We recently attended the launch of the HTC Desire S at Icon in Intercon Manila. (Thanks HTC for inviting us!) It was a short and sweet event with all the hype you’ve come to expect from a product launch.
Now, I won’t bore you a rundown of the specs of the HTC Desire S anymore. I’m sure you’ve seen enough of that by now. (Just in case you haven’t seen the specs, click here). Here’s what I thought of the Desire S:
First Impressions
Looking at the Desire S, I really couldn’t help but be reminded of the iPhone. The Desire S packs a capacitive touchscreen – no Retina Display or AMOLED screen here but it’s good enough for the everyday user, a 5MP rear camera with LED flash, HD video recording and a front facing camera for selfshots and video calling. Hmmmm… sounds more or less like the iPhone right? I’ve listed a couple of things that set this phone apart after the jump.
The Look
This phone boasts an aluminum unibody — which means that every HTC Desire S was fashioned from a single block of aluminum, serving as both its casing and its frame. This unibody adds to the phone’s durability and solid, sturdy feel — not to mention lending it a sleek and sexy appearance.
The Feel
As I said the phone feels solid in your hand partly due to the alum unibody and partly because of its dimensions. The phone is wide enough to get a good grip on it. What’s more I didn’t feel like I had to use two hands to make full use of the touchscreen. I could easily navigate through the phone’s touch UI without feeling like I might drop it.
I do have a comment for HTC though. I wish they would have made the UI a bit more responsive. The transitions and gestures I experienced had a couple of seconds of lag time.
Performance
It’s interesting to note that the Desire S’s processors, RAM and graphics, basically a lot of what contributes to the phone’s performance is the same as it’s higher end big brother the Incredible S. The Desire S just isn’t as incredibly high priced. :)
Internet
You get 3G and GPRS internet with the phone…nothing new there. Good news though, the Desire S comes with a tethering function — which allows you to share your phone’s internet connection with your laptop or tablet making it a personal Wi-Fi Hotspot.
Everything Android
For all you droid fans out there, the Desire S runs on Android 2.3, better known as Gingerbread. It’s not the latest version of the Android OS as Google’s released Android 3.0. No worries though HTC has released OS updates in the past for their Android phones which should be the case here for the Desire S.
Oh and if you’re thinking of buying this phone for the Android for the apps, do know that app purchases in the Android market isn’t available in the Philippines yet.
Comes with HTC Sense… what is HTC Sense?
HTC Sense is HTC’s way of making phones more sensitive to the user experience. From the benefits they listed, I think we’ll appreciate the flip to silence function (turning your phone to face down puts it on silent) and the catch all calls function (your phone rings louder in a noisy situation or when it’s in your pocket or bag) You can learn more about it on HTC’s official page: http://www.htc.com/www/htcsense/index.html
Price
So what’s all this going to cost you? HTC’s official price is at P27,000. That’s a good deal, I think, for everything you get from the phone. From what I hear some shops sell it for waaay lower than the SRP — with obvious trade-offs of course.
The Bottomline
The HTC Desire S is a sleek and sexy alternative to the iPhone, setting you apart from the sea of iPhone users out there. While it may not have as much as of the bells and whistles as its Apple counterpart bear in mind that it’s also priced several floors below.
Hope this helps! Happy phone hunting guys! :)
Ed: Those who are interested in new technological advances may appreciate information about an online it degree.
6 comments
LZMBWE says:
Jun 9, 2011
Android 3.0 Honeycomb is for tablets ONLY. Android 2.3 Gingerbread is the latest for smartphones. So the answer is NO, there will be no Honeycomb update to the Desire S.
Anonymous says:
Jun 9, 2011
Yup. If a new update to the smartphone os comes out, htc would update their phones with that.
LZMBWE says:
Jun 10, 2011
perhaps you should clarify that 2.3 is the latest Android OS for smartphones because when you read through that paragraph it might make some people think that 3.0 is also for smartphones. When it isn’t. Or clarify that 3.0 Honeycomb is only for tablets.
Anonymous says:
Jun 10, 2011
Yup, thanks! :-)
Anonymous says:
May 18, 2011
Texting depends on the keyboard app you use. I use Swiftkey and it’s pretty fast and has great predictive abilities (can be taught so mine now knows tagalog).
Camera wise I would say comparable to the iPhone. Although with the Vignette app (exclusive to Android), you can take some nice photos using the filters and effects. :)
Hope this helps!
Jen Ng says:
May 13, 2011
cool! alds! congrats!