The big design trade off on the HTC Surround is something we’ve already touched on. There’s a big slide out speaker which is unlike anything I’ve seen on a smartphone to date, but with it comes added thickness and heft that makes it feel like a device from a few years ago. Most of the time, that thickness and heft isn’t a big deal because you get the functionality of a real keyboard. In the case of the Surround, you just get a gigantic speaker. It’s sort of polarizing, and ultimately whether that trade off makes sense depends on what’s important to individual customers. There’s definitely a market for a smartphone focused entirely on music playback, the question is whether the Surround is that device. 

In a word, yes. The Surround packs easily the loudest and best sounding speaker I’ve encountered on a smartphone - when the slider is open. With the slider closed, you get muffled, muted sound that isn’t much louder than the rest of the competition. It’s pretty trivial to measure how loud the speaker on the Surround is as well. To do this test, I simply use the same setup I do for speakerphone testing, but instead play an entire music track start to end and average. 

Speaker Volume - Music Playback]

You can see how with the slider closed, the Surround is almost exactly as loud as the iPhone 4. With the slider open, it’s much louder, easily enough to fill a small room. Subjectively, I’d say the Surround is about as loud as a loud clock radio. 

Audio quality strongly depends on what setting the Surround is in. There’s a button at the top of the slider that cycles through 3 audibly different modes. Cycling through, the modes are Off, Dolby Mobile, and SRS Wow. 

Unfortunately, outside of the HTC Sound Enhancer app in the HTC Hub (more on this later), there’s no immediate visual feedback about which mode you’re in. Distinguishing the off mode is easy, but the other two don’t immediately present hugely different soundscapes until you pay attention to the detail. Inside the Sound Enhancer application, you can set the sound enhancement mode manually for both audio and video playback modes. There’s an additional equalizer setting exposed when you have headsets plugged in. I shot a short video comparing audio playback on the Surround to the iPhone 4 and Nexus One:

On the whole, the audio presets actually do a fairly decent job leveraging the good part of the Surround’s response curve. With audio enhancements off, sound is tinny and sometimes sounds distorted maximum volume, with way too much emphasis in the highs and mids, and no lows at all. It’s what you’d basically expect from a smartphone. With either of two presets enabled, the response is much flatter - there’s no distortion, much less of an insane difference between emphasis on the highs and mids, and just a tiny bit more in the lows. Honestly, the lows are still pretty bad, but they’re still much better than anything else I’ve heard from a smartphone. 

The Surround almost doubles as a sort of modern boombox - maybe a few more dBAs of audio power and I’d feel safe saying smartphones are a modern day analogue. So is the HTC Surround, well, surround sound? No, not quite. One of those audio modes sounds a heck of a lot like a virtual surround emulator, which is exactly what the HTC Surround is doing in software to have so much presence. It sounds good, don't get me wrong, it just isn't surround, er, surround.

The only remaining problem is that the Zune software doesn’t have landscape support. The result is that if you try and listen to music with the kickstand out (like you’d reasonably expect to be able to do with the device on a desk or table), you’ll have to deal with a rotated interface. It’s somewhat frustrating, honestly.

Videos of course play back the right orientation, but it’s still frustrating that WP7 is again a platform with landscape support only some of the time. The most notable exception of which is the home screen. It’s confusing considering how well the rest of the platform (even the settings app) has landscape support. Clearly this is something the WP7 team thought about. 

Camera - Video HTC Hub - This is where Sense UI lives
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  • HobHayward - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    It's possible different cell providers include different size microSD cards.

    Also anandtech's spam filter is trying to not let me post this.
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    You are correct, fixed :)

    Take care,
    Anand
  • deputc26 - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    I'd like to see this metric included:

    http://lovinitinaz.blogspot.com/2010/11/new-metric...
  • Meegulthwarp - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    I'd really like to see a comparison of the speeds the different class cards give. If installing a class 6 or 10 card vastly improves the performance of the device then I would gladly replace it but if it is only for bigger GBs then I'll pass as I'm quite happy with 8GB right now.

    Orange UK has an option to buy a 16GB card when you are purchasing a HTC Mozart online. Not sure what that's about as the cards aren't user replacable, might phone them up later on to ask.
  • bigboxes - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    that needs to use their headphones.

    *seated at the restaurant next to boxes*

    OMG! Listen to this!
    *giggle*
    Let's play it again, but this time turn it up louder!
    *boxes picks up teen's cell phone and smashes it into restaurant wall*

    This is not going to replace larger sets at home and on the road (on the bus, in the grocery store line, at the restaurant, etc.) you should use headphones.
  • kevith - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    Oh yes, in my country this is already quite trendy among teenagers. It can be realyy annoying.

    Seems like an ok phone though, still I think we´ve only seen the beginning. As before with first desktops, then laptops, the whole race for Mhz and faster hardware can start all over again in a new formfactor, The Pockettop...

    I´m 50 years old, it´s great to have lived half my life before computers entered the scen for home-users. I´m a muscician, and when I think of the things we used to dream, that computers would be able to, and what they actually are capable of today, I feel a little bit as if had been wittnessing the Wright Bros first attempts to fly.

    And now - well, in a short time anyway - maybe a studio-PC to carry in your pocket.

    Wonderful.
  • Nataku - Monday, November 15, 2010 - link

    i can see some use for this though, not that i want some jerk cranking it up in a bus full of already pissed off people... lol

    (kids learning to dance during break time some where down the hall might be one good application for this)
  • NYHoustonman - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    What the hell is that noise D:
  • banvetor - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    Dear Anand and Brian,

    Thank-you for the excellent phone reviews you are making. I wish to ask one thing though: in your reviews, can you make some points about the usability of each OS when you DO NOT have a data plan?

    I don't know how many of us are out there, but I use a lot my smartphone (music, taking pictures, gps, etc), but I simply have no need for a many-dollar-a-month data plan. I do browse the web and check e-mails also, but only when there is wi-fi... If I have some VERY IMPORTANT e-mail to check, then I pay for the KB of data...

    The most important points would be how dependent on a always-on data connection the OSes are... like the Zune music access, for instance. I have a Nokia N96 right now (planning to switch soon), and I just love that it has a map application that works offline, for instance (I know that no other phone has that, but I highlighted it just to make my point...).

    Thanks once again!
    Leo.
  • Gungel - Sunday, November 14, 2010 - link

    With AT&T you have to get a data plan on your smartphone. Even if you buy a phone off contract, they will add a dataplan once the network checks your IMEI and recognizes it as such. I was on an old $15 a month unlimited data plan grandfathered in when SBC became AT&T. I recently bought an Android phone off contract and got a nice surprise on my next phone bill. The data plan is now $30 and is limited to 2GB a month.

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