oversized, clickable trackball, but we found ourselves using just the Menu and Back keys regularly.

The Android Market is also beginning to show its worth, and is now stuffed with all sorts of useful and entertaining applications ready for quick and easy download. One of the first we installed was GDocs – a tool for editing and viewing Google docs, essential in the absence of any kind of integrated synchronisation, but there’s also everything here from a beta Microsoft Exchange synchronisation app (Roadsync) to games and other phone frippery. It’s not the juggernaut that the iPhone App Store is, but it’s a very encouraging start.

There are other improvements, too, such as the ability to record video clips and upload them easily to YouTube (don’t expect great quality here, though) and the ability to play back video via the Gallery application. Converting video for the phone is simple – it plays back the same type of MP4 file as an iPod Touch or iPhone – and playback is smooth and glitch free.
The integration of Street View into Android’s Google Maps app is one of the most wondrous gimmicks we’ve seen in any handset. Turn on the Magic’s digital compass and you can browse views simply by spinning in a circle – the view follows you as you go, allowing you to look up and down as well. Google Maps, strangely, still doesn’t take advantage of the compass in standard map view, though, so you’re stuck with North is up, no matter what you do. In compensation the GPS locks on incredibly quickly to your location.

And, needless to say, HTC has left no stone unturned when it comes to smartphone hardware goodies. You get Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.0, up to 7.2Mbits/sec HSDPA and a 3.2-megapixel stills camera, while storage comes in the form of a reasonable 512MB of ROM, with a microSD slot for expansion.

The critical improvement, however, is the battery life. The first time we saw the G1, we struggled to get the battery life to last past a day, even with the very lightest of workloads. This time, with a larger battery in tow (1,340mAh), the Magic lasted over four days in our real world battery test. During this test we make half an hour of calls, download 50MB of data, and then leave the phone on standby, synchronising email over its HSDPA connection until the battery eventually dies.

Even under more demanding conditions, with lots of web browsing, application downloads and YouTube video watched, the phone lasted well into day two; an impressive performance by any standards, and the equal of its main competitor, the iPhone.

There are, however, some mistakes here, aside from the limited colour scheme. First up is that – crazily – there’s no 3.5mm headphone jack. Headphones must be connected via HTC’s proprietary ExtUSB connection, which is also used to drag files on and off the phone. Thankfully, you do get an adapter in the box that allows you to use your own headphones; the bundled stereo handsfree set is of predictably low quality.

Second is that Android’s onboard Gmail app still has several infuriatingly annoying quirks. Most attachments can’t be downloaded, for instance, just previewed. There are workarounds: by downloading the Download Crutch app you can use the web interface to download files directly, but it’s hardly an elegant solution. We also found we couldn’t zoom out for an overview of PDF attachments.

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But with plenty elsewhere to like we’re happy to overlook the foibles and give this Android handset the thumbs up – after all it’s not as if Windows Mobile phones or the iPhone don’t have their irritations too.

The HTC Magic is simple to use, browsing the web on it is a joy, battery life is good and, in the Android Market, there’s plenty of potential for expansion and fun. Plus, with Vodafone offering it for free on a £35 per month 18 month contract (including 600 minutes, unlimited texts and data), it’s a better deal than the iPhone is too.

Details

Cheapest price on contract
Contract monthly charge
Contract period 18 months
Contract provider Vodafone

Battery Life

Talk time, quoted 2hrs
Standby, quoted 4 days

Physical

Dimensions 56 x 113 x 14mm (WDH)
Weight 118g
Touchscreen yes
Primary keyboard On-screen

Core Specifications

RAM capacity 288MB
ROM size 512MB
Camera megapixel rating 3.2MP
Front-facing camera? no
Video capture? yes

Display

Screen size 3.2in
Resolution 320 x 480
Landscape mode? yes

Other wireless standards

Bluetooth support yes
Integrated GPS yes

Software

OS family Android

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