Speedy new HTC Hero firmware starts to pop around the world

End users of HTC’s Hero are now getting official access to the major new firmware build that’s been floating around lately, with the company’s Danish site being among the first to offer it to downloaders official stamped as version 2.73.405.5 (for comparison, UK visitors are still left out in the cold as of this writing). The big deal here is speed — the new build stamps out many lag-related concerns buyers had at the phone’s initial release, and we’ve heard (and seen) that the new code is nothing short of magic. Unfortunately, US residents still don’t have a good reason to expect to find this on their local HTC support site yet — Sprint won’t be dropping the Hero until early next month, at which point we’d certainly hope the latest and greatest speed improvements would’ve already been incorporated — but Europeans hesitant to give the Hero a shot might want to give it another look with the new goods installed.

[Thanks, Frederik C.]

Filed under: ,

Speedy new HTC Hero firmware starts to pop around the world originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 07:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

LG officially announces GW620, its first Android phone

Though it already broke cover at IFA out in Germany a few days ago, LG’s just sealed the deal on its very first Android phone — the GW620 landscape QWERTY slider. Interestingly, the “Etna” name seen at IFA is missing from the official press release, but otherwise, the 3-inch touchscreen mentioned lines up nicely with what we’d previously known. Camera specs aren’t mentioned here, but as far as we know, it’s going to clock in at 5 megapixels and the phone looks to be loaded with a very bone-stock Android build sans LG-specific enhancements like an S-Class port. Interestingly, the GW620 flies in the face of LG’s super-cozy relationship with Microsoft and its commitment to concentrate on WinMo in its smartphone line, but you can tell that the company’s wording in the release is very carefully-chosen: the phone is geared at “making the smartphone experience more accessible for typical users” and “young professionals who demand a full QWERTY keypad,” which we guess makes WinMo a more business-savvy platform in LG’s eyes. We think we’re comfortable with that characterization — for now, anyway. Look for the GW620 to start showing up in “select European markets” in the fourth quarter of the year.

Filed under: ,

LG officially announces GW620, its first Android phone originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 02:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Sprint’s Dan Hesse talks Android, Pre, iPhone, 4G on Charlie Rose

Sprint CEO Dan Hesse recently sat down for an interview with the master of one-on-ones and black backdrops, Charlie Rose, and while much of the talk was spent traveling down memory lane and revisiting Hesse’s two-decade rise through the ranks at AT&T before fleeing in 2000, there were some great quotes that came out of it:

  • “We’re getting ready to launch a couple of new Android devices.” We know one’s the Hero, and the other — if we were the betting types — is the Samsung InstinctQ.
  • Rose: “The merger with Nextel was a bad idea?” Hesse: “In 20 / 20 hindsight, it was, yes… the premium that Sprint paid for Nextel was too much.” Sprint’s gone back and forth on the idea of spinning off Nextel over the past couple years, so it’s not a surprising thing for him to think — but to hear Sprint’s CEO actually say out loud that he thinks a very active part of its network shouldn’t have become part of the company is a little bombastic.
  • “Our prepaid brand is Boost.” Nothing wild and crazy about that statement, though it does reaffirm that Virgin Mobile is destined for assimilation. The whole thing’s kinda funny considering that Boost dabbled in CDMA before reversing course, and once again, Sprint will be dealing with large installed bases of both iDEN and CDMA prepaid customers.
  • On touchscreen smartphones: “Those are the most expensive phones for us to sell, and those are the ones where we need to make sure that the customer stays with us [and] doesn’t churn, because we’re out a lot of money… those are expensive devices.” Theoretically, an aggressively-priced subsidized smartphone could still end up leaving a carrier in the red if you broke your contract early on and paid the ETF, but we doubt that’s a huge problem — especially for a CDMA carrier like Sprint. He goes on to say “I’m already looking at 4G versions of smartphones,” so that’s really encouraging to hear, particularly if you’re into WiMAX.
  • “Customers will pay premium for simplicity. Simplicity is everything… Digital One Rate which we launched back at AT&T, that was all about simplicity… people paid more. It wasn’t a price cut.” Translation: “Unlimited makes you feel like you’re getting a deal, but rest assured, we’re banking.”
  • In response to Rose asking how Sprint uses the Palm Pre to take on Apple and RIM: “It was really kind of Palm’s decision to take on Apple. And Palm has had [a] long standing relationship with Sprint.” It’s interesting to hear Hesse seemingly back away from a fight with Apple and chalk up the situation to happenstance — RIM not as much, considering that Sprint carries a number of BlackBerrys in its lineup and will certainly continue to do so. Talking more about pitting the Pre against the iPhone, he goes on to say that Palm’s handset is “doing well. But you’ve got to almost put the iPhone, to be fair, in a separate category. The Apple brand and that device has done so well. It’s like comparing someone to Michael Jordan.” If that’s not a tactful acknowledgment that the iPhone is a bona fide wireless superstar, we don’t know what is. Hesse’s giving the iPhone the respect it’s rightfully earned — as any strategically-minded executive would.
  • “The biggest impediment to mobile growth is you got processors are getting a lot faster, screens are getting sharper, they use more and more power, and battery technology is not moving very fast… That’s the one breakthrough that the industry needs. It needs battery breakthroughs.” It’s good to hear that Hesse understands as well as everyone else that the wireless industry needs to be focused on making power draw a non-issue, but he sounds less convinced of the solution: “I don’t know. Solar we hope, and renewable energy sources.” When Sprint gets some cash socked away, it might consider throwing some R&D money at the problem — it’ll be first to market with something resembling a “national” 4G network, after all, and the situation’s only going to get worse.

