Microsoft has set relatively strict rules for what carriers and manufacturers alike can and can’t do to the WP7 experience. Back in the Windows Mobile days, things like carrier skinning and default installs with a plethora of carrier sideloads were the norm rather than the exception. HTC’s device skins definitely extended Windows Mobile’s longevity an extra year or two, but ultimately led to chaotic platform confusion.

The result is that (as we’ve noted in our other WP7 coverage), there’s no carrier skinning. But HTC TouchFLO that became Sense lives on in spirit on the HTC Surround. This time, however, it’s in a specific HTC Hub. 

Fire up the hub, and you get to the trademark HTC clock after an animation. Tap on it, and you get weather forecast for the next few days. If you’ve seen HTC Sense on Android or TouchFLO on Windows Mobile, this is almost the same thing, but relegated to what amounts to an application.

There’s some nice eye-candy in the application itself, which bodes well for WP7 performance, but honestly the hub itself is of marginal practicality. You have to sit through the launch animation each time, and outside of just showing off the platform, it doesn’t really serve much use 

The hub itself does little more than offer the clock, weather, and shortcuts to specific HTC applications you’re granted free access to by having an HTC phone. Sound Enhancer which we’ve talked about earlier, Stocks, Photo Enhancer, Flashlight, Converter, Lists, Connection Setup, and a few more. Tapping on any of them brings up the entry in the market. 

Back in the marketplace application, there’s also an entry for HTC Apps which essentially serves the same purpose. The interesting part of what HTC is allowed to do here is that there’s nothing preinstalled from HTC except for the hub itself - to grab things, you have to get them from the marketplace. While that results in less bloat right off the bat, the downside is that installing everything is tedious. Oddly enough, the AT&T applications come preinstalled - but you can uninstall them. 

Sound Enhancer we’ve already been over - you can manually select which sound enhancement you want, if any, instead of using the buttons. 

Connection setup seems to be little more than a way to set APNs graphically, instead of searching for the settings online. There’s a ton of carriers in here.

Probably the most useful thing HTC has added is a flashlight app which actually uses the LED flash. I’m not sure if the LED flash API is exposed to developers elsewhere, but the flashlight app reminds me of the one I’ve seen on Android - same styling and functionality.

Photo Enhancer is a bit basic, offering about a dozen presets. There’s some auto enhancement modes, as well as your usual run of holga/lomo emulation presets for that vintage look. I’m not a fan of presets, as I expected some contrast, exposure, and saturation controls in a photo enhancer app, but for what it offers, photo enhancer does work. In addition, edits thankfully are not destructive, instead saved inside a different album. 

Notes and Stocks are there, and do what you’d expect them to. The Notes application has some nice eye candy, though they're ultimately extraneous. It does its job, however.

On the whole, it relegating the HTC customizations to one single hub seems to make sense on WP7. On Windows Mobile, HTC's skinning attempts were arguably aimed squarely at making the platform useable and differentiating HTC phones from other devices running what was an increasingly complicated mobile OS. For the time being, WP7's interface is fresh and simple enough that adding a carrier skin would only detract from the experience. Time will tell whether Microsoft sticks to its guns in keeping the entire platform completely consistent - until then, manufacturers will differentiate their phones with a custom marketplace and hardware.

Putting the Surround in HTC Surround Speakerphone: The HTC Surround's bitter irony
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  • KayDat - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    Would have been interesting if HTC could implement a keyboard/speaker combo. Slide one way for speaker, other way for keyboard. That way, you wouldn't add thickness just for speakers.
  • bpt8056 - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    I like your idea about the speaker/keyboard combo. In addition to that, better landscape support would make this phone a much more competing product.
  • vol7ron - Sunday, November 14, 2010 - link

    I love the fact that speakers/sound quality are now being considered by manufacturers. I wish the kickstand was on it, so the screen was higher.

    I'm curious how big the speakers are - I also would not be too sure that the part would be durable enough to withstand a slide out keyboard/speaker combo.
  • Randomblame - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    if only it ran windows mobile 6.5 and that slide out was a keyboard. That would be the updated rhodium aka touch pro 3 I would buy.
  • Snotling - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    come on now... win mobile? What else Windows XP forever? Do you Miss Pentium CPUs? Still playing Starcraft 1?
  • aebiv - Monday, November 15, 2010 - link

    No, some of us aren't wow'd by the fact with WP7 you LOSE functionality vs WM6.5.

    Quit being a tool.
  • Nataku - Monday, November 15, 2010 - link

    well... legacy is a blessing and a curse, thats all that can be said for winmo6.5...

    im actually glad win phone 7 gets a fresh start, at least nothing to drag it's feet
  • a12e - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    only has 8 GB of integrated NAND, I believe, not 16.
  • softdrinkviking - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    i can't find that mistake. on pg 2, it says 512MB of integrated NAND, and a 16GB microSD card.
  • a12e - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link

    In the spec comparison table at the bottom of the first page for the Samsung Focus.
    I wish it had 16GB... then I'd have an extra 8GB right now. :)

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