Tag Archive | "htc desire"

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A Look At The HTC Desire

Posted on 01 September 2010 by cellphone

HTC has been manufacturing smartphones for a number of years now, but it wasn’t until they switched to building them based on the Android operating system, that they started to see the success that has made them one of the big names in the market. Having created the Legend and Google’s Nexus One, HTC have now launched the HTC Desire. But what makes it better than the Legend, and as good as the Nexus One?

On the face of it, there doesn’t appear to be much difference between the Nexus One and the Desire. The Desire has a quality feel to it, even it it doesn’t benefit from the same unibody construction as the Nexus One. The touchscreen is a decent size and looks good, especially when you notice that it has both the traditional clickable buttons, as well as the additional ones located on the touchscreen. The optical trackball adds an air of sophistication without looking too delicate.

The Desire is pretty impressive on the inside too. Underneath the 3.7 inch AMOLED screen there’s a fast Snapdragon processor to make dealing with all the different apps and functions a fast and painless experience. HTC have also increased the RAM to 512MB just to make sure there’s enough memory to match the processing power.

The HTC Desire has excellent still and video capture capabilities, thanks to the 5 megapixel camera that comes with autofocus and an LED flash. Video recording might not be in full 720p hi definition, but it is a higher resolution than the Legend and the Nexus One. The Desire also captures photographs in the wider 5:3 format, which means you get a lot more out of your camera phone photography than you do with a lot of other smartphones.

Since abandoning Windows Mobile on most of its smartphones, HTC has forged ahead with Android, and the Desire demonstrates even further development with HTC’s Sense user interface. Overlaying the Android platform Sense works well and lets users easily and smoothly navigate around the phone. Recent additions to the Sense user interface have included the social network aggregator Friendstream, as well as the home screen manager Leap, and these only help to strengthen the case for the HTC Desire being a smartphone that people love to use.

From an almost standing start a few years ago, HTC has already proved they can manufacture the kind of smartphones that users want to buy. With high spec technology and impressive software, the HTC Desire simply reinforces this idea.

Now Try - HTC Desire Deals

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HTC Desire : An Overview

Posted on 21 August 2010 by cellphone

HTC came out of the gates swinging with the highly impressive Legend smartphone. The company has followed up that device with the Desire, a phone HTC hopes will leave the Android crowd reeling. A large number of people who have tested the handset mention the Desire?s resemblance to the Nexus One. This isn?t to say that the phone is a rip off or some sort of inferior product.

The Desire, in fact, is packaged with HTC Sense which already provides better usability right out of the package than the Nexus One. The phone is by no means huge, measuring 119 x 60 x 11.9mm. This makes it just a bit larger than its cousin the Nexus One, but not gargantuan by any stretch of the imagination. Of course, the Desire would be a little bigger in order to house the large 3.7-inch OLED capacitive touch screen. The AMOLED display offers 800 x 480 pixel resolution, creating sharper images than most other Android phones.

A display this impressive needs to be paired with a camera that is also of high quality. Although it may not blow the doors off the joint, the 5-megapixel camera from the Legend is brought to the Desire. Maybe not exactly completely complementary to the display, the camera still offers an aspect ratio of 5:3 on its still images which is a nice, wide picture. The video recorder on the Desire shoots in 800 x 480p resolution, an improvement over the Legend and the Nexus One. In low light, the Desire?s recorder does reduce frame rate, but this is in order to extend exposure time to compensate for relatively dark settings.

Mentioned previously, HTC placed the Sense user interface in addition to Android 2.1 on the Desire. Whole screen weather effects really make the most of Desire?s impressive display. Seven homescreens are available on the Sense UI, and Live View is new to the Desire. Live View takes the seven panels and shrinks them to thumbnails with pinch to zoom. Applications and the ability to perform multiple ones effectively are vital to Android phones. With its incredible 576MB of RAM, the Desire is able to multitask at speeds up to anyone?s standards. The Desire also introduces Friend Stream, which is basically the answer to Motoblur. Friend Stream takes Facebook, Flickr, and Twitter updates and places them in a single timeline.

