Saturday, February 19, 2011

[Review] HTC Inspire 4G: A Pretty Face Only Gets You So Far

About this time last week, I first started playing with our Inspire 4G review unit. And at first blush, I admittedly found myself enamored with this phone. Unfortunately, it was a love that started to splinter as the days went on, and the more I used it, the more I noticed just how unfinished some parts of this phone can feel. Overall, the Inspire is a good phone with the potential to be great, and I’ll talk about what’s holding it back (software, connectivity) further on in the review.
Don’t let that statement deter you from considering purchasing it, though, because at $99 (or $60 on Amazon), the Inspire 4G is a steal of a deal if you’re looking for a reasonably priced 4G smartphone.

At A Glance


The Inspire 4G packs an impressive spec sheet, even if the single core and WVGA display don’t wow quite like they did a few months ago:
  • 4.3" WVGA SLCD (800×480)
  • 1GHz Snapdragon MSM 8255 processor
  • Adreno 205 GPU
  • Android 2.2 Froyo with HTC Sense
  • 768MB RAM
  • 4GB Internal storage (1.55GB usable)
  • 8GB SDHC card included
  • HSPA+ connectivity
  • 8MP rear camera with dual-LED flash
  • 1230mAh battery
  • DLNA compatible
Figures aren’t everything, of course, and so I’ve taken the liberty of breaking down the Inspire’s strengths and weaknesses in a couple of handy lists:

The Good:

  • Large 4.3" display is bright and vivid with great viewing angles.
  • Fantastic build quality, metal frame, rubberized plastic battery/card covers, and very solid feel overall.
  • Great battery life – I get two days of moderate use no problem.
  • A hardware accelerated browser makes using the web that much better on a smartphone, I’m in love here.
  • Generally snappy performance, homescreens swipe smoothly, though apps can be another story.

The Not So Good:

  • Not really a "4G" phone yet (ahem, AT&T) – at least I couldn’t find any HSPA+ speeds in Los Angeles.
  • WiFi / cell data connection switching and upload issues (see: Connection Problems) – going back and forth off and on WiFi can cause annoying behavior. Upload speeds on mobile connection are ungodly slow.
  • AT&T bloatware onboard. It’s not very annoying, but you can’t take it off.
  • No sideloading apps. This means you’ll have to fork over at least $45 a month for your DataPro plus tethering plan if you want to WiFi hotspot this thing.
  • Still running Froyo.
In a sentence: The Inspire 4G is a great piece of hardware at a great price, but also a staunch reminder of the double-edged blade that is the UI overlay.
You should buy it if: You want to spend a little less on your smartphone, having 4G and Gingerbread right now aren’t major concerns for you, and you trust HTC and AT&T to make good on providing those features down the road.
Still curious? Read on. There’s pictures, I promise.

Video Review

 

4G***

We’ll start our full review with part of the Inspire’s namesake: 4G. AT&T’s first 4G phone supposedly runs on the first of AT&T’s two 4G networks to be deployed this year: HSPA+. I’d tell you how fast that HSPA+ network was – if I could find it.
And let’s be clear, I’m not out in the boonies. I’ve run network speed tests up and down West LA, Hollywood and parts of downtown LA. Why, you ask, would I run speed tests instead of just looking at the connection status in the notification bar for a handy "4G" symbol? Because AT&T is very clever, that’s why.
The Inspire 4G will display an "H+" (presumably, HSPA+) as its connection type any time you are covered by AT&T’s HSDPA 3G. This is because AT&T plans (key word: plans) to backhaul their entire HSDPA 3G network to support HSPA+ 4G, so the device gives you signal information operating under the assumption that said backhaul is complete. News flash: it isn’t. Kind of a reality distortion field going on there. So far as I can tell, AT&T has yet to provide any HSPA+ 4G coverage in the LA area, and that’s not exactly a small market.

Oh Yeah, It’s a Phone, Too

I made some calls on the Inspire 4G – none of them dropped (though my AT&T calls in LA rarely do). The audio was good, even better than my Nexus One, probably owing to the Inspire’s large speaker bar. The large 4.3" screen means the phone sits closer to your talk-hole compared to a smaller phone, so people generally hear you better, too.
Blinking notifications for missed calls and e-mails are extremely difficult to see. The Inspire’s silver speaker grille along the top of the phone impedes much of the contrast and brightness coming from the small notification/charging light underneath it, making it almost impossible to see unless you’re staring straight down at the phone. The brightness and blink frequency are non-adjustable. I suggest keeping the device on vibrate, because you’ll probably never notice that pale green notification light blinking.

