Posts tagged HTC
HTC Pyramid is a Smart phone or a Smartest Phone….
Apr 1st
HTC Pyramid is a product of HTC, is a dual-cored processored Smartphone. HTC Pyramid is another Android 3G mobile with 4.3 inch TFT touchscreen display by HTC, HTC Pyramid is equipped with Dual camera (8MP main and 1.3 MP front camera) , HD video recording Features, Gprs, Bluetooth and WiFi connectivity option , HTC Pyramid is Powered by Android 2.3 OS & 1.2 GHz processor.
Have a look on HTC Pyramid Price, Features and Specification
Network: 2G, 3G Network
Operating System: Android OS
Processor: 1.2 GHz Processor
4.0 inches S-LCD capacitive Touchscreen with resolution of 540 x 960 pixels and 16M colors
HTC Sense v3.0 UI
8MP camera with resolution of 3264 x 2448 pixels and auto focus, LED Flash
1.3 MP front facing camera for video calling
HD video recording @ 30 fps
Geo-tagging, touch-focus, image stabilization
Internal Memory : 786MB
MicroSD card slot, up to 32 GB expandable
Bluetooth v2.1 with A2DP,EDR
Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, DLNA
3G network support with HSDPA, HSUPA
MicroUSB v2.0
FM Radio with RDS
GPRS, EDGE, GPS with A-GPS Support
Mp3 codec’s: MP3/AAC+/WAV/WMA player
The price of HTC Pyramid is about Rs. 30000-35000(approx) in India.
This Phone must be pretty good for the personal as well as the Professional use.. To know more about HTC mobile phones click pricesbolo.com.
HTC ChaCha – whats that chacha stands for…? Cha-cha-cha DANCE…?
Mar 31st
Well… Let me not show it like a cha cha cha dance which is one of the dance of cuban. And i am not taking about it. I am here talking about the HTC CHACHA, its a HTC mobile phone basically which is waiting for its’ arrival sooner.
HTC CHACHA mobile phone has a dedicated facebook button that lets you share anything about by just a single click or you can also say ONE TOUCH. Take a photo straight to facebook using a high qaulity camera, take a video straight to facebook. Show it to your friends whenever, whatever you want by just clicking one button. You can not only post status, you can even chat with your social networking friends, you can group all your friends together and see when anybody is online. You can start a live chat, instant chat and juggle between as many private conversation as you want.
You can type like a monster heaps of friends, heaps of things you want to say. HTC CHACHA comes with a QWERTY keypad so you can knock out all your massages as fast as you can. For doing all these things its battery must be good enough.There are some more features for which we have to “hang on”! So I hope you guys will hang on as well…. and well, while hanging on you can do this CHA CHA CHA things… ufff…!!!! what kinda dance is that…?
You can check various HTC mobile phones and their prices in pricesbolo.com
Is HTC Desire S worth…???
Mar 29th
The latest addition to HTC’s Desirefamily is DESIRE S and it comes with two cameras (one for normal pics, one for video calls) and runs on the latest version of Android (2.3 aka Gingerbread). The Desire S however doesn’t have a dual-core processor, which is shaping up to be the must-have smartphone feature for 2011.
Everything about the HTC Desire S is polished and slick. From the curved metal and rubberised body that fits nicely in the palm, to the glossy high resolution touchscreen. Swiping left and right through the Desire S’s seven homescreens feels buttery smooth and the colourful animated backgrounds are very easy on the eye.
The Desire S is running on Android 2.3 “Gingerbread” (the latest version of Android for phones), and comes with all of the important refinements. Things like improved text selection/cut and paste (pictured) makes correcting typos in texts and emails a piece of cake.
Phones with two cameras – one for taking pictures and one for videocalls/self-portraits – are set to be all the rage this year. The HTC Desire S’s main camera is a 5-megapixel jobbie while the front-facing camera is a VGA one.
The internal memory of the Desire S is just 1GB. Sure, you can flesh this out with a microSD card (it can take up to 32GB extra) but the problem is that big memory cards can be expensive. Also, there are still a lot of apps out there in the Android Market that can’t be moved to the SD card. So if you want to donwload lots of apps, this 1GB could fill up pretty quickly. Hence its better to have a biggest microSD card so that you can cope up.
