Pick up your copy of Joy Division: Closer at WHSmith today

Lend yourself a touch of class
With many modern mobile phones, making a call can feel as complicated as
negotiating the control panel of the space shuttle. The profusion of fiddly
multi-function buttons means one false press can have you accidentally
taking a photo, opening a web browser or turning the phone into a sat nav
unit.
So what’s the solution? Ditch the keypad, bin the buttons and replace the whole lot with a touchscreen that has colourful icons to prod and simple lists to flick through.
Touchscreens look clean and modern, afford plenty of room for viewing photos or videos and dispense with the need for tiny, childlike fingers to accurately dial a number. The best touchphones can even respond to certain gestures, such as making a pinching motion across the screen of the iPhone to make a page shrink before your eyes.
Although Apple’s iPhone wasn’t the first touchscreen mobile, its launch last year galvanised other phone makers into releasing their own touch-sensitive handsets. The result is that there are now touchphones to suit all tastes – if not all budgets – so the new 3G iPhone finds itself up against some stiff competition.
Large, colourful touchscreens are much more expensive to make than traditional displays, so they tend to be found on high-end handsets bristling with advanced features. We tested six touchphones using two different kinds of touchscreen. Resistive touchscreens – found here on the HTC, Palm and Sony Ericsson – can be used with a finger, a stylus or even the end of a pencil, but they don’t provide a particularly crisp image.
Capacitive touchscreens, on the other hand, give greater clarity but work by means of your fingers interrupting a weak electric field. Unfortunately, a stylus or gloved hand is useless, as it doesn’t affect the current. Capacitive screens are found on the iPhone, LG and Samsung.
Some touchphones also have conventional keys. The Sony Ericsson and LG have small number-pads, while the Palm Centro squeezes on an entire miniature qwerty keyboard – time to call back those pin-fingered kids. The Samsung doesn’t have real keys but goes some way towards emulating them by vibrating each time a virtual key is pressed.
Speed is critical on a touchscreen. The HTC and Sony Ericsson proved slow in our tests, while the iPhone and Palm were most responsive. Excluding the Palm phone, all the units tested were 3G-compatible, which provides much faster web surfing and e-mail retrieval – as long as you’re in a 3G area, of course. All but the Sony Ericsson worked with the latest, superfast 3G technology known as HSDPA, although coverage of this service outside big cities remains rather patchy in the UK.
The iPhone, Sony Ericsson and HTC have wi-fi for connecting to the internet using hotspots or wireless home networks. The iPhone and HTC handsets also have GPS for navigation, but be warned that this drains batteries at a ferocious rate.
The LG, Palm and Samsung phones have enough internal memory to store your contacts and messages and take some pictures. To store more music and video, you’ll need to slot in a microSD card (about £15 for 4GB). The other phones have much more internal storage, but no card slot for further expansion. That’s fine with the 8GB and 16GB iPhones and the 8GB Sony Ericsson, but you could well eventually run out of space with the 4GB HTC.
Touchphones aren’t for everyone. They are usually larger and heavier than normal phones, have a shorter battery life (four hours of talk time is typical) and often make texting slow. Even making a call can become problematic if the screen reacts to the pressure of your ear.
If you want a phone to flick through thousands of tunes, watch movies on the move or browse the web, the iPhone 3G, LG Secret or Samsung Tocco are useful, easy and fun to use. If you have less money to spend and don’t mind a slower 2.5G connection, you’ll find the Centro is great value, particularly as it has a real keyboard for easier messaging. But if you spend most of your mobile life writing texts or making calls, you’ll probably find these touchscreen divas rather ungainly and overpriced.
One last thing: all the phones here can be had more cheaply, or even for free, if you sign up to a monthly contract. Mobile networks subsidise expensive handsets in the expectation of earning back more in call and data charges over the life of a contract. As an example, it’s believed that AT&T – the iPhone’s network in the United States – buys phones from Apple for $499 (£254) each and sells them to customers, with a contract, for $199 (£101) in the expectation of making back at least $300 (£153) on each phone.
JARGON BUSTER
Accelerometer Motion sensor that rotates display depending on position
in which the phone is held
Capacitive touchscreen High quality, operated by fingers, not a stylus
HSDPA Latest 3G technology with near-broadband speeds
Resistive touchscreen Lower quality, for use with a stylus or fingers
BIG AND BEAUTIFUL
Apple iPhone 3G – pay-as-you-go price to be confirmed
Feature-packed but not perfect 
The new iPhone 3G, which goes on sale on July 11 in 8GB and 16GB versions, looks as good and handles as smoothly as the original, and has the same bright, colourful 3.5in touchscreen. Of our six phones, the iPhone gave the best web-surfing experience – via 3G or wi-fi – and adds GPS to the already impressive maps feature. You can now “tag” photos with their location, although the 2Mp camera is basic and doesn’t shoot video. Contrary to many predictions, there is no front camera for 3G video calling, though, and the original model’s tricky text messaging remains. The virtual keypad is clumsy but it does have smart automatic error correction. The largest, heaviest (133g) phone here, it’s also the most usable and satisfying one.
SLIDE IN STYLE
LG Secret – typically £400, or £350 from www.mobilefun.co.uk
Stylish hybrid of traditional and touch menus