Comprised of all of the best features of the Legend, the HTC Desire has updated that handset. The HTC Desire is the next logical step after a phone that was already well-received. Instead of breaking the mold, HTC took what worked and improved upon it.

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What You Need To Know About The HTC Desire

Posted on 24 July 2010 by cellphone

Continuing from the HTC Legend, this company has now released the HTC Desire, which has a lot of similar features to the previous phone. However, the HTC Desire comes with a bigger screen and meatier processor, so you can navigate far more quickly and easily. The 1GHz processor that comes with the phone is about as powerful as any smartphone can be right now. With this processor, you can run applications very quickly, as well as multitask a number of apps at a time.

The Android 2.1 operating system and HTC Sense user interface are found on this phone, allowing you to get around the myriad features of this phone very conveniently. All you have to do is pinch zoom on a main screen, or just double tap the Home button, and you can quickly glance at all of your home screens, of which you can have up to seven. Just tap the screen you want and you are on your way. You can customize fully each of your seven home screens with the applications you are looking for.

The HTC Desire really shines when it comes to its superior touch screen, which measures in at 3.7″, which is larger than any other smartphone on the market, giving it a lot of information with its 480 x 800 pixel resolution. You can see these applications very sharply with the AMOLED technology behind the screen, which can come in handy when you are reading a lot of small print in web browsing and reading emails.

With the bigger screen, you can use the touch-screen QWERTY keyboard very easily no matter what mode you are in, allowing you to minimize the typos that usually come with these types of interfaces. This way, it is simpler than ever to send out a little email very quickly, and you can look at Word, Excel and PowerPoint files with the Quick Office program, and PDFs are easier to access than ever before with the PDF reader.

If you have had an Android smartphone before, you should find a lot to love with these front buttons. Along with the Menu and Home buttons, you can get Back and Search buttons as well, the Search button accessing Google at the same time as your device. All you have to do is tap the phrase you want to search for, and you will find everything that pertains to it on both Google and your phone. The search results will narrow as you keep typing, leaving the Google search by itself if nothing pertinent shows up on your phone, making it incredibly intuitive.

Now Try - HTC Desire Deals

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The HTC Desire

Posted on 16 May 2010 by cellphone

The HTC Desire is a powerhouse of a smartphone, running off a 1GHz Snapdragon processor and a massive 576MB of RAM. The results speak for themselves, with consistently fast load times and a very responsive interface. Importantly, the HTC Desire also makes the grade as an actual mobile phone, something which, oddly, some people forget to consider when buying a smartphone these days. Calls sound clear in a variety of situations, and messaging is easy as a result of the great on-screen keyboard.

The HTC Desire’s user interface offers a mixture of usability and style that sets it apart from the competition. It features seven customizable homescreens, to which you can apply a wide range of widgets and shortcuts. Out of the box, you will find a good selection of apps and web shortcuts to play with, representing the corporations behind the release, and any service or tool not on the phone when you receive can be found on the Android Market to download.

Browsing the web is a good experience rather than a pain, as pages render correctly and load quickly. Abode Flash content is supported too, unlike with the iPhone. The media player is better than average, but nothing revolutionary. It plays most of the standard assortment of video and music files, all of which look great on the screen and sound great on the speakers. The camera is a cut above the standard ones used on smartphones, but the quality does not seem to be as good as it should be for a 5 megapixel camera.

The HTC Desire supports a wide range of communication methods, from Facebook and Twitter, to old favorites like SMS and email. Staying in touch with contacts and is one of the highest priorities to those using smartphones and HTC has recognized that and met the need. The HTC Desire ticks all of the relevant boxes, and does it in some really innovative ways.

HTC has made sure the Desire is as good for business as it is for fun, and has extended its normal support for Microsoft Exchange email to include the ability to search a corporate database for contacts - a feature rarely seen on any other smartphone. Quickoffice is installed for viewing and editing Microsoft Office documents, and the HTC calendar is a winner with its clean user interface and the integration of up-to-date weather forecasts into calendar entries.

The HTC Desire will, inevitably, always be compared to the iPhone. Performance wise, there is nothing to choose between the two, so it really comes down to whether you want a smartphone for fun or for a particular purpose. If it is the latter, then the HTC Desire is the smartphone for you.

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