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2010/12/04

HTC HD7 review, Price, pictures, Details, model specifications


There’s no such thing as a small WP 7 phone. However, 4.3 inches of screen estate are really something else. The best case scenario: the HTC HD7 is the phone you’ve been waiting for. The worst case scenario: it’s too big to fail.

HTC 7 Trophy price سعر اتش تي سي 7

HTC 7 Trophy price سعر اتش تي سي 7

The HTC HD7 was inevitable. Was it not the first Windows Phone 7 ever rumored? And rightly so. There’s no phone too big or too powerful for Windows Phone 7. In fact, if you ask Microsoft they’d say the bigger the better. HTC – on their part – didn’t have to think too hard. They simply skipped right to number seven.

Come to think of it, it may as well have been exactly with the HTC HD2 in mind that Microsoft laid down the law about the Windows Phone 7 required hardware. Effectively, HTC had a Windows Phone 7 flagship on standby for nearly a year – waiting for as much as a nod from Microsoft to let it off the leash. Anyway, as we’ve seen on a number of occasions, this whole thing is about getting things done on the biggest mobile screen possible. And the HTC HD7’s best course of action is to ensure no surprises.

Key features:

  • 4.3″ 16M-color capacitive LCD touchscreen of WVGA resolution (480 x 800 pixels)
  • Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support
  • Dual-band 3G with HSDPA (7.2 Mbps) and HSUPA (2Mbps)
  • Windows Phone 7 operating system
  • 1GHz Snapdragon CPU, 576MB RAM, 512MB ROM
  • 5 megapixel autofocus camera with dual-LED flash, geotagging
  • 720p video recording @ 25fps
  • 8GB of built-in storage
  • Standard 3.5mm audio jack
  • Standard microUSB port (charging)
  • Dolby Mobile and SRS sound enhancement
  • Wi-Fi b/g/n
  • Bluetooth 2.1 with A2DP
  • Accelerometer for screen auto rotation
  • Office document editor
  • Facebook integration and cloud services
  • Built-in A-GPS receiver
  • Stereo FM Radio with RDS
  • Comes with HTC Hub and exclusive HTC apps
  • Voice-to-text functionality
  • Kickstand with trademark yellow accents
  • Great audio quality

Main disadvantages:

  • High screen response time causes visible ghosting
  • Non-expandable storage
  • No lens protection
  • Quite heavy at 162 g (not that we mind)
  • Somewhat susceptible to the “antenna death grip” (signal drops by at least two bars)

WP7-specific limitations

  • No system-wide file manager
  • No Bluetooth file transfers
  • No USB mass storage mode
  • Limited third-party apps availability
  • No Flash (nor Silverlight) support in the browser
  • Too dependent on Zune software for file management and syncing
  • No video calls
  • New ringtones available only through the Marketplace
  • Music player lacks equalizer presets
  • No multitasking
  • No copy/paste
  • No DivX/XviD video support (automatic transcoding provided by Zune software)
  • No sign of free Bing maps Navigation so far
  • No internet tethering support
  • No handwriting recognition support

Alright, one thing we can be sure of – the HTC HD7 is playing strictly by the Microsoft book in terms of hardware. On the other hand, it does look like a simple copy/paste job. You know, WP7 phones have a hard time demonstrating a personality. The HD7 has the extra task of identifying itself as something different from the HD2.

The brand new OS is the right place to start. In terms of hardware, the kickstand is certainly an eye-catcher – not to mention it tells you’re dealing with a phone that will keep you entertained. Next on the list is the HTC Hub and the exclusive apps it offers.

It still seems the HTC HD7 offers little in the way of creativity. It will be up to the other WP7 phones in the HTC portfolio to do that. The HD7 might just be supposed to be a mere display of power – the one that completes their grand slam of massive screens.

If you are still with us, you’re welcome on the next page where we start with the hardware.

Flexible homescreen with Live tiles

The software part of Windows Phone 7 reviews feels like a book you’ve read – that’s because all WP7 phones run the exact same software, with just a couple of preinstalled apps that make some difference. So don’t get surprised that we’ve reused some texts from our previous Windows Phone 7 reviews (including our dedicated WP7 review). We want you to be sure that even when we reuse portions of the texts, we always take care to check our facts with the review unit thoroughly.

