Sprint kicks off HTC Touch Pro2 sales at $349.99

So, any luck socking away $350 worth crisp, unmarked, non-sequential US currency over the past week since the Touch Pro2 was officially announced for Sprint? If so, we’d just like to offer a friendly reminder that you can now head over to Sprint’s online store to place your order — and yes, that $349.99 you’ll be shelling out is after rebate and discount on a new two-year contract. Being second doesn’t come cheap, it seems.

[Thanks, Wilson]

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Sprint kicks off HTC Touch Pro2 sales at $349.99 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 Sep 2009 01:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Pre rumored to be dropping to $150 on September 8th

We’ve already seen the Palm Pre dip below its $199 list price during a few limited, occasionally inadvertent sales, but it looks like it could soon be dropping well under the $200 mark for a slightly longer period of time — at least if a purportedly legit leaked document is to be believed. According to PreCentral, the doc comes from someone working at a Sprint “indirect partner retail dealer,” and quite clearly indicates that “indirect partners” will be able to sell the Pre for $149.99 (after a mail-in rebate) between September 8th and October 31st, 2009. Presumably, Sprint itself would also be offering the Pre for the same price during that time and, if the HTC Hero’s $179.99 price tag on Sprint is any indication, there seems to be at least a decent chance that the price drop could eventually become a permanent one. Either way, we won’t have to wait too long to see how this one pans out.

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Palm Pre rumored to be dropping to $150 on September 8th originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 Sep 2009 18:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Sprint HTC Touch Pro2 unboxed, compared to T-Mobile version

There’s not long to wait now, with September 8th confirmed as the date the Touch Pro2 hits Sprint stores, but just in case your cup runneth over with anticipation, we’ve been to the future and videotaped what you’ll be doing this coming Tuesday morning. The Sprint model you see above comes with a 3.5 millimeter headphone jack (is that a chorus of approval we hear?) and some minor keyboard and color scheme modifications from the T-Mobile version we reviewed a while back, but yeah, you already knew that. Anxious to see it? Run along past the break and look out for the new back cover, it’s quite the eye catcher.

[Thanks, thedoctor]

Continue reading Video: Sprint HTC Touch Pro2 unboxed, compared to T-Mobile version

Video: Sprint HTC Touch Pro2 unboxed, compared to T-Mobile version originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Sep 2009 07:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint to Sell the HTC Hero Android Phone

htc-hero

HTC’s recently announced third Android phone, the HTC Hero, has found a telecom carrier in Sprint. The device will sell for $180 after a $100 mail-in rebate, and with a two-year contract, in Sprint stores starting Oct. 11.

It will be the first Android phone on the Sprint network. So far, only T-Mobile in the U.S. offered phones running the Google-designed Android mobile operating system.

HTC had introduced the Hero in June though at that time the company did not reveal the telecom carrier for the device. The Hero has a 3.2-inch touch screen display, GPS, digital compass, a 5-megapixel auto focus camera and expandable MicroSD memory. It also features an anti-fingerprint coating on the screen for smudge resistance and a Teflon coating on the exterior. The HTC Hero will be the first Android device to support Adobe’s Flash standard.

The phone has been given a minor face lift for its American debut. Instead of sporting a ‘chin’ that we have seen on recent HTC phones such as the T-Mobile G1, the Hero has a sleek, flat compact design that should please consumers.

The Hero’s user interface will be reminiscent of the Palm Pre webOS as it tries to organize the phone around contacts and other user information. The HTC Hero will also allow users to add widgets such as Twitter feeds, weather, email and calendar to the home screen in a bid to customize the phone.

The device is a coup for Sprint, which also has the Palm Pre exclusively available on its network. For mobile phone buyers who want an alternative to the iPhone, Sprint is fast emerging as the better choice in terms of the range of smartphones that it has, compared to Verizon or T-Mobile.

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Photo: HTC Hero/HTC


HTC Hero heading to Sprint October 11th for $179.99, no chin in sight (update: exclusive to Sprint)

Semi-official no longer, Sprint has now officially announced the HTC Hero for its network. Here’s the skinny: it’s coming October 11th and will be $179.99 after assorted rebates. Also noteworthy? It’s the chinless model we just spied just days ago, but otherwise it looks like the same internals, Exchange Active Sync, and Sense UI we’ve been toying with for months now, plus Sprint TV. Pre-registration (note: not pre-order) is now available for those eager to already claim stake. We can’t help but notice there’s no mention of exclusivity here, but regardless, well played, Sprint, between this and the Pre, you’re amassing quite a nice collection, there.

Update: We spoke to Sprint, and the Hero is in fact an exclusive for the company.

