Posts Tagged ‘HTC’

Top seven HTC smartphones: how HTC made a mark 3 in years?

December 22nd, 2011

Three years ago, the name HTC (High Tech Computer Corporation) was not very familiar to many of us. Today, the Taiwanese tech giant is one of the world’s top smartphone and tablet makers. The company predominantly produces hardware solutions for Google Android. But it also has some products with Windows Phone with the likes of HTC HD 7, HTC Radar and Titan.

Here we list seven best smartphones ever from HTC, which is arguably the second largest Android hardware maker after Samsung. Microsoft has also signed a deal with the firm to produce more devices for its revamped Windows Phone platform.

HTC Desire HD
HTC Desire HD is one of the first high end smartphones from the company. HTC unveiled this 4.3-inch smartphone in September 2010. When released, Desire HD had Android 2.2 Froyo, which was later upgraded to Gingerbread. The High Definition Android phone is powered by a super fast 1GHz Qualcomm 8255 Snapdragon processor, 1.5GB flash memory, 768MB of RAM and 32GB expandable microSD slot.

HTC Wildfire
HTC Wildfire is an Android smartphone that has penetrated into global markets really like a wildfire. It received large popularity as it is a perfect entry level smartphone. Powered by a 528 MHz Qualcomm processor, Android 2.2 Froyo, 3.2-inch TFT LCD capacitive touchscreen and a 5-megapixel camera, Wildfire is one of the popular phones ever from the company. The device comes up with FriendStream social media capabilities, Adobe Flash browser and many other incredible features.

HTC HD7
HTC HD 7, a successor to the HTC HD2, is a Windows Phone 7 handset from the Taiwan firm. The smartphone features a 4.3-inch LCD capacitive touchscreen display, 1GHz Scorpion Qualcomm Snapdragon QSD8250 processor, Adreno 200 graphics and 5-megapixel rear camera. HD 7 is a better recommendation for HD video recording, weather forecast animation and many other fresh features. The company recently added two more phones to its Windows Phone kitty. They are HTC Radar and Titan.

HTC Nexus One
It is actually the first Google Nexus branded phone. In fact, Google hired HTC to build its first Nexus phone. With its huge competence in smartphone manufacturing, HTC built up an amazing smartphone with a 3.7-inch PenTile display. Running on Android 2.2 Froyo, Nexus One is a great phone with its glossy display, fast processor and Google Maps navigation software. The device is powered by a 1GHz Qualcomm QSD 8250 Snapdragon ARM processor, 512MB of RAM, 5-megapixel rear camera and many other brilliant features.

HTC Legend
HTC Legend, a successor to the HTC Hero, came into stores in March 2010. The device features a 3.2-inch active-matrix OLED (AMOLED) display, Qualcomm MSM 7227 600 MHz processor, 384MB of RAM and 5-megapixel rear camera. HTC Legend, though came up with Android 2.1 Éclair, now runs on Froyo. The device is made of single piece aluminum, inspired by Apple’s Mac range.

“Apple, eat your heart out. This handset, hewn from a single piece of aluminum, owes many of its design cues to Apple’s unibody Mac range, but its widget library, customizable home screen and tight social integration elevates it above the competition,” says Telegraph’s Claudine Beaumont.

HTC Sensation 4G
HTC Sensation 4G is the company’s reply to Samsung Galaxy S II. Announced in April 2011, HTC unveiled the device in June in the United States. It is an Android 2.3 Gingerbread smartphone with a large 4.3-inch S-LCD Gorilla glass touchscreen display that offers a resolution of 540 x 960 pixels at 256 ppi. The device is powered by a 1.2 GHz dual core Qualcomm MSM8260 CPU, Qualcomm Adreno 220 GPU and 768MB of RAM. Though touted as a huge competitor to Galaxy S II, Sensation 4G could not make large influence in the U.S.

