Shortly after HTC announced the HTC Touch on June 5, 2007, word came of a CDMA version of the handheld. This CDMA version (CDMA is the network technology used by Sprint and Verizon in the U.S.) is called the HTC Vogue.
The HTC Vogue features a layered interface called TouchFLO touchscreen technology. In short, the Vogue is designed to be controlled more by your finger than a stylus (though a stylus is included). With TouchFLO, the screen can detect the difference between the touch of a finger and the tap of a stylus; the new screen can also accept "sweeps" of the finger as different commands, similar to, though perhaps not as sophisticated as, the multi-touch interface found on the Apple iPhone.
Like the Touch, the HTC Vogue has a respectable feature set beyond TouchFLO; the handset is powered by Windows Mobile 6 Professional, is available with both 802.11g and Bluetooth 2.0 onboard, is compatible with high speed EVDO Revision A wireless networks, and has a 2MP digital camera. Other features include 256MB of flash memory, 256MB of RAM, a microSD card slot (with an included 1GB card) and an 1100mAh Li-Ion battery.