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HTC Trophy

HTC 7 Trophy
HTC Trophy smartphone.jpg
Manufacturer HTC Corporation
Availability by country May 26, 2011 - United States
Discontinued End of January 2013
Form factor Slate smartphone
Dimensions 118.5 mm (4.67 in) (h)
65.5 mm (2.42 in) (w)
11.96 mm (0.47 in) (d)
Weight 140 g (4.94 oz)
Operating system Windows Phone 7
CPU Qualcomm QSD8250 1GHz Scorpion (Snapdragon)
Qualcomm QSD8650 1GHz Scorpion (Snapdragon) on Verizon
Memory 576 MB RAM
Storage 512 MB ROM
Removable storage 16 GB internal micro SD Card on Verizon
8 GB on other carriers
Battery 1300 mAh Lithium-ion or Lithium-ion polymer
Data inputs Multi-touch touchscreen display
Dual microphone
3-axis accelerometer
Digital compass
Proximity sensor
Ambient light sensor
Display 3.8-inch (diagonal) widescreen
480-by-800 WVGA
Rear camera 5 megapixel autofocus with flash, rear-facing, with 720p video capture
Front camera None
Connectivity CDMA EV-DO 800/1900, 2100 HSPA, WCDMA
850/900/1800/1900 GSM, EDGE on Verizon Wireless
900/2100 HSPA, WCDMA
850/900/1800/1900 GSM, EDGE on all other carriers
Other Wi-Fi, FM-Radio, GPS
Development status Available
Hearing aid compatibility M4/T4

The HTC Trophy (Referred to as the 7 Trophy in all countries except the US) is one of several Windows Phone handsets produced by HTC Corporation.

In late 2008, a HTC roadmap leaked to the technology press featuring future HTC devices. One of these was labeled the HTC Trophy. A BlackBerry reminiscent phone, the device sported a 3-inch touchscreen with a portrait Qwerty keyboard and a trackball. For several years, this phone was not heard of again, largely due to the internal shakeups going on at Microsoft involving the move from Windows Mobile 7.0 to Windows Phone 7 Series (Later renamed Windows Phone 7), as well as problems with development of the KIN devices. When Microsoft announced its new mobile OS at Mobile World Congress 2010, most journalists assumed that the HTC Trophy had been abandoned. But a new model (codenamed HTC Spark) began to appear in leaked spy shots, and the phone was released as the HTC 7 Trophy to international markets on October 21, 2010. In January 2011, a leaked internal document to Microsoft employees appeared on Engadget's website. It offered the phone for $199.99 to Microsoft employees. Many took this to mean that the phone would soon be launching on Verizon's network. After several more leaks, Verizon announced the phone on May 19, 2011 to be available in early June.

It was discontinued by the end of January 2013.

The Trophy features a 3.8" capacitive touchscreen display that is a WVGA LCD panel on international versions, and a WVGA SLCD panel on the US Verizon version. The phone has a 1 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor (QSD8250) with 512 Mb of ROM and 576 Mb of RAM. International versions have 8 GB of built-in storage on a (non-user accessible) microSD card, while US versions have 16. Verizon has updated the Trophy smartphone with a new update to the HTC Trophy 8107. The updated will fixes a Gmail syncing issue, a location access issue, an email issue involving Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 and disappearing virtual keyboards.

In addition to having specification differences, the Trophy and 7 Trophy have slight design differences as well. The 7 Trophy features a bright yellow battery compartment (typical of HTC Windows Mobile devices in the past), whereas the Trophy has a bright red battery compartment (to acknowledge the phone's Verizon ties). Press images of the Verizon device also appear to show a small circular cutout beneath the battery door, and above the Windows Phone logo. This circle is an external antenna port cover.


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