Connection Problems

Now, back to smartphone things. Unfortunately, AT&T’s currently non-existent 4G network isn’t the only connectivity "issue" this phone has. I’ve noticed consistently that when switching from a mobile data connection to WiFi that many apps don’t recognize the change. Twitter, Words With Friends, the browser, and the Market will all repeatedly give me connection errors until I turn WiFi back off, then on again. This may be something specific to me, but I’ve noticed it on two different WiFi networks so far, and it is extremely frustrating.
Another oddity I’ve come across is the Inspire’s upload speeds while on a 3G connection – they are extremely low. I’m using the Speed Test app as the benchmark tool here, but I don’t see any reason why it would have a measurement bias against the Inspire. The issue doesn’t seem to occur on WiFi, so I’m guessing it’s some kind of radio firmware bug.
To quantify, my AT&T Nexus One gets about 1-1.2Mbps on a 3G upload speed test. The Inspire is lucky to get 0.25 with the exact same signal strength. The Inspire also just seems to get worse data speeds in general, side by side with my N1, it consistently scores 10-20% lower on the download.

Build Quality

In my hands-on, you may recall my passing statement about loving the hand-feel of the Inspire 4G. I still do – it’s an extremely solid phone to hold, and the metal casing gives you that hard-to-pin-down feeling that it’s well-built and durable. However, it’s not perfect (what phone is?). I’ll say now that these imperfections on the Inspire 4G are minor and don’t diminish my regard for this device’s quality significantly, but there’s a couple worth noting.
1
The battery and SD/SIM slot covers are made of rubberized plastic,  and the card slot cover bows up a little bit on the review unit I’m using, taking away from the fit and finish of the phone. The screen bezel is bordered by the phone’s metal frame. If your fingers run up against the frame, it’s a bit sharp and since the frame sits slightly above the bezel, this may be annoying to some.
2 9
Those little design quirks aside, using the phone from the hardware standpoint has been great. The power button and volume rocker both have an easy action, aside from the fact that they might be hard to find in your pocket. The capacitive touch buttons work even better than those on my Nexus One, and I think for all but the most tactile among us, are just plain better than hardware buttons.
The Inspire 4G is a testament to the fact that HTC’s build quality and materials choices are just getting better and better, and this phone may just be their best yet in that regard.

Display and Battery Life

It’s an SLCD. There isn’t much to say about the Inspire’s screen aside from the fact that the capacitive panel’s grid markers are more visible than on the average phone. I’d show you a picture, but the amount of light required to get them to show up would make such a camera glare that you wouldn’t be able to see them anyway. All capacitive touch panels have these markers, they’re just of varying visibility. They’re much harder to see on my Nexus One, for example.
5
The Inspire’s display gets nice and bright, and the viewing angle is only slightly narrower than that of an AMOLED. The 4.3" screen’s resolution is standard WVGA, which honestly looks a little lacking in the DPI department when you compare it side by side with a WVGA device that has a smaller screen, but it’s by no means subpar.
6 4
Battery life on the Inspire 4G is outstanding, and that’s not an exaggeration. I easily get two full days (eg, have to charge it on night two) of moderate to heavy use out of it with battery to spare. And if you forget to charge up, HTC’s battery saver tool ensures you get the most time possible out of your remaining juice. Why such great battery life in a big-screen device packing a tiny 1230mAh battery? It’s the processor – the MSM 8255 is the big brother to the power-sipping chipset you’ll find in the G2, which is notorious for its longevity.

