Posts tagged HTC
T-Mobile Launches G2 Teaser Site, Set to be Carrier’s First HSPA+ Phone
Aug 18th
T-Mobile just posted up the teaser site for their first HSPA+ phone, the G2. Previous leaks of T-Mobile’s roadmap lead us to think that it will be a HTC Android device launching sometime in September. While the people at Engaget seem to think the smokey silhouette above looks like the myTouch HD that has been leaked previously, I think it better resembles another leak, the HTC Blaze. Whatever it is, it’s coming soon and should bring a hot piece of hardware to T-Mobile. While you wait, check out the G2′s teaser site and feel free to sign up for updates if you’re into that sort of thing. Otherwise, we’ll keep you posted.
Mobilicity Back To School Promos!
Aug 10th

An anonymous tipster, has given us a look at Mobilicity’s back to school promos which will be effective as of tomorrow. If you use Mobilicity, you definitely want to have a look-see.
We are excited to announce all of our Back-to-School promotions which include:
- $35 Plan now includes province-wide calling
- Recurring monthly credits on $35 – $65 plans
- $20 Multi Minute long distance add-ons
- HTC Snap™ Promotion
Hit the Jump for full details>>
Rate Plan Change: $35 Plan now includes province-wide calling! More improvements to our $35 Plan We have improved our $35 Plan to include unlimited province-wide calling. This makes Mobilicity the best value in the market for the $35 price point. Please note that this is a PERMANENT rate plan change, and all EXISTING customers on the $35 Plan will receive the province-wide calling as well, and will be notified via a phone call. Promo #1: Recurring Activation Credits Amazing offer – ends Sept. 6, 2010 New customers will receive recurring activation credits for the $35 plans and up for as long as they are a Mobilicity customer. The credit will be given to them within 24 hours of activation. The great thing about this promotion is that there is no expiry date! Customers will continue to receive the My Wallet credit as long as they activate their account before Sept. 6 and do not go into cancellation mode. Key points to note: Promo #2: Multi Minute Long Distance Add-Ons Introducing amazing Long Distance Add-Ons to 12 countries! For just $20 a month, customers can receive packaged Long Distance minutes to many countries. This can only be added once per month. The details are as follows: rate For more information and updated rates, please go to www.mobilicity.ca/addons Promo #3: HTC Snap™ Promotion Customers will receive a $50 credit if they purchase the HTC Snap™ handset! Activate the HTC Snap™ phone on ANY Mobilicity monthly plan and the customer will receive a $50 My Wallet Credit. This amount will be credited to their account in five (5) business days from the activation date.
Countries
Minutes included
Per minute
Bangladesh
900
0.02
Guyana
100
0.20
Iran
300
0.07
Iraq
250
0.08
Jamaica
150
0.13
Pakistan
300
0.07
Philippines
200
0.10
Sri Lanka
250
0.08
Trinidad & Tobago
300
0.07
Ukraine
250
0.08
United Kingdom
175
0.11
Vietnam
450
0.04

This Week In Android 8/1-8/7
Aug 8th
Even though this week was BlackBerry Torch week, that doesn’t mean Android didn’t have its fair share of news. Multiple numbers came in this week showing tremendous growth in the market share and mind share of Android handsets, the Nexus One isn’t completely dead, and there were various other Android phone release rumors and announcements. Check in after the break to see the week’s Android News.
Android is the best. Or, at least, it’s the most popular. Up 886% year over year.
Half of BlackBerry Users are Ready to Jump Ship to Android and iPhone
Froyo Hitting More Devices. Onto the next one!
Bell Samsung Vibrant launching August 6 for $149.95
Motorola Flipout Now Available From Rogers for $29.99
Android OS Takes the Lead from BlackBerry in Q2
Google Keeps the Nexus One Alive as an Official Developer Phone
Samsung Gem – a Wave with Android for Verizon?
Droid X Froyo Update Coming in “Early September”
HTC Desire Available From Telus for $79.99! Whoa!<Rumour: Bell Samsung Vibrant not unlockable
WIND Mobile Getting High End Motorola Milestone XT720 Android Device?
