Hardware
We've already given away the game earlier, but in addition to the handsome unibody chassis and the 8 megapixel camera (with Xenon flash), there's also the now-common 1GHz Snapdragon chipset, along with a sharp 3.7-inch SLCD (with better color reproduction and viewing angle than the
HD7's) and 8GB storage capacity. On the front there are three backlit capacitive buttons below the screen, whereas above the screen you see a shiny grill for the earpiece plus an LED indicator underneath. The remaining buttons -- all in matte silver -- are located on the sides: volume rocker on the left, power button at the top (where the 3.5mm headphone jack resides as well), and the two-stage camera button at the bottom right. Before we move to the back, we'd like to make a little complaint about the screen's two side edges: they're pretty sharp. Not the knife kind of sharp, but sharp enough to cause discomfort. This is particularly noticeable when we brush our thumbs across either edge, which almost feels and sounds like stroking the edge of some paper card.
Things get a whole lot more interesting when you turn to the back of the 7 Mozart, and we will confess: there have been moments where we spent minutes just quietly admiring HTC's artwork from all sorts of angles. There's a certain dynamism in the non-symmetrical design that keeps us absorbed. In brief, imagine a hollow block of aluminum with large parts of its top-left and bottom-left corners sawn off on the backside, and then there are two triangular rubber pieces -- same material as battery door on the Desire and Trophy -- that cover up the holes. But that's not all: the key to this seductive sculpture is the triangular dent milled onto the metal, which not only steals your attention with its highlights from various angles, but we also suspect that this is a subtle homage to HTC's previous logo. Cute.
Going back to the rubberized triangles: the top one -- which houses the camera, Xenon flash, power button and headphone jack -- is not user-removable; whereas the bottom one doubles up as a fully detachable battery cover plus an antenna (so don't lose it!), and underneath it lies a flap that stops your battery from slipping off -- basically just like the Legend. As for battery life, we managed to get somewhere around seven to eight hours of typical usage, which is pretty standard for smartphones these days; however, it'll be interesting to see what happens when we get more third party apps that support background notification.
Gallery: Samsung Omnia 7 vs HTC HD7 and 7 Mozart