Software

HTC has tried to make the new Sense UI as smooth as possible, and they’ve succeeded – mostly. The homescreens bounce back and forth easily with a flick of your finger, and this is generally where you’re most concerned with  the "smoothness" of Android. Oh, and as always, HTC’s widgets are very pretty. That’s the good stuff.
HTC’s apps are another story. The first time I launched HTC Likes (its purpose is something I’m still sort of unclear on), it slowed the whole phone to a grinding halt. It wasn’t until I force closed it from the app management menu that its reign of terror over my processor ended. Safe to say, I haven’t opened it again.
FriendStream, Hub, Likes, Stocks, People, Reader – they all have noticeable problems in terms of responsiveness. Switching from pane to pane or scrolling inside these apps can be annoyingly slow – though not enough to make them unusable. HTC’s widgets can be even worse offenders in this regard, with presses taking just long enough that you can notice the unnatural latency between your finger and the resulting action. There is an exception here: the browser, which appears to have hardware acceleration built-in. It’s downright fast compared to the stock Android browser, and scrolling is an order of magnitude smoother.
On the carrier side, there’s AT&T’s set of bloatware, and while it’s not removable, it’s not intrusive either. AT&T has made at least one substantially annoying change that on the Inspire, though – they’ve disabled the ability to sideload apps. That means no free tethering, unless you root your device. AT&T’s DataPro plan with tethering starts at $45 a month for 4GB, so take that for what you will.
Despite some issues, the software doesn’t stop me from liking this phone – the imperfections don’t interfere with your use of the device too much, generally speaking. Not that I would mind an upgrade to Gingerbread, something HTC will hopefully deliver in a reasonable time frame.

Camera

The examples can do the talking in terms of image quality, but I’ll do a quick blurb on the software: it’s good. Nothing crazy or revolutionary, but in my opinion the camera UI is superior to (and better looking than) what you get in stock Android. That may change with Honeybread (or whatever you want to call it), of course.
 IMAG0012 
IMAG0007 IMAG0010
IMAG0014
Not shabby, right? Here’s a little 720p video recording action – keep in mind this is in direct sunlight, though. I suggest going to the YouTube page to actually view it in 720p, because it looks like garbage at the default YouTube resolution.

 

Conclusion

The Inspire 4G, again, has the potential to be great. What does it need to meet that potential? Working 4G and Gingerbread. This phone would have been a real competitor a few months ago, but even as a "cutting edge" 4G device, it’s a Desire HD in an AT&T hoodie. Smartphones don’t age like wine, and while the Desire HD is a truly wonderful hardware platform, AT&T and HTC need to keep up their ends of the bargain (network rollout and software updates, respectively) if they want this to be a competitive product.

Motorola Atrix 4G Hitting RadioShack On Feb. 22 For $150, Dock For $330, On Contract

 atrix
The Shack has officially announced the Atrix launch details via their Facebook page. The skinny: it lands in the store on February 22 for $150 with a new  qualified 2-year plan. If you buy the dock at the same time, you can get it for $330, at a total cost of $480 – or $20 less than you’ll pay at AT&T. I’m not looking to beat a dead horse on whether or not that price is too much, so I’m going to skip straight to the deetz:
The device is equipped with features that will blow you away:
  • MOTOBLUR with Android 2.2 Operating System
  • Adobe Flash 10
  • 5.0 Megapixel camera with 720p video capture
  • 4”"qHD Display with Touchscreen
  • 1GHz dual core processor that outputs 2x 1GHz of processing speed and 1GB of RAM
  • 4G capable speeds
The ATRIX blurs the line between smartphone and computer with the MOTOROLA LAPDOCK, available in select stores for $479.99*
  • The MOTOROLA LAPDOCK gives you a full Firefox browser and access to web apps just like on a PC. No hard drive and no separate data connection or contract needed.
  • Together, the ATRIX 4G and Laptop Dock are thinner and lighter than standard laptops and netbooks with a backlit 11.6” screen, a full-size keyboard, and enough battery life for up to six hours of connected browsing.
Interested in getting both the ATRIX and the MOTOROLA LAPDOCK? You can purchase both together, the ATRIX for $149.99 activated and the laptop dock at a special price of $329.99. That’s $150 in savings!

Google gives users 5 helpful tips for using Blogger from your Android device

Just earlier this month, Google released an official Blogger app for Android that would allow users to blog straight from their phones. Now, Google is providing you with five helpful hints that can help you take advantage of all of Blogger’s features from your Android device.
1. Attach photos as you compose
Take photos using your phone’s camera and instantly add them to your post while you draft. You can also insert photos from your phone’s gallery, all within the Blogger app.
2. Include your current location
With your phone’s GPS, you can let your readers know where you’re blogging from by selecting your current location, no additional typing needed.
3. Share to Blogger
Share videos, products, photos, links and other interesting things you would like to include in your blog via the share button that’s available in many apps, including Google Maps for mobile, YouTube, and your web browser. After you share an item to your Blogger, it will be inserted into new post that’s automatically created for you so that start can composing right away.
4. Switch across multiple Blogger accounts
If you’re an author of more than one blog, you can easily switch between your different accounts by tapping on the orange arrow next to the title of your blog. That way, you can publish articles for each of your blogs to keep your all of your readers up to date.
5. Keep track of published posts and saved drafts
See what you’ve composed in an easy to read list by tapping the list icon located on the top right-hand corner.