Who knew you’d find out so much about the inner workings of the States’ third-largest carrier from watching PBS? [Via Gizmodo]

Filed under: ,

Sprint’s Dan Hesse talks Android, Pre, iPhone, 4G on Charlie Rose originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Sep 2009 20:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Hands On: Motorola’s New Android Phone Nails Design, Fumbles Software

motorola-cliq-main

Motorola announced its first Android operating system-based device, the Cliq yesterday. The hardware is beautifully designed while the software makes a serious attempt to incorporate social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook. But more importantly, the future of Motorola may ride partially on the success of the Cliq.

First off, let’s just say the handset gets a lot of things right: The phone itself is nicely designed and feels impossibly thin (for a slider), the touchscreen is responsive and the social networking options are subtly ingrained into the phone — they don’t come out and slap you in the face.

But let’s also say this that the Cliq suffers from feature overload. The UI is messy and challenging to learn — it attempts to bring together too many mobile features and can be confusing and clogged. We suspect that after a few days with the device, it would become easy to master. But right off the bat, operating the phone left us befuddled.

The Cliq’s coming out party was September 9, and then we got the device behind closed doors. Here are the highlights.

motorola-cliq-motoblur-hands-on20Hardware

The Cliq is lovely to hold. It feels quite slim (about 0.62 inches thick) and light (weighing 5.6 ounces). Comparatively, the Palm Pre is 0.67 inches thick and weighs 4.76 ounces, while the iPhone 3G is 0.48 inches thick and weighs 4.7 ounces. The sliding keyboard on the Cliq is smooth and the physical(!) keypad offers fantastic tactile feedback, making touch-typing a very real possibility. The phone comes in a polished black the company calls “Titanium” and “Winter White.” The 3.1-inch display is bright and easy to read — at least under the florescent lighting where we put the phone through its paces. The screen is touch capable and very, very responsive. It’s certainly on par with the iPhone.

motorola-cliq-uiUser interface

The Cliq runs the Android OS draped in a custom skin from Motorola called Blur. Besides having an idiotic name, the skin collates e-mail, social networking services (Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace) and contacts into a single stream so users don’t have to click through different apps. The phone’s homescreen has three widgets: Social Status, Happenings and Messaging.

Social Status has a text box where you can broadcast your status (eating ice cream or hanging out with friends) and choose the service, such as Facebook, Twitter or MySpace, you want it to be updated to. It’s a neat service and fans of mobile tweeting will appreciate having a feature like this built into their phones.

Messaging can aggregate corporate and personal e-mail accounts and display them on a single screen. You can arrange new messages to pop up in a cardlike view (similar to the Palm Pre) or in an easily scrollable list.

The Happenings widget looks much like a Facebook feed except it brings in information about status updates and photos from other services like Twitter and MySpace too.

Camera

The Cliq has a 5.2-megapixel auto-focus camera. We tested it briefly by shooting some pics in low light and comparing it to photos from the iPhone’s camera. Guess what? The Cliq’s cam captured finer details and offered a brighter picture with true colors. It’s easy to share and upload photos, in the spirit of Cliq fun. The user interface on every photo has four choices: Share, Gallery, Set as Wallpaper and Delete. Clicking on the Share tab means you can post the photo to MySpace, Gmail, Picasa or any other photo-sharing site you have set up such as Flickr.

Phone

Hey, this thing is supposed to make calls, right? The phone sports a dialer similar to the iPhone, and the keypad has additional features, such as a speed dialer and history (a mashup of e-mails, phone calls and status updates). We didn’t get to test the voice quality of this device, which will be available on the T-Mobile network later this year. Motorola and T-Mobile haven’t said how much the phone will cost, but we’re betting under $200.