HTC fans will be disappointed to find out that the Taiwanese company wasn’t allowed to do a complete UI makeover like they have on other platforms, but still they managed to give the HD7 that trademark HTC feel. The HTC Hub has the familiar clock and a few other apps that wouldn’t look out of place in a Sense UI environment.

The old Today screen is gone and it has been replaced with a set of Live tiles. It’s one of the most flexible homescreens we’ve seen. You’ll notice just how many useful things you can put on it as this review goes on. The iconic Start menu has gone too and there’s no trace of the honeycomb pattern either.

The Windows Phone 7 Metro UI has two main parts that live side by side – the homescreen (referred to as “Start”) and the main menu. You can switch between the two by sideways swipes or using the arrow button.

The homescreen is a grid of Live tiles. Live tiles fit the broad concept of “widget” but, unlike most widgets out there, are very uniform with clear labels of what each of them does. They display info (e.g. number of messages, the date) and are also the Windows Phone 7 equivalent of homescreen shortcuts.

The color theme of the interface is customizable – the background can be either dark or light and there’s a long list of accent colors (the fill color of the tiles).

The main menu is a traditional list – this is where all the hubs and installed apps are listed in alphabetical order. A press and hold reveals a context menu, which lets you “pin” items to the homescreen (that is put their Live tile there), uninstall them or rate and review an app that you’ve downloaded.

There are no folders in the main menu – so the more apps you install, the longer the list will get. So, finding apps that you chose not to pin to the homescreen may involve plenty of scrolling. The list is alphabetical, so at least you’ll know where to look (an alphabet scroll would have been useful here).

The interface is quite simple – sideways swipes navigate a sort of tabbed interface and there are on-screen soft keys. This will cover the most commonly used features, but for advanced features you can tap the “…” symbol.

It opens an extended context menu (and also reveals a label under each soft key, if the icon wasn’t revealing enough). Pressing and holding on an item in a list (e.g. a single message) will reveal a context menu relevant to that item only.

What Windows Phone 7 has lost since the 6th iteration is multitasking. It handles a lot like a pre-version-4 iOS. The Start key (the one with the Windows logo) will get you out of the app and on the homescreen. Alternatively, you can exit an app using the Back key. That gets you back to the app last used.

That last app will continue from exactly the same point from where you left it. Getting back into an app is done by tapping its live tile or shortcut in the menu or by using the back button, which returns to the previous screen (even if it was from a completely different app).

However, lack of multitasking means you can’t, say, run third party music players (e.g. last.fm) in the background. Apps also get suspended when you lock the screen – however, there’s the option to allow them to run with a locked screen.

Microsoft will lift that restriction, but only for the apps that prove battery-efficient – the phone must be able to work at least 6 hours with the app running if it’s a music player and 120 hours otherwise.

Still, all the other apps get suspended when you lock the phone – unlocking the phone will cause the app or game to reload, which can be slow and you usually lose your progress. This can be very annoying to even casual gamers.

There’s no “recently used” type of list to make going back to the app you need easier – so you might have to search for it in the main menu or keep hitting the Back button until you see it. So, multitasking is not a complete loss, but not quite as comfortable as true multitasking OSes either.

Phonebook tightly integrates with Facebook

The People hub assumes the responsibilities of the phonebook, though calling it a “phonebook” is not very accurate. Instead of contacts, you have people with profiles – a term borrowed straight out of the social networking domain.

The first screen of the People hub shows you a list of all your contacts (phone contacts, social network friends, email pen friends – everything), with a search shortcut and an add contact button.

Contacts are ordered alphabetically, indexed with colored squares with a letter. You can tap on any one of those letter boxes and the screen shows you the whole alphabet highlighting the letters actually in use. You can tap a letter to skip directly to that part of the list.

Contacts can be sorted by either first name or last and they can be displayed as “First Last” or “Last, First” (the two settings are separate), you can also include or exclude Facebook friends, import only Facebook contacts that have a phone number and add several accounts to sync with.

Swiping to the side shows only new events from all contacts from social networks. Another swipe shows the recently called contacts. Instead of favorites, you can pin a contact to the homescreen.

Viewing a contact’s profile shows the contact photo. Below that there are actions – “call mobile”, “text mobile”, “write on wall”, “view website” and so on. Below each actions, in smaller type and grey or blue letters, are the target for the action (e.g. phone number, email, site URL) and where that info came from (Google, Facebook, etc.).