Virtual Tour of Google’s Android Booth at MWC 2011


Mobile World Congress was a huge event this last week in Barcelona, and we won’t lie…we wish we’d been there. Just wasn’t in the cards this year. Thankfully, our friends over at Engadget we on-site, and their coverage was outstanding. They got a great virtual tour of Google’s very impressive Android booth…and to hear them tell it, that was the busiest booth at MWC, which doesn’t surprise us at all. There was apparently a slide, a smoothie bar, and lots of android paraphernalia, often dressed up to be festive in various costumes. They have a video over at their site that might be interesting to those of you, like us, wish you’d been there.

Bejewelled 2 Comes to Android Market

EA has released the very popular Bejewelled 2 on the Android platform, effective today. The original Popcap game revolutionized the face of “casual” gaming on the PC as a flash game, and has inspired countless clones (like Jewels). But the sequel has been just as big of a hit, and is available today in the Android market. This hit puzzle game has you swapping gems to line up three in a row, which then vanish Tetris-style dropping the rows above them into place. It’s a very fun, addictive game, and is available in the Android market for $2.99, or you can scan the QR code below.

HTC Evo 4G and Desire HD gets Honeycomb Ported

htc_honeycomb-300x150
Android developers usually don’t like to wait around for a carrier or manufacturer to get the good stuff going on new OS’s. Probably why they send out the SDK’s anyway, get the hard work done by someone else more determined to fix it.
The two videos below highlight Honeycomb ported to teh HTC Evo 4G and the Desire HD, and although none of the buttons work properly, and the OS seems pretty sluggish at times, it still a few steps in the right direction.

YouTube Preview Image YouTube Preview Image

htc_honeycomb-300x150
Android developers usually don’t like to wait around for a carrier or manufacturer to get the good stuff going on new OS’s. Probably why they send out the SDK’s anyway, get the hard work done by someone else more determined to fix it.
The two videos below highlight Honeycomb ported to teh HTC Evo 4G and the Desire HD, and although none of the buttons work properly, and the OS seems pretty sluggish at times, it still a few steps in the right direction.

YouTube Preview Image YouTube Preview Image

LifeTouch Note Android Notebook from NEC Debuted in Japan


The good folks at Engadget are reporting that NEC has announced their first Android-based netbook. NEC’s LifeTouch Note runs Android 2.2, has a Tegra 2 CPU with a seven-inch backlit screen running at 840×400 resolution, a 2 MP camera, SD and SDHC card slots and GPS capabilities. According to the source article on Akihabara News, the LifeTouch Note will come in three flavors:
  • WiFi, 3G enabled with 8 GB of memory
  • WiFi only with 8 GB of memory
  • WiFi only with 4 GB of memory
Also according to the source article, the WiFi only version weighs about as much as an iPad. On the software side, the LifeTouch Note includes NEC’s improved integration with photos in order to send them to SMS services, text or email in mere moments.
Prices of these range from 40,000 Yen (~$481) for the WiFi-only 4 GB model to 45,000 Yen (~$542) for the two models with 8 GB of memory each. No word as of yet on when they will be available for purchase in Japan — or elsewhere, for that matter — but we will keep you apprised.

Lenovo launching LePad Android tablet in June 2011

lenovo-android-tablet
Lenovo has been taking their sweet time putting out their LePad tablet that we finally got to see at CES back in January this year. We heard about their launch plans for the LePad last June, then September, then after it still didn’t come out, they stated they weren’t releasing it until Honeycomb was released. Well, Honeycomb is released, but are we going to see Lenovo make good on their claims? It’s starting to sound like Notion Ink already!
Well, they aren’t totally matching their word, but sort of. They are launching the tablet, and Honeycomb has come out…but the tablet will reportedly have Android 2.2 on it…not Honeycomb. Fail. Pricing may be the only thing saving this device from total annihilation in the tablet race, which will be between $399 – $449. It’ll be launching in June (we’ll see that when it actually happens), and in China in March.
Personally, I don’t think it’s worth it at all, but let us know what you think below.