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HTC P6550 Sedna Enterprise smartphone gets real, specs

By: , IntoMobile
Tuesday, August 14th, 2007 at 6:29 PM

HTC P6550 Sedna Windows Mobile 6.0 Professional smartphone for enterpriseAs far as enterprise phones are concerned, there just aren’t phones out there that really catches our eye. It always seems like there’s just that little “something” that’s missing from the feature-set or user experience. But, it looks like HTC is trying to change that with their upcoming HTC P6550 (codenamed Sedna). We’re a little embarrassed that the Windows Mobile 6.0 Professional-powered Sedna slipped by us relatively unnoticed, but it’s better late than never.

The same leaked product roadmap that gave us details on the HTC Nike and HTC Kaiser (can you blame us for overlooking the Sedna in the Kaiser’s bright spotlight?) also gave us a peek at the HTC Sedna. The P6550 rocks almost every feature you can imagine for a WM6 phone, a full QWERTY-keyboard (or keypad, for that matter) has been omitted in favor of the touchscreen – a la WM6 Professional. But, with a spec-sheet that reads like a technological showcase, we can do without any keyboard or keypad:

  •  Qualcomm MSM7200, 400MHz chipset
  •  Memory: 256 MP ROM, 64 or 128 RAM, Optional 1GB NAND Flash
  •  Windows Mobile 6.0
  •  Quad-band: GSM 850/900/1800/1900, EDGE, GPRS
  •  WCDMA tri-band 2100 or 850/1900 MHz, HSDPA 7.2 Mbps
  •  WiFi b/g, Bluetooth, miniUSB
  •  3.5? QVGA TFT touchscreen
  •  3 megapixel camera with autofocus
  •  A-GPS
  •  Fingerprint reader
  •  2 MMC/SDIO expansion slots
  •  Dimensions: 137×72×21 mm
  •  Optional credit card reader/extended battery

Heaps of RAM (up to 1GB?!), HSDPA, WiFi, A-GPS, and fingerprint security? We can’t wait to get our hands on this thing! Hopefully, HTC won’t be making us have to memorize any more names – “HTC P6550 Sedna” is long enough.

[Via: Unwired View]

About The Author

Will Park

Will hails from The City of Angels - Los Angeles, California. He spends his time playing with his numerous gadgets and looking forward to seeing what future holds for mobile technology. An avid promoter of a fully "digital" life, he promotes the widespread adoption of truly mobile, paper-less living. He dreams of the day when he can go completely digital. No more snail mail, paper receipts, bound books, notepads/spiral notebooks, credit cards, hard currency. He's a digital warrior - fighting for the converged life. He is an idealist and a realist - he has a perfect view of what the world should be but knows that the world is not perfect. Can we ever hope to see Will's dream become reality? We'll see...