The soft keys let you pin a contact, link two (or more) contacts from the various services and edit. Swiping to the side brings up the “What’s new” panel, which shows the latest updates and events just from that contact.

Telephony lacks smart dialing

The in-call sound of the HTC HD7 was loud and clear. Signal reception was decent but in areas with weak signal it dropped the call more often than not.

Also note that the HD7 is susceptible to the infamous “antenna death grip”. At most, we managed to knock off two of the five bars but we couldn’t make it completely lose the signal (even when we wrapped our hands all over it). Still, it happens when you hold it normally too, so this is something to watch out for in areas of poor coverage.

The phone application shows you the call history, with shortcuts to voice mail, dialer and phonebook. The phone live tile will show the number of missed calls as will the lock screen.

The dialer itself is as simple as it gets – a phone keypad with a Call and a Save button. The lack of smart dialing is an annoyance, but the People hub is good at finding contacts.

You could use voice dialing instead – the HD7 did fairly well recognizing our commands, though it did have issues separating the two Dexter’s in our contact list – “Dexter” and “Dexter Morgan”. Still, it did recognize the unusual name of Mandark.

An interesting option is the International assist – it comes in handy for dialing while abroad or calling someone outside the country. What’s missing is the ability to set any song from your collection as a ringtone – a feature some of you might miss. You can download new ringtones from the Marketplace though (possibly for a fee).

When there’s an incoming call, the contact’s photo will appear full screen and you can slide up to reveal the answer and reject call buttons. This will prevent any accidentally answered or rejected calls.

A quick note – status indicators are hidden by default (except the clock) but you can bring them up with a quick tap on the very top of the screen.

Good messaging capabilities

The messaging department of Windows Phone 7 uses threaded view to organize your messages. When you start the app, you’ll see a list of conversations – each one consists of multiple messages displayed as speech bubbles, which are ordered by the time they were sent/received.

An empty speech bubble will hang at the bottom waiting for you to type a response. A message can have multiple recipients too by using the + button next to the recipient field. Just the first few letters of the contact’s name are needed – the search feature will find it for you.

You can attach a photo to turn the message into an MMS – either an existing photo or you can snap one on the fly. You can add only one though and you can only attach photos (not videos).

The email app is pretty good. It easily retrieved the settings for our Gmail and Hotmail test accounts. Each inbox is separate and you can pin it to the homescreen, though there’s no aggregated inbox view.

You can opt to display all, unread or flagged messages – by sweeps to the side and you can browse all folders for the email account and batch operations are easy – a tap on the left side of the screen selects the message, so you can move it, mark it as (un)read or flag it.

Each message can be flagged, which is a great way to sort only the emails that are important right now – just tap the “toggle flag” option from the context menu when you’re done with them and they are off the list.

We tried emailing a photo from HD7’s camera, but the email app downscaled it before sending – so, emailing full resolution shots is a no go.

Big screen means bigger virtual keys but the thin bezel around the screen makes it a bit uncomfortable to hit the leftmost and rightmost keys. It’s no big deal though and with a little practice you’ll start typing fast and error free.

The spell correction also helps a lot here. It turned out to be very accurate and the overall experience was so positive that even heavy texters should be satisfied.

Gallery, kickstand but where’s the slideshow?

The Pictures hub is the photo gallery of Windows Phone 7. When you start it, it shows the most recent photos (including those from the camera), What’s new (which shows photos from online services) and a menu, which lets you view all photos, photos sorted by date and your favorite photos.

Viewing an individual photo supports pinch zooming and you can easily upload the photo to Facebook or share it on some other service. There’s an option to automatically strip geo-tagging information before uploading it to online services – that way your offline album will still be geo-tagged, but you won’t have to worry about privacy.

We have some issues with the WP7 gallery. With a kickstand and a large 4.3” screen, the HTC HD7 would have made an excellent makeshift picture frame. The biggest issues is that there’s no slideshow option – a basic option of galleries on all phones we’re so used to seeing that we were confused when we couldn’t find it.

The gallery also doesn’t have a landscape mode for the thumbnail view – sure, you can zoom out from a photo into a film strip view but still, for a phone that will likely spend a lot of time in landscape mode this is an annoying omission.

An app can probably substitute the gallery and offer both landscape mode and slideshows, but it’s really something that should be part of the native app.

