Showing posts with label future technology of HTC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label future technology of HTC. Show all posts

HTC One X, One S And One V Land In Europe April 2nd

HTC has announced the first few destinations for the new One series of Android-based smartphones: The HTC One X, One S, and One V will be landing in Germany, Austria and Switzerland next week, April 2nd.

The One X will be the line’s toppermost of the poppermost device. Priced at 599 euros for an unlocked, unsubsidized unit, the One X features a 4.7-inch 720p screen, a quad-core Tegra 3 processor, a 1.3MP front-facing cam, and an eight-megapixel snapper at the back.

At 499 euros, the One S is the line’s ‘mid-range’ model, but with a spec that’s still pretty good. This one packs a 4.3-inch screen with a 540 x 960 resolution, a dual-core 1.5GHz Snapdragon S4 processor, aVGA front cam and an eight-megapixel main camera. HTC One X, One S, One V to land in Europe on April 2 htc one v. The One V is the line’s ‘budget’ model, offering a 1GHz single-core processor, 3.7-inch, 480 x 800 screen and a five megapixel camera for 299 euros.

All three phones will arrive preinstalled with Android 4.0 layered with HTC’s Sense 4.0 interface, which introduces HTC ImageSense (a suite of camera and imaging features). All three phones also feature Beats Audio for enhanced sound quality.

HTC’s One line is expected to reach the US soon. The One X will arrive as the HTC Jet on Sprint (probably on April 4th), and AT&T. The One S will be landing on T-Mobile, while the One V is rumored to be headed to Virgin Mobile.

HTC One X, One S, One V ON SALE Early In Germany:

HTC One X Gets Unboxed

The HTC One X set to go on sale in Europe next week, a device that will be the company’s first big release of 2012. It will also mark the first quad-core release for HTC as the overseas One X is equipped with a Tegra 3 dual-core processor on board. It also runs Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, making it an extremely attractive device for consumers. Well, today, we have our first unboxing of the device which arrives just ahead of launch and gives us a great look at HTC’s latest and greatest smartphone.

HTC-Hub, a French blog, has managed to get its hands on one before the April 2nd launch date and they gladly take us on a tour of the packaging, the accessories in the box, and the device itself.

Unfortunately, we don’t get a full-blown tour of Android 4.0 and the new HTC Sense 4.0, but we have already shown you a tour of that on the AT&T device.

The international version of the device will be launching with a quad-core processor. However, AT&T’s model will be launching with a Snapdragon S4 dual-core processor on board. That’s because, at the time, the Tegra 3 quad-core chip did not have the proper certification for use with 4G LTE, the network on which the AT&T model will run.

And while the international version has a release date, AT&T has yet to cough up the goods. We’re thinking that we’ll see it in April, especially because T-Mobile is rumored to be getting the One X’s brother, the One S, on April 22nd.

Hands-On With The HTC One X and HTC Sense 4.0:


Some HTC Sensation Devices Receiving Android 4.0 Update In Europe?

The Android Ice Cream Sandwich update with Sense 3.6 is now available for the HTC Sensation and Sensation XE for some customers in the Nordic region. There was a report earlier which said that HTC will be launching the new update for its Sensation series in March, and it seems it has kept its word. So this means that other regions should start receiving the update soon.

HTC headquarters have confirmed that company has started the roll-out has begun and b the end of this month, almost all Sensation devices should receive some ICS goodness along with Sense 3.6 on top. Do keep checking for your updates as they might arrive anytime soon, and do let us know if you manage to update your Sensation devices.

Following Devices Will Get Ice Cream Sandwich ( Android 4.0 ):


HTC Sensation XL Review

The HTC Sensation XL is one of the best music phones to ever squirt audio into our ears. Stuff it with your favourite albums -- MP3, WAV, WMA or even OGG files, it's not fussy. Then jam the garish, heavyweight earbud headphones into your ears and you're in for an auditory treat the likes of which your average smart phone can only dream of delivering.

