iPhone rivals !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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And that's just for starters. Not only does this device cruise along on high-speed 3G networks, but its Windows Mobile software allows users to crack open and edit Word documents using a slide-out keypad and a tilt screen.
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Couple that with a capable media player, slick blogging software and a broad selection of games, and this phone is a radically different approach to building a media-friendly phone, compared with the iPhone.
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And while the Touch hasn't matched the iPhone's hype, it hints that HTC may be the company with the best odds of one day cranking out a handset that knocks Steve Jobs & Co. on their butts.
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Next up, Google, another company with an inside track at Apple. Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt holds a seat on Apple's board. And he's admitted that he's had to sit out some meetings, with Google readying an effort to pump its software into Internet-friendly phones due in the fourth quarter from such manufacturers as HTC, Samsung and LG Electronics.
At first glance, Google's so-called Android effort poses quite a threat, since Google has a host of online services it can pour into the handsets. The challenge: timing. By the time the first of these handsets arrive, Apple could already be synonymous with Web-friendly phones.
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Worse yet, the phone's look--and $199 retail price--invites comparison to a competitor the Instinct doesn't match. Unlike the new iPhone, the Instinct lacks wi-fi, has less memory and its touch-sensitive interface is less sophisticated.
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Details on the phone itself are thin. However, it's hard to imagine Research in Motion being able to back up the wide, media-friendly screen (seen in leaked images) with the wealth of multimedia content Apple has packed into its iTune store for its iPhones, iPods and Macs.
Research in Motion might do better than Apple if it were to roll out a phone with tiny plastic keys aimed at prying your credit card company's vice president away from her CrackBerry. But Apple is too smart to go there.
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