If you like the comfort and speed of using real number keys, the tough, carbon
fibre 3G Secret offers the best of both worlds, for behind its touchscreen
lurks a normal, backlit keypad. A menu option makes the 2.4in display
touch-sensitive for easy scrolling and zooming, but only for five features:
music, photos, document viewer, FM radio and games. There are also
touch-sensitive lights on the side that change function depending on what
you’re doing. A built-in accelerometer rotates the screen when you tip the
phone, and it’s also used for motion-controlled games ranging from mazes to
fishing. The Secret is slim and quite light (116g), and includes a 5Mp
camera. A smooth operator overall, with a good balance of virtual buttons
and real keys.
SMALL BUT FEISTY
Samsung Tocco – typically £400, or £310 from www.allorange.co.uk
Slim, user-friendly cameraphone

This compact 3G touchphone (106g) will suit those for whom the iPhone is too
big. The Tocco fits the hand well and lets you customise its 2.8in
touchscreen to show or hide the clock, reminders and alarms. The 5Mp camera
has face detection and a shutter that is triggered automatically when your
subject smiles. There’s no danger of it threatening real cameras, but it’s
quite an advanced snapper for a mobile phone. You can configure the
vibrating “haptic” feedback from nothing to a fierce buzz, making its
virtual buttons feel almost as responsive as real ones. Text messaging is
let down by virtual keys that are too close together, and it’s too easy to
quit messages accidentally. Battery life is weak, too.
FORM OVER FUNCTION
HTC Touch Diamond– typically £500 or £425 from www.handtec.co.uk
Powerful but slow smartphone

The 3G Touch Diamond’s 2.8in display is bright and the sharpest on test. Some
of the touch controls, such as the image zoom, are similar to those on the
iPhone, although flicking through tunes and lists is not particularly slick
or involving. There’s a Rolodex-style contacts directory and an
accelerometer that mutes the ringtone if the phone is left face-down. The
lightweight Touch Diamond (110g) has a decent 3.2Mp camera, wi-fi for
hotspot surfing and GPS, but its modest 4GB of storage can’t be expanded,
and texting with the virtual keyboard can be tricky. Also, some of the
Windows-based software is very slow, although the HTC does come with a
quantity of programs that befits a proper smartphone.
NO FRILLS FUN
Palm Centro – typically £200, or £165 from www.pixmania.co.uk
Cheap and effective 2.5G touchphone

This affordable touchphone is capable, accessible and fast to use,
particularly when finding contacts or appointments with the search function.
The screen has short cuts to e-mail, a music player and Google, and its
compact, backlit qwerty keypad makes for quicker text-message and e-mail
composition. You can dial using either the keypad or the screen, and a handy
option lets you reject a call with a polite text message. The handset is not
3G, though, so web browsing can be slow, although it is fast enough for
checking simple e-mails. The Palm betrays its budget origins with its
smaller (2¼in), less than pin-sharp touchscreen, basic 1.3Mp camera and
chunky (124g) design.
SOUNDS COME FIRST
Sony Ericsson W960i – typically £400 or £350 from www.play.com
Good music phone, cumbersome menus