Much of this is undoubtedly down to the fact that this is one of the first mobiles to feature Beats Audio, a sound profile straight from the lab of NWA founder and G-Funk pioneer Dr Dre. The rapper and producer has already launched a range of headphones with Monster and crowbarred his tech into HP laptops -- mobiles were the next logical destination for Beats. Given the Sensation XL's price tag, however, we're not entirely convinced it's worth the outlay if you already own a decent smart phone.

Aside from its music chops, the Sensation XL's other big feature -- quite literally -- is its screen. Few mobiles can boast a display as large as this 4.7-inch monster, and fans of video, ebooks and mobile web browsing will appreciate the extra acreage. That said, the screen is outdone in terms of sharpness by a lot of other models out there. Its LCD technology doesn't please the eyeballs as much as the AMOLED-equipped likes of the Samsung Galaxy S2. Colour and contrast just aren't as rich.

Aside from that, the Sensation XL is a slightly-above-average Android Gingerbread phone. It's well built, speedy enough, there's just about enough storage space included, the 8-megapixel camera takes acceptable photos and HD video clips, and the HTC Sense interface is pleasant to use. You've got access to a dizzying range of apps in the Android Market and the seven home screens can be tweaked and prodded until they feature your favoured blend and arrangement of apps, widgets, folders and shortcuts. There's nothing here to really annoy you, but aside from the aforementioned Beats technology there's nothing here to really excite you either -- at least nothing that a bunch of other similarly priced Android phones can't provide.

Screen:
The HTC Sensation XL has one of the largest screens on the market. It's a 4.7-inch Super LCD display with a resolution of 480x800 pixels, which gives a pixel density of around 199 pixels per inch (ppi). It's not the biggest screen we've seen on a phone recently -- the Samsung Galaxy Note's gigantic 285ppi 5.3-inch display dwarfs it. Neither is it the sharpest -- the iPhone 4 and 4S are 330ppi and the Samsung Galaxy Nexus is very nearly as good at 316ppi. But it's still an impressive sight.

Colours are extremely vibrant and the contrast is impressively deep for an LCD screen, so the overall effect is gloriously punchy. Is it a match for the AMOLED screen of the Samsung Galaxy Note? Nope -- the colours aren't as juicily saturated and the blacks aren't as bottomlessly inky -- but it's far from poor. It's not the pinnacle of mobile phone displays, but fire up a session of Angry Birds or watch a video and you're unlikely to be disappointed.

Web browsing is another beneficiary of the vast amount of screen real estate. While the Sensation XL doesn't match its higher resolution rivals in this respect, it's one of a handful of phones on which you can read full-size websites without straining your eyes. The mobile versions of sites are beautifully readable and clear, of course.

Sound quality:
Aside from the huge screen, the Sensation XL's other headlining feature is the inclusion of Beats Audio technology, a special sound profile personally tweaked by hip-hop legend Dr Dre. HTC has made Beats technology a major focus of the phone's marketing strategy -- the logo is displayed prominently on the backplate. Essentially, the idea behind Beats Audio is that it dials up mobile phone audio quality from 'merely acceptable' to, well, 'gangsta'.

The headphones play a big part in this, however. Hook them up to a non-Beats Audio phone (we tried the iPhone 3GS), and sound is almost as impressive as on the Sensation XL. So rather than spending a lot of money on this mobile, music fans looking for an improvement in audio quality could simply invest in a good set of headphones for their existing phone. The inclusion of Beats Audio alone is not sufficient reason to buy the Sensation XL.

User interface:
The Sensation XL runs on Google's Android 2.3 Gingerbread operating system, upon which HTC has laid its own HTC Sense 'skin'. Alongside Samsung's TouchWiz, HTC Sense is one of the better non-standard Android interfaces we've come across. Using the Sensation XL is a cinch.

