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HTC Desire Z A7272 Review

Posted on 9 October, 2011 by admin There have been 0 comments

HTC Desire Z

A phone that lets you have it both ways

The HTC Desire Z gives you a dedicated QWERT keyboard as well as a super responsive touch screen. So you don’t get lost it comes with instant maps. And in case it gets lost, it comes with HTC Sense to help find it. Its screen is perfect for browsing the web or catching up on emails. Ideal for work, and play.
With HTC Desire Z you get both Touch screen and keypad. The 3.7 inch touch screen is perfect for browsing the web, checking your friends’ latest updates, or catching up on email. Pop open the keyboard — the keys are nicely spaced and raised for fast comfortable typing.

Design

Google has worked hard in the latest releases of Android to bolster the platform's appeal to business users, but with the jolly green robot as mascot this platform still tends to appeal to geeks and gamers more than to the BlackBerry set. The HTC Desire Z could change this, with an excellent QWERTY keyboard offering something we don't often see paired with Google's system.

Android is coming up on its third birthday as a commercial product, and yet a scan over the dozens of Android releases up to now reveals a severe shortage of physical keyboards. Motorola is far in front with 14 QWERTY Androids (only five of which have made it to Australia), but for HTC, a leader in the Android brigade, the Desire Z is only the second keyboard phone after the HTC Dream. To set this release apart, HTC's designers have attempted to solve a problem we see all too often with QWERTY slider handsets: how to move the screen into a position where it doesn't obstruct the top row of the keyboard.

The solution is rather clever: an ingenious design HTC calls the "Z-hinge". When you slide this phone open the screen is effectively lifted by the Z-hinge and placed in line, and very nearly flush, with the bottom half of the handset. This reveals an excellent chiclet-design keyboard, where each key has a little breathing room from its neighbour.

HTC's clever Z-hinge mid-action.

The physical aesthetics of the Desire Z are among the best of the HTC range. The handset maintains the now-familiar HTC design profile, but its mix of brushed aluminium and light slate-coloured soft-touch plastic gives the Z a brighter, more chic appearance than you get with either the Desire HD or with the HTC Windows Phone handsets.

User experience

If you've been watching the progress of HTC's Sense UI, then you're probably familiar with the user experience of the Desire Z. In many ways, it is identical to the version of Sense UI you get on the Desire HD. This Sense UI version 2.1 adds to its predecessor with customisation options unmatched by any other Android maker in the market to date. Using the HTC Hub you can change the phone's Skin, effectively change the colour palette of the phone across the UI, download ringtone packs to update all phone sounds in one action and apply any of the 72 HTC-designed home screen widgets.

Sense 2.1 also adds a multitasking manager into the Android notifications panel, allowing you to move between your most recently opened apps by scrolling through a horizontal list above your current notifications.

If there's one element of the UI we'd love HTC to take a crack at next, it's the layout of the Application Drawer. On the Desire Z the App Drawer remains the same as it has been since the first HTC releases, while other Android makers like Samsung have long since looked to an iPhone-esque horizontal app layout. This is a small issue to be sure, but we find the App Drawer can become a little unruly once you've downloaded several dozen new apps to the phone.

Media and the web

With innovations in the UI and the handset design, we weren't too surprised to see that the Desire Z doesn't break any new ground in either areas of multimedia or web browsing. The stock Android web browsing experience is used here, and our tests show it as being on par with the Desire HD, though a little slower with its lower processor clock speed.

We've read in several places that the Desire Z should support DivX and Xvid media files, but the only video file types we've managed to play on this handset are MP4 and WMV. We also struggled to use the HTC Connected Media DLNA file sharing app. In theory it should be as simple as having two DLNA-compatible devices on the same Wi-Fi network, but regardless of which devices we tried to connect to, the app simply couldn't find them.

The 5-megapixel camera on the Desire Z is only an average camera phone. Though it features an LED photolight and auto-focus, plus a range of nifty photo filters, the photos we took mostly showed soft focus and a gentle pink hue moving the pics away from a natural reproduction of colour.

Product Description:

  • Featuring 3.7 in couch screen with keyboard
  • The HTC Desire Z delivers maps with zero wait, zero dead spots and zero data roaming fees.
  • Frantic about personal data on your phone that’s been lost or stolen? Log into HTCSense.com to quickly lock and wipe it remotely.
  • The HTC Desire Z is made for multitasking. Access your work email, contacts and calendars with Microsoft Exchange compatibility and view Microsoft Office docs on the go.
  • The built-in Quick Lookup tool satisfies your thirst for knowledge by letting you highlight any text you’re reading on the HTC Desire Z and search that selection in
  • Wikipedia, Google, YouTube or the dictionary.
  • The HTC Desire Z has a vivid screen which makes it great for watching homemade YouTube™ epics - filmed with your phone’s on-board HD camera. And of course you can watch the latest Hollywood blockbuster that you’ve loaded on your SD card.
  • The HTC Desire Z’s cinematic display and G-Sensor provide a console quality environment for immersive gaming experiences from your favorite video-game companies, like Gameloft.
  • Added HD video recording and a 5MP, flash camera with built-in effects (it’s like being able to swap lenses and add filters on the fly). And we’ve made it a snap to share to YouTube or to your big screen TV via DLNA.
  • With built-in Adobe® Flash® Player support on your HTC Desire Z, no websites are out-of-bounds. And why wait for pages to load when you can view them in separate windows? A pinch and a tap lets you jump from one page to the next.
  • News app on the HTC Desire Z which syncs with Google Reader.

Product Specifications:

Condition Brand New
Network Support 2G Quadband, 3G, 900Mhz
Network Lock Unlocked
Network Branding Vodafone
Weight 180g
Dimensions 119 x 60.4 x 14.2 mm
Handset Type Touch Screen
Camera 5.0 MP
Bluetooth Yes, V2.1 with A2DP
Internal Memory 1.5GB
Card Slot Yes. Up to 32GB MicroSD
Operating System Android 2.2
Features Email, FM Radio, GPRS, GPS, Java, MMS, MP3 Player, Qwerty Keyboard, Speakerphone, USB, Video Camera, WiFi
Warranty 12 Months - Manufacturer

This post was posted in HTC, Smart Phone PDA and was tagged with A7272, HTC Desire Z

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