Google Keeps the Nexus One Alive as an Official Developer Phone
Aug 5th
Whew, that was a close one. Just when we thought HTC’s Nexus One was gone for good, Google’s Developer Blog has announced that the phone will still be available for Android Developers to purchase for $529. You will of course need to be a developer to be eligible to purchase a Nexus One so perhaps that $25 registration fee is worth it if you missed your chance to snag the phone earlier. Thanks Google, we were worried sick that we would lose the most hackable Android phone ever.
[Via Android Developers Blog]
This Week In Android 7/18-7/24
Jul 25th
It’s been a rough week for Android with the largest (and saddest) story being that the famous Google Nexus One is no longer available for sale from Google. GuruDaniel wrote a heart-wrenching salute to the handset, explaining how the Nexus One helped push Android hardware into the next generation, and how it is the ultimate slate for developers and hackers to build on. Other than that, we have a few Android handsets hitting the Canadian carriers Bell and Telus as well as an extra blurry shot of a Droid slider device hopefully headed to Verizon. Check in after the break to see what Android news you may have missed this week.
Google’s Nexus One Discontinued. Wherefore Art Thou, Open Android?
Bell To Get HTC Wildfire? Say It Ain’t So!
If A Droid and Palm Pre Had An Affair…This Would Be The Result
Android 2.1 clears half of all Android devices, Froyo creeps up
Apple Posts Antenna Attenuation Info Page
Jul 16th
Ooh, the heat is on. Along with being apologetic to iPhone 4 owners, Apple also doubles back with a “see, it happens to everyone” info page. While the news isn’t, news, so to speak, it does highlight the problem with holding any kind of phone. The reason it’s such a big deal now is likely do to the high profile nature of an iPhone and extremely targeted location it occurs at.
Apple demonstrates this by showing signal loss on various phones, including: the Samsung Omnia II, HTC Droid Eris, BlackBerry Bold 9700 and the iPhone 3GS. Apple also goes into some pretty surprising details about their antenna testing lab (the pictures are incredible). I think the attempt on Apple’s part is certainly worth noting, but ultimately won’t stop people from complaining that there exists a flaw in the design of the iPhone 4…, despite it being a physics issue that no one has conclusively solved.
Smartphone Antenna Performance via Apple
HTC Evo or Incredible Being Ported To GSM?
Jul 10th
Everyone knows about the Droid Incredible on Verizon and the HTC Evo on Sprint, and how, because they both run on CDMA-spec networks, they are incompatible with any other network. Contrast this to, for example, a Nexus One, which out of the box comes unlocked and compatible with multiple GSM carriers around the world (in two versions, however) as long as the radio bands are compatible. That means that if one should need to travel overseas, his or her Nexus One (or any other GSM-compatible device; I am just using the N1 as an example) should work to make phone calls and send text messages on a local network, as long as one buys a SIM card.
Up in Canada, we have are in an Android drought. Sure, the HTC Desire is coming to Telus shortly and the HTC Legend was just released on Bell, but it is unlikely that any Evo or Incredible-like devices are going to make their way up north any time soon. Canada’s carriers are phasing out their CDMA infrustructure, and it seems that the two aforementioned CDMA devices are US-exclusive.
So what happens when HTC decides to take those designs and port them over to make them GSM compatible? They could potentially go to a lot more places around the world. Sure, the EVO 4G will likely just be an HSPA device, but the world could use more Android handsets, period. According to Pocket-Lint, one of their tipsters mentioned that an HTC device, code named “Ace,” is going to be released later in the year in the UK, and has a striking similarity to the HTC HD2 (a sexy, Sense-covered Windows Mobile 6.5 device). Whether this is going to be a strict port of the Incredible or EVO, or a unique device altogether, we don’t know, but if it’s released in the UK, a Canadian/South American/European release can’t be too far off.