The user interface is mainly touch-based: you unlock the phone by dragging a ring at the bottom of the homescreen into the screen's centre and flicking between the seven homescreens. Other multi-touch controls include pinch-to-zoom -- do so on a homescreen and it zooms back, allowing you to see all seven simultaneously -- and double-tap to zoom in/out of a column on a web page. Solid, standard stuff, in other words.

In addition, there are four touch-sensitive buttons at the bottom of the phone's front face, just underneath the screen. From left to right, these are home, options, back and search. We prefer having a physical, pressable hardware button for home (it's easier to find in the dark), but this arrangement isn't too tricky to get used to.

When you first switch on the phone, a step-by-step walkthrough lets you enter your Google profile. Assuming you have one, this makes setting up the Sensation XL a breeze, as your Gmail, contacts, Android Market purchases, favourite Google Maps locations, Google search history and so on can all be transferred across.

Home screens:
There are seven separate homescreens on this phone. A slider at the bottom indicates which you are on at any time. Dragging your finger left or right on the screen scrolls between the homescreens. But no matter which you're on, a bar at the bottom remains to give you shortcuts to the phone, apps and personalisation screens. We often find the default layout of Android phones' homescreens to be a mess of annoying widgets and oddly placed apps. HTC has done a reasonable job of not leaving you with a mess to clear up.

The main, central home screen has a widget showing the time, date and weather in your current location at the top, and eight app shortcuts: Music, Android Market, Messages, Mail, Internet, Camera, Watch and Reader. A pretty good selection, we think, and there's space left for four more, or another widget.

Hitting the home button on the phone will bring you back to this central homescreen, and tapping it a second time will show you mini versions of all homescreens simultaneously -- tap one to jump directly to it.

Flick to the left and you've got an entire home screen dedicated to HTC's FriendStream widget, which delivers your social network updates -- Twitter, Facebook and Flickr -- in a single, unified stream. You can also update your own status direct from FriendStream, and hit the location icon to reveal -- and check into, should you wish -- nearby points of interest. It's a useful widget.


Flick once more to the left and it's another full-screen widget, this time for HTC's Watch app. This is essentially a video store from which you can purchase or rent movies. Most films cost £9.99 to buy and £3.49 to rent, but some are cheaper. Some movies can't be rented, only bought. Watching films on a phone is a bit weird in our opinion, but the Sensation XL is one of the few mobiles that have a screen big enough to make it work.

One more to the left and you've got HTC's homegrown music widget, which shows album artwork and lets you play/pause and skip between tracks. It's rather basic, but tapping it opens the full-fat music player.

Moving to the right of the central home screen, the first screen you come to has a Google search widget at the top and HTC's People widget below. This lets you add your favourite contacts (or at least the ones you need to get in touch with most often), and a shortcut for each: either a call, text or email. So you can instantly text a mate without having to open up the contacts screen, select text message and so on.

The next homescreen to the right has a Google Navigation widget, which can be set to always show your current location if you wish. The final screen is empty and begging to be loaded with the apps and widgets of your choosing.

It's a smart home screen layout, all told, but of course you can tweak and customise it to your heart's desire. Hold a single finger down on a space and a menu pops up allowing you to select a widget, app, folder or shortcut to drop into the space. You can then drag and drop to rearrange, or drag to the bottom of the screen to remove.

This being an Android smart phone, every home screen has a notifications panel. Icons at the top-left tell you when you have notifications including available updates for apps -- dragging down on the bar shows you a pane with them all in. When listening to music, you can also enable and disable the Beats Audio sound profile from this pane.

Apps:
As with most Android phones, the Sensation XL comes stuffed with apps, some of which you may want to dump straight away. Bloatware? Well, the phone still performs speedily enough, and they're nicely hidden out of sight in the apps menu screen, so there's no real sense that they're clogging up your phone and making everything look like a mess.

Nevertheless, we expect users with a high regard for tidiness -- or simply OCD-- will spend a good amount of time dumping the likes of the Mirror app, which uses the front-facing camera to, yes, let you look at yourself.

