Little Details Relating HTC Hero - Is It The Fresh Dawn For Smartphones?
HTC Hero Review - the most hyped smart phone from the HTC even has been the doing the rounds from mid 2009 and it has been an eye-catching for several of us. This is the third HTC phone based on the new age Android Platform and HTC have scaled new heights of personalization with the Hero.
This gorgeous phone has a radical pattern and maximum of its facade area is protected by a glass touch screen that guarantees easy managing. All of 135 grams, it fits easily into your palm and the virtual keyboard although a bit cramped is quite easy to use. The gleaming word forecast system in the Hero further makes writing messages and mails easy. Planning through the applications in the Sprint HTC Hero is kid's game with the great back lit track ball in the 'chin'. Finger print smudges and scratches on the touch screen are kept away by a covering the screen and this is one amongst the many firsts in Hero.
The original "HTC Sense" interface works marvels and makes easier all your everyday activities on the phone. This feature certainly provides it an edge over i-phone and Nokia N series. The browser of the Hero has wider media viewing substitutes as it supports flash applications. The Hero's 3.2 inch HVGA touch screen is a joy to handle and the display images are affluent, crisp and sharp. The vividness of the screen is automatically adjusted by the in-built light anteena. The HTC Hero comes with a 2 GB SD card and supports up to 8 GB. On the whole the design of the Hero is sleek and contemporary.
With Hero, HTC has also fallen into all too familiar consequences. The 5 mbps camera is not best and the zooming controls mounted on the trackball makes it inept to handle. Full blown use of each applications in the Hero would outcome in a dead battery before the end of the day. And for the radiation conscious the SAR (Radiation) rating of 1.13 is fairly on the higher side.
On the whole with Hero, HTC has guaranteed a good phone with an outstanding design which may possibly keep Apple and Nokia on their toes.
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