HTC Hero | The Communication Blog

Monday, January 25, 2010

HTC Hero

By Agnes Lamont

Introducing the HTC Hero Smartphone. The Google Android phone you have been waiting for. Supercharged by Google's Android operating system the Hero is one to own. The design of the phone is daring to say the least. Most recent phones have all become slick shapeless blobs as they have all lost their hard lines and angles. This HTC Smartphone is very angular. The phone feels more rugged and tough than rest of phones on the market today. The angles make for a more comfortable and natural feel in your hand.



Keypad, Display & Browser - Just like the latest Google Android smartphones the display is multitouch with a vibrant 480-320 screen. The WebKit browser makes good use of the multitouch feature with pinch to zoom out and spread to zoom in. Flash support is also incorporated into the core WebKit browser. The brightness is similar to other phones of this type but feels warmer than most. If you are a little worried about on-screen keyboards, don't be. The keyboard is particularly good on this phone. There are three keyboard layouts in both portrait and landscape modes. The standard full QWERTY keyboard, a phone keypad and a cut down version of QWERTY - which has two letters per key. The full QWERTY keyboard in landscape mode is a dream to type fast with.

Widgets - The HTC Hero Smartphone is loaded with a slew of new applications and widgets. Most of which are HTC unique, meaning you won't be seeing them on non HTC phones. The standard clock and weather widgets are present but there are interesting widgets like the Twitter widget. This enables you to read recent tweets or update your status without having to open the Twitter app. The Hero comes with multiple desktop themes, each with different backgrounds, widgets and shortcuts. You can customise these and save your configurations as well. Switching between these themes, or scenes as they are called, takes only a couple of seconds and lets you completely rearrange your entire desktop almost instantly. Use one scene for home and one for work, this lets you organise better.

Social Networking - The Hero Smartphone asks for your Facebook, Twitter and Flickr logins when you first turn it on. One thing I like is after you log in to Facebook it does not dump all 500 of your Facebook friends into your contacts list; it keeps the list in the background for when you need it. The Facebook connection here is deeper and more useful than the likes of the Palm Pre. While scrolling down your phone contacts if you have linked someone to a Facebook profile you can view their most recent status. In the contact tab you can view all the usual information such as phone numbers, email addresses, photos, birthday and all recent txt messages and conversions. Also displayed are email history, recent Facebook updates and Flickr photo albums.

The Hero Smartphone is the best Google Android driven phone to date. The features such as integrated profile and unique widgets combined with the phone's design and interface make this the best smartphone to date. This is the best alternative to the iPhone and Palm Pre.

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