Signing up for an HTC Sense account allows you to access the HTC Hub app, which in turn offers a selection of themes, called 'Scenes' here, ringtones, notification sounds, alarm sounds, wallpapers and HTC apps. Irritatingly, the apps download page wouldn't update for us despite 10 or so attempts, so we can't talk about the full extent of HTC's homegrown apps.

Speed:

The Sensation XL sports a single-core 1.5GHz processor and 768MB of RAM, so it's not up there with the most powerful smart phones on the market. We put it through its paces with AnTuTu Benchmark, which tests memory, CPU speed and graphics. It achieved an overall score of 3,645, putting it slightly above the likes of the Google Nexus S and HTC's own Desire HD.

The ageing Samsung Galaxy S2 scored almost 6,000 in the same test and the Samsung Galaxy Note achieved 6,379 when we tested it last week. More damningly, the smaller HTC Sensation XE scored over 1,000 more in the same test, thanks to its dual-core processor. So, on paper, the Sensation XL doesn't look like anything to get excited about on the speed front.

When actually using the phone, however, we didn't feel like its speed was letting us down in any way. Apps open fairly swiftly and games run without a hitch. Obviously if you want your phone to be lightning-fast and to remain so for the next two years, the Sensation XL probably won't be for you.

Battery life:
A large screen can often mean bad things for a smart phone's battery life, but the Sensation XL doesn't appear to suffer from an abnormally short battery. HTC claims the battery offers up to 6 hours 50 minutes of talk time on 3G (11 hours 50 minutes on 2G), and a standby time of up to 460 hours.

We charged it to full one morning and used it for a day at what we'd describe as 'normal' levels -- a few calls, a fair bit of web surfing, a spot of sat-nav and some games. The next morning there was around 15 per cent of the battery life left. That's pretty decent in our book. If you're hitting the 3G hard or using GPS navigation frequently, of course you'll need to charge it up a lot more often.

Phone functionality:
Despite its large size, the HTC Sensation XL works very well when it comes to the simple task of making and taking phone calls. Unlike the Samsung Galaxy Note, it's not so big as to make you look faintly ludicrous when holding it up to your face. Call quality is clear and crisp.

You can open the dialler straight from the lock screen by dragging the phone icon into the centre of the lock ring. The dialler screen also features shortcut buttons to all contacts, favourite contacts and recent calls.

Camera:
The Sensation XL features two cameras: a front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera for video calls and self-shooting, and a main rear camera with 8 megapixels, dual-LED flash, auto-focus and a BSI sensor for 'better low-light captures', HTC promises. The rear camera can also capture HD-quality video at up to 720p.

There's a healthy amount of options available for the main camera, many more than on the stock Samsung Android camera app, for instance. You can toggle the flash to on, off and auto, and there are nine scene modes to pick from, including full-auto if you want the camera to tweak the settings itself. Those who fancy a bit more dabbling can adjust the white balance, ISO, resolution, contrast, colour saturation, sharpness and exposure compensation in the settings menu.

Conclusion:
The HTC Sensation XL is an impressive phone for the music-obsessed, thanks to its beefy sound quality and a fantastic set of bundled Beats buds. It plays a good amount of audio file formats too, including uncompressed WAV. The only potential black mark against its music capabilities is the limited amount of storage space.

Aside from that, it has friendly user interface and all the general Android-related advantages in its corner. But its large and pretty screen isn't the sharpest available and it's definitely last year's phone when it comes to processing performance.

It's a decent package overall, but take away the music skills and there are many better Android alternatives out there -- not least the excellent HTC Sensation XE, which has a better (if smaller) screen, a faster processor and all the Beats gubbins. If you want the best possible screen on your Android phone, we suggest you hold your horses until the Samsung Galaxy Nexus arrives.

