-
HTC brings passion back with Desire
HTC brings passion back with Desire
by Magnus Nystedt
Although it was introduced at Mobile World Congress in February, the HTC Desire smartphone has just arrived in the Middle East. Finally, after we’ve been told since April that it would launch here, it’s available at a list price of AED 2,299.
Much has happened in the nine months since the introduction but it’s still one of the best Android smartphones available right now.
Google’s Nexus One, introduced in January, was manufactured by HTC and Desire is basically their version of that same smartphone. It has a 3.7-inch 480 x 800 pixel display, which is very bright and clear. With a 1GHz processor it’s fast and I’ve yet to experience any slow down even when running multiple applications. The 512MB RAM could be a bit larger but for most users it will be enough and with micro-SD card slot (up to 32GB) you can expand storage.
The Desire feels high-quality without any of the typical plastic noises when you press and bend it slightly. I would say the only exception is the back, which you have to take off with a small measure of violence, making me very nervous every time. Behind the cover you find SIM card, MicroSD card and battery.
One obvious drawback is the lack of Android Market on Desires sold in the UAE. If you spend over 2,000 on a device you really expect more. But practice your Google skills and find out how to hack it to get Market enabled and you’ll be fine. It’s sad you have to do that though and the parties should really come together and sort this situation out.
Desire comes with Android 2.1 and HTC in Dubai wouldn’t say when 2.2 can be expected. My review unit updated Over The Air (OTA) to 2.2 “Froyo” without issues and it makes a big difference.
There’s simply no doubt that you want Android 2.2 on your Desire as it brings a line of updates and new functionality. For example, with 2.2 you get 720p HD video recording, portable Wi-Fi access point, iTunes sync, and Adobe Flash support.
Desire’s 5-megapixel camera produces very good photos and video. For a lot of users and with good available light, the camera is good enough to replace a low-end compact digital camera.
The WebKit-based web browser is very fast, probably due to the processor, and loading pages, zoom in/out, scroll around, etc. all happens instantly. This obviously also depends on your connection speed.
HTC Sense, their proprietary software, is by and large nice but I wish it could be disabled as I would prefer just the standard Android look. The functionality of the built-in apps like the Twitter app Peep is also substandard. However, for many of you, Sense will bring different functionality together in one place under one interface.
Overall, the Desire is an excellent smartphone. The choice between it and Samsung Galaxy S is tough one. Although it is late arriving to our market, for now, I prefer the Desire.This article originally appeared in Khaleej Times. The articles are published here one week after they appear in print. You can find all my Khaleej Times articles here.
-
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
Radio 2010-08-31
- HTC’s version of Google Nexus One (HTC manufactured Nexus One for Google)
- 3.7-inch 480 x 800 pixel display, very bright, clear
- 1GHz processor, fast
- 512MB RAM
- micro-SD card slot (up to 32GB)
- Feels high-quality (only exception is the back, which you have to take off with a small measure of violence)
- Android 2.1 (update to 2.2 OTA, Over The Air)
- No Android Market in UAE
- 5MP camera, good quality, face detection
- Would have liked camera button on outside
- 1280x720 HD video recording
- FM radio
- Portable Wi-Fi access point
- Fast web browser, easy to zoom in/out, scroll around
- HTC Sense, proprietary UI, I wish this could be disabled. User should have a choice.
- Adobe Flash 10.1 is avaialble for 2.2 but I’ve not managed to get it installed yet.
- “Broadly available by the end of August 2010”
- AED 2,299
- Network Attached Storage (NAS))
- Room for 2 x 3.5-inch hard drives
- Lockable compartment
- Easy to swap drives
- Display with status, IP, etc.
- Admin via web browser
- FTP, Torrent, iTunes, DLNA.
- Buffalo has service which lets you connect to the TeraStation from over the Internet.
- Price: 1TB AED 2,299 ($609.99), 2TB AED 2,899 ($759.99), 4TB AED 4,599 ($1,199.99)
- Battery-operated printer
- 5-color ink system let you print at 9600 x 2400 dpi
- Speed according to Canon: black up to 20 ppm, color up to 14 ppm
- Print 1 color page, high photo quality, 1min 52sec
- Connect with USB cable
- IrDA (infrared)
- Optional Bluetooth interface
- PictBridge compatible (connect directly to camera to print)
- There is no case for it
- No card slot (SD card, CF card)
- No display
- AED 1,239 with battery
Some Eid gift ideas:
- MP3 player: New iPod nano (if rumors are true)
- Smartphone: Samsung Galaxy S, HTC Desire
- Notebook: Apple MacBook, Sony Vaio Z
- Desktop: Apple iMac, Asus EeeTop PC ET2010PNT (all-in-one with touchscreen)
- Accessory for Mac users: anything from Just Mobile or Twelve South, or Apple’s Magic TrackPad
- Hard drive: G-Technology G-Drive, Buffalo
- For PC gamers: Belkin Nostromo N52te control pad
- PC/Mac game: StarCraft 2
- Console game: Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2
- Digital camera: Sony CyberShot NEX-3/5