HTC Rezound
HTC Rezound, previously codenamed HTC Vigor, is actually a musical upgrade to HTC Sensation 4G. HTC launched the device with an aim to take on iPhone 4S. Rezound, known as Sensation XL in Europe, is known for its integration with the Dr. Dre Beats Audio software tweaks and headphone for unequaled musical experience. The Gingerbread smartphone is powered by a 1.5 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon MSM8660, 1GB of RAM, HTC Sense 3.5, 8-megapixel rear camera and much more.

Source:http://nvonews.com/2011/12/21/top-seven-htc-smartphones-how-htc-made-a-mark-3-in-years/

HTC, Google, GM, Righthaven, AMSC: Intellectual Property

September 20th, 2011

HTC Corp. (2498), the Taiwanese smartphone maker locked in a global patent battle with competitor Apple Inc. (AAPL), lost a U.K. court bid to rush the scheduling of a trial in Britain before a parallel case is heard in Germany.

Holding a U.K. trial in January on the validity of Apple’s patent for multilingual texting technology would put too much pressure on the iPhone maker, which is defending three other patents for touch-screen features against HTC lawsuits in Britain, Judge Richard Arnold ruled yesterday in the High Court in London. HTC had hoped to win a U.K. judgment in its favor in time to show the judge in the German trial early next year.

While the trial shouldn’t be expedited to accommodate a German trial that isn’t yet scheduled, the case does have “commercial urgency,” Arnold said. All four patents should go to trial in March or April, he ruled.

The dispute over the U.K. trial date comes as Apple, based in Cupertino, California, is embroiled in a global battle with Samsung Electronics Co. over both smartphones and tablet computers. HTC sued Apple in London on July 29, seeking to revoke the European smartphone patents it was accused of infringing in two German lawsuits earlier that month. Apple also sued in the U.K., naming HTC and Samsung in a complaint filed Sept. 12. Samsung’s lawyers didn’t attend today’s hearing.

A spokeswoman for HTC’s European unit didn’t comment when reached yesterday by phone.

The case is HTC Europe Co. Ltd. v. Apple Inc., High Court of Justice, London, HC11C02703

For more patent news, click here.
Trademark

ISYS Technologies Settles ChromiumPC Trademark Case With Google

ISYS Technologies Inc., creator of a 3.5-inch modular computer product, has dismissed a trademark infringement case against Google Inc., according to a court filing.

ISYS sued Google and its marketing partners Amazon.com Inc., Best Buy Co., Samsung Electronics Co. and Acer Inc. (2353) in efforts to halt the sale of the Google Chromebook.

That suit, filed June 6 in federal court in Utah, alleged that Google’s application to register “Chromium” as a trademark, and opposition to ISYS’ application for a “ChromiumPC” trademark to be used for computer hardware were both done in bad faith. The closely held Salt Lake City-based ISYS claimed the public would be confused by the similarity of the two names.

The suit was dismissed and the transcript of a hearing on ISYS’s request for a ban on the promotion and sale of the Chromebooks was removed from public viewing in the court file at the parties’ request, according to an order by U.S. District Judge Clark Waddoups.

ISYS spokesman David Politis told the Salt Lake Tribune that the company had decided to abandon its effort to register “Chromium PC” and that it’s “very pleased with the terms and conditions of this settlement.”

The case is ISYS Technologies Inc. v. Google Inc (GOOG), 2:11-cv- 00507-CW, U.S. District Court, District of Utah.

Kentucky Man Accused of Forgery in Sale of GM Auto Parts

Mike Archbold, an auto-parts dealer in Hendersonville, Kentucky, was charged with forgery following an investigation into the sale of counterfeit General Motors Co. (GM) auto parts, Nashville’s WTVF-TV reported on its news website.

Some of the fake parts were marked with GM’s “bowtie” Chevrolet trademark, according to the website.

Archbold told the television station that the dispute should be a civil matter between the automaker and himself, and he couldn’t understand why this had become a criminal case.

Although GM told police they had sent the auto-parts seller a cease-and-desist letter in 2010, Archbold told the television station he’d never received it.

