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Posts tagged Legend
Bell To Get HTC Wildfire? Say It Ain’t So!
Jul 19th
Bell, what are you doing? You already have the best low-spec Android phone on the market in the HTC Legend! What’s the point of introducing an even lower-spec Android 2.1 device in the Wildfire? The Legend is $79.95 on a 3-year term, and is almost the perfect marriage of size, power and epic aluminum. The Wildfire is like the stunted, ugly sister to the Legend.
But I digress. They must have a reason for showing the phone in a recent internal document (Act-celerate your Sales. Wow, Bell, can you be any lamer?). And if they do decide to introduce it, perhaps the Wildfire could intro at $0 post-paid, or even be eligible for pre-paid.
The Wildfire has the same 528MHz Qualcomm MSM7225 processor as the HTC Magic which was introduced over two years ago. It’s 3.2″ 320×240 screen is a tad low-res for my tastes, but certainly fits well with the small stature of the phone. It has a decent 384MB RAM, also adequate for the smaller texture sizes that have to be loaded into RAM. It’s topped off with a 5MP camera with LED flash. So clearly the phone has some legs. It’s also cute and small for the ladies.
I do hope it finds a home in some Canadians’ pockets, but Bell should be focusing more on bringing high-end Android devices to these shores. K? Thanks.
(via AndroidGuys)

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.
A Legend Approaches… Across The Ocean.
Mar 9th
The HTC Legend, the phone maker’s follow-up to the ridiculously well-selling Hero, is set to release its next earth-shattering handset on March 23rd, according to Clove Technology, a retailer in the UK. The phone has already been to this side of the ocean, and has been reviewed by Gizmodo, who loved it, claiming that, despite its modest hardware upgrades, the new 2.1 OS combined with a sleek new Sense UI, more memory, full-aluminum casing and slight bump in processing speed, makes the phone much, much faster and than its predecessor. And MAN is it a beauty!
Unfortunately, the phone in its current form will not run on any North American 3G networks, so people looking to import it over from the UK are looking at meager EDGE speeds until an 850/1900MHZ version is made.
The phone will be available on March 23rd for a reasonable £376, around $564USD.
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