Performance

Of course, performance on the Surround should be in line with the other WP7 devices, which we covered in the launch piece. With the Surround, you get a 1 GHz Qualcomm QSD8250 SoC with 488 MB of LPDDR1, and 512 MB of NAND onboard in JBOD with the 16 GB internal microSD card. Like the rest of the WP7 lineup, we’re dealing with basically the same kind of SoC performance. 

I was surprised previously when there was an  performance disparity between the HTC Surround and the two other WP7 devices we had - the Optimus 7 and Focus. Interestingly enough, I re-ran those two tests and performance fell in place right where it should be:

Rightware BrowserMark

Sunspider as well:

SunSpider Javascript Benchmark 0.9

We’ve talked in the launch piece about IE browser responsiveness on the platform in general. While panning around inside WP7 after the page is loaded is very speedy thanks to GPU acceleration, loading is measurably slower than the competition. You can really get a sense of that from the Browsermark numbers above, and the video below. 

The rest of the story about the HTC Surround is that it’s indeed in line with the rest of the WP7 devices we’ve tested thus far. 

Battery Life

If you read the launch piece, you already know the state of battery life for WP7, which I’ll repeat below. The HTC Surround and rest of the WP7 lineup uses Qualcomm’s 65nm SoC which doesn’t exactly help things, but overall Microsoft has done a good job keeping things reasonable. These tests are again our standard smartphone battery life tests - for call time, we place a call and make noise at both ends until the connection drops, for WiFi and 3G we keep the screen on at 50% brightness and cycle through pages roughly every 20 seconds. 

   3G Web Browsing Battery Life

3G Talk Time Battery Life

WiFi Web Browsing Battery Life   

Again, battery life isn’t iPhone 4 level, but middle of the pack with Android devices. 

HTC Surround Disassembled: microSD inside Final Thoughts
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  • banvetor - Sunday, November 14, 2010 - link

    Really? Wow, the US cellphone companies are really screwed... But anyway, I'm from Brazil and currently I live in Italy, and in both places you can have the plan you want with whatever cell phone you have...

    Since I believe that many Anandtech readers do not live in the US, the "offline" analysis should still be valid... and also, maybe this screwed behavior is only at AT&T?
  • strikeback03 - Monday, November 15, 2010 - link

    No, common on the major US carriers at least. And while it is an added expense, IMO data on the go is the reason to have a smartphone. I almost never use mine on WiFi, as places I have WiFi I usually have a computer as well. If they did offer pay-as-you-go Data, it would likely be at high enough prices to encourage getting a plan anyway.
  • Nataku - Monday, November 15, 2010 - link

    really? they did that without telling you and that's legal?

    im amazed... now i need to think about whether or not I should even be getting one... I hope the rules aren't the same in Canada lol
  • Brian Klug - Monday, November 15, 2010 - link

    Hey Leo,

    That's actually a very valid point - I realize we have a large international audience and am pushing to get a lot more international devices into our coverage. I realize so far it's been a bit myopic with this tunnel-vision like focus on devices for US carriers, but we're working hard to mix it up with everything from abroad as well. I've actually got the LG Optimus One here (which is UK/Orange bound, if I'm not mistaken), which will be our first international device.

    Anyhow, I digress. Yeah, I'll definitely include some discussion about what you can do with data off. Thankfully WP7 does let you turn cellular data off entirely - then you're basically limited to text and voice when out and about. I know with WP7 everything is required to be cached, so apps should work, they just won't serve much purpose if they require a data connection. Obviously WiFi will work whenever you're connected as well.

    Honestly these smartphones are of marginal use without cellular data. I think Vivek rolls without a data plan most of the time, and he manages to get by just fine with the G2 and a bunch of others.

    Thanks again (sorry about the delayed response),
    Brian
  • QueBert - Sunday, November 14, 2010 - link

    So basically this is the loudest speaker on a cell phone, yet it's still close to 10db quieter than the Sunchip bag. Apple, Samsung, Moto, some cell phone manufacture obviously needs to incorporate the same technology Frito-Lay used to make the Sunchip biodegradable bag so damn loud.
  • JimmiG - Sunday, November 14, 2010 - link

    I can see this as becoming something very annoying in schools, on trains and buses etc. I think the world would have been a better place without this phone.
  • DaveGirard - Sunday, November 14, 2010 - link

    those photos are awful. It's all filter and no camera.
  • Tros - Sunday, November 14, 2010 - link

    Maybe the phone needs to be in boombox-aspect to expose the microphone properly.
  • Brian Klug - Monday, November 15, 2010 - link

    This is a very interesting suggestion - if I get time, I'll test it out. That actually might end up being the case.

    -Brian
  • rackley - Sunday, November 14, 2010 - link

    Nice review - I'm looking forward to seeing the review of the Focus, especially since you mentioned the PenTile display.

    Personally I think the Focus's display of text looks pretty bad with PenTile next to a Surround or LG, but I'd love to hear your always-detailed analysis of the issue.

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