Showing posts with label design and specification of htc wildfire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design and specification of htc wildfire. Show all posts

Friday, 10 June 2011

SPECIFICATION OF HTC DESIRE


                                    

HTC Desire S is one of HTC's smartphone models which allows you to catch your everything best moments with high-quality results. Featuring all-in-one camera and HD video recorder that offer a clearly result. Moreover, this smartphone gives a comfortable browsing experience with its smarter and faster internet features.

For those of you, of course, who own HTC Desire S, these guides here would be very useful to figure the smartphone details as well as would be very helpful if there is something that you don't know or have a problem with it. Two guides linked beneath this post, including the user manual and also the quick start guide.

Design
The Desire S has unibody design with aluminum finish, weighs 130 g with 115 x 59.8 x 11.6 mm dimensions. The phone has a 3.7-inch full touch screen with S-LCD display (480 x 800 pixel resolution). The Gorilla Glass present in the screen makes it sturdy and scratch resistant. The various sensors included in the handset are G-sensor, Proximity sensor and Ambient light sensor.

Storage and Battery
This HTC smartphone ships with 1.1 GB of internal memory. The Android device is microSD 2.0 compatible, and external memory up to 32 GB can be added using a microSD card. The touchscreen device has a 1450 mAh Li-Ion standard battery that supports 240 minutes of talk time.

Internet and Connectivity
The HTC Desire S smartphone can be connected to the Internet via GPRS, EDGE, 3G and Wi-Fi. Other connectivity options available in the mobile are Bluetooth, USB and a 3.5 mm stereo audio jack. The phone also comes loaded with an internal GPS antenna. Additional features included in this touchscreen device are SNS integration, digital compass, document viewer and access to Google maps and Android market apps.

The HTC Desire comes with 1GHz Snapdragon Processor and Android 2.1 operating sytem. For memory card 8 GB microSD (support up to 32 GB) with ROM: 512/ MB RAM: 384 MB. For network is Dual-band CDMA2000 xRTT/1xEVDO rev. A, and IS-95A. Another features and specification such as 5 megapixel color camera , Internal GPS antenna, Navigator Deluxe, HTC Footprints and Google Maps, social network (facebook, twitter), Bluetooth 2.1, FTP and OPP for file transfer,and A2DP for wireless stereo headsets.


The HTC Desire User Manual provides detail information such as how to Connecting your phone to a computer, how to Copying files to and from the storage card, how to Changing wallpaper, how to Using the onscreen keyboard, Facebook for HTC Sense and Facebook for Android application, how to Connecting to a Wi-Fi network with EAP-TLS security, how to Connecting to another Wi-Fi network, how to Using your phone’s web browser, how to Connecting a Bluetooth headset or car kit, how to Using Google Maps, Using HTC Footprints and many other information. While for quick start guide only provides brief information, but there is information about troubleshooting.

FEATURES OF HTC WILDFIRE


                                                             
Despite being designed as a lower-cost Android handset, the HTC Wildfire still comes with the company's much-loved Sense UI. Although this may keep costs a touch higher than they could otherwise be, it's a joy to use.

From the moment you switch the phone on for the first time, you'll appreciate it easing you into smartphone-dom, with a smooth eight-step walk through getting you set up quickly and easily.

In a matter of minutes, you'll have your contacts imported, your social networking sites set up, your Google account activated, your Wi-Fi connected and your preferences set. Like we said, a joy.

Navigation around the HTC Wildfire is fairly straightforward – with seven home screens available for customising, you'll be able to save your most-used apps and widgets here and avoid the alphabetised menu altogether.

Popular widgets, like weather, news, favourite contacts and FriendStream (HTC's social network aggregator) come ready installed to home screens but moving and removing these is very simple.

Just holding down the icon you want to reorganise then dragging it to its new location (or the trashcan) does the trick.

Silly little things like how few icons you can place on a screen started to grate – although with seven Home screens to play with, there's obviously plenty of space overall.
                        
Swiping through them all is no big deal for the HTC Wildfire – you might think with the lower processing power and the lower-quality screen that there'd be some lag; there really isn't.

In fact, that processor is the same speed as the HTC Hero's (528Mhz), so it shouldn't be any great surprise that it can hold its own – although it's not going to offer Desire levels of speed, and juddering sometimes occurs when switching windows and applications.

If you don't fancy swiping, you can scroll between using the optical trackpad. HTC's lovely Leap View, introduced with Android 2.1 on the HTC Legend and HTC Desire earlier this year, is present and correct, giving you a quick overview of your home screens and a shortcut to moving between them.

Although buttons aren't exactly in abundance on the Wildfire, it would be convenient to be able to use the trackpad as the screen unlock button as well as the power key. It's much more accessible when you're in a hurry.

Of course there's full access to the Android Market on the HTC Wildfire, so you can download apps to the handset. Download speeds over Wi-Fi were generally fine, although a little slower using 3G.

HTC has clearly given app sharing some thought, and come up with a system for sending links via email or text to friends without a fuss.

It's not the most elegant of systems, but it's a darn sight easier than them having to search for the app in the Marketplace.

As the handset is basically run in the same way as the Desire and Legend, this handset isn't aimed at the tech-phobic, more at the smartphone-literate on a budget.

That said, it's very easy to get the hang of – the set-up guide walks new users through setting up their various email and social networking accounts, while the menu system is also very straightforward.

The seven home screens may be a little more confusing, but so simple once you've customised them to your liking. The Wildfire also makes it easy to transfer everything from your old phone via Bluetooth using the onboard 'transfer data' app.

The HTC Wildfire comes with haptic feedback by default – we like the satisfying buzz as it registers our commands, but if you're not such a fan it's fairly easy to turn off in the settings menu.


 
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