Want CNET to notify you of price drops and the latest stories?
X
CNET logo Why You Can Trust CNET

Our expert, award-winning staff selects the products we cover and rigorously researches and tests our top picks. If you buy through our links, we may get a commission. Reviews ethics statement

HTC Tattoo indelibly marks your flesh with cut-price Android goodness

HTC is bringing Android to the people with the HTC Tattoo, an inexpensive Android touchscreen phone you can customise with switchable covers featuring your own snaps

2 min read
Advertiser Disclosure
Advertiser Disclosure
This advertising widget is powered by Navi and contains advertisements that Navi may be paid for in different ways. You will not be charged for engaging with this advertisement. While we strive to provide a wide range of offers, this advertising widget does not include information about every product or service that may be available to you. We make reasonable efforts to ensure that information in the featured advertisements is up to date, each advertiser featured in this widget is responsible for the accuracy and availability of its offer details. It is possible that your actual offer terms from an advertiser may be different than the offer terms in this advertising widget and the advertised offers may be subject to additional terms and conditions of the advertiser which will be presented to you prior to making a purchase. All information is presented without any warranty or guarantee to you.

Despite its open-source origins, phones with the Google Android operating system don't come cheap. Even the proto-droid T-Mobile G1, with its Neanderthal looks, will still fleece you of £27.50 per month on an 18-month contract. HTC hopes to remedy that with the HTC Tattoo.

The Tattoo is an inexpensive phone that still has the Sense user interface we loved on the incredible HTC Hero. We're already Android fans, but Sense adds heaps of good stuff to the basic little green robot package, such as a better on-screen keyboard and the ability to merge your Facebook and Flickr contacts and photo albums with the contacts on your phone -- although we're waiting for HTC to confirm which of the Hero's features will make it to the cut-price Tattoo.

The Tattoo will also have a switchable cover, which is always a fun tweak, and HTC will be offering an online service where Tattoo-ists can make covers from their own images, or choose from a collection of pre-designed covers. HTC tells us turnaround for custom covers will betwo weeks, but we're still waiting to hear how much the covers will cost, and the order site isn't up and running yet.

The Tattoo will have a 3.2-megapixel camera -- the same resolution as the HTC Magic. There's also a standard 3.5mm headphone jack, so you can use your own headphones, which the Magic doesn't offer. Unfortunately, it looks like the Tattoo will lack the usual Android trackball -- a nubbin we just love to rub -- and have a four-way navigation pad instead.

There's 7.2Mbps HSDPA on board for fast downloads over 3G, as well as Wi-Fi, and expandable memory thanks to a microSD card slot. GPS and a compass will get you into all those augmented-reality apps, which you can download along with heaps of others from the Android Market. And in a thrilling Android first, it'll have the most underrated feature in showbusiness: an FM radio. Tattoo, we're falling a little bit in love with your reasonably priced body.

The Tattoo will be on our shelves at the beginning of October and we'll let you know prices as soon as we have them.

Update: HTC tells us the Tattoo will cost from free on a £25-per-month, 18-month contract, which we think is pretty freaking great. No word on which networks it'll be available on.