Anyway, we’ve had no issues with speed – Microsoft’s minimum spec requirement guarantees that even 5MP photos are handled without a snag.

Even so, Microsoft has decided to downscale photos when they are transferred from a computer to the phone using the Zune software (much like emailing a photo).

One of the HTC provided apps – Photo Enhancer – can be used to add a bit of flare to photos. It’s a really basic app, you just open a photo and select an effect: Auto enhance, Cinnamon, High contrast, Sepia, Overexposed, Glimmer, Twilight, Vintage, Antique and a few more.

Zune music player plus Dolby and SRS enhancements

The media players reside together in the Music & Videos hub, which bears the Zune logo. When you start it, it shows the History, which gives you quick access to the last two things played, or you can go to the full menu and start the music or video player, listen/watch podcasts (both audio and video podcasts are supported), start the FM radio or go to the Marketplace.

The music and video players are simple and have straightforward interfaces. You won’t have any difficulties using them. However there are some things missing, like equalizers. Another missing feature is the ability to scrub through a song with your finger – you have to press and hold on the FF/rewind buttons to simply jump back and forth.

Tapping the album art temporarily reveals three buttons – repeat, favorite and shuffle.

The players can of course work in the background and there’s another nice shortcut – when you press a volume key, the name of the currently playing track also appears along with play/pause, next and previous buttons (they can also scrub through the song).

It’s interesting (and useful) that you can pin individual items to the homescreen – like a song or video, even an FM radio frequency.

One of the best preloaded apps by HTC is the Sound Enhancer. It can apply sound enhancements to both songs and videos – there are two separate settings, so the music enhancement you choose won’t affect videos.

You can enable either Dolby Mobile or SRS enhancement and for music you get an equalizer too. It doesn’t support custom presets though.

Watching videos excites and disappoints at the same time

The large 4.3” screen with nearly widescreen aspect (it’s 15:9) makes the HD7 a good platform for movie and TV show fans. It’s even better because of the Zune Marketplace, which is a great source for buying or renting movies and TV shows.

The kickstand means you don’t have to hold the phone during the movie or episode – which is great since holding the phone for even 45 minutes (the typical runtime for a 1 hour TV show) can be tiring and awkward.

Much like the picture gallery, viewing the list of videos can be done in portrait orientation mode only. The video player on the other hand is fixed to landscape only.

Another gripe we have with the HTC HD7 video watching experience is that the loudspeaker is on the back so the sound is actually directed away from you. Stereo speakers around the display on the front would have been a much better option.

Yet another problem is that the screen is not well-equipped for action scenes – the unpleasant ghosting effect we already mentioned is visible and spoils the experience.

The HTC HD7 has no AVI or DivX/XviD support, just MP4 and WMV. However, the Zune software on your computer will automatically convert unsupported video files to .WMV (up to WVGA res). You can watch those formats on the HD7, it’s just that the transfer to the device can take quite a while (depending on your computer configuration).

Videos from the Zune Marketplace come in the correct format so they might be the easier option.

FM radio has RDS

The HTC HD7 also has a built in FM radio with a dead simple interface. You have the current frequency in very large digits – swiping left and right changes the frequency and a swipe and release automatically searches for the next available station in that direction.

Great audio quality

The HTC HD7 did very well in our audio quality test. There are no notable flaws when you use it with an active external amplifier – the frequency response is great and so are the noise level, dynamic range and stereo crosstalk readings. The total harmonic distortion is pretty low too and generally the intermodulation distortion is the only thing about the HD7 ouput that was not particularly impressive (though it’s still acceptable).

As you could expect things get a bit worse when you plug in a pair of headphones, but the HD7 still maintains a very good performance. As a matter of fact the degradation is so subtle that the device ranks higher up in this scenario, than in the previous. The stereo crosstalk increases and that’s about that. There’s no extra intermodulation distortion or ferquency response deviations. Now add the fact that the HD7 is pretty loud too and you get the idea that the HD7 is a pretty good music player indeed.

Check out the table and see for yourself.

A decent 5MP camera

The HTC HD7 has a 5MP autofocus camera with dual-LED flash that snaps photos with maximum resolution of 2592 x 1944 pixels.

The camera UI is pretty simple – you have your viewfinder and some controls on the right. From top to bottom they are the still/video camera toggle, virtual zoom buttons and an extended settings menu.