Beatles Tribute Band Barred From Use of ‘Get Back’ Trademark

A Nashville, Tennessee-based Beatles Tribute band that uses the name “Getback! Productions” persuaded a federal court to halt a second band’s use of a similar name.

According to a Sept. 9 court filing, Cefalo Corp. of Carnegie, Pennsylvania, is barred from using “Get Back” or any similar name in connection with its Beatles tribune band. The Tennessee group, which was formed in the early 1980s, acquired the mark in June 2001. It had been registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in March 1999, according to court papers.

GetBack! Productions filed an infringement suit March 15 in federal court in Pittsburgh, asking for a ban on the Pennsylvania band’s use of the mark and for money damages.

The case is Jack Petrilla v. Cefalo Corp., 2:11-cv-00335- NBF, U.S. District Court, Western District of Pennsylvania (Pittsburgh).

Vietnam’s Phu Quoc Mark for Fish Sauce Sought by Chinese Company

While the Phu Quoc trademark is limited to fish-sauce makers on Vietnam’s Phu Quoc island, a Hong Kong-based company is seeking to register the mark in China, according to Vietnam News.

In 2001, Phu Quoc became one of Vietnam’s first products to have its geographic origin registered, Vietnam News reported.

If the owners of the Phu Quoc trademark fail to object to the Chinese company’s application in time, the mark could be registered in China, the news service reported.

Source:http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-09-20/htc-google-gm-righthaven-amsc-intellectual-property.html

HTC EVO 3D brings depth to smartphones

July 26th, 2011

Watching and interacting with content in 3D has been around for a few years.

Putting it on a smartphone, though, is something new all together. The HTC EVO 3D brings the 3D technology on an Android phone that does a really good job of displaying 3D images and videos.

Where the experience falls short is when you want to view the 3D pictures and videos away from the phone.

3D content

The HTC EVO 3D does more than let you watch 3D content. I was able to watch The Green Hornet on the phone entirely in 3D.

The phone does more than let you play 3D games. I played a pretty cool Spider Man game on the phone that did a good job of mixing solid gameplay and the 3D display.

Where this phone distinguishes itself is in how it lets you produce 3D content.

The 5 megapixel camera works great for standard 2D images and high-definition video. But you can shoot 3D images and video by moving a small switch on the phone from 2D to 3D.

The resulting images and videos are pretty good considering no glasses are needed to view them. You can clearly see depth in the images. I took a picture of a monster truck that made it appear as if the truck was a good bit in front of the backdrop.

The challenge is being able to share the images you create or even just view them on something other than the phone. The phone can easily share content with computers and televisions. You’ll need a 3D compatible display to look at the 3D content produced with the phone.

The other stuff

This phone obviously does more than 3D. It’s actually a pretty good Android smartphone. It runs on an updated version of the HTC Sense Android skin. That gives the phone several ways to personalize the experience and brings the Sense user interface several new tweaks that make finding and sharing content much easier.

One of my favorite features is the HTC Watch movie library. You can log in through your phone to get access to tons of films. I was able to view The Green Hornet through HTC Watch. The only real issue I have with the phone is that it’s not 4G compatible. Sprint offers some pretty good 4G connections in select markets. Valley owners of this phone will be left out of the 4G party once Phoenix gets access.

Let’s be honest.

The truth about a phone like the HTC EVO 3D is that it is a good smartphone that will do most everything the other similar devices on the market can do. It’s an Android phone, so it has some of the same benefits – such as an open platform and easy access to files – and deficiencies – such as a slow camera and bad battery life – other Android phones do.

What the EVO 3D does differently is life up to its name. Viewing 3D content on a mobile phone is a pretty cool thing. It would be far cooler if I personally had a way to view the photos and videos on my T.V. or computer monitor. That deficiency, though, is the result of my own personal hardware, not a problem with the phone.

Fans of the 3D technology should definitely consider this phone. Everyone else should know that it’s a good smartphone running on a solid network.

