Friday, 24 June 2011

HTC Desire Z


GOOD:Great design and build, superb display, physical QWERTY keypad, HTC Sense UI
BAD:Loose slider mechanism can be annoying at times, keypad takes some getting used to, mediocre camera, no video call camera, no MKV format support, occasional lag in the UI
VERDICT:A good all-round smartphone
 
The first Android phone had a QWERTY keypad and was manufactured by HTC. After that there haven t been a lot of droids with QWERTY keypads and HTC in particular never visited that territory. Not until now, that is. The successor to the original droid, the T-Mobile G1 was followed by the G2, which is several leagues ahead of its predecessor.  Of course, that phone is restricted to T-Mobile so HTC came up with the Desire Z - the phone that we are reviewing today - where they loaded it with their own Sense UI and are selling it unlocked in other markets. The phone has been selling in the Indian market for some time now but it took HTC a while to send us a review sample. Nevertheless, we have the phone with us now and we have been spending some quality time with it. So read on if you want the full review. 

Design and Build

The Desire Z has a slightly subdued design compared to the Desire. You can tell it is designed to suit a businessman more than, say, a college goer. Nevertheless, it is still a handsome phone. The silver brushed aluminum finish goes well with the grey rubberized plastic. Metal is used sparingly on the Desire Z, possibly to keep the weight less; the sliding mechanism already adds a lot to that.



On the front you have the large earpiece on the top with the ambient light sensor and the proximity sense hidden towards its left. Below is the 3.7-inch display covered with a Gorilla Glass. Below the display is a thin row of touch sensitive keys along with an optical trackpad. We preferred the physical controls below the Desire's display; it is much more difficult to press unintentionally. The trackpad has a ring that glows when you have a notification.



On the left side are the volume control buttons and the micro USB port. On the right is the camera shutter button, and the button for releasing the battery cover.



On the top is the 3.5mm headphone jack and a power button.

 

Product Specifications

CPU 800 MHz Scorpion processor, Adreno 205 GPU, Qualcomm MSM 7230 chipset
Card slot microSD, up to 32GB
2G Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G Network HSDPA 900 / 2100 / HSDPA 850 / 1900 - North America
3G HSDPA, 14.4 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps
Infrared Port No
Call Records Practically unlimited
USB Yes, microUSB v2.0
GPS Yes, with A-GPS support
Additional features Aluminum unibody casing / Dedicated search key / Facebook, Tweeter for HTC Sense / Voice memo/dial
OS Android OS, v2.2 (Froyo)
Form Factor Slide Phone
Phone Type Quadband
Networks GSM 850, 900, 1800 , 1900
GPRS Yes
EDGE Yes
WLAN Yes
Wireless Internet Technology GPRS
Height (mm) 119
Width (mm) 60.4
Depth (mm) 14.2
Weight (g) 180 g
Battery Standard battery, Li-Ion 1300mAh
Standbytime (h) Up to 430 h (2G) / Up to 430 h (3G)
Talktime (m) Up to 9 h 50 min (2G) / Up to 6 h 40 min (3G)
IrDA No
SMS Yes
Email Yes
MMS Yes
Bluetooth Yes
Java Yes
Radio Yes
Camera Yes
Camera resolution 5 MP, 2592Ñ…1944 pixels, autofocus, LED flash
Colour display Yes
Number of colours 16M
Video recording Yes
Memory 1.5 GB; 512 MB RAM
Ringtones Vibration, MP3, WAV ringtones
MP3 Yes
Games Yes
Voicedialing Yes
Predictive text Predictive text input
Display width (pixel) 480
Display height (pixel) 800
LCD Size (pixel) 480 x 800 pixels, 3.7 inches
Voicememo Yes
Touchscreen Yes
Vibrate Yes
Phonebook Capacity Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall