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| HTC Desire |
HTC Desire
is the first smartphone of the Desire series developed by HTC. It was announced on 16 February 2010 and released in Europe and Australia in the second quarter of the same year. The HTC Desire was launched with Android 2.1 Eclair but can be upgraded to 2.2 Froyo or 2.3 Gingerbread. Internally it bears a strong resemblance to the Nexus One, but differs in some features.Availability
In the United States, the device is available from, Alltel, U.S. Cellular,
Cellular South, Cox Wireless,nTelos Wireless, Cellcom and United Wireless in
southwest Kansas. In Canada, the device was released by Telus Mobility on 6
August 2010.
In Europe,
the carriers are Elisa in Finland, Vodafone UK, Vodafone Ireland, Meteor Irl, BT Broadband Anywhere,
T-Mobile UK, O2, Orange UK, 3, and Virgin Mobile UK. In Australia, it is
exclusive to Telstra.
In Japan, Softbank Mobile
started sales in April. In Turkey, Vodafone started sales in late November
2010.
In South
Korea, SK Telecom began sales in May 2010.
In
Singapore, the official launch date was 14 May 2010, and the phone has been for
sale by all carriers subsequently.
In mainland
China, HTC launched its four flagship smartphones including the Desire on 27
July 2010. Unlike in other markets, the device will be shipped with Android 2.2
("Froyo").
Many of the
UK mobile networks have been unable to keep up with demand; Virgin Mobile UK,
Vodafone UK, 3, T-Mobile UK and Orange UK are some of the networks experiencing
very high demand. The ash produced by the 2010 eruptions of
Eyjafjallajökull led to some customers waiting a month getting their HTC
Desires due to much of European airspace being closed.
In India,
HTC and TATA DOCOMO, the GSM brand of Tata Teleservices Limited, announced a
partnership to launch HTC Desire in India on 16 August 2010.
Hardware the phone uses a 1 GHz ARMv7 "Snapdragon" processor, includes a 5 megapixel
auto-focus camera and an optical trackpad, and was among the first consumer
devices to feature a large, full-color active-matrix
OLED (AMOLED) display.
During late Q2 2010, HTC
made the decision to switch the Desire's display to a S-LCD panel, manufactured
by the company S-LCD a co-operative between Sony and Samsung. Although this was
brought on by a severe AMOLED panel supply shortfall, the new display greatly enhances text
readability because of its improved effective resolution, one of the few
complaints people had with the original Desire model. Compared to the original AMOLED
display, the SLCD display has more accurate color reproduction, far less
susceptibility to burn-in, similar peak brightness and optimal viewing angles,
but a lower contrast ratio. The new SLCD display was claimed to have similar or
better power efficiency compared with the original AMOLED display; however,
this has proved to not always be the case because with AMOLED pixels' ability
to completely turn off, black or dark pixels use very little power. However, in
situations when the screen is predominantly bright (such as when viewing many
web pages), the AMOLED display uses more power.
The hardware
is capable of
high-definition (720p) video recording and playback; the 720p video recording
feature has been added to the HTC Desire when updating to the official HTC
modified Android 2.2 firmware.
Software
The Desire was shipped with Android 2.1. HTC made an update
to Android 2.2 (codenamed "Froyo") available on the following dates:
- · Europe: 1 August 2010
- · SE Asia: 30 August 2010
- · India: 1 September 2010
- · Japan: 8 October 2010
- · US: 8 February 2011
HTC
has released a software update to upgrade the Desire to Android 2.3
(Gingerbread). Originally, they planned to do this in June 2011. On 14
June 2011, HTC announced via Facebook that there would be no Gingerbread update
for the HTC Desire, citing memory constraints. This is because HTC had been
unable to fit both Gingerbread and HTC Sense together in the phone's 250 MB
system partition. However, on 15 June, they released a statement saying the
Desire would receive the Gingerbread update, with the possibility of some apps
being cut. The update was finally released for download from HTC's
developer website on 1 August 2011, and is not available as an
over-the-air update.
Via Wikipedia
Via Wikipedia

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