One has to wonder whether, by the time these ports are completed and released, the high-end specs (1GHZ Snapdragon 512MB RAM, etc.) will seem a bit antiquated. Newer dual-core Snapdragon processors are being released later in the year, and HTC surely has them already planned for devices. Personally, I’d like to see the EVO ported to GSM to run on Bell or Telus’ new HSPA+ network. That would be hot.
Exciting Times Ahead For QWERTY Android Lovers
Jul 5th
With the MyTouch 3G hitting T-Mobile recently, and the Droid 2 popping up in every leaked picture around, the demand for high-end smartphones with QWERTY keyboards doesn’t seem to be abating any time soon.
In Crotia, a so-called HTC Vision prototype has been making the rounds, and it looks unlike any HTC device yet released. Gone are the smooth curves of the Desire or the flush Black Beauty of the EVO 4G. This looks, for lack of a better term, practical. And why not?
Surely, if this is production hardware, the keyboard will need to be extremely comfortable to take people away from the Droid they love, but give it some GSM love and perhaps Canadians can finally get their hands on a decent QWERTY device.
Specs are speculated to be pretty much HTC-standard now: Android 2.1 with Sense UI, 1GHZ Snapdragon processor, 512MB RAM, 5MP Camera with LED flash, 1+GB storage.
There seems to be some errant buttons on the 4-row keyboard, however, that are stupefying most observers. Some speculate it is to prompt some Sense UI commands, others think it’s going to open the Matrix. We shall see.
(Gizmodo via Android Central)
A Weekend With Sense: First Impressions of Bell’s HTC Legend
Jun 22nd
I am sitting, as I have done the last few days, with three phones in front of me: a BlackBerry Bold 9700, a HTC Nexus One, and a HTC Legend.
Each have their own shortfalls and virtues; each is attractive in its own way; and certainly, each appeals to a different type of consumer. To have all three is to show the current breadth of choice in the consumer smartphone market. Certainly, to understand that the HTC Legend and Nexus One run Android is to miss the point. I purchased the Nexus One using Google’s short-lived online store, off-contract, unlocked, and completely open to root, hack, customize and play with. It’s proven to be a reliable phone, surviving slip after fall after puddle, and is what I would consider the closest to a true computer replacement ever released in a cellphone.
The BlackBerry is a messager’s dream. The keyboard, after years of use, is second nature, an extension of my two very active thumbs. Without thinking, they dance along the keyboard like upon a piano, spittin’ out lyrics, if you will. It is the phone I never leave home without, since it is the one I can rely on to actually be used as a phone, as a communications device. It serves its purpose. I no longer lust after ghost apps, ones that I would find on other platforms but are, like an amputated limb, missing from the App World. Once you come to terms with the BlackBerry as a wonderfully efficient email and messaging device, and little else, it is perhaps the best one ever made.
The HTC Legend is smack in the middle of the two aforementioned devices. It is beautiful: created from one piece of brushed aluminum, to hold it in your hand is to cradle a fine jewel or piece of art. Even without turning it on, its subtle combination of design excellence and austere presentation promotes the best of industrial smartphone design. There is, to be frank, nothing wrong with the device’s design. I could quibble about how, when removing the SIM card, your phone will turn off, since one side of the battery connector is attached the the piece, on the bottom of the device, that is taken off to get to the SIM card/microSD card. But that is necessitated by the design; one look at the back side of the Legend is justification enough for this design choice. As an evolution from the attractive, though markedly cheaper-looking HTC Hero, the Legend is a step in the right direction: it promotes build quality in the face of higher production and marketing costs.
The software, compared to the Hero, is also an evolutionary step in the right direction. The jump from Android 1.5 to 2.1 is the difference, even on similar hardware, between a slow-moving steam engine and a bullet train. The whole OS infrastructure has been made more efficient. The additions of voice-recognition throughout the OS, of multi-touch within the browser, maps and gallery apps, and the improvements made to HTC’s Sense UI, are unifying ingredients that make Android feel like much more of a well-rounded package. The problems that exist in stock Android builds, even the latest 2.2 build, are taken up by Sense with panache. Copy and paste mimic Apple’s implementation (a little too much, IMO); the HTC_IME keyboard is incredible; their mail app is vastly superior to stock Android; their widgets do not hamper your interactions with the OS but improve on them. I particularly enjoy the FriendStream widget, which provides, on the homescreen, Twitter, Facebook and Flickr feeds, in a clean, intuitive way.
