The Wing features a slider design; just slide the front face of the smart phone to the left and turn it on its side to expose the full QWERTY keyboard. The screen also automatically switches from portrait to landscape mode, but there were a couple seconds of delay, which got to be annoying.
The T-Mobile Wing is one of the first Windows Mobile 6 smart phones shipping in the United States. It replaces the T-Mobile MDA and features a revamped design.
Some of the biggest differences between the T-Mobile Wing and the T-Mobile MDA are in design. The Wing now sports a midnight blue casing and features a soft-touch finish that gives the phone a rubberlike texture.
Overall, we found the keyboard easy to use, though certainly not perfect. While the individual buttons are large and tactile, we missed the extra spacing between keys.
At 2.3 inches wide by 4.3 inches high by 0.7 inch deep, the Wing is actually slightly thinner than the MDA (2.3 inches by 4.3 inches by 0.9 inch). However, at 6 ounces, the Wing is heavier than its predecessor, and the difference is quite noticeable.
The T-Mobile Wing has an upgraded 2-megapixel camera with an 8x zoom and video-recording capabilities. It took sharp-looking pictures, but there was a yellowish tone to the images.
The T-Mobile Wing's QWERTY keyboard now features square buttons (rather than the MDA's oval-like ones) with no spacing between the keys--very similar to the keyboard found on the Cingular 8525. There are also two new, small LEDs at the top of the keyboard that illuminate blue to confirm the Caps or Alt functions.
There's about 40MB of user-accessible memory, but you can always expand the capacity by using the microSD expansion slot, which is located on the left side.
In addition to the touch screen, you can use the navigation controls below the display to operate the smart phone. These include two soft keys, the Talk and End buttons, a new shortcut to the Start menu, an OK button, and a four-way navigation toggle with a central Select key.
The T-Mobile Wing comes packaged with a belt holster and an audio/charging cable (pictured here) as well as a travel charger, a USB cable, a stereo headset, and reference material.
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