Source:http://www.azcentral.com/business/articles/2011/07/25/20110725htc-evo-3d-review.html

HTC Puccini tablet resurfaces on FCC website

July 19th, 2011

Web chat regarding the arrival of HTC’s first 10.1-inch tablet computer first arose back in May of this year. We were suitably intrigued to see how the hardware maker expects to build on the success of its initial Flyer tablet.

Those initial whispers have now gathered significantly more credence following the appearance of a large-screen HTC tablet that appears to have passed successfully though the FCC website.

The tablet in question, which is known as the ‘Puccini’, sports the model number PG09410 and is expected to come equipped with a 10.1-inch touch-screen display and Google’s Android operating system (probably v3.0).

Based on previous (completely unofficial) coverage regarding the Puccini, prospective buyers can look forward to the snappy performance of a 1.5GHz processor, up to 2GBs of RAM, the HTC Sense interface, and a pixel resolution of 1280×720.

Although core fixtures and fittings remain deep in the realm of the unknown, the unearthed FCC filing points to the Puccini arriving in the United States via AT&T’s upcoming 4G/LTE network.

HTC hasn’t said when the 10.1-inch tablet will launch on the high street, but we here at Tech Herald Towers wouldn’t be surprised to see it hitting retail shelves by the autumn.

Source:http://www.thetechherald.com/article.php/201129/7404/HTC-Puccini-tablet-resurfaces-on-FCC-website

HTC Sensation is the tablet version of Sense UI

January 24th, 2011

HTC is known for the Sense user interface on their Windows Mobile and, more recently, Android smartphones, and a recent trademark filing may have revealed that they’re planning to use a similar skin on their upcoming tablets. According to a European filing, the company is trying to trademark “HTC Sensation,” which on its own is a pretty good indicator that it’s something Sense-related. Upon further inspection, though, the description in the filing gives us even more evidence that Sensation could be the name of a tablet UI: “user interface software; computer hardware and software for user interfacing, telecommunications and telecommunications services.” The full description is as follows:

“Mobile phones, smartphones, wireless phones, wireless devices, portable computers and personal digital assistants, computer hardware and software for mobile, portable and wireless devices; user interface software; computer hardware and software for user interfacing, telecommunications and telecommunications services; computer hardware and software for transmitting and receiving voice, image, data, audio, video and multimedia content; wireless modems; headsets, headsets with wireless transmission function, connection cables, cradles, mounts, face plates, batteries, power adaptors, chargers, cases, in-vehicle chargers, in-vehicle holders, remote controls, keyboards, microphones, loudspeakers, leather pouches for mobile phones.”

While my love for vanilla Android has been well-documented, I do think that HTC’s Sense UI is one of the better skins on the market today. It’ll be interesting to see how HTC adapts Sense for their tablet(s), whenever the company gets around to releasing them. We’ve heard that a device called the Flyer could be arriving as soon as March, but there hasn’t been any hard evidence to prove that just yet. The good news is that HTC will likely have some devices to show off at MWC, which just so happens to be right around the corner.

Source:-http://www.phonedog.com/2011/01/23/rumor-htc-sensation-is-the-tablet-version-of-sense-ui/

Editorial What I want to see from an HTC Tablet

December 27th, 2010

Last week was quite a table week at HTCPedia. It started earlier in the week when Marchello picked up the Samsung Galaxy Tab after Best Buy sliced the price down to $500. It continued on Christmas day when my girlfriend gave me an iPad (thanks sweetie!). Obviously, this means that tablets have been on my mind this week, and in playing with my iPad and my brief experience with the Galaxy Tab, I’ve come to form a few opinions on tablets.

