


The video quality of the Tilt 2's camera was also "middle of the road." Panning was smooth, focus acceptable, and the footage was a shade darker than other HTC cameras. You have eight capture modes including still photos, videos, video share, contact photos, panoramas, MMS videos, Theme photos (frame templates) and GPS photos (tags your pictures with GPS coordinates) to video. I was hoping you could map the PTT button to serve as the shutter button but then again, it might be a little awkward to manipulate.
TILT TO LIVE FREEZE 200 ACHEVEMENT SOFTWARE
The Tilt 2 runs the standard HTC camera software and with the absence of a directional pad, you're left with using a shutter symbol to snap the picture. With the Tilt 2 there were no delays in screen rotation when extending the keyboard and about a half-second delay in rotating the screen. One issue that was present with the AT&T Fuze was a slight delay with screen rotation. I'll maintain that it's better to have the tilt feature and not need it than need it and not have it. I can live with or without it but will admit, it comes in handy when watching video. I'm still on the fence with the tilting screen. This is a wondrous invention that eliminates the need to hunt for the power/sleep button to turn on your screen when you're on a call. When you move the phone away, the screen turns back on. When you move the phone to your ear, the sensor turns off the screen. I did notice that there was a slight blue cast on the screen but discount it because AT&T's themes incorporate so much blue. Simply put, it's a great screen both in responsiveness and image quality. While the Pure's 3.2-inch screen is noticeably larger than the Fuze, the Tilt 2's 480x800, 3.6-inch screen dwarfs both of them. I've been using the AT&T Pure for a few weeks and before that, the AT&T Fuze.
