PowerSkin battery case pumps juice to HTC Inspire 4G, Desire HD

PowerSkin battery case pumps juice to HTC Inspire 4G, Desire HD

When it comes to battery-boosting power sleeves, we’d say the iPhone’s covered, but what of the little green monster? Well, at least two Androids can now get juiced by way of a new charging case from PowerSkin. HTC’s Inspire 4G and Desire HD are getting a little extra power with the release of this black silicone skin, which promises 1500mAh and up to eight hours of added battery life. The PowerSkin will set you back $60, and is now available at Amazon and the source link below.

PowerSkin battery case pumps juice to HTC Inspire 4G, Desire HD originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Jun 2011 03:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC EVO 3D review

The first time we saw the rumored Supersonic we were blown away. HTC and Google had just wowed us with the Nexus One, and here we were looking at something even better — a 4.3-inch phone with WiMAX wrapped in a white body. This prototype was buggy and had abysmal battery life, but it was real. Four months later it landed in our hands at Google I/O. We’re of course talking about the EVO 4G which went on to become a runaway hit for HTC and Sprint as the first ever 4G smartphone in the US. And here we are a year later with the HTC EVO 3D, the legitimate heir to Sprint’s mobile kingdom — at least until the Motorola Photon 4G comes along. When we first played with the 3D-capable handset at CTIA we were suitably impressed, but we left with a lot of unanswered questions. How do the 1.2GHz dual core processor and qHD display affect battery life? Is 3D a compelling feature or just a gimmick? What is 2D camera performance like with the lower specced camera? Is the EVO 3D a worthy replacement for the EVO 4G? Find out in our review after the break.

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HTC EVO 3D review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jun 2011 19:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC EVO View 4G review

It’s not often that we feel a keen sense of déjà vu while writing a review, but here we are. The EVO View 4G ($399.99) is a first, but also something you’ve most definitely seen before. This tablet is, for all intents and purposes, the HTC Flyer: it has the same 7-inch display, aluminum build, single-core 1.5GHz processor, Gingerbread-plus-Sense-combo, 32GB of storage, and stylus for pen input. But, it also happens to be Sprint’s first WiMAX tablet to go on sale in the US, with a 4G radio promising download / upload speeds up to 10Mbps / 1Mbps on Sprint’s network. And, at the risk of spoiling our review, the View’s connection is, indeed, zippy. But does this have any bearing on the tablet’s overall value? Join us past the break to find out — we’ve got some revisiting to do.

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HTC EVO View 4G review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jun 2011 19:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Evo 3D: Oh My God Make It Stop Hurting

The original Evo 4G was a beautiful, throbbing monster. A huge screen, powerful guts, and features spilling out of its belt. Now what could make a giant mecha-Android better? Adding 3D powers, right? Wrong. Very, very wrong. More »

HTC Sensation 4G now available at T-Mobile, $150 if you order online

Walmart shoppers may have been able to get their hands on the phone a few days early but, as promised, everyone else can now snag the HTC Sensation 4G direct from T-Mobile. What’s more, while the list price is the same $200 we’d heard previously (on a two-year contract and after a $50 mail-in rebate), the carrier is also offering an additional $50 off for those that order online, which brings the final cost down to the same $150 that Walmart’s been selling it for. The phone itself, of course, is the same we’ve been seeing all along: a 4.3-inch qHD screen, 1.2GHz dual-core Snapdragon processor, and Android 2.3 with Sense. Hit the link below to get your order in if that sounds alright with you.

[Thanks, Mike]

HTC Sensation 4G now available at T-Mobile, $150 if you order online originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jun 2011 16:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Flip-Flops on Android Update for Desire Smartphone

Despite earlier claims to the contrary, HTC’s Desire smartphone will receive a software update to the latest version of Android. Photo: Charlie Sorrel/Wired.com

Smartphone hardware manufacturer HTC is having trouble making up its mind.

On Tuesday, HTC quietly posted to its Facebook page that owners of its Desire smartphone would not receive the latest Android software update, “Gingerbread.” The company claimed a memory issue that conflicted with its customized user interface, Sense 3.0.

Less than 24 hours later, however, HTC made a complete 180-degree turnaround on its position in a pithy follow-up post: “Contrary to what we said earlier, we are going to bring Gingerbread to HTC Desire.

HTC hasn’t given a reason for flip-flopping on the matter, and the company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

HTC’s issues with updating the Desire handset highlight a problem long familiar to the Android platform. The Android team’s software development cycle averages a new version release every six months. That’s hard on manufacturers, which can take twice that amount of time to go through the developmental process of creating a new piece of hardware. HTC has the added hassle of updating its Sense software to work with each new version release of Android. So by the time a phone is ready to launch, the Android version it ships with may already be out of date.

Some say HTC’s Sense software is the very thing holding the Desire back from an update.

“The hardware itself can certainly handle Gingerbread,” Steve Kondik, creator of popular Android modification software CyanogenMod, told Wired.com. “A standard build of Android fits just fine, but once HTC adds their stuff to it (Sense UI and everything that goes with it), there is no way it will fit.”

Google makes the code for its Android platform widely available to manufacturers after each version is finished (with some notable exceptions). It’s what is called “stock Android,” because the code comes directly from Google, untouched. A number of devices — like HTC’s Nexus One or the more recent LG G2X — ship with stock Android.