Overall, the phone is stable, and speedy enough to engage in some multitasking without bogging down the system. The 600MHZ processor does not strain under most conditions, since the screen resolution is lower than on most high-end Android devices. You wouldn’t know it to look, though, since the AMOLED screen is sharp, bright and quite pleasant to look at, even in sunlight. I did notice the colours wash out quite a bit in the sun, but less so than on the Nexus One.
There was some slowdown, though I expect it is app-related more than problems with the OS. When typing in a text field in the browser, there is some nasty slowdown with the keyboard. The keyboard would flake out randomly, and then Force Close, the Android equivalent of a BSOD. It usually starts right back up, but it’s a consistent problem and one I hope improves with updates.
I noticed a problem with battery life, too. As a fairly low-use phone, I expected at least a full day out of a charge. Instead, even with minimal use from the browser, camera, SMS and phone calls, the battery would expire in 4-6 hours. Not acceptable for a device aimed at the mainstream. While I’m sure I could improve the longevity by keeping the brightness to a minimum and turning off all background apps, most users will leave the settings on default, such as auto-brightness, and install an RSS reader, Facebook, Twitter, etc., all of which use background resources every one in a while.
Bell’s network, in the two cities I used the device, Toronto and Montreal, and in between on the 401, was rock solid. I found a couple dead spots on the highway, but it would usually spring right back to life within a couple minutes. The speed was always good whether I was downloading apps or uploading pictures. I will say it again: Bell’s network is definitely the fastest 3G network in Canada at the moment.
The camera takes sharp pictures with its 5MP sensor, and the LED flash is a welcome addition. HTC’s camera app is much better than the stock Android version as well, and is so beloved among enthusiasts, it has been ported over to work with rooted stock devices such as the Nexus One. Its small size is perfect to slip in an out of a pocket to take quick snaps, and the optical trackpad works wonders as a shutter click.
Speaking of its small size, I cannot convey how wonderful this phone feels in your hands. It is a pleasure to use. Without exploding with hyperbole, I don’t think I have ever been more comfortable using a phone. It is noticeably lighter and smaller than the iPhone and Nexus One, thinner than both, and despite its smaller screen size, because of the text’s sharpness, I never missed the higher resolution of the N1. There is something to be said for chemistry between a person and his or her phone; it may seem trifling, but the phone you buy is an important decision: you’re going to use it for hours a day, every day. For it to feel comfortable and inviting in your hands is essential, and something I believe people overlook when making their decision.
There are things I’ve overlooked. I will get to them in the video review. Suffice it to that, however, that for $79.99 on a 3-year term, the HTC Legend is a bargain on either Bell or Virgin Mobile. For $399 at Bell (or $350 at Virgin Mobile), you can purchase it outright, unlock it and use it on any Canadian provider, or AT&T in the US. Until the Desire arrives in its NAM 3G form, this is the most desirable Android device in Canada: sorry Milestone, Liquid E et al.
For more information on the device, check out HTC’s page, and to get it on Bell, hit up their store.
HTC EVO 4G and HTC Droid Incredible Hit With Screen Issues
Jun 15th
While the HTC Incredible may be immune to the screen issues that affect the Nexus One, it looks like there is a new and potentially more annoying issue which affects not only the Incredible, but it’s new big brother, the HTC EVO 4G. The new problem has to do with faulty grounding in the screens of both HTC devices causing the upper portion of the screen to become unresponsive when not being held. As you can see from the picture above, this causes some serious problems when you’re not actually holding the device and can make simple tasks like pulling down the notification shade impossible.
Seriously, can anyone actually push out one of these “superphones” without all the hiccups we’re currently seeing. Maybe Motorola? Samsung? Anyone?
Hit the break for the depressing footage.
[Via Engadget]











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