Overall

The Cliq is a beautiful piece of hardware, but it suffers from features creep. Too many options are jammed into a skin that, quite frankly, can’t handle them. There’s a reason why the iPhone, the Pre and even the G1 have done so well — the user interfaces are simple and elegant, and they can be learned without an instruction manual. Motorola screwed up with Blur — it adds an obtuse layer of functionality to a device that does not need it.

Moto admits the phone can be overwhelming at first, but claims the complete customization of social networking sites like Twitter, MySpace and Facebook are worth it. We disagree. Let people pick and choose what social networking sites they want to use on their phones and download apps that best serve their needs. An additional skin like Blur just over-complicates things.

Motrola, hear us out: You guys are not doing well right now. You make great hardware and crappy software. If you want phone buyers to take you seriously, keep producing excellent handsets like the Cliq, load them with top-notch operating systems (Android FTW!) and let it be. People will start buying your products again.

See more photos of the Cliq.

motorola-cliq-motoblur-hands-on01

motorola-cliq-motoblur-hands-on09

motorola-cliq-motoblur-hands-on18

Photos: Courtesy IntoMobile/Will Park


Motorola Takes the Android Focus off of Google

Motorola CEO Dr. Sanjay K. Jha made one thing unflinchingly clear during yesterday’s keynote at GigaOm’s Mobilize 09 conference: the Cliq is all about Motorola–not Google and certainly not T-Mobile. The focus on the company no doubt stemmed to some degree out of its recent economic woes–the event was something of a make-or-break for Motorola, which, as of late, has been struggling to recapture the success of mid-00 devices like the Razr. On the software side, the event marked the latest in an on-going shift in focus for Android handsets away from Google.

Launched in October of last year, the first Android handset was all about Google–the “G” in T-Mobile G1. The device was branded with Google’s logo and the name HTC was dropped entirely from the device for its US launch. The branding was actually part of a marketing deal with Google that insured the software giant would have a good deal of control over the version Android included on the handset, which meant that it was centered around such Google products as Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Maps, and YouTube.

The focus shifted away from Google a touch with the launch of subsequent handsets from HTC, the T-Mobile myTouch 3G and the HTC Hero. From the talk surrounding both devices, however, it was clear that there was still some emphasis on the OS–in fact, in the UK, the latter is sometimes called the T-Mobile G2.

Video: Meizu M8 seemingly runs Android, definitely sets expectations too high

Ah, the Meizu M8. Undoubtedly the funnest smartphone ever to talk about, though based on shipping success rates, it’s probably not the phone to order if you actually value the whole “getting what you paid for” thing. Dodgy ownership aside, we’ve been waiting for Google’s own mobile operating system to splash down on the M8 since June, and if the video seen down there in the read link is to be believed, said scenario has finally become reality. All we’re shown are a few swiping motions, but when you’re talking Meizu, that’s all you really need to believe.

[Thanks, Bidur]

Filed under:

Video: Meizu M8 seemingly runs Android, definitely sets expectations too high originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Sep 2009 09:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Motorola CLIQ: first hands-on impressions (update: with video)

The wait’s killing us for a proper hands-on with this thing, but we just had a chance to very briefly touch — yes, touch — the CLIQ as we wandered the show (and ran into tnkgrl in the process). Here’s what we can tell you:

  • Despite the MSM7201a core, the UI is definitely faster than any factory ROM we’ve used before on any Android device. A good test of this is to quickly swipe open the app drawer — the action’s smooth on the CLIQ, whereas most Magic ROMs would stutter.
  • The screen is glass capacitive, and it feels that way. There’s no “give” like you’ve got on a G1 or Magic, for example.
  • Expanding on the glass screen, the device feels absolutely fantastic overall. Through Motorola’s thick and thin, you’ve got to admit that the company has a reputation for building ridiculously rock-solid phones, and we’re pleased to say that the trend is continuing with the CLIQ. Pictures don’t do it justice — the white model looks particularly cheap at a glance — but in the hand, it feels like it’s fashioned from a solid block of metal.
  • The camera button has a focus detent, which makes it a heck of a lot easier to properly harness the power of your 5 megapixel autofocus optics. The jury’s still out on photo quality, but it seems promising and focusing is relatively quick (though our disappointment in QVGA 24fps video still runs pretty deep).
  • This probably blew Google’s mind, but MOTOBLUR has five home screen panels along with a small indicator similar to the iPhone’s to show you which one you’re currently on. Who knew that someone might want more than three? [Yes, we know HTC’s bringing additional panels to the table in Sense as well — thing is, stock Android doesn’t, which a majority of Android phones in circulation still run. It’d be nice to see Google take something like this into the trunk in Donut or Eclair. -Ed.]
  • The keyboard feels great. Truly stellar, actually — and we don’t think there’s much room for complaints about layout, unless you’re really into the dedicated horizontal number row.