Read – Press release
Read – Hero pre-registration

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HTC Hero heading to Sprint October 11th for $179.99, no chin in sight (update: exclusive to Sprint) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Sep 2009 09:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint developer site claims HTC Hero as network’s “first Android device”

These two have been eying each other from opposite ends of the room for quite some time now, but at long last, we’re seeing the first semi-official word that HTC’s Hero is indeed coming to the Now Network. Planted over in the Android section of Sprint’s own Developer site, we’re greeted with this statement:

“Announcing the HTC Hero, which will be the first Android device running on the Sprint network.”

The brief post (copied in full after the break) goes on to inform readers that the Sprint developer program will deploy an Android development section by September’s close, and there’s even a direct link to begin downloading the Android 1.5 SDK immediately. Of course, this isn’t as good as a carefully worded press release from the bowels of Overland Park, but it’s certainly enough to whet our appetites. C’mon Sprint — out with the price and release date, pronto!

[Via Phandroid]

Continue reading Sprint developer site claims HTC Hero as network’s “first Android device”

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Sprint developer site claims HTC Hero as network’s “first Android device” originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Sep 2009 08:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Hero Hits Sprint Oct. 11 With New Face, $180 Price Tag

That Sprint’s first Android phone’s going to be the HTC Hero is about as unsurprising as news gets, but you know what is surprising? They’ve given it some invasive plastic surgery, and priced it squarely below their own Palm Pre.

Sprint’s Hero is a bit blobbier than HTC’s original, but it also looks less chinny—an HTC design quirk that’s starting to get on some people’s nerves—and at any rate, there isn’t a whole lot of the Hero that isn’t the screen, so aside from the shuffled hard buttons, this redesign shouldn’t change too much in terms of usability.

Wisely, Sprint left the Hero’s guts—hardware and software—intact. That’s the same 3.2-inch multitouch capacitive screen, the same 5-megapixel camera, the same microSD slot (Sprint throws in a 2GB card for free), the same 3.5mm headphone jack, the same multitouch browser (no mention of Flash support though) and the same Sense UI, which converts Android into something unexpectedly beautiful, but tragically sluggish. And since this thing obviously supports EV-DO, we’ll finally get to play with it on proper 3G.

Whether or not they’ll be able to load HTC’s latest Sense update—the one that fixes basically every complaint we had with the original Hero, including slowdown—before the handsets ship is still up in the air, but in any case, it’s coming eventually.

The $180 price assumes a 2-year agreement at a minimum of $70 a month, and that you’ve got the initiative to mail in a rebate form, though just like with the Pre, there’s a good chance retailers like Best Buy’ll just take care of this for you. Like the Pre, the Hero is eligible for the $100 Everything plan, which is just about the best deal going for obnoxiously talky/texty types.

So, uh, Sprint’s kind of killing it these days, no? They’ve got their iron grip on the only two smartphone underdogs anyone really cares about: the first of which made all the other carriers’ Palm phones look pathetically lame; and the second of which looks like it’ll sucker-punch a complacent T-Mobile right off its Android throne—especially considering the fact that Sprint’s priced this thing a few bucks below T-Mo’s categorically less good MyTouch 3G. It may have taken a year, but this whole Android thing is finally getting interesting.

The best bits of press release below. [Sprint]

The Innovation and Openness of a True Mobile Internet Experience Coming Soon to America’s Most Dependable 3G Network from Sprint on HTC Hero with Google

Sprint’s first device with the Android™ platform available Oct. 11;
Pre-register for HTC Hero today at www.sprint.com/hero

OVERLAND PARK, Kan., and BELLEVUE, Wash. – Sept. 3, 2009 – Sprint (NYSE: S) and HTC Corporation today announced the upcoming arrival of the first wireless device offering the combination of the open and innovative Android platform with the high-speed connectivity of America’s most dependable 3G network1 (EVDO Rev. A), HTC Hero™ with Google™. Offering a rich mobile Internet experience, the much-anticipated HTC Hero offers synchronization for built-in Google mobile services, including Google Search™, Google Maps™, Gmail™, and YouTube™ as well as access to thousands of applications built on the Android platform.

Beginning on Oct. 11, customers will be able to purchase HTC Hero through all Sprint retail channels including Web (www.sprint.com), Telesales (1-800-SPRINT1) and our national retail partner Best Buy for $179.99 (excluding taxes) after a $50 instant savings and a $100 mail-in rebate with a two-year service agreement. Pre-registration begins today at www.sprint.com/hero.

Access to countless applications
As a charter member of the Open Handset Alliance™, Sprint is actively engaged with the Android community. Through Android Market™, HTC Hero users have access to more than 8,000 useful applications, widgets and fun games to download and install on their phone, with many more to come. Thousands of developers are working to introduce new Android applications every day.

Intuitive, user-focused and fun
HTC Hero is the first U.S. device to feature HTC Sense, an intuitive experience that was built with a guiding philosophy to put people at the center and allows the device to be completely customized to the wants and needs of the user. The device’s seven-panel wide home screen can be populated with customizable widgets that bring information to the surface.

