HTC Hero review

By Maggie Holland,
Rating:
It did take a little while for the phone’s engine to get warmed up when we first powered it on, but after that, applications generally loaded quickly. The phone is equipped with a 512MHz Qualcomm processor, as after all if you’re a multi-tasking, heavy business user, you need a meaty processor.
That said, unlike many TV meteorologists, the handset seems to know what the weather was like where we were thanks to some smoke and mirrors GPS jiggery pokery. Google Maps was also quickly able to pinpoint our exact location quite speedily.
Hardware aside, the UI is the main attraction. Casting the shininess of Android and all its Market wares aside for one moment, HTC’s Hero is the first handset to feature its new Sense UI. The company claims it’s based on three tenets: “Make it mine,” “Stay close” and “Discover the unexpected.”
And it’s actually more than a little bit good.
A new kind of interface
Users are greeted with bright and crisp colours and intuitive navigation with context sensitive menus that adapt depending on what application is open at the time. For example, when looking at photos, the menu gives you options of deleting, viewing slide show and so on. Whereas when the browser is in use, menu options are bookmark, back and forward etc.
The search button (identifiable as a magnifying glass on the key) also adapts to whatever application you have open at the time, so you can contextually search through emails, tweets, or something entirely different.
Seven scenes are on offer, each customisable so that users can bring the content that matters most to them to their mobile desktop through the use of widgets. These offer another level of personalisation.
The scenes don’t just limit themselves to the screen available at the time. More so, they make use of an extended screen, accessible by flipping across the phone with your finger.
HTC’s chief marketing officer John Wang expressed the idea behind this concept during an interview with IT PRO last month. “I hang a painting on the wall, I don’t want an icon of a picture on the wall,” he said of the extended desktop-creating scenes.
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The Hero (Not)
My husband bought me the HTC for my 60th birthday and how disappointed I am - I really don't want to find out the cost as it would totally depress me thinking of a thousand other things I could have had. The phone should have a hazard warning "not suitable for the over 60s" I went to bed with a stinking headache the first time I "tried" to use it and that was just programming in the time and date. The instruction manual is useless, we can't get on line and it is somewhat vague as to what extra costs I will incur. I only hope it gets better as I am stuck with it. How negative can that be I am very much into computers but this is really doing my head in. Regards Gill Gilbert
By Confused on Friday Aug 7
The Best Yet
In phone terms I've owned 'em all, iPhone to N97, T60 to LG Arena, and I firmly believe that despite irs faults (and it has a fair few) the Hero is the most rewarding and exciting phone to date. I just wanted to point out a few things in you review however. First the processor is 528MHz not 511, and also the Teflon coating is on the casing of the white handset not on the screen which has an oleophobic coating not Teflon. It also DOES have multi-touch, that how you can pinch and zoom, this wouldn't be possible without it. I also believe the browser in the Hero outguns that of the iPhone with its Flash support. Interesting review though, always nice to read what others think.
By pixelat0r on Monday Sep 7
htc hero
i love my htc hero. got it from gsmallover.com...which is also a really great website. & since i've gotten it, 3 other ppl from my work picked them up to! talk about trend setter ;)
By Ryan543 on Saturday Jan 2