We’ll have more thoughts this evening once we’ve spent more quality time… you know, “clicking” with the CLIQ. Sorry.

Update: More screenshots of CLIQ and MOTOBLUR UI, including the back panel designs and some comparison shots. Interesting to note that the keyboard aspect of the device is just slightly thinner than the iPhone 3GS.

Update 2: Now with more video!

Continue reading Motorola CLIQ: first hands-on impressions (update: with video)

Filed under: ,

Motorola CLIQ: first hands-on impressions (update: with video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 23:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Android Battle: CLIQ edition

CLIQ
Galaxy
Tattoo
Hero
Magic / MT3G
Dream / G1
CarrierT-Mobile— (GSM / HSDPA)— (GSM / EDGE)SprintT-MobileT-Mobile
Manuf.MotorolaSamsungHTCHTCHTCHTC
Price$179.99$99.99$149.99
ReleasedJuly 2009Oct 11, 2009Aug 5, 2009Oct 22, 2008
KeyboardSlide-outVirtualVirtualVirtualVirtualSlide-out
AndroidMOTOBLURStandardSense UISense UIStandardStandard
Processor528MHz MSM7201A528MHz ARM11528MHz MSM7225528MHz MSM7201A528MHz MSM7201A528MHz MSM7201A
Screen3.1-inch (est.), 320 x 4803.2-inch, 320 x 4802.8-inch, 240 x 3203.2-inch, 320 x 4803.2-inch, 320 x 4803.2-inch, 480 x 320
Headphone3.5mm3.5mm3.5mm3.5mmExtUSBExtUSB
TouchscreenCapacitiveCapacitiveResistiveCapacitiveCapacitiveCapacitive
Still Camera5MP with AF5MP with Flash3.2MP5MP with AF3.2MP with AF3.2MP with AF
Bluetooth2.02.12.02.02.02.0
ExchangeActiveSyncActiveSyncActiveSyncDepends on versionDepends on version
Storage256MB, microSD8GB, microSD512MB, microSD512MB, microSD512MB, microSD256MB, microSD
Battery1400mAh1500mAh1100mAh1500 mAh1340 mAh1150 mAh
Weight163g114g113g135g116g158g

It’s been over 11 months since the Android first hit the scene with HTC’s T-Mobile G1, and in that time we’ve come to the conclusion that, despite having more or less a clean slate on industrial design choices and specs, little progress has been made in the way of variation. Stacked up side-to-side, Motorola CLIQ manages to stand out with a slide-out keyboard and MOTOBLUR skin, but under the hood, it’s pretty much as uniform as a netbook. Peruse for yourself in the chart above.

Update: We had a typo on the Hero screen size — it’s 3.2-inches, not the other way around! Stupid keyboards.

Filed under: ,

Android Battle: CLIQ edition originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Video: Motorola CLIQ gets demoed in detail

CLIQs are pretty hard to come by in the wake of Motorola’s big announcement today, but we flagged down an all-too-nice rep who showed off the phone’s major talking points. Though it’s got the same old Qualcomm MSM7201a beating in its chest that we’ve found in countless other Android and WinMo phones — not anything thoroughly modern like Snapdragon — we’re feeling cautiously optimistic that MOTOBLUR is snappier in day-to-day use than HTC’s competing Sense. The built-in widgets Motorola is supplying look top-notch with a ton of spit and polish (seemingly without sacrificing speed or usability), so all told, we think Moto’s been really cranking this year baking this platform to a golden crisp. Follow the break for the epic demo, and pay special attention to the white model when the rep pulls it out — the back was supposed to be stylized Morse code that reads “I love Friday nights,” but apparently they ran out of space, so it’s now just random dots on a cover. At least it still looks cool, though, and that’s the important thing.

Continue reading Video: Motorola CLIQ gets demoed in detail

Filed under: ,

Video: Motorola CLIQ gets demoed in detail originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 15:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Motorola CLIQ finds a home on T-Mobile’s website

Lookie here! Those who thought Motorola was messing around with the revitalization of itself best take notice, as the company’s CLIQ — which was literally just announced moments ago — has already surfaced on T-Mobile USA’s website. At least initially, T-Mob will be the exclusive carrier for the phone in America, and it’ll be shipping in both black and white. Sadly, there’s no clues yet as to when it’ll launch and how much it’ll set you back, but feel free to hit that read link if you’re interested in subscribing to updates.

[Thanks, Micah]

Filed under:

Motorola CLIQ finds a home on T-Mobile’s website originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 15:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments