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Posts by Bograma

Wi-Fi updated on my HTC Desire HD!

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HTC surprises me every day: I just received an update for the Wi-Fi function. I had some issues with mine, too, when the phone was not able to hold a Wi-Fi signal, while all the other phones seemed fine.
Again, looks like HTC is really listening to its customer base. That’s what Social Media is all about!

The reviews – the series

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I am about to start a string of app reviews – the ones I have in my phone to be exact. I mean, why not these ones, the ones I use every day? They are “the keepers” in spite of the 10 apps I install (and quickly delete) weekly.

Sunpak SC-800 solar/USB charger review

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As stated here, I got the aforementioned solar charger and wanted to try it out and see if it’s a good replacement (even as emergency charger) of my hugely appreciated external 5.000 mAh battery. Because while it can charge two devices at the same time (and receive charge from an electrical outlet at the same time!), it’s quite heavy and bulky to be carried around. Luckily, I employ a big laptop bag when traveling and I do not have to carry it in my pocket.

First of all, of course there’s no comparison with an external battery. The solar charger gets its power from the sun which means it is 100% green but it also means it’s less efficient than the battery drawing its power from the electrical outlet. I won’t go into cost details, as none of the two above are used as main power source.

Hardware: 800 mAh Ni-MH battery included for energy storage, 55 grams, a short cable with 5 different tips: Mini-USB, Micro-USB, Motorola, Nokia and Sony-Ericsson. It takes around 3 hours and a half to charge it up by USB and about 8 to 10 hours to charge it completely from the sun.

The charger is small and light , with its upper part crafted in the form of a bezel allowing the gadget to be hanged or tied to something. It’s finishing is extremely poor, cheap – the plastic makes a crackling sound if you squeeze it. The solar panel is crooked, with parts aligning badly. The cable is fitting itself very well in the USB slot but very poorly with the different tips – I sometimes left the phone charging, just to check 20 minutes later to find out the contact was imperfect thus not charging the phone. It did restart after I moved it a little bit around. Oh, well, check the price and you’ll understand why this happens. You get even less than what you’re paying for.

How it works: Surprisingly well! You can see bellow the stages of the charger discharging and charging my phone:

Full solar charger battery – smartphone at 12% energy left:

 

70% left on the solar charger, smartphone up to 17% after 20 minutes:

 

 

50% left on the solar charger, smartphone up to 24% after 34 minutes:


 

It finally bogged-down after 87 minutes in which time it charged the smartphone up to 40%. Not too bad for small charger and definitely a good choice for a back-up.

It’s also worth mentioned that if you keep it in sunlight and attached to the phone, it will charge directly and sustain any activity on your smartphone, like calling or playing games.

Highly recommended for this price!

Green energy from a solar charger

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Tomorrow I’ll use the beautiful, sunny day to (empirically) test a new solar charger I got by mistake. It’s my belief that this small gadget (a cheap Chinese copycat of a Western techology probably) can and will suply some much needed energy to my phone.
We’ll see!

WebOS – still making a difference?

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Just a year ago I wanted a Palm Pre. This was quite some time after the launch in June 2009, but this happens cause I’m not moving too fast when I get the new gadgets – I don’t like to Beta-test on my own money. And because competition is fierce, everybody is rushing the products out without too much fuss leaving us to pick-up the pieces behind. But that’s another story.

At that point I was buying into the “totally diff’rent, revolutionary gadget” hype! I wanted to test the wonderful, new webOS, with promises of full integration and fluid U.I. I wasn’t even considering an Android device yet; I was rocking a BlackBerry (my 2nd actually) and I thought Android is not yet mature enough. So I chose the Pre instead. It wasn’t meant to be: my smartphone got lost in the mailing process (my friend Mark had to work to get the insurance money – hope you got it all back, man!) and I ended-up getting an…Android device.

And now because I had a good chance to get a cheap, 2nd hand, unlocked Pre, I just went ahead and got it! I wanted to like it, I wanted to love it and ditch my HTC Desire HD! This one had the latest OS build, the 1.4.5. I was resting assure that by now, two years after the initial launch I would have a nicer, richer, more rounded experience of this challenger in a tech world dominated by Google and Apple.

Hardware: I knew what I was getting: the phone feels plasticky, the glossy finish is a magnet to fingerprints, scratches and the screen doesn’t make any exception. I knew about the much commented sliding mechanism/wobbly upper-part, which in my hand made the Pre to feel like an unfinished product. I know, a slider has to have a certain lateral movement, in order to accommodate hasty openings/closing or maybe some accidental slips. But this one had a 2 millimeters lateral movement which actually at times  prevented me to slide-up the phone, in order to use it! I also know about the Palm’s advice to use both fingers to push it up! Yes, because otherwise you risk to damage the phone and to separate the two slides. Why? Because that damn wobble is too accentuated!

The “Mute” button was hard to switch, moving lateral the whole upper slider with it! Again, because of that wobble! The “Power” button was recessed a little bit, but in my books that’s a good thing! Nothing notable about the “Volume” buttons. The glossy back was hard to remove; I would’ve loved a Touchstone back cover!