This Walkman-branded 3G phone puts music first with its good-quality earphones, generous 8GB of storage and dedicated music buttons. Away from the tunes, though, the W960i feels a touch confused. Its 2.6in touchscreen is disappointing, lacking both clarity and brightness, and the backlit number pad has awkwardly flat, cramped keys, so it’s no quicker to write texts and e-mails than it is with the best virtual keyboards on test. Even a thumb-friendly, side-mounted jog dial can’t help menus that are bafflingly put together and slow to react to the touch. Finally, battery life on this fat, though not heavy (116g), phone is below average, giving just three hours of talk time between charges.
Reviews by David Phelan.
Prices are for pay-as-you-go phones and include Vat but not delivery
Explore your passion for food with the delights of Thai, Indian & Chinese cooking
In our new series, Tony Hawks takes a dry, wry look at modern life - junk mail, interminable meetings and snooty sales assistants
Read the training tips and advice that helped our London Triathletes
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
2007
£30,000
2006
£14,337
2008
£39,937
Great car insurance deals online
c.£75,000
GlosFirstmeansbusiness
Gloucestershire
Competitive package
Npower
Midlands
£
£32,795 - £41,545
Universitry of Southampton
Southampton
Competitive Package
Npower
West Midlands
1 & 2 Bed apartments
From £249,995
Great Investment, River Views
Great Dubai Investment Opportunities
from £89,950
low-cost ownership homes in London
Multi–Centre 9 Nights
From only £925pp
View thousands of properties online with your Vacation Rental People
£POA
List your property with two leading travel websites
£POA
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Globrix Property Search - find property for sale and rent in the UK. Milkround Job Search - for graduate careers in the UK. Visit our classified services and find jobs, used cars, property or holidays. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.
No one mentioning the Nokia N82, all the features of the N95, plus a proper Xenon flash. It is also upgradeable memory-wise. The I-Phone seems to be just a triumph of form over content. It looks nice, but lacks all the features, even in the new 3G version.
Alan, BSB, Brunei
No MMS ! Arrrgghhh!!! the end of the world!!
I bought an iphone and discovered that i could send emails with photos for free. thats 2 megapixel images not some poxy little 320X320 image. There is no shutter lag on the camera which is a pain on every other mobile I've ever had.
dave, torquay,
"iPhone: A few minor features missing, but with regular firmware
upgrades can only improve."
No MMS.
No video.
2MP camera w/ no flash - cf the standard 5MP you get with all other high-end phones.
No front-camera for video-calling.
Can't be used as a memory stick.
No VOIP.
Don, London, UK
The N95 is not as popular as the iPhone for web browsing in the US.The new 3G iPhon will cement that in Europe.After many phones, using lots of different software, the thing that really matters is ease of use and the iPhone wins hands down.As Jobs has always said it's the software that defines Apple
george, London,
I cancelled my AT&T iPhone contract a couple of week ago and managed to sell my iphone for $350, which is just $50 less than retail. I ended up paying nearly $80 a month for not making very many calls. I also got done for over $1,000 of roaming internet charges on a visit to Europe. Never again.
Tony Stewart, Chicago, USA
I have the Samsung F490. I have had it for three weeks and I hate it. Making calls is a pain in the back side. scrolling through contacts or last call received/made it maddening. and when trying to answer or hang up it never seems to do it on the first attempt so i miss most incoming calls.
Chris, Yorks,
I've just ditched a 1st gen iPhone. Overrated & overhyped. Browsing was slow & the lack of MMS support annoyed me. Holding off for the Sony Ericsson Xperia X1 now. Has all the functionaity of the iPhone with a sliding qwerty KB, better camera with flash, better Exchange syncing, more software...
Mark, Zurich, Switzerland
"Iphone (sic) is nothing of interest to anyone outside of USA and a handful of kids."
Kids like MIMvista who have created Medical Mapping Applications, allowing doctors to see 3D scans bodies in the plam of their hand, like the investors in the $100m iFund...
iPhone is the platform of the future.
James Kelly, Wirral,
Jay - I have an N95 and overall am fairly happy with it, but it's not in this review because it does not have touchscreen capability, which is what this review is all about.
Dave L, Hertford,
iPhone like iPod ,set the standard , is 2 years ahead ,and knows the future of phones ...others always trying to catch up . It has a 90% "contented user rating" so everybody who has one loves it (against around 70% 2nd best) all critics haven't OWNED one . Software developers kit will seal the deal
Brett schlesinger, london, uk
I just ditched my N95 for an iPhone a couple of months ago (after the security scare about N95's) and wouldn't look back: web browsing is what I need on the road and the N95 was horrific -- the iPhone is superb. Now if I could just open/read Word documents on it, it'd be perfect.
Thomas Jackson, Oxford, UK
Windows Mobile - clunky user interface, typical Microsoft thinking: transpose a PC to a mobile. Not quite that simple.
Nokia: menu system designed for aliens.
Korean phones: no charisma.
iPhone: spot on interface. A few minor features missing, but with regular firmware upgrades can only improve.
SimonC, London, UK
The reviewer seems to be an Apple salesman !
The British 02 XDA range has been around with excellent touchscreens and a host of features for some years. I've used the Exec, Orbit and now have the Orbit2 model. These products are all excellent, and I wouldn't swap any of them for the Apple iPhone
Tom, Chester, UK
If I read the reports on the iPhone correctly this machine brings a new dimension as it is going to able to run a lot of software under development by a plethora of programmers. No longer just a phone more a mini pocket computer, no longer just a web browser and emailer.
Is Jobs is a visionary?
Tom Taylor-Duxbury, Ludlow, UK
RUBBISH REVIEW! what happened to the number 1 phone on the market the Nokia N95 8GB.
Iphone is nothing of interest to anyone outside of USA and a handful of kids.
Jay, Windsor, UK