HTC Hero users can easily create and switch between Scenes to reflect different moments or roles in their lives, such as work, social, travel and play. For example, a work Scene can be easily set up to include stock updates, work email and calendar, a play Scene could have music, weather, and a Twitter feed or a travel Scene could offer instant access to the local time, weather and maps.

Industry-leading features
HTC Hero features an integrated 5.0 MP camera and camcorder. It also offers easy access to personal and business e-mail, instant messaging and text messaging through POP, IMAP, and Exchange Active Sync accounts.

HTC Hero is a full-featured smartphone with Wi-Fi capability, a 3.2-inch capacitive touchscreen with pinch-to-zoom capability and a fingerprint resistant coating, integrated GPS navigation, and trackball navigation. Additional features include:
Stereo Bluetooth® 2.0 Wireless technology
accelerometer, light sensor and home screen widgets for improved usability
multimedia capable with microSD slot (32GB capable, 2GB included)
Sprint TV® with live and on-demand programming
NFL Mobile Live and NASCAR Sprint Cup MobileSM
easy access to social networking sites, including Facebook®, Flickr® and Twitter
visual voice mail for quick and easy access to specific voice mail messages

HTC Hero requires activation on a pricing plan offering unlimited data. Sprint’s Simply EverythingSM plan provides unlimited nationwide calling, texting, e-mail, social networking, Web browsing, GPS navigation, Sprint TV, streaming music, NFL Mobile Live, NASCAR Sprint Cup Mobile and much more for only $99.99 per month. That’s a savings of $1,200 over two years vs. a comparable AT&T iPhone® plan2. Sprint Everything Data plans with unlimited messaging and data start at just $69.99 for 450 minutes with unlimited night and weekend calling starting at 7 p.m. (All price plans exclude Sprint surcharges and taxes.)

Mysterious HTC Hero revision pics surface, angled chin now M.I.A.

It’s not unusual for HTC to repackage the same phone in dramatic ways for different carriers (see Sprint Touch Pro vs. Verizon’s vs AT&T Fuze), but the Hero that 8080.net reportedly has is a pretty marked difference — most notably a more conservative chin. Here’s what we can glean from the admittedly bad machine translation: the outlet claims it’s the Hero200 that the FCC just approved for CDMA bands, and while it certainly seems like a Hero variant one way or another, we have no proof that this is actually the same recently-approved version, nor have we seen what Sprint’s Hero will actually look like. With all those caveats all the way, feel free to jump into the read link and enjoy a number of pictures up close and personal with the device.

[Via Cloned in China]

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Mysterious HTC Hero revision pics surface, angled chin now M.I.A. originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Sep 2009 00:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sprint follows T-Mobile’s lead, wants $350 for HTC Touch Pro2

We figured the suits over at T-Mobile USA were on some of that good stuff when they slapped an almost comical $350 (on contract) price tag on HTC’s Touch Pro2, but evidently said “stuff” has made its way into the halls of Overland Park as well. After months of watching evidence mount, Sprint has finally come clean and admitted that HTC’s EV-DO Rev. A-equipped superphone is coming to its network, and with it will come access to Sprint TV as well as NFL Mobile Live and NASCAR Sprint Cup Mobile apps. The smartphone will go on sale September 8th, though you’ll have to pony up $349.99 (after a $100 mail-in rebate) in order to secure one on a two-year contract. We’re all about that 3.6-inch WVGA tilting screen, but with Palm’s Pre selling on this very network for a full $150 less, we’re thinking this one won’t appeal to many outside of the WinMo faithful.

Continue reading Sprint follows T-Mobile’s lead, wants $350 for HTC Touch Pro2

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Sprint follows T-Mobile’s lead, wants $350 for HTC Touch Pro2 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 Aug 2009 14:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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JD Power Releases 2009 Call Quality Study

Motorola_EM330.jpgJ.D. Power and Associates has released its 2009 Wireless Call Quality Performance Study, which measured call quality in six regions: Northeast; Mid-Atlantic; Southeast; North Central; Southwest; and West.

The study found that overall, wireless carriers have reduced the number of issues to four problems per 100 calls (PP100), down from 5 PP100 six months ago. In addition, failed connections are down to 3 PP100 (from 4 PP100), and audio issues like static declined from 3 PP100 to 2 PP100.

So who’s on top? Verizon Wireless ranked the highest in the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, and Southwest regions. J.D. Power said that Verizon Wireless did “particularly well” in limiting dropped calls, failed initial connections, and late or failed voice mail or text messages.

The numbers varied wildly; for example, AT&T scored the worst in the northeast, with 16 PP100; Sprint had 15 PP100, T-Mobile had 14 PP100, and VZW had just 8 PP100.