Our man in England, mister Chris Davies, has let loose his review of the HTC Desire S over on SlashGear. What he’s found is that this 3.7-inch display having, Android 2.3.3 wielding, 5-megapixel camera toting handset isn’t the best of the bunch, but it’s certainly not the worst device he’s ever held. This phone is the sequel to the original HTC Desire, which was undeniably HTC’s answer for the Nexus One – will it hold up to the pressure of the barrage of phones that have been released in only these past few months?
Hardware
This is a phone that’s a mere 115 x 59.8 x 11.63 mm, and only 130g. The display again is a 3.7-inch Super LCD with WVGA resolution, this making it the same number of pixels as the original Desire, but with Super LCD instead of AMOLED. The original Desire had an optical trackpad where this one has none, moving toward a touchscreen-only model that many manufacturer are trending at nowadays, perhaps due to the oncoming Honeycomb / Ice Cream world of Android where no physical buttons are necessary.
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Volume and USB are along the left, top has a power/lock button and headphone jack. On the back is one of two cameras (the other on the front) as well as a speaker near the top and a removable panel near the bottom with access to your SIM, microSD, and htc battery. This reminds us of the HTC Inspire 4G which has each of these accessible in two panels instead of just one.
The whole body of the handset is what Chris notes as “a very successful design,” speaking on the matte finnish, discreet chrome bits here and there, and the “HTC chin” which makes it easy to take from and replace this handset in your pocket. Also specifically Chris notes that it feels solid and, with a less-plastic design than the original Desire, it’s “hard not to imagine that this could have been the design for the second Nexus, had Google stuck with HTC as a hardware partner.” A pretty nice compliment!
Inside you’ll find a Qualcomm’s single-core 1GHz MSM8255 processor, 768MB of RAM, and 1.1GB of internal storage. Connectivity includes dualband HSPA/WCDMA, quadband GSM/EDGE, WiFi b/g/n, and of course Bluetooth 2.1. There’s also GPS, a g-sensor, digital compass, proximity sensor and ambient light sensor.
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