Many others, however, ship with customized versions of the Android platform. “Sense” is HTC’s particular flavor of Android, and the modified user interface serves mostly to differentiate HTC’s phones from the glut of others currently available on the market. HTC’s initial statement suggested that the latest version of Sense was too large to load on the 512 MB of flash memory the Desire comes with.

With some effort, however, HTC may be able to fit a version of the Sense software on the Desire.

“They probably have to trim the fat,” software developer Koushik Dutta told Wired.com in an interview. “Provide the bloatware as optional downloads, compress the image resources further,” and other tweaks to the Sense software that result in a slimmer software footprint on the device.

It may not be realistic to expect continuous software updates to smartphones considering the industry timetables.

“Generally, consumers should count on paying for upgrades at the initial time of purchase,” Gartner mobile analyst Ken Dulaney told Wired.com in an e-mail. “Save your money and buy new devices every 2 years.”

That two-year window fits in line with Google’s vision for carriers and manufacturers. In May, Google announced an agreement with the most prominent smartphone manufacturers and carriers, mandating that newly purchased Android devices you buy from participating partners and carriers will receive the most current version of the Android software for up to 18 months after the device’s initial release.

Although the Desire first debuted before this agreement, it’s not unreasonable to expect a software update on a phone less than a year old.

HTC’s dilemma raises the question: How many smartphones aren’t updated to the latest version of Android because of top-heavy customized interfaces?


Best Buy adds $50 dock to its collection of HTC Flyer accessories

Surely by now you’ve recouped that $80 you begrudgingly forked over for your Flyer stylus, right? Good. Because the parade of accessories for the 7-inch slate continues. Now, Best Buy’s selling a matching white micro-USB dock for $50. It’s perfect for transforming the slate into the aluminum-clad bedside alarm of your dreams, but you can also connect your own MHL adapter to the rear micro-USB port, allowing you to output video to an HDTV. Looks like more than a few folks are sweet on the idea of porting HTC Watch to a bigger screen — the dock’s back-ordered with a one- to two-week delay. But is it worth the fifty bucks? We’ll leave that to you and your wallet.

Best Buy adds $50 dock to its collection of HTC Flyer accessories originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jun 2011 11:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Kingdom soars into FCC’s database, WiMAX radio signals a Sprint release

Up until now, all we’ve had to go on were leaked Blurrycam photos and a few morsels “from the inside.” Now, however, HTC’s going to have an awfully difficult time denying the existence of its so-called Kingdom, known to the FCC as PH44100. The filing itself doesn’t reveal a whole heck of a lot beyond what we already knew — a 4.3-inch qHD display, namely — but the presence of both a CDMA and WiMAX radio assures us that it’ll be heading for Sprint sooner rather than later. A qHD contender for The Now Network? Yes, please.

HTC Kingdom soars into FCC’s database, WiMAX radio signals a Sprint release originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jun 2011 09:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC pulls a 180, now says Gingerbread is coming to Desire

So, here’s the tally: as of June 14th, there’s just “not enough memory” in the Desire for Gingerbread to run properly. As of the 15th, however, there is. We won’t pretend to understand what changed so drastically in the past 24 hours, but what is clear is that the aforesaid handset maker is listening to its most demanding of users. While it’s safe to assume that the Average Joe (or Jane) wouldn’t be able to recognize the difference between Android 2.2 and 2.3, folks clamoring for the update seem to have coerced the company to make things work. In other words, it looks like the update is back on… now it’s just a matter of making it run well. Kudos HTC, and godspeed.

[Thanks, Frederik]

HTC pulls a 180, now says Gingerbread is coming to Desire originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jun 2011 08:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Gives Up on Gingerbread For Desire

Desire owners who believed HTC’s promise to bring Gingerbread to the handset can stop waiting now

[UPDATE: HTC has now changed its mind again. A new Facebook post reads “Contrary to what we said earlier, we are going to bring Gingerbread to HTC Desire.” ]

Those who bought the HTC Desire because of a promised future upgrade to Android 2.3 Gingerbread can put there heads in their hands and begin to softly weep. HTC has announced — via Facebook — that it has officially given up on the project. The problem? The phone doesn’t have enough memory for both Gingerbread and HTC’s own Sense user interface. To save you entering the seething morass of Facebook, here’s the announcement in full.

Our engineering teams have been working hard for the past few months to find a way to bring Gingerbread to the HTC Desire without compromising the HTC Sense experience you’ve come to expect from our phones.

However, we’re sorry to announce that we’ve been forced to accept there isn’t enough memory to allow us both to bring Gingerbread and keep the HTC Sense experience on the HTC Desire. We’re sincerely sorry for the disappointment that this news may bring to some of you

This isn’t really a surprise. We got our first look at the Desire at the Mobile World Congress, Barcelona, in February 2010. But as recently as this year’s MWC HTC was promising that the upgrade was on its way.

What this news really highlights is the way Android works. Instead of being a single OS that can be sent out to users, it’s more of a platform that is taken by phone makers and bent to their will before being passed on to you. And it seems that now we can’t even trust the manufacturers to tell us the truth.

Desire and Gingerbread Update [Facebook via ]

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