Filed under: Handsets, HTC, Android We doubt the July 15 delivery date is set in stone, but UK residents itching to get a little Hero in their lives are now able to pre-order HTC’s latest for
Filed under: Handsets, HTC, T-Mobile, Windows Mobile, GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, UMTS While we twiddle our thumbs and wait for the Dash 3G and the Touch Pro2 to make their fanfare-laden debuts on good ol’ Number Four (that’s our pet name for T-Mobile USA, of course), literature is starting to show up that should make the wait marginally more bearable by giving us a few pretty pictures to look at and words to read. There’s nothing Earth-shattering in here, but we see that the Dash 3G has 256MB of ROM and an impressive rated 8.3 days of standby time — we’ll believe that when we get that kind of performance ourselves — while the Touch Pro2 moves up to 512MB, keeps the 8.3 days of standby, and touts its unusual full-duplex speakerphone that dominates the rear of the device.
Posted under Reviews on Monday, 29 June 2009 by admin
Filed under: Handsets, Others, Windows Mobile, GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, UMTS, HSUPA As HTC’s already eager to demonstrate with the Touch Diamond2 and Touch Pro2 and Toshiba with the TG01, Windows Mobile 6.5 should bring with it a pretty wide range of interesting compatible hardware — and we’ll admit that we’re a little intrigued by this alleged device from Mio codenamed “Amber.” All we’ve got here is a render, but it’s certainly within the realm of plausibility — it looks quite a bit like the company’s G50, after all, and we’d certainly expect them to be releasing new WinMo devices in conjunction with 6.5. Anyhow, we’re told that we can expect a 528MHz Qualcomm MSM7200 series (we would’ve preferred Snapdragon-class silicon, of course), a whopping 3.61-inch WVGA display, 256MB of RAM paired with 512MB of ROM, a 5 megapixel AF primary cam, full HSPA, and an integrated FM transmitter. If it’s real, it looks like this one has the Touch Diamond2 squarely in its sights
Posted under Reviews on Saturday, 27 June 2009 by admin
Looks like the licensing nazi has struck again. The slick “Sense” UI on the coveted HTC Hero is not going to be available as an upgrade for anybody in the US any time soon
Posted under Reviews on Friday, 26 June 2009 by admin
According to pocket-lint , HTC CEO Peter Chou has confirmed that the HTC Sense interface will be available as an optional addition to “other existing [HTC] devices.” Though he did not detail which phones would receive the addition and when, it isn’t hard to extrapolate. There are only a few other HTC phones running on Android, though each has a few variants: the HTC Dream, otherwise known as the T-Mobile G1, and the HTC Magic, known as the myTouch, ION, etc. Speaking of variants: From what we’ve heard from our talks with HTC, it seems a bit unlikely that Sense will find its way to any “with Google”-branded handsets - at least not in any official manner.
Filed under: Software, Android Java-based development within a specialized, optimized virtual machine is one of the founding principles of the platform that makes Android what it is — but sometimes, you need a little more oomph and you’ve got to bend the rules to make that happen. Google’s totally cool with that, it turns out, and today they’ve released the Android 1.5 Native Development Kit (NDK) that allows developers to generate C and C++ libraries that run directly on the platform rather than being routed through Dalvik. The Android team pulls no punches that devs should be careful when going native, saying “your application will be more complicated, have reduced compatibility, have no access to framework APIs, and be harder to debug” — but as they note, there’ll be times when the improved performance and deeper access to hardware will be a boon.
Posted under Reviews on Friday, 26 June 2009 by jack
Filed under: Handsets, HTC, Android We’ve got some good and bad news… mostly bad, though. First, the good news: HTC is looking into finding a way to bring its new Sense UI — the one featured prominently in the new Hero — to its non-Google branded Android devices, such as Canadian carrier Roger Wireless’ Magic.
Filed under: Handsets, Palm Palm had its quarterly results conference call yesterday and although CEO Jon Rubinstein and CFO Doug Jeffries kept a pretty tight lid on the future product talk, they did say that licensing webOS to third parties isn’t “a religious issue for us.” That’s pretty vague, sure, but we can’t help but immediately think back to the golden age of Palm OS, when licensees like Sony put out amazing devices like the Clie PEG-NZ90 that we’ve lovingly mocked up with a webOS screenshot above — we’re sure Palm’s upcoming handsets will be interesting in their own right, but we’d love to see a manufacturer like HTC riff on webOS the way it’s tweaking Android. Of course, Jeffries also said Palm has “no plans at this time to even talk about” licensing, so this is all just a pipe dream for now, but let’s not ruin the moment, okay