So to conclude, HTC Desire S isn’t that bad phone. For those who wanna use FaceBook, Send mails, etc.., can have a bite, Fod you this HTC desire S ROCKS…. To check prices about other HTC phones you can click Pricesbolo.
HTC HD7 preview
Oct 12th
Alright, so by now we all know that HTC’s HD7 is mostly a HD2 in imperial new clothes, but let’s give the new phone a chance, shall we? We’ve just gotten to grips with the latest member of HTC’s 4.3-inch brigade and predictably enough it feels just as snappy as the rest of the Windows Phone 7 devices introduced today. Navigation is blazingly quick, interrupted only by Microsoft’s excessive fascination with animated screen transitions. Clearly, designing the new WP7 OS around hard-set minimum specs has paid off for Microsoft, whose end product exhibits a great deal of polish. T-Mobile, the HD7′s exclusive carrier in the US, is keen to point out that it’s the largest Windows Phone 7 launch device, so if size is atop your list of priorities, this will be the phone you’ll want to start your journey with. We’ve got some in-depth impressions of the hardware after the break and a video is coming right up as well. Enjoy!
Update: As promised, a lengthy video exhibition of the HD7 awaits your eyeballs just past the break.
Much like the HD2 before it, the sheer size of the HD7 will be the first thing that grabs you. The 4.3-inch screen is again framed by a minimal bezel, lending a feel of efficient, raw, electronic prowess, and it just feels bigger without the HD2′s hardware buttons in the way. We were less impressed by the display’s viewing angles, however — maybe the recent spate of AMOLED, IPS, and Super LCD panels has spoiled us, but the color degradation as you move off center is really offputting. We appreciate that a 4.3-inch superscreen is probably beyond any reasonable manufacturing budgets, but the fact remains that the HD7′s current screen feels a step behind the competition, both in terms of pixel density and general performance. There was no faulting the capacitive digitizer, though, as every touch was responded to almost instantaneously in our brief tests and WP7′s virtual landscape keyboard was a pleasure.
Build quality seems to be on par with HTC’s recent efforts, with a metallic band accounting for most of the bezel and firm matte plastic covering the rear. A squeaky battery door left us feeling a little uneasy, however, and the kickstand’s a fairly thin and weak affair, even if it does have a nice, solid click. The problem is that while the rounded edge of the stand looks neat, it actually serves to make the hefty device easier to topple. We’re again left with the sense that the oversized form factor has limited HTC’s budget and, consequently, options.
Flip the phone sideways, however, trust that kickstand to do its job, and the HD7 becomes a multimedia machine. A pair of front-facing stereo speakers, complete with Dolby and SRS Surround for extra branding points, will fire off anything you can magic up with the preloaded Netflix, Slacker Radio and T-Mobile TV apps. In our time with it, Netflix worked about as well here as it does on the iPhone, piping a very watchable framerate (but with considerable artifacting) over T-Mobile’s 3G. Speaking of connectivity, we’re afraid the HD7 won’t feature the carrier’s new HSPA+ transfer speeds — T-Mobile reps said the HD7′s silicon doesn’t support it, and neither does Microsoft’s spec.
The T-Mobile “Family Room” promises to be an interesting piece of software — a cloud sharing app built on Microsoft Azure that lets individuals leave notes, pictures, calendar events and the like on a Metro UI-ified bulletin board of sorts. Though its appeal would be fairly limited if restricted only to high-end WP7 devices such as those currently on offer from T-Mobile — which the kiddies aren’t exactly liable to own any time soon — the company stressed its brand is “about value,” without letting us in on its plans.
You won’t be surprised to hear that the biggest downer we found with the HD7 was its failure to advance the hardware spec (in any meaningful way) from the HD2. Then again, if specs mean less to you than overall user experience and the chance to jump aboard a shiny new bandwagon, the HD7 should tick your boxes quite competently. It certainly promises to fill many an early WP7 adopter’s time with happy memories of snappy, oversized smartphone action.





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