HTC Connect certifies AV gear for your One series phone, Pioneer lines up

HTC Connect certifies AV gear for your One series phone, Pioneer lines up

HTC is going on something of a certification tangent: it’s following its PlayStation Suite approval with its own program, HTC Connect. Home AV equipment with the label promises to lift the standards for streaming media to or from one of HTC’s devices. The rubber stamp will be limited at first to DLNA audio and video, but it should eventually include just about anything that doesn’t involve a wire, such as Bluetooth, in-car media, NFC and wireless speakers. There isn’t an immediate deluge of partners. HTC has scored a rather big ally, however: Pioneer’s DLNA-ready receivers and wireless speakers this year, and beyond, will flaunt the HTC Connect badge. Don’t brag about the media credentials of your One X just yet. Although the Connect seal of approval won’t be needed for media streaming anytime soon, it will only be coming to the One series through an upgrade in the months ahead.

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HTC Connect certifies AV gear for your One series phone, Pioneer lines up originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jun 2012 12:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC One S software glitch sends home screen crazy

The HTC One S is one of the better looking smartphones out there, sporting a unibody made out of metal, but as mom always said – do not judge a book by its cover, and in this case, regardless of how beautiful the exterior is, make sure the software controlling the handset does not fall short in terms of performance. Unfortunately, there seems to be a software glitch on the HTC One S that affected a handful of owners, where said smartphone will switch between the home screen and helicopter view of all homescreens at the most random of moments, and if you make attempts to make the phone behave through its three capacitive buttons, the handset would just hang – i other words, it would stop responding.

How do you solve this without removing the battery? If you are quick enough to lock and unlock the phone, then it ought to behave normally, although this is but a temporary solution. The video above shows such a mischievious handset in action, and HTC has started to receive defective One S models for repair, although no universal solution is in sight – yet. Hopefully HTC will be able to come up with a fix soon enough. I wonder if the new 1.7GHz enabled One S model is also affected…

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: HTC One S with Snapdragon S3 1.7GHz processor spotted, HTC One S launches in Taiwan with 1.7GHz Snapdragon S3 processor,