The keyboard was tiny but usable. I liked the clicky feedback but made a lot of mistakes when I was using it, mainly because it has a learning curve like any other gadget. I’m sure in time I would’ve evolved.

The 3.1 inch screen was beautiful, I loved it. I loved its responsiveness. I loved its colors and its resolution. Even now, two years later, it’s up to par with the others and down-right usable. The size could be an issue for some people, especially when you come from a 4-incher.

Software: I’ve been holding my breath since 2009 when they announced webOS first! I realized the power of apps in 2004 when I got my first smartphone: a P990i by Sony-Ericsson. Wow! That was the future! Then in time I found out I’m using only a handful of apps, not too many special ones: calendar, email, browser, instant messenger, a call filter, a podcatcher, a RSS feeder and some games. I thought I didn’t need more. But I didn’t because at the time (and later with UIQ 3.0 – anybody remembers that one?) there weren’t as many apps as they are today. There were no App-Stores and the big players didn’t think too much about those – well, not until Apple came along and changed the game rules.

The U.I is awesome! Period. It rivals Android and iPhone (especially the iPhone, due to the same kind of limitations!) hands-down. It’s the only reason I’d get a webOS device again…see the spoiler here? :-) It’s a pleasant experience but from my point of view it failed to take off to mass adoption due to lack of developers’ interest. Coming from an Android device, I was expecting hundreds of free and useful apps. Instead, the only free and usable app I got was Clock Sync and that in order to correct the clock drifting forward. By a lot! Anything else I needed to pay for. And because I’m not living in an “acceptable” country, no paid apps for me. Nice! Again, without any developer support there’s gonna be no webOS!

I don’t know the processor speed and/or RAM and I didn’t feel compelled to look them up; everything felt normal . Yes, I noticed a slowness when opening up a card (an application), but it moved naturally taking into account it uses a different OS. I run a 1 Gig processor on my Desire HD and I don’t find the lack of this awesome speed a deal-breaker in the Pre.

Bugs and SW mishaps? Whoa! The clock is drifting by hours, the alarm won’t ring, the Messenger section only allows AOL and/or GTalk, no connection is available thru WiFi when registering a new user (so if I don’t have a data subscription I’m stuck!), the Facebook application won’t log-out, the email client is not allowing you to delete multiple messages at once and the device is freezing: only charging will unfreeze it but only sometimes. I had to reinstall the O.S twice in two weeks. And that didn’t fix the issue. Officially, there is no problem with the O.S thus no support is offered.

The rest: Battery life was average. As in “it won’t last a working day, unless you make almost no calls, surf the net nor receive many emails”. And once you get a smartphone, you do that all too often. The calls quality was fine, the speaker is unusable as usual for conversations but very good when rendering your favorite ringtone. Can’t comment too much on the sub-par 2.0 MP camera – I guess it’s fine for everyday use when you’re not pretentious.

Bottom line: Reading all the other Pre Plus, Pre 2, Veer and Pre 3 news and reviews, I can see improvement. And I hope for HP’s sake they’re all the way behind webOS. The original Pre is a total disappointment for me in terms of “what it could’ve been and wasn’t!”. It shows great promise U.I-wise, but I expected much more from the 1.4.5 update. Palm wasn’t even able to fix the clock? In the end, it’s not over till it’s over – I look forward to using a Pre 3 and THEN I’ll make up my mind.

My HTC Desire HD received the Gingerbread update!

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So, yes, the update is here! The 2.3 version a.k.a Gingerbread is pushed to HTC Desire HD as promised. My version is 2.3.3 with 2.1 HTC Sense still on it. You can find it in Settings/ About Phone/ Software Updates. It’s 100 MB and it takes 2 minutes to download it over Wi-Fi. All the previous settings, applications, even application’s settings are kept.

I have to say I was a little worried about the whole update business, as there are so many ways in which you can brick your phone. Or you need to spend another 2 hours afterwards restoring everything because something went wrong? Who can you blame?

The main (aesthetics) improvements I spotted while browsing the phone were:

  • the Notifications bar got a 2-tab line: first tab holds the usual notifications tab and the second is “Quick Settings”, which allows you to access Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, the Wi-Fi hotspot, G.P.S, Mobile Network and all phone settings. I can think of at least 3 or 4 widget applications becoming obsolete.
  • unlock the screen on the Weather/Clock widget and you’ll be presented with the usual animation (the wipers if it’s raining) but ALSO sound: the sound of rain and the sound of the wiper’s motor – quite neat! Also the clock movement is a bit laggy!
  • the bottom bar containing the “Menu” button, the Phone button and the “Personalize” button is thinner and the whole design is crisper.
  • inside the menu there’s a new bottom bar holding also “Favorite” and “Downloaded” applications tab. It’s a very good idea if you wanna have a faster access to the most important applications for you.

Of course, there are many more important updates coming with Gingerbread, but that should require more than a peek. You can find a complete list with the improvements here.

Looking forward to the power-saving improvements!

 

Picture courtesy of Christmas-Clip Art.

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