HTC Sensation XL Review:

HTC Confirms Some Of Its Android Handsets Are Leaking WiFi Passwords

HTC has acknowledged a flaw in the way that some of its handsets handle specific Android requests may expose the security credentials on Wi-Fi networks they are connected to. Researchers Chris Hessing and Bret Jordan found that any Android application on an affected HTC handset with the android.permission.ACCESS_WIFI_STATE permission would be able to call upon the .toString() command in the WifiConfiguration class to view all credentials of a Wi-Fi network. If combined with the android.permission.INTERNET permission, attackers could then harvest the details and send them to a remote server on the Internet.

The flaw affects the following devices:

Desire HD (both “ace” and “spade” board revisions) – Versions FRG83D, GRI40, Glacier – Version FRG83, Droid Incredible – Version FRF91, Thunderbolt 4G – Version FRG83D, Sensation Z710e – Version GRI40, Sensation 4G – Version GRI40, Desire S – Version GRI40, EVO 3D – Version GRI40, EVO 4G – Version GRI40.

The good news is that most HTC handsets will automatically patch the issue, but some will require the user to manually load a fix. HTC says that users should check its site next week for more details on how to perform the update. Hessing and Jordan found the issue on September 7 2011 but worked with HTC and Google over the next couple of months to establish the cause and help them issue a fix, before they publicly disclosed their work. The issue would require the user to install an application that had been specifically designed to harvest details or was uploaded to the Android Market with the specific aim of collecting information. The impact may have been small in the fact that such an app will not see the reach as a more popular app but the security risk does exist. If you own one of the affected handsets, you may have already received the fix. If you do not, keep checking the HTC Support site for more information.

HTC Primo specs leaked; includes Android 4.0 and Beats Audio


The new fad in Android models seems to be smaller form factors with mid-to high end specs. Just the other day, we told you about the Sony Ericsson Kumquat, which fits into this mold. Now, thanks to a tipster for Stuff, we see low to mid range specs allegedly heading for the HTC Primo. With a 3.7 inch Super AMOLED display strengthened by Gorilla Glass and a dual-core 1GHz Qualcomm processor under the hood, the HTC Primo would have the muscles to get the job done. On board is 512MB of RAM and a 5MP camera on back that captures 720p video. The dual-shutter on the camera allows you to snap photos while taking video at the same time and the f/2.0 aperture should help you take decent pictures in less than optimal lighting conditions. As for size, the Primo will be just 9mm thick.

HTC Primo

HTC Primo
The HTC Primo is coming to market with Ice Cream Sandwich installed out of the box and with HTC Sense 4.0 on top. That is right, you don't have to wait for an update to get Android 4.0. Additionally, this should be a Beats Audio model with all of that great audio functionality integrated into the OS. There is no word yet on whether or not those iconic red earphones will be included. The picture of the phone on the right is just a mock-up, so don't get too attached to that rendering. While pricing was not disclosed, Stuff figures it will run about 250GBP (approximately $389USD). As far as when or where we will see this phone offered, nothing has been determined at this time.

HTC and IBM partner to win the enterprise user


During the kickoff session for their annual Lotusphere event last week, IBM execs demonstrated a variety of their business applications, running on HTC smartphones and tablets.

This is as close to a partnership with HTC as it can get, and the Taiwanese seem pretty excited about it. David Jaeger, executive director Global Enterprise and Services at HTC, who bears most of the responsibility for this pivotal partnership with IBM, said:

"It’s only been really relatively recently that HTC has broken into the enterprise space. We’re driving toward that magic 100-million device number globally. We see IBM as the gold standard for an enterprise partnership. We want to make sure if IBM is talking about Android or tablets, HTC is in the conversation."

HTC has worked in sync with IBM to ensure its gear can run Big Blue's award-winning enterprise software, and run it well, with a particular focus on that all-important enterprise feature - security. HTC is also leveraging its unique tablet proposition - the Scribe pen technology - for the enterprise market, and currently has 35 applications that can take good advantage of it, some of it with the corporate world in mind, and more are on the way from third party developers.

“There’s a certain amount of precision with what you can do with the pen,” says Will Ro, director of Global Enterprise Operations and Strategy at HTC, “Our stylus is an active stylus.”