So what does this have to do with HTC? Simple; they haven’t released a tablet yet. Apple and Samsung have, Viewsonic and ASUS have, but not HTC. Earlier this was probably to see if the market would accept tablets, but now it’s because they’re probably actively testing their tablet prototypes. And while I’m sure whatever they eventually trot out on stage will be amazing, here is what I hope an HTC tablet includes:

7-inch and 10-inch models: There has been a lot of debate over the size of a tablet’s screen. In my brief experience with tablets, I’ve found both sizes to have their pros and minuses. Games, books and websites look amazing on the iPad’s screen, but the iPad is a little heavy. The Galaxy Tab feels more like a super-sized phone, but it’s much more portable.

Here is where I think it comes down to personal preference, and I think HTC should let the consumer decide which model they want.

Tablet-friendly HTC Sense: One of the great things about HTC Sense is how comprehensive the experience is. WIth the latest versions of Sense on both Android and Windows Mobile, you can do a lot without leaving HTC’s UI.

Depending on when an HTC tablet is released, they may need to go farther with Sense than ever before. As great as Android is (and it’s really great), it really is not tablet optimized. If the tablet is released before honeycomb is ready for prime time, then HTC must do everything to make sure the UI is tablet optimized. With that said, a timely honeycomb upgrade wouldn’t hurt either.

Good performance: Android can be a little laggy at times, and HTC will have to really optimize performance. That doesn’t mean throwing in a 1.2 GHz processor, but make sure the stutter and lag is minimal. (Although we figure that Gingerbread will mitigate some of those problems.)

Good battery life: This is a no-brainer, but considering how bad Android is with power management, and how poor the battery life on phones like the EVO is, it’s something that must be taken into account. Please HTC: if you’re going to seal the battery in, then make sure we can get at least 7 hours on a single charge. If the battery is user replaceable, then give us at least 5.5 hours. I need to be able to fly across country on a single charge.

Wi-Fi and 3G models: Being able to access the internet anywhere is a great feeling of security, but paying another monthly bill and signing a two-year contract is not. With a Wi-Fi model, customers aren’t forced to choose between paying the $600-$700 for an off contract 3G model or signing a long term contract. As a bonus, non-smartphone buyers, people who never walk into a Verizon store much less sign a two-year contract, would get a chance to learn about HTC and Sense just by visiting a Best Buy and looking at the tablet section.

Ample storage space: Between apps, music, video and photos, a tablet gets filled pretty quickly. This can be resolved in one of two ways: putting lots of internal storage in the tab, or adding a microSD slot. What should not be done, however, is what HTC is doing with their Windows Phone 7 devices, which is putting small microSD cards in non-user accessible places.

An affordable price tag: An HTC tablet is going to get attention, there’s no doubt about that. Part of the reason why is because and HTC tablet will be well-built. Unfortunately well-built also means expensive, but if HTC can somehow get the price of a Wi-Fi model down to $450, it’ll sell like gangbusters.

These are just a few things I hope to see in an HTC tablet. If you disagree with me or feel that I missed something, let me know in the comments.

Source:-http://htcpedia.com/news/what-i-want-from-htc-tablet.html?l_page=1&p_page=1

HTC to bring Windows 7 based HD 7 phone in India

December 19th, 2010

HTC is introducing its Windows 7 based phone, HD 7, in the Indian markets next week. Although it has not been officially announced yet, but online sources place the price of the phone to be around 30,000.

The HD 7 has a 4.3 inch high-resolution capacitive touchscreen display and a 5MP camera coupled with auto focus and dual LED flash. Running on the latest operating system from Microsoft, Windows Phone 7, the HD 7 is powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 1GHz processor.

Connectivity options of the phone include Bluetooth, 3G, GPS, and Wi-Fi. The Asian version of the phone is likely to be shipped with an internal memory of 16GB. The device supports high definition video recording. The Windows operating system integrates with popular Microsoft services like Bing Search, Xbox LIVE and others.

The Windows 7 platform, since its release, has been falling flat in front of competition from Android and iOS. Now it needs to be seen whether the phone is able to strike a chord with the Indian user or not.

Source:http://www.siliconindia.com/shownews/HTC_to_bring_Windows_7_based_HD_7_phone_in_India-nid-75630.html

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