A handy trick for checking out the last few photos is that a side slide to the right opens the last picture shot and a slide to the left brings back the camera’s live view instantly.

The extended settings menu offers control over resolution, metering mode and flicker adjustment and also effects (fewer than the Photo Enhancer effects) and also Scenes presets.

The shutter key is not particularly comfortable. It’s too near the center of the right side of the HD7, so you can’t hold the phone by both ends and reach the shutter. You have to move your right hand to the left and obscure a part of the viewfinder or use some other awkward solution.

The good thing is the shutter key can wake the phone with a single press – that is unlock it and start the camera. But that feature cleverly doesn’t trigger if there’s something in front of the proximity sensor – like the insides of your pocket or purse.

The camera performance is noticeably better than the Trophy camera but that’s not saying much. The noise levels are lower and there’s less work for the noise reduction, so there’s a decent amount of detail left in the photo. There’s still some smearing though and oversharpening artifacts too. Color balance tended towards yellow too (but it’s how Joe Public prefers it).

Here are some camera samples so you can judge yourself.

Video camera does 720p

The video camera interface is identical to the still camera one and has plenty of features too. You can calibrate contrast, saturation and sharpness, change the white balance or exposure compensation and also add image effects. You can use the two LEDs as a video light too.

You can record in three resolutions: QVGA, VGA or 720p. The camera defaults to VGA, which is frustrating – if you forget to set it to 720p, the videos you thought were shot in HD will be at the much less impressive VGA resolution.

Connectivity lacks Mass storage unless you hack it

The HTC HD7 has quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support and dual-band 3G with HSPA (7.2Mbps downlink and 2Mbps uplink).

The local connectivity is covered by Wi-Fi b/g/n and Bluetooth 2.1 with A2DP. Bluetooth is currently limited as to what it can do – there’s no file transfer support.

Syncing with a computer is done with the Zune computer application. It’s the only way to transfer files directly between your computer and your HD7 – Windows Phone 7 doesn’t support Mass storage mode. Zune supports syncing over USB and Wi-Fi. There’s a Mac version of Zune in the works too. You can check our detailed review of the Zune software here.

There is a registry hack that enables Mass storage, which is relatively easy (you need to change 3 values in the registry) and since the WP7 internal folder structure is fairly straightforward you can easily browse for content. Anything you put on it, won’t be recognized by the phone itself.

Another syncing option is the cloud. SkyDrive is a free Microsoft service that gives you 25GB of cloud storage. You can even have your photos automatically uploaded as soon as you snap them.

Great browsing experience would have been better with Silverlight

Internet Explorer on Windows Phone 7 is the best mobile IE yet. But that doesn’t do it justice – it’s actually a huge leap forward compared to version 6. Coupled with the big screen of the HTC HD7, it will make you think twice before buying a tablet.

Organizing your day with WP7

The calendar prefers two view modes – agenda and day view. You have month view too, but you can’t access it by side-swiping – you need to use the soft key for that.

You can sync with multiple calendars, including our Google Calendar but we had to add it as an Outlook (ActiveSync) account.

You can set multiple alarms – each with its own name, ringing sound and repeat pattern. We set up ten and yet the add alarm button didn’t grey out – the HTC HD7 can handle more alarms than we know what to do with.

There’s a basic calculator too, which has big, easy to hit buttons – turn the phone on its right side and the calculator adds hexadecimal digits and a few more operations (e.g. mod), turn it on its left and you get trigonometry and logarithms.

Bing search, voice commands and SkyDrive

Like the Bing website, there are new photos every day to serve as a background, but WP7 has one extra – three squares on the photo, which give you three interesting facts about what’s in the picture. The copyright sign in the bottom right also reveals the location of the photo (e.g. “Waterfall on the Arroyo del Salto River”).

Mobile office is better than ever, still not perfect

The Office hub is an important part of the Windows Phone 7 package. The interface is identical to the other hubs and it’s the best mobile Office suite we’ve seen yet.

The Office hub breaks down into three sections – OneNote, Documents and SharePoint.

HTC Hub and other HTC apps

There are several HTC apps preloaded on the HD7 and we’ve already covered some of them. Now it’s time to look at the ones we haven’t covered yet.

The HTC Hub for a brief moment looks like Sense UI – once that moment passes you see that the only thing borrowed from Sense is the clock with a weather forecast. A tap on the clock brings up a five day forecast. You can have multiple locations and the weather conditions are visualized in traditional Sense UI fashion.

It’s those prolonged animations that may be the Hub’s undoing. Each time you start the app, each time you tap the clock there’s an (admittedly attractive) animation that’s several seconds long. The novelty of it will quickly wear out and there’s no option to disable it.

Anyway, below the clock is a list of featured HTC apps – the “Get more” button will take you to the HTC Apps section of the Windows Phone Marketplace.

The Converter has an easy to use, touch-optimized interface and can handle conversions in many areas.

The Connection Setup is a bit of an odd app – it lets you pick country and carrier for the GSM connection. It’s odd because it pretty much doubles functionality Windows Phone 7 already has in the settings menu (the country selection is new though).

Who needs a paper map when you have Bing Maps

The HTC HD7 comes with a GPS receiver built-in, which got an accurate GPS lock a little over two minutes. Cell tower and Wi-Fi positioning is available too – it gets a lock almost instantly but it’s accurate to only 100-150 meters (good enough for location based services).

The native mapping app is Bing Maps – it has two modes (regular map mode and satellite photo mode) and you can get directions and information on nearby businesses too.

Interestingly, when you zoom in down to street level, Bing maps automatically switches to satellite imagery. However, the cool Bird’s eye view from the desktop Bing Maps isn’t available nor is Streetside view (Microsoft’s Street View alternative).

The three softkeys available are for directions, my location and search. The extended menu has options to clear the map of any markers you’ve placed, toggling aerial view and accessing the settings.

Browsing the map is easy and relatively fast. Zooming is done by pinching, and for a bit of eye candy when new tiles are loaded they fade in smoothly instead of just popping up. Overall the effect is looks much smoother than on Google Maps for Mobile.

A press and hold places the marker on a specific location – tap the marker and you get About (a map screenshot and the address, which you can send over a message or email) and Nearby, which shows nearby POI with a rating and basic info (like a phone and a web site).

You also get Directions from my location button, which will find step by step instructions to get you to your destination by either driving or walking.

Now for what’s missing – there’s no Navigate from here option, which can be quite useful. For example, you’re going to the theater, but want to check how far away the restaurant you’re going to afterwards is from the theater.

HTC Apps offers stuff for free

The Marketplace has gotten a few tweaks since we last saw it. It’s organized into four main sections – applications, games, music and the HTC Apps. A fifth section called Updates shows up when one of your installed apps has received an update – there’s an Update all button, which will save you the hassle of updating each app individually.

Anyway, each app will be listed with a short description, a rating and user reviews, and a few screenshots. If the app can use something that can potentially breach your privacy (e.g. location information) the Marketplace will let you know.

It’s not as comprehensive as the Android Market (which lists just about everything the app can use) but on the upside it only warns you about the important things.

Big downloads (anything north of 30MB) need a Wi-Fi connection to work. Alternatively, you can download those jumbo apps using the desktop Zune software.

The HTC Apps section offers HTC-made, HTC-exclusive apps for free. There are handy things like Attentive Phone – it offers pocket mode, quiet ring on pickup, flip to mute and flip for speaker (features we’ve seen on their Android phones). There are less useful apps like Flashlight and a “she loves me, she loves me not” app but you’ll probably end up downloading everything from the HTC Apps section.

Xbox Live and games

Xbox Live is at the heart of the Games hub. It carries over many features from the Xbox – from your avatar to your scores and achievements. The Spotlight feature is available too (it shows info on new stuff) and also Requests – which shows you game invites from your friends.

Remote services from the WindowsPhone.Live.com cloud

Microsoft has added extensive support for “in the cloud” features in Windows Phone 7. The WindowsPhone.Live.com site is where you can access those features from your browser – everything from remote wipe to browsing photos.

Open the site in your browser and sign in with the Live ID that you use on your WP7 phone.

Once that’s done you have access to the Find My Phone features. You can make the phone ring or see its last location on a map.

If it turns out that your phone is lost, you can lock it and leave a “please return” note on the screen.

If you fear it’s been stolen, you can remote wipe it too (which erases all data from the phone).

The Windows Phone Live also lets you browse and edit contacts, calendar events and OneNotes too (those are edited with Office Live).

You can also browse photos you’ve uploaded to SkyDrive. We already mentioned that the camera of every WP7 phone